Sunday, September 25, 2011

5 Tips to Start a Marketing Plan for Your New Fiscal Year






Hosted by: technogranny
Title: Monday Morning Marketeer, How to Start Your Marketing Plan for 2011
Time: 01/24/20

Hosted by: technogranny
Title: Monday Morning Marketeer, How to Start Your Marketing Plan for 2011
Time: 01/24/2011 11:00 AM EST
Episode Notes: You never thought of doing a marketing plan for the year, shame on you! It's not too late. The snow has not thawed yet and guaranteed you will still have a few days where you do not feel like going out of the house, so let's get started with the basics, where do you start? And how do you make it sticky? Or how do you make sure that it is something you can and will follow?


Sticky and Stickiness are ways to describe marketing ideas that hold a certain value in a user’s mind. Within that value, the ideas must be worth enough to be shared with friends and family.
The concept of sticky marketing came from Malcolm Gladwell’s “The Tipping Point“. Gladwell discusses product epidemics and tipping points being made up of 3 Laws:
1. The Law of the Few
2. The Stickiness Factor
3. Law of Context
“The Tipping Point” illustrates that products and services if presented right, and under the right circumstances, can be irresistible and sticky.

The clock is ticking,
is your plan ready?
Whether you are reading this at the first of the  year or the end of it, the clock is ticking.  Have you ever heard that having no business plan is like having a plan to fail?  No matter when you are reading this, there are only a Only a few more hours until the clock strikes IMMINENT, yes imminent and that is what time your failure arrives without a marketing plan.  Soon you will  fin yourself in another month, another quarter, another year without a marketing plan.   Do you know what you want to accomplish this year and what about the next and the year after that.  This is not And I’m not talking about your year-after-year resolution to that becomes a wish list at the end of the year that your fairy godmother did not grant.  Have you taken the time to sit down and truly figure out what you want to achieve for you and your business in the next months, next quarter, next year?
 This is not you writing into your to do list or on your calendar:
Here is a list of generic goals.
A..   Get my business in shape
B. Outpace my competitior
C. Find more clients
D. Make more money
But how are you going to get there?
The buzz word now is “sustainable business.”  If you are jumping on this buzz like it’s the train to success, which it is,  you must understand the importance of planning. However, that’s often easier said than done. Hectic schedules and day-to-day business tend to get in the way.  Again it is biblical, “Write your vision on tablets.”
Have no fear! Even if you haven’t put a strategic marketing plan in place for 2011, it’s not too late to get started now. So, what are you waiting for? Here are simple five steps to kick you into high gear and help you develop a marketing plan that will generate results for your business.

1. Start with goals
Before you can put a plan in action, you need to know which direction you’re headed. Although this may seem like an obvious step, it can be often overlooked.
Sounds elementary, but
you have to set goals!
Take the time to write down specific, measureable goals for your business. Start with the larger goal in mind. Then, take it down into bite-sized chunks and look at what benchmarks you need to achieve on a monthly basis to accomplish the overall goal.  Not only will this exercise help you determine the best marketing strategy, but it will help hold you accountable along the way.
I will give you an example from my own seminar, Monday Morning Marketeer™  This is part of my Dreamweaver Marketing Associates plan which is by the way the parent company from which I run both my full service marketing company and all of my information products and media.
Goals from my Dreamweaver Marketing Plan Example:

  •   to garner additional listeners and sponsors for my radio shows
  •   To diversify products and add new ones that will augment my online platform and my business
  •   To create more stable income with diversification
  •   To increase my list and sphere of influence
  •   To keep my online identity fresh

I am not going to bore you with the bite size chunks that I broke these down into.  Everyone has to start somewhere and this is where I started.

2. Self Evaluation
The best marketing strategies in the world can’t help a business that doesn’t have a killer product or service. Before you do anything else, make sure you’ve got something spectacular to offer your customers.
What do you see when you
look in your business mirror?
I know, I know – we all think our own business is the best thing since sliced bread. But, ask your customers. Do they feel the same way? Does your product or service solve their problems or give them the results they’re after? Do your customers receive top-notch service?
If you’re not sure about the answers, talk to your employees and your customers. Getting their honest feedback will likely highlight some ways you can improve your offerings and make your business shine.
Here’s what I did in my Dreamweaver Marketing Associates Plan with regard to my media offerings:
Looked at my editorial calendar and how I could beef up my calendar for
TechnoGrannyShow
PositivelyPittsburghLive
Monday Morning Marketeer
Professionals with Impact
This all feeds locally into PositivelyPittsburghLiveMagazine.com
So I looked at:
· Web Statistics including hits, click throughs and unique page views
· Did my clients find the Pittsburgh Internet Radio and TV channel easy to use?
· Did they even understand its purpose?
· What could I do to augment content?
· Could I turn my current listeners and viewers into advocates?
· What did they think I should add?
· How did they think I could improve?
· I turned my listeners and readers into marketing constultants.  I asked them what they wanted, what could be better, how could I fix it.  And guess what?  I also took their recommendations.

