THE MARKETING PLAN
IMPROVING YOUR
COMPETITIVE EDGE
A Marketing Plan is a written strategy for selling the
products/services of a new business. It is a reflection of how serious a
company is in meeting the competition head on, with strategies and plans to
increase market share and attract customers. An effective Marketing Plan is
backed by carefully collected market, consumer and competitor information,
sometimes citing professional advice.
Why Prepare a
Marketing Plan?
A good Marketing Plan will help you to improve your odds against more experienced competitors and newly emerging ones. The Plan enables you to recognize and take action on any trends and consumer preferences that other companies have overlooked, and to develop and expand your own select group of loyal customers now and into the future.
A good Marketing Plan will help you to improve your odds against more experienced competitors and newly emerging ones. The Plan enables you to recognize and take action on any trends and consumer preferences that other companies have overlooked, and to develop and expand your own select group of loyal customers now and into the future.
The Plan also shows to others that you have carefully considered
how to produce a product that is innovative, unique and marketable- improving
your chances of stable sales and profits - reasons for investors to financially
back you.
CONTENTS OF A
MARKETING PLAN
Title Page
·
Include the name of the company, period of time that the
contents of the marketing plan covers, and completion date.
·
Use a clean and professional format with examples of the
company logo and product designs and packaging types.
Table of Contents
·
List all the contents of the marketing plan in the order
they appear, citing relevant page numbers.
·
List tables, graphs and diagrams on a separate page so that
the reader can locate these presentation tools quickly. List the appendices
that will be included at the end of your document.
Cover
Letter
·
This letter should form a personalized overview of the
document. Highlight areas of the plan that are particularly crucial to the
reader, providing an indication of how this plan will help your business attain
overall success in the future.
Historical
Background
·
Give the reader an indication of where your business idea
originated, citing the date you began researching into the idea, the existence
of any mentors or advisors, the scope of your business (the specific of what
the business "does"), and opportunities for expansion. Indicate how
the future success of the business can be attributed to the strategies found in
the Marketing Plan.
Marketing
Goals and Objectives
To introduce this section, include the "mission statement" of the business; an idea of what its goals are for customers, clients, employees and the consumer, then proceed with:
To introduce this section, include the "mission statement" of the business; an idea of what its goals are for customers, clients, employees and the consumer, then proceed with:
Sales Objectives
·
Compare your prospects for future sales with either past
performance, or a general industry performance report. By analyzing the
industry average as well as your own performance you will demonstrate to the
reader that you can look "beyond your borders" to the competition to
give yourself an idea of how well you are performing, or what general
difficulties the whole industry may be facing.
·
Identify industry wide problems and create strategies to
challenge them. This will also demonstrate that you have the necessary
foresight to allow you to recognize problems in the future.
·
Set "benchmarks" for your sales objectives by
using quarterly reports as a way of evaluating the success of your overall
marketing approach. Indicate how much "market share" you intend to
collect over the next 5 years, to show that you expect to advance your position
against your competitors using your "individual" approach.
Profit
Objectives
·
Include your predictions for after tax profit for each of
the next five years. Relate this profit assumption based on the contents of
your operating budget's costs figures found in your Business Plan.
·
Indicate how you will reinvest your profit margin in
specific areas of the Marketing Plans future activities, as well as countering
operating and start up costs you already have. Don't neglect the future of the
Marketing Plan because you have to defer the costs you already have. A sound
Marketing Plan should do more than "pay for itself" and its
activities.
Pricing
Objectives
·
Focus on the weaknesses of your competitors by offering
better quality at a competitive price. Remember what your own attitudes are
towards products you consume on a day to day basis. Remember how you react to
high prices for poor or marginal quality or service.
·
Justifying your prices for your product or service while
thinking like a customer will give you an advantage. Survey a sampling of your
potential customer group and ask them directly how they feel about competitors
products, services, industry prices and any areas for improvement.
