digital marketing

Actionable Tips For Creating a Great Marketing Plan

A strategic marketing plan is a blueprint for how a company will grow. However, many businesses don’t have the time or subject matter expertise to develop one. 

This blog post explains the basics of creating a successful strategic marketing plan. I throw in actionable tips, what to include in your marketing plan and how to track your progress. 

Benefits of Having a Marketing Plan

What are the benefits of a strategic marketing plan? It will:

  1. Improve allocation of your scarce marketing resources
  2. Identify the target markets that offer the best potential 
  3. Define what makes your organization unique and the best way to promote that uniqueness throughout all of your marketing tactics like your website and social media
  4. Support your sales team in building a healthy sales funnel

Actionable Tips for Creating Your Plan

A team led by a facilitator develops most marketing plans. Even if that team is just 2 or 3 people, each team member brings a valuable perspective and diverse experience to the plan. This combination provides a balanced, well-rounded approach. 

Don’t just look inside your company when developing your Strategic Marketing Plan. Instead, spend time analyzing the external environment too. The process includes identifying gaps in how you go to market and deciding how to fill those gaps. Be brutally honest when reviewing the strengths and weaknesses of your primary competitors. 

When analyzing the external environment, reexamine what you know about your customers’ pain points. This will help sharpen the messaging on your website and other marketing tactics. This is also where new product or service ideas often come from. You’ll identify unmet market needs that your product or service can uniquely satisfy.  

The Essential Components 

Your marketing plan doesn’t have to be perfect. But it does need to include several essential components. 

Most marketing decisions are based on your Target Market (also called Ideal Customer Profile).

For example, you don’t want to be on every social media channel. It’s impossible and unrealistic. Instead, selecting your business’s optimal social media channels depends on where your ideal customers spend their time. 

In developing your marketing plan, create your Ideal Customer Profile(s).

Include their primary challenges, how they deal with those challenges without your product and why your product is the perfect solution. 

Determine your ideal customer profile early in the process of creating your marketing plan.

You’ll make many decisions based on it. Focus is crucial. The reality is that not everyone wants to buy your product or service. Devote your scarce marketing resources to earning business from customers that most likely need what you have to offer. 

New opportunities for revenue growth are the lifeblood of any business.

And marketing is a company’s best resource for identifying, prioritizing and pursuing new opportunities. We’re talking about new product introductions or targeting sets of customers different from your existing customer base.  

Don’t worry if you identify multiple opportunities.

You may find it helpful to distinguish between short-term and long-term opportunities. This approach worked well for a former client who, like many companies, sought to grow but had limited resources to put behind their initiatives.

How do you make your marketing plan come alive?

Track progress regularly. Set SMART Goals for your marketing. I recommend having 2 or 3 overall marketing goals that align with your business plan and several tactical level goals that you monitor regularly. This keeps you connected to the performance of your marketing initiatives so you can make adjustments without being bogged down by “analysis paralysis.”  

Document which marketing tactics are ideal for reaching your customers and prospects.

Digital marketing presents a vast and often overwhelming set of options. However, a website is the central point of the marketing mix for my clients. And other digital marketing tools like e-mail marketing and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) help put a brand in front of customers and prospects.

Conclusion

Having a plan for how to grow your business is essential. Your strategic marketing plan is the catalyst driving future business development behaviors and critical marketing decisions. It’s a living document you’ll monitor and re-visit. Be prepared to update it due to changes in your market. It is rare that an industry doesn’t evolve or change. And it’s imperative for your marketing to stay current and relevant. 

To learn more about this, reach out to a Milwaukee marketing professional today!

About the Author: Michael Quill

Known for delivering successful marketing outcomes by providing strategic and tactical leadership. Passion for shaping product strategies that resonate with the target market and implementing marketing campaigns that align with business objectives. Add immediate value by taking marketing management to the next level and supporting the sales funnel.

By |2023-09-14T17:59:33+00:00June 2, 2022|

Unlock Marketing Strategies By Listening to your Favorite Football Coach

We’re deep into the 2021 football season. Regardless of where your team is in the rankings, there is something to be learned about marketing from what the head coach tells the players on your favorite team.

What does coach speak have to do with marketing? Listen carefully enough, and you’ll discover that there’s plenty. We’re going to take a close look at five coaching cliches and tease out the marketing strategies hidden therein.

Give 110% / Nothing comes easy in this league

Coaching is part strategy, part psychology. Great coaches are experts at applying psychology to motivate their players. They preach mental toughness and they insist that every player bring their “A” game. That’s because they know there’s a tendency to let up when things get tough. But an exceptional level of intensity often leads to positive outcomes. You know a great brand when you see it. Successful brands resonate with their customers. Yet the great brands have access to the same marketing tools and talent as the brands that fail.

In my experience, numerous variables contribute to a brand’s success. However, it’s tough to conquer a highly motivated team. And that goes for marketing strategies as well as sports.