3. Master the basics
There are a couple of marketing basics that are so essential, it’s like milk and bread. Branding and a websites fall into that category. If you want to move the needle for your business this year, you must have these in place.
It's simple, just do it!
Your brand has not only to be exciting but also rock solid.  This  is an integral to a successful business. More than just a logo, a brand is the personality of your business. In other words, your brand communicates who you are and what makes you different from the competition. If you haven’t nailed down your brand message, now is the time. Don’t wait another year to get this right.

In today’s digital world, an amateur website just won’t cut it anymore. A well-written, user-friendly website is a must for businesses. In a world that’s constantly competing for eyeballs, make sure your site hits the mark and doesn’t leave them quickly moving on to the next one.
These are some methods that I used in my Dreamweaver Marketing Associates.  I decided that I needed to  Promote my business by increased Internet marketing.
These are areas that I will share my ideas with you for various niches in the media portion of my business:
· Every Monday at the beginning of my show, PositivelyPittsburghLive I do the “local good news.”  I decided not enough people were listening and so I had my blogger put together the news in blog format with links back to listen and planned to  blast it out to my list every Tuesday.  The goal was to get 20% additional listeners and it is working, every month.
· The Roving Pittsburgher™ is another segment on the news which listeners really seem to like, even my guests who I force to listen to it before their roundtable interview on PositivelyPittsburghLive.  This is where I tell listeners where I , my good news reporters and other PositivePittsburghers have been the week before. Decided that this had to become more organized and profitable so I did a few things.  I purchased domain names and negotiated a new website, put a system into place to get more tickets for events and more dinner invitations. I also have plans to institute a monthly video contest where viewers can send in their own pictures which my staff will turn into a video.  The plan for the following year is to send out
the Roving Pittsburgher Report on Wednesdays.

· Post Script PPL         .
In order to raise the number of listeners and hit to my PPL Mag I needed a vehicle.  So I invented the PPL Post Script in which I would send out all of the syndicated show links that were archived in the previous two weeks.  This increased listeners.  This is a Thursday blast.
· To further interest local listeners I developed Positively Pittsburgh Live Perks™  This is a blast for channel owners on PositivelyPittsburghLive to put out special deals for PositivelyPittsburghLive listeners on DreamweaverMarketing Associates mailing list.
     

4. Make Sure You Get Noticed
Social media is definitely the new kid on the block. But before you rush off to sign up for a Twitter account, take a look at your current marketing efforts and determine what is working well for you.
For instance, if word of mouth is your top business generator, build a referral strategy that rewards your biggest fans for spreading the word. Or, if your email list responds well to your campaigns, look for ways to grow your list by encouraging your readers to share it with their friends.
Whatever it is, continue to focus your energy in this area and look for ways to amplify it.
Start some fireworks
about your business!
Oftentimes, the most profitable marketing effort we can employ is by taking a strategy that is working really well and turning up the volume.

If you have a mobile phone use down time to communicate on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, even Sprouter and what I am doing now in New Media, TalkShoe, also Blogger
I have Ning Network for Positive Pittsburghers and two Sundays ago sent out 1700 invitations to join.  :My newest strategy is to offer a free gift to everyone on the site once we hit each breakthrough goal for membership.  I have enlisted clients and local vendors to provide the gifts.  No cost for me and good public relations for them.

5. Stretch yourself
Once you’ve hammered out ways to improve already successful strategies, you can begin to venture into uncharted territory. Social media is the considered marketing frontier for small business and it can be a great way to engage customers, generate leads and provide customer service.
The reward is in the stretch!
So wake up!
But, before you take the plunge, do your research. Determine what you want to accomplish through social media. Find out where your customers hang out on line and where they go to get their information.  Also  look at what is working well for other businesses in your niche. A misguided social media effort will suck up a lot of time and produce little in return.
Determine your goals because your return on investment will not always be in dollars. It could be in visibility, additional hits to your website, additional inquiries.  These are my goals for my internet radio shows.
· Additional listeners
· Additional visibility
· Give out good information to create credibility
· Build relationships to increase customers
 So with that in mind I certainly hope you will use the share button to pass this blog onto friends and also that you wiill listen to MondayMorningMarketeer™ or one of my other four internet radio shows.
You can listen to a fifteen minute audio version similar to this blog at:
Monday Morning Marketeer, How to Start Your Marketing Plan for 2011


For More on this Topic:
 "Folly of Marketing Plan in Your Head, 101 Compelling Reasons to Write One" 