Product Objectives
·
Much like what you would be doing for your prices, focus on
the wants, needs and perceptions of your consumers and the general public.
Identify any problems for your industry/product.
·
Show how you will attract more customers while keeping the
ones you have. Determine the determining factors of customer preference towards
a product, like price, or social considerations such as environmental impact,
product quality or convenience.
·
Indicate the goals you have for quality of service, level
of service (speed and accuracy), customer satisfaction, and your own
flexibility to support consumer demands and requests.
Market
Analysis
·
Examine whether or not your industry is growing, maturing
or declining.
·
If it is declining, identify the problems that exist and be
able to change the ones you can. Show how you can adapt to changes that you
can't control.
·
If your industry is maturing, show how as a new company,
you may be able to better adapt to external forces; better than the more mature
competition.
·
In a newly emerging and growing market (the best scenario),
differentiate yourself from new competitors. Show how you expect to become a
major market share holder, using a new approach to the marketplace and
utilizing the latest technology. Identify the older methods of generating your
product/service being challenged by your business' approach.
·
Acknowledge the problems and challenges of the marketplace
you are entering. Use your analysis to construct a strategy that will put you
ahead of your competition.
·
Look to ways of prolonging the "life" of your
business if you recognize that what your getting into is threatened by newly
emerging technologies and business approaches. To advance your business in the
new economy means finding your "niche", or, creating one of your own.
·
In your market analysis focus is on key areas like industry
wide sales performance. Acknowledge why sales (as a whole) may be declining.
Look to national and provincial averages, citing reasons for poor performance.
Reasons can be both external to a particular businesses operations, or internal
to the way the business operates. People called "industry analysts"
have developed a way of determining the causes of business failures, focusing
on the direction newly emerging business can take to realize success. Reference
these professionals.
·
Your focus should also turn to the local scene, since local
markets may or may not follow the greater industry trend for various reasons.
Compare the local situation to the national and provincial averages; the trends
in sales, and the estimated total market that can be reached by local
companies.
·
Recognize the position your local competitors have taken in
the local market; the clientele they serve, the product they produce, the price
they expect to charge for their products and services.
·
Finally, relate your own businesses position to the
position of others, reflecting on the maturity and experience of your business
competitors.
Environmental
Analysis - Global Business Environment
Conduct an environmental analysis to look at and comment on the world in which you will be operating. Unemployment rates for the past 2 to 5 years and the impact it has had on sales and the overall customer base is an effective way of demonstrating the effect of "external" pressures onto your business. Threats due to environmental conditions (like unemployment, layoffs, recession, high interest rates) reduce consumer activity, and should be explored in your marketing plan.
Conduct an environmental analysis to look at and comment on the world in which you will be operating. Unemployment rates for the past 2 to 5 years and the impact it has had on sales and the overall customer base is an effective way of demonstrating the effect of "external" pressures onto your business. Threats due to environmental conditions (like unemployment, layoffs, recession, high interest rates) reduce consumer activity, and should be explored in your marketing plan.
Political
and Legal
·
Identify the regulations, permits, insurance, liability,
municipal zoning and taxation requirements that you must follow in order to
operate your business.
·
The business climate of your town, village and surrounding
area is an important influence on your day-to-day operations. Reflect on topics
such as taxation, zoning and other factors.
Demographics
·
Describe the population base that exists to support your
product. Identify the market size for your product, and the people that make up
your product/service's consumer group. Provide information about:
·
Where they live, What products do they buy, How much they
spend on similar products each year,
·
Where they shop for these products, etc. Indicate whether
or not your product is geared towards a specific age group, with spending
patterns and consumer demands. Indicate whether this group is shrinking,
expanding or yet to be tapped into.
Environmental
Analysis - Local Business Environment
Conduct an environmental analysis that looks at and comments on your local area and your network of business contacts, competitors and customers.
Conduct an environmental analysis that looks at and comments on your local area and your network of business contacts, competitors and customers.
