Thứ Năm, 23 tháng 1, 2014

how to do a marketing plan























HOW TO DO A MARKETING PLAN





























Twinning Covenant SI2000/IB/SPP-01

2
INDEX


INTRODUCTION 3
STEP 1: WHAT IS A MARKETING PLAN? 4
STEP 2: HOW TO DO A MARKET RESEARCH 5
STEP 3: SWOT ANALYSIS, SEGMENTATION OF THE MARKET AND DEFINITION
OF OBJECTIVES AND STRATEGIES 8
STEP 4: DEFINITION OF THE YEARLY ACTION PLAN. THE MARKETING MIX. 10
STEP 5: WRITING THE MARKETING PLAN 11


3


INTRODUCTION

The objective of this document is to be a guide for new entrepreneurs that want to create
a new business, for the elaboration of the Marketing Plan of the new entrepreneurial
project.

It describes the steps that an entrepreneur has to follow in order to define and elaborate
the Marketing Plan of the new business project.

These steps are:

• Step 1: What is a Marketing Plan?.

• Step 2: How to do a Market Research.

• Step 3: Definition of the Marketing Objectives and Strategies.

• Step 4: Definition of the yearly Action Plan. The Marketing Mix.

• Step 5: Writing the Marketing Plan.









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STEP 1: What is a Marketing Plan?

Marketing is the supply of goods or services in order to meet the clients needs.

It is the process that combines the company’s capacities with the clients needs.

The marketing plan is the instrument for planning and organising the company’s
resources and capacities for achieving marketing objectives for the new firm. It has to
identify the most promising business opportunities for the company and details how to
enter, capture and retain positions in identified markets.







The elaboration of a good marketing plan is an essential step during the creation and
development of a new business.

Specially for a start-up, the marketing plan is an instrument that allows to know key
information for the entrepreneur. The marketing plan of a star-up assumes various
functions:
• Carrying out market research for the products and services of the new firm.
• To help the entrepreneur to foresee the demand for the first year of the life of the
new company.
• Identify the number and importance of the actual clients for the new company.
• Analyse and determine the marketing resources available for the new firm.
• Getting to know the SWOT of the new firm in relation with the reality of the
market.
• Identify the profile of the potential new clients.
• Identify the segment of market for each product of the new firm.
• Setting marketing objectives and marketing strategies
• Setting the action plans within the “marketing mix” framework, and the marketing
budgets.

The marketing plan is a document that can contain approximately between 15 and 40
pages.

Market planning is an interactive process and the plan should be reviewed and updated
during its implementation.





The marketing plan details who will do what, when, where and how, in order to
achieve the new firm market objectives.


5

Step 2: How to do a Market Research

The market research is the process of collecting information about the reference
market for the new firm, and analyse this information in order to take the best marketing
decisions.

Knowledge of the market is an indispensable prerequisite to the elaboration of a
marketing plan.






The way for knowing the key information for running the new business is doing a good
market research.

Market research is used to:
• Give a description of the market.
• Analyse the evolution of the market.
• Decide which actions will be taken by a company and evaluate the results of those
actions.

What information to collect and analyse. This information can be:

Quantitative Information Qualitative Information

• These kind of information produce
quantitative numbers on customer
behaviour, attitudes, needs and
volumes of business.

• To acquire this kind of data generally
a large number of customers or a
very focused small group in case of
personal contact is required.

• The issues to be researched are what
product/service options do the clients
prefer, and where, when and at what
price do they would buy the product.

• The methodology for doing this
research could be: telephone survey,
mailing of questionnaires and short
but focused questionnaires in case of
personal contact.


• These kinds of information produce
qualitative information on customer
behaviour, attitudes or needs.

• The issues to be researched are what
is the way a customer considers the
purchase of a certain product, what he
knows about the product category,
how well he understands the
advantages of the product and the
misconceptions of the product in his
opinion.

• The methodology for doing this
research could be the organisation of
a focus group where only six to eight
people are sat around a table and
invited to discuss their views on your
(carefully chosen and controlled)
questions.


The quality of the business decisions you take is dependent upon the quality of the
information you have.


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Depending on the stage of advancement and progress of the project, the entrepreneur
must work in two phases of the market research:


Preliminary assessment phase, when the entrepreneur will seek for general
information related to the essential points of the new project.

These points could be:

Economic trends.

Nature of the needs to satisfy with the product/service.

Size of the aggregated demand of the product/service.

Identification of the competitors and their products/services.

Barriers of going in and out of the market.

Access to adequate suppliers.

Access to adequate technology.

Existing distribution channels.

The entrepreneur must identify the adequate sources of information for getting the key
information and do the systematic deskwork in order to process it.




In-depth study phase, when the entrepreneur will seek for useful data to get to know
the needs and the segmentation of the market.

These points could be:

Identification of existing market segments.

Purchasing capacity of the actual potential clients.

