culled from:http://www.dummies.com
Understanding how to set goals and
objectives is key to developing a good marketing plan. Your marketing
strategy should reflect the goals you want to achieve as a business. As a
small business marketer, if you start with a goal, a marketing
strategy, and a reasonable budget for achieving your desired outcome,
chances are you’ll get where you want to go. Follow these steps:
1
Conduct market research.
Doing so ensures that you know everything you
can about your customer, your product, your competition, and your
business environment.
2
Establish marketing goals and objectives.
More than just business buzzwords, goals and objectives
work together to take your small business from ideas to action. A
marketing goal represents the overall sales or professional target that
your marketing program seeks to achieve. Your goal is an expression of a
realistic and clearly defined target, usually accompanied by a time
frame.
A marketing objective is the measurable result that will be necessary to achieve the goal. A marketing plan usually has several objectives that define the major means by which you’ll meet the goal. To write an objective, start with a verb, followed by a noun, and finally a description of the desired change. For example, you might write To introduce a new product aimed at young, affluent, urban professionals.
A marketing objective is the measurable result that will be necessary to achieve the goal. A marketing plan usually has several objectives that define the major means by which you’ll meet the goal. To write an objective, start with a verb, followed by a noun, and finally a description of the desired change. For example, you might write To introduce a new product aimed at young, affluent, urban professionals.
3
Set marketing strategies and determine the marketing mix that you’ll employ to achieve your objectives.
Strategies are the plans for achieving business
objectives. They’re practical, achievable, and action-oriented.
Strategies generally detail changes that a business intends to make to
the four marketing functions called the marketing mix (or the four p’s):
pricing, product, promotion, and place (also known as distribution).
Cast your goals and objectives in cement when you
create your marketing plan each year, but keep your strategies flexible
so you can adjust them in response to competitive forces, economic
realities, or new opportunities. Just remember that the only strategy
worth pursuing is one that directly supports your goals and objectives.
4
Choose your marketing tools and tactics.
Develop effective marketing communications, and
then choose the media outlet you want to use to convey it, such as
radio, television, print, or online. You might decide to work with an
agency, or go it alone. You might put most of your efforts into building
a website that sells your brand and your image.
Whether delivered in person, through promotions, or via traditional media, direct mail, or e-mail, all marketing communications need to accomplish the same tasks — to grab attention and impart information the prospect wants to know.
Marketing communications should also present offers that are sensitive to how and when the prospect wants to take action, affirm why the prospect would want to take action, and offer a reason to take action. Finally, marketing communication should launch a relationship, which increasingly means fostering interaction and two-way communication between you and your customer.
Whether delivered in person, through promotions, or via traditional media, direct mail, or e-mail, all marketing communications need to accomplish the same tasks — to grab attention and impart information the prospect wants to know.
Marketing communications should also present offers that are sensitive to how and when the prospect wants to take action, affirm why the prospect would want to take action, and offer a reason to take action. Finally, marketing communication should launch a relationship, which increasingly means fostering interaction and two-way communication between you and your customer.
Never, ever decide on your marketing tactic until you
know your strategies. When you know your strategies, you know your
objectives, which means that you know your goals, which means that you
know where you want your business to go. After that, all that’s left is
to establish interim milestones and measure results along the way,
fine-tuning your tools and tactics as necessary until you reach your
goal.
Tactics follow strategies — not vice versa.
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09:57
Executive Republic
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