Marketing Plan
Every marketing plan has to fit the needs and situation.
Even so, there are standard components you just can't do without. A marketing
plan should always have a situation analysis, marketing strategy, sales
forecast, and expense budget.
Situation Analysis: Normally this will
include a market analysis, a SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities,
and threats), and a competitive analysis. The market analysis will include
market forecast, segmentation, customer information, and market needs analysis.
Marketing Strategy: This should include
at least a mission statement, objectives, and focused strategy including
market segment focus and product positioning.
Sales Forecast: This would include enough
detail to track sales month by month and follow up on plan-vs.-actual analysis.
Normally a plan will also include specific sales by product, by region or
market segment, by channels, by manager responsibilities, and other elements.
The forecast alone is a bare minimum.
Expense Budget: This ought to include
enough detail to track expenses month by month and follow up on plan-vs.-actual
analysis. Normally a plan will also include specific sales tactics, programs,
management responsibilities, promotion, and other elements. The expense
budget is a bare minimum.
You should also remember that planning is about the results,
not the plan itself. A marketing plan must be measured by the results it
produces. The implementation of your plan is much more important than its
brilliant ideas or massive market research. You can influence implementation
by building a plan full of specific, measurable and concrete plans that
can be tracked and followed up. Plan-vs.-actual analysis is critical to
the eventual results, and you should build it into your plan.