Suppliers
·
Identify your sources for direct purchasing by describing
their locations, the frequency of your orders and the type and amount of
supplies you will be ordering.
Social/Cultural
·
Explain any particular client support or other specialized
consumer groups that can be identified apart from the general public. Describe
the spending and product requirements of these groups and the characteristics
of your company that support the product and services they are demanding.
Indicate whether your product is part of the day to day activities of a
specific group or the general public. Identify the influence this will have on
your projected sales. Identify your networking contacts in the community, and
the overall atmosphere surrounding your business. Identify the influence this
will have on your projected sales. Predict the receptiveness of your product
concepts, and how the community perceives your business.
·
Describe the expected response to your advertising, and how
this will boost sales. Indicate what overall market trends you will be
following in order to stay current and "in touch" with the public.
What special techniques will you be employing in order to match consumer
demands.
Competition
·
Identify your direct competition by naming their business,
describing their facilities and operations, identifying their share of the
consumer market, realizing support for their product and by reviewing the
weaknesses of their approach.
Consumer
Analysis
·
Identify your target market, describing how your company
will meet the needs of the consumer better than the competition does. List the
expectations consumers have for your type of product. Since demands may be
different, products and services will vary between competitors. Quality, price
and after sales service are just some of the areas where this difference
occurs.
·
Identify the segment of the market that will benefit from
your product and area of expertise as well as your approach to selling your
product or service.
·
Predict the sales potential that may be realized by tapping
into and holding onto your target market, and attracting others through
different strategies and approaches. These different approaches can be all done
at the same time or be more incremental - obtaining a core audience for your
product or service first, then expanding into the rest of the market. Identify
the sales potential for each of these target groups.
Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats Analysis
Strengths
·
List the strengths of your business approach such as cost
effectiveness, service quality and customer loyalty.
·
List other assets of your operations such as flexibility,
innovativeness, response to external pressures, creativity and company
stability.
·
Relate your experience (professionalism, duration and
diversity) and the contacts you have made in all areas of your businesses
operations - from suppliers to clients, government officials to business
professionals.
Weaknesses
·
Describe the areas of weakness in your company's operations,
such as government policies and procedures, and management inexperience.
·
Capital financing, credit, loans and other financial debts
should be identified, with strategies to control their effect on your business.
·
Recognize the limited impact of a new product on the market
- its lack of recognition may be attributed to the companies inexperience in
promoting.
·
Recognize that poor performance will mean lower than
expected profits - which will result in a lot of the money going to reduce
debts rather than improving business facilities, operations and expanding
markets.
Opportunities
·
Examine how proper timing, as well as other factors such as
your company's innovativeness, may improve your business's chances of success.
·
Use tools such as customer surveys to emphasize the need
for product quality and after sales service.
·
Relate your company's focus to a segment of the present
market that is being overlooked.
Threats
·
List the external threats to your business' success, such a
existing and newly emerging competitors, performance of the overall economy,
and your dependency on other businesses such as suppliers, retailers and
distributors for market access and support.
Marketing Focus
Product or Service
·
Identify your product or service by what it is, who will
buy it, how much they will pay for it and how much it will cost for you to
produce it, why a consumer demand exists for your product, and where your
product sits in comparison to similar products/services now available.
·
Describe the marketplace rationale for the differences
between your product and a competitors. Look at quality, price, new
ideas/approaches, and how your product appeals to a specific customer base -
both existing customers and new customers you hope to attract to the market.
·
Be specific about how your product/service improves upon
those already existing, your use of quality control, post purchase evaluation
(and how you will obtain feedback) and the scope of service you will provide:
responsibilities, liabilities and expectations.
Location
·
Identify the location of your business, why it is located
there (strategic, competitive, economic objectives), your expected methods of
distribution, and timing objectives.
·
Different products have different shelf lives and your
estimation of how long your product will remain on the shelf is an important
one.
