This written marketing plan
- Provides a method to spend the marketing budget in the most efficient manner
- Establishes the goal for Marketing to put competitors out of business
This blog will take you step by step to develop the ultimate marketing plan and deliver marketing strategies that destroy the competition.
Summary
Step 1 Internal Analysis understand your strengths and weaknesses
Step 2 What threats and opportunities are in the macro-environment
Step 3 External Analysis; Market Research (size, profitability, prospects)
Step 4 External analysis; Competition analysis (Strengths, Weaknesses, Capabilities)
Step 5 Customer analysis, (Needs, Wants, Likes, Dislikes, Information)
Step 6 Porter’s 3 General business strategies (the only 3 that survive long term)
Step 7 Organizing all of the information and implementing it
Internal Analysis is the first step in How to create and implement the ultimate marketing plan to destroy competitors
The first step in producing the ultimate marketing plan is to analyze the internal organization. In order to improve the organization from the customer’s perspective, you must change internally first.
- Develop a Detailed SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) for every function of all departments in your organization, including marketing.
Example Sales-SWOT on Prospecting, Sales Pitch, Negotiating, Knowledge of Competitors, Closing, sales skills
The purpose of doing a detailed SWOT analysis for the marketing plan is
HR-employee training
Marketing-uncovering internal strengths for communication messages to customers
Marketing-reducing marketing weaknesses to limit competition
Management-developing strategies to remove overall weaknesses and double down on strengths
- SWOT analysis (one for each department) on communication and coordination between departments, such as marketing and sales
The purpose of this is to remove silos and bottle necks to increase productivity among departments
Create a flowchart of all the processes in the organization and how much time it takes for each process
Example Sales gets an order sends it to whom? What do they do with it then? What is the time spent?
This information can be used to do future cost-benefit analysis, improve processes to increase productivity, a check to see if best practices are being used, and industry benchmarking analysis.
- Interview sales accounts for wins/losses and retention. Use product performance, sales team’s perception, company perception, marketing brand, marketing messages. Ask the question, where positive performance correlates with wins and where does negative performance correlate with losses
In order to succeed an organization has to show value and expertise. What metrics are the most important to the customer, target these first, this will provide the biggest impact for sales increases or retaining accounts. By brining your negative up to the competitor’s level, it just makes you even with competition; you must go that extra length to be better than them.
These items will provide a great detail of information that you can use to develop marketing strategies and the ultimate marketing plan.