The way a customer considers the purchase of the product/service.

How well the client understands the advantages of the product/service.

Actual demand for each product/service of the new firm.

Size of the new firm market niche.

Prices and sell-conditions of the competitor's products/services.

Conditions for working with the potential suppliers.

Quality, prices and conditions of accessibility to the needed supplies.

Quality, prices and conditions of accessibility to the adequate technology.

Identification and evaluation of appropriate distribution channels.

Modes of communication adapted to the sector of activity.

Conditions of intellectual property.

Legislation and standards.

The entrepreneur must prepare a survey for getting quantitative information and must
organise the method for getting qualitative information.







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The sources of information that the entrepreneur will be able to use are:
• The proper clients, suppliers and competitors.
• Technical public organisations.
• Financial institutions.
• Professional organisations.
• Trade magazines and books.
• Fairs and events.
• Experts.
• Documents published by companies.
• Databases.





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Step 3: SWOT analysis, segmentation of the market and
definition of objectives and strategies

Analysing the information collected and processed during the market research, the
entrepreneur is recommended to do a SWOT analysis of the potential success of the new
business idea in the market.

The SWOT analysis will allow the entrepreneur to identify and reflect about what are
the key factors to take into account in the moment of launching the new
product/service to the market.

The SWOT analysis structure is:

Strengths
What are the strengths of your product? What makes it
better than other products? Are these strengths being
sufficiently exploited? Are they being sufficiently
defended?

Weaknesses
What are the weaknesses of your product? What makes it
inferior to other products?






Opportunities
What external factors are there that could be embraced if
appropriate resources were allocated?







Threats
What external factors are there that threaten to reduce
your market share?




After doing the SWOT analysis, the entrepreneur must do the segmentation of the
market.

The segmentation of the market consists of identifying and characterising the
portions of a global market that are integrated by different groups of consumers with
the same needs and behaviour.

Segmentation is a vital operation, both for the proper understanding of the market and
the choice of the right orientation.

The approach to the segmentation of the market will be focused on the choice of the
segmentation criteria for determining what shared characteristics constitute
homogeneous groups of consumers.





9
The segmentation criteria could be the following:

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS MASS CONSUMER MARKET
PRODUCTS


Sector of activity.

Size of companies (turnover, number
of employees, etc)

Legal structure.

Means of production.

Maturity.

Region.

Equipment and technologies.

Certifications.

Financial results.





Sex.

Age.

Social-professional category.

Neighbourhood.

Number of persons in household.

Region.

Religion.

Incomes.





With all the information collected and analyse during the processes of market research,
SWOT analysis, and segmentation of the market, the entrepreneur has information
enough for defining the marketing objectives and strategies of the new firm.

The objectives will be defined in order to allow the entrepreneur to quantify the
foreseen incomes for a limited period (normally one year), and for each line of
products/services.


The objectives definition has to take into account the following rules:

Do not go against the realities of the market.

Beware of non-fundable needs.

Make sure that the objectives established are in line with the results of the
information collected during the market research and the SWOT analysis.


In order to obtain the objectives established, the following phase consists in defining the
marketing strategies for the four P's of the marketing mix.

Product
Defines the characteristics of your product or service that meets the
needs of your customers.

Price
Decide on a pricing strategy. Do not let it just happen! Even if you
decide not to charge for a service (a loss leader), you must realise that
this is a conscious decision and forms part of the pricing strategy.

Promotion
This includes all the weapons in the marketing armoury -advertising,
selling, sales promotions, Public Relations, merchandising, etc

Place
(or route
of distribution)

Some of the revolutions in marketing have come about by changing this
P. Think if you are going to sell your products/service directly to the
customer or through a complex channel of various steps of distributors.

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Step 4: Definition of the yearly Action Plan. The Marketing
Mix

The marketing mix consists in define the proper combination of actions for the four
P's:

Product.

Price.

Promotion.

Place (distribution).

The yearly action plan consists of going into the details of the marketing plan for the
following year.

The content of the yearly action plan for the first year of a new firm, must be
organised for families of products/services and must provide information about what to
do, who will do, when, where, how and with what resources including budget, in
relation with the four P's of the marketing mix:


Products/services:

Definition of functions and characteristics of the products, specific to each
market segment.

Development of the product values as appearance, design, ergonomics, utility,
ease or use or maintenance.

Selection of the potential more worthy products within the portfolio.

Adequate the product/service to the regulations, standards and conditions of
certification.



Prices:

Calculation of the cost of production and commercialisation.

Calculation of the distribution margins.

To update continuously the prices.



Promotion:

Determine the proper mix of actions of advertising, publicity, merchandising,
sponsoring, public relationships, sales promotions, etc.



Place:

Identification of the adequate distribution channels.

Determine foreseen incomes and costs of each distribution channel.

Negotiate conditions with distributors for our product/service.

Launch the product/service through the appropriate channel.

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