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It's
Time To Get All Strategic - Small Business
Marketing Stategy |
by:
J
D Moore |
Copyright
2005 J D Moore
So what's your small business marketing
strategy? I'm willing to bet that close
to 85% of the people reading this are scratching
their heads now. Many small business owners
fail to create a marketing strategy at all,
instead focusing on tactics.
Let me give you one of the definitions of
strategy from the fine folks at Merriam
Webster: a : a careful plan or method :
a clever strategem b : the art of devising
or employing plans or strategems toward
a goal
So a strategy is a plan and the implementation
of that plan. Tactics are merely the methods
with which which you carry out that plan.
Planning is important in small business
marketing for a few reasons:
-Planning helps insure you keep a consistent
marketing effort.
-Planning helps you set goals and move towards
reaching them.
-Planning helps you set and stick to a budget.
Many small business owners are intimidated
by the idea of a marketing plan. They think
it needs to be a huge formal document with
financials and charts. It can be that, particularly
if you are going for funding. However, if
you are just in business for yourself, your
marketing plan can be very simple.
Here are some items I think it should include:
-Your overall vision, value proposition,
and unique selling position
-A list of your target markets, and what
you know about them
-Your budget for marketing
-A list of strengths and weaknesses with
the customer facing side of your business.
-A list of steps you are going to take (I
recommend a marketing calendar)
-There are three ways to increase your revenue,
and your plan should take each into account:
1. Increase your number of customers
2. Increase the amount of your average transaction
3. Increase the frequency at which your
customers buy from you
Most marketing efforts I encounter focus
only on #1. However #1 represents the most
expensive, difficult, and slow method for
increasing revenues.
Remember that marketing is not just advertising
and PR. Your plan should encompass your
customers' entire experience with you. It
might include changing the way you answer
the phone, more frequent followup calls,
cleaning the bathrooms at your store more
often, adding plants to your reception area.
your plan also might include some kind of
customer satisfaction survey, maybe during
followup calls or during a visit to your
business.
Your plan might also include presenting
your products or services better, or repackaging
them in different ways. It might have you
creating a new brochure, or giving sales
training to your staff.
Your plan should include the tactics you
want to use, and a budget for each tactic.
There's an old military aphorism that goes:
Even the best possible battle plan has not
survived first contact with the enemy. This
basically means that the unpredictable always
happens - it's what makes life interesting.
Do not be afraid to revise your marketing
plan to respond to changing conditions.
However, you still need a consistent and
intelligent marketing effort.
You should be able to capitalize on new
opportunities and respond to new challenges.
Plan and stay consistent - you will outpace
most of your competition.
About the author:
J D Moore Small Business Marketing Coach
"helping small business owners inprove marketing
results" http://marketingcomet.typepad.com
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