We have the utmost respect for the other team

Coaches often say this about their next opponent. They’ve spent endless hours studying film and analyzing the other team’s tendencies. The goal is to anticipate the other coach’s moves in critical situations. Similarly, good marketing teams devote time to understanding the strengths and weaknesses of their primary competitors. They know that their customers can choose between multiple brands. Consequently, they don’t assume their brand is better than the other brand.

They periodically scan the competitive environment and see the market from the customer’s point of view. This form of “respect for the other team” can yield actionable insights for astute marketers. Conducting a brief analysis of a competitor’s strengths and weaknesses can often spotlight potential opportunities to exploit.

Study the playbook from cover to cover

Smart players are intimately familiar with the team’s playbook. They have to be because the entire coaching staff, their teammates, and the fan base count on them to play smart football. In addition, the players perform their role in a system. Players have accountability to one another.

The same goes for great marketers. They have a deep understanding of their brand guidelines. The company is counting on them to be the champions of the brand. This requires a working knowledge of what the brand stands for. They’re conversant not only in the visual aspects of the brand but the brand’s voice as well. Every positive brand impression, no matter how small it may be, contributes to the brand’s overall success.

Take things one day at a time

As a lifelong sports fan, I can’t tell you how often I’ve heard this cliché spoken by coaches. In marketing, we operate day to day in the trenches. However, we have to think longer-term than just days. We develop plans that are a year or more in scope. We measure the performance of our tactics in terms of weeks, months, and quarters. That’s why it’s vital for business planning to ensure marketing has a seat at the table.

I want to see team spirit

To borrow a phrase from legendary UCLA basketball coach John Wooden, “winning breeds winning.” Celebrating success is an essential element to building teams, both in business and sports. Yet, as obvious as this seems, it can be overlooked. Don’t take celebration for granted.

This is especially important when things get tough. We’ve all been there. Unexpected market events are commonplace. Fostering team spirit is your insurance policy against losing momentum when business is slow or the economy is experiencing a downturn. Be sure to celebrate your marketing successes. It lifts the entire team. And it helps team members feel like they’re part of something special.

Conclusion

You don’t need a whistle, clipboard, headset, or any other piece of coaching paraphernalia to learn a little about marketing strategies. Now go out there and show them what you’re made of!

About the Author: Michael Quill

Known for delivering successful marketing outcomes by providing strategic and tactical leadership. Passion for shaping product strategies that resonate with the target market and implementing marketing campaigns that align with business objectives. Add immediate value by taking marketing management to the next level and supporting the sales funnel.

By |2023-10-05T14:51:38+00:00November 3, 2021|

Good SEO Means Having a Solid Social Strategy

Blog1Oddly enough, both small and large companies often have problems getting their digital marketing strategies to effectively integrate SEO, social media and content marketing. More often than not,  this is because key stakeholders don’t understand how these three pillars of effective online marketing work together. Have one or two but not all three, and an online strategy that could sizzle will fizzle.

Don’t believe me? Consider this:

  • Company A invests in killer content that positions their business as industry experts who have unique insights that they know their competitors can’t match. Awesome! But then they don’t invest in an equally killer social campaign to promote their content, so instead of getting hundreds of leads, they get a handful.
  • Company B puts together an SEO attack plan that targets critical keywords and phrases that should crush their competition. Yes! But then they don’t back up their plan with a sound social strategy that gets SERP-boosting backlinks from social media must-haves like Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
  • Company C creates a smart, fun social media campaign that rates a 10 on the click-bait scale. It’s so effective, in fact, that 50% of people exposed to it click through to their site. Boom! But the campaign ultimately fails because they didn’t invest in equally rockin’ content for their website, so none of the click-throughs turns into leads.

What do these companies all have in common? They all had digital marketing strategies that failed to pay off because although they each had great parts, they didn’t consider how each part impacts the whole.

The Online Marketing Circle of Life

There are three steps that nearly every successful digital  marketing campaign follows:

Create ► Optimize ► Promote

  1. Create high-quality content that is relevant and will resonate with your target audience.
  2. Optimize your content using sound SEO strategy. (No black-hat tactics!)
  3. Promote your content using social media.

What do you do after that? The same thing. Do these three things repeatedly and consistently, and your digital marketing can do great things. If you’ve got great, optimized content, social media can help you both get the exposure it deserves and build up a solid backlink portfolio. Plus, great content paired with the exposure that social media offers can position you or your company as an industry expert and thought leader.

Why You Can’t Forget the Social

For a long time, just having the right keywords at the right ratios was pretty much enough to give websites the SERP results needed for success, but that’s no longer the case. And for those who are knee-deep in SEO and the technical aspects of search engine optimization, it can be easy to forget how important social is in the equation. Before you dismiss social as irrelevant to SEO, remember:

  • Social media creates backlinks, which is good news for SEO.
  • Google factors in social media influence, which is based on social signals like Facebook posts, shares and Tweets.
  • If you’ve got great content, social media can help you do the “heavy lifting” of promoting it and getting it out there long after you’ve stopped actively promoting it.

Ready to add social media to your digital marketing mix? Call us at 414-208-0700 or fill out our contact form today for a free consultation!

By |2015-08-04T21:40:21+00:00August 4, 2015|
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