Promotion
·
Describe the type of promotional methods you will use to
spread the word about your product. Identify techniques such as word of mouth,
radio and newspaper ads.
·
For radio, focus on a stations music format and its
relationship to your products image, broadcast area, cultural focus, age focus,
etc.
·
For newspapers and other print mediums, consider the level
at which you wish to advertise (local, regional, provincial, federal,
cross-national, etc.), in what mediums (trade magazines, professional,
recreational, cultural, hobby, special interest, etc.), how often, and the
timing of such advertisements (seasonal, special issues, etc.).
·
List accessible tradeshows that offer your business and
opportunity to display banners and promotional literature.
·
Explain your use of expensive mediums such as television
and billboards. Both are highly expensive, while computer based "bulletin
boards" and the Internet can provide a global audience.
·
Promotion through associations and government support
programs offer an opportunity for success stories to advertise.
·
In store promotions, sidewalk sales, plant tours, free
samples, openhouses, "point of sale" displays, acknowledgment in
government programs, agendas, brochures and calendars are other avenues for
promotion. Also, gimmicks like draws for free product samples and service
visits also provide you with a mailing list for future considerations.
·
Alliance campaigns between yourself and associated
businesses (retailers, suppliers, etc.) provide you and some complementary
businesses the chance to improve your market image and potential sales.
Price
·
The prices of your products or services should reflect your
overall company strategy. Pricing should be competitive as well as a reflection
of the quality, costs and profit margin.
·
List the quality features of your product or service, as
well as the associated cost component for each item or level of service.
·
List strategies you plan to use, such as providing a
discount on some items you sell in order to increase the sales in other areas.
Financial
Information
·
Show the predicted level of sales you expect to realize
with and without the strategies you have outlined in the marketing plan. Show the
natural level of sales as described in your business plan, and then show the
expected increase in sales as they relate to specific marketing techniques you
will use.
·
Show the market share you will hope to attain, based on
"high", "medium", and "low" estimates for the
success of your marketing strategy.
·
Forecast the "break even point" for each of the
following 5 years, in the number of sales in dollars. This will demonstrate
your need to realize a certain amount of sales in order to cover your expected
costs for each of the next 5 years.
·
Outline the areas of weakness in the financing of your
business; the deficiencies that may be found in areas such as "operating
capital", outstanding loans, and insufficient credit.
·
Provide appropriate suggestions for reducing the effect
that these deficiencies will have on the successful operation of your business.
Tables, Graphs,
Diagrams and Pictures
By presenting information in a picture format, some areas that are hard to express in words become easy to show to the reader. Here are some examples:
By presenting information in a picture format, some areas that are hard to express in words become easy to show to the reader. Here are some examples:
Position Analysis
·
A figure that shows where your company's image lies in
relation to your direct competition.
Advertising
Examples and Other Promotional Materials
·
Provide the reader with some examples of the type of
artwork and advertising you hope to use to attract potential customers, and, to
portray a particular image of your product/service.
·
Such materials can demonstrate the effectiveness of your
message, successful product/service recognition and packaging design.
Demographics,
Consumer Statistics and Budgets
·
Include appropriate demographic information such as
populations, age distributions, projected population growth and household
sizes.
·
Include statistics covering family expenditures, personal
income characteristics, employment figures, and spending and consumer patterns.
·
Provide budget sheets for advertising campaigns, sales
promotions, and expenses such as uniforms, business cards, logo designs,
banners, flyers, billboards, etc.
·
Include printing costs and expected reordering schedules.
·
Demographics and other statistics can be found in
Statistics Canada information, available at the local library.
Pricing
·
Relate the pricing of your products or services to your
costs, profit margin, "break even point" in sales, competitor pricing
schemes, consumer profiles and product/service expectations.
Separate the "fixed
cost" components and your "variable costs". Fixed costs are
those that should remain stable over the next 5 years, while variable costs are
those that adjust to external and internal
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