This blog post can be reproduced in its entirety with the following information:  
© Joanne Quinn-Smith 2011, Monday Morning Marketeer™ 412-628-5048    
Listen at:  http://mondaymorningmarketeer.com
Blog:  www.mondaymorningmarketeer.com
Or on its unique radio channel at:                                                                      
www.positivelypittsburghlivemgazine.com


Joanne Quinn-Smith is the Creative Energy Officer of Dreamweaver Marketing Associates in Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania and an expert on Web 2.0 Branding.
Joanne has also been designated by the 2009 U.S. Small Business Administration as the Small Business Journalist of the Year for her work with information relevant to and advocacy of small businesses.
Follow at:  https://twitter.com/monmornmarketer
Facebook:  http://www.facebook.com/mondaymorningmarketeer
Phone:  412-444-5197

Monday, September 12, 2011

MondayMorningMarketeer Market Data, Five Things to Determine, Three Reasons to Bother




Market Data, Five Things to Determine,
Three Reasons to Bother
Prepare Market Data Like You Would a Recipe,
Recipe for Strategic Marketing Success

You have got to know the lay of the land in order to prepare a good marketing strategy.  Like any good recipe you have got to have the ingredients and a process for preparation.  Your strategic marketing recipe should be based on good data. Good data collection should be used to start your strategic marketing planning process with data about your industry and specific market, and about your customers.

First is the data collection process.  The data that you will need to collect is: 

Strategic Marketing requires good data!

·         Industry and market data         

·         Customer behavior data

·         Online monitoring Data

And then you have to turn that data into good information that can help you in the strategic marketing process to turn suspects in to prospects and then clients and to turn activity into business.


·         You will want to collect data that reflects market research that you have conducted for the marketing plan.
·         What is Market Data? it’s data from Studies, surveys, market demographics and sales data

·         If you don’t have a large budget you may want to start with Census Bureau for Your Local Community, Use Industry Data, if you are starting anything to do with Food Service, US Food and Hospitality Industry.  Do a Google Search for instance on Manufacturing or the Fashion industry

·         Great site: 
http://www.grabstats.com 
Some Statistics Categories from this site  


·         eCommerce Statistics  (116)
·         Homelessness Statistics  (34)
Think you might be able to find something here?
·         ___________________________

Five Things You Need to Determine

1.  Determine the market, past present and future
·          
·         Preparing the target market section of your plan
·         The outdated and overused way of marketing is to create a product and then try to figure out how to sell it.  In this fast paced world where we now do business, that just does not work.  Before you even begin producing your product or designing your service you must be certain of sufficiently large, accessible, and responsive target audiences.
Investors want to know that you
have a sizeable enough market.
·          If your market isn't large enough, you can't reach it efficiently, or if it isn't ready for you, your business will fail, no matter how good your business concept.
·         A concise description and thorough understanding of your target market will give you focus when developing your product or service, designing your marketing plan, and forecasting sales and expenses. Potential investors want reassurance that you not only have a sizeable market but that you will have a platform from which to reach that market.  It’s also important to investors that you comprehend the opportunities and limitations of the market.
·         You say, why is she talking so much about investors, I am going to bootstrap this myself.  Well unless you are not going to invest in your own business, you are also an investor.  You are investing your time, your income and your ideas and dreams.  You need to make certain your target market is definable and reachable.
·          
·         When preparing the Target Market section of your written strategic marketing plan you need good solid data with the right focus.  To get you started focus primarily on these three areas:
• Description
• Trends
• Strategic Opportunities

2. Who owns the current market share for your product or service?
Ask these questions:  Who are the current players?
Who would be your immediate competition? Please don’t tell me there is none, this is 2011 there is competition everywhere for everything both on and offline.

3. Look at market trends, have there been any recent shifts?
Has a big player gone out of business?
Know the recent market shifts!
Has technology changed the playing field?                
Have celebrities changed their style or buying habits?
Has a movie or documentary created a trend?
What are they talking about on Twitter, FAcebook, LinkedIn, Four Square,
Check Out Google Trends and a publication called Ad Media.
Also check out the website of the Newspaper Association of America


Some of the things they are talking about on their front page:
o   Retailer Consolidation: A Shift In Buying Power .
o   Multi-Channel Advertisers: Clicks And Mortar Plus .
o   Opportunities: Emerging Players With Unique Needs 
o   Competitors: Traditional And New .
o   Population Changes: Workers And Customers 
Of course they are talking about the traditional media business but you can get an idea of how to organize your research.
.

4. Develop Pricing Strategy
Look at your costs.  Consider material costs and labor costs and overhead costs.  
What are your competitor’s prices?  What would you have to charge to operate at a particular gross margin?
Establish pricing techniques and brief description of these techniques.
Establish both retail and wholesale costing and pricing
Establish if you are going to price below the competition or
Establish value for pricing above the competition
Will you have multiple pricing strategies for different layers of your business.
 

Although your pricing strategy may be based on a strategy devised by industry standards you should study this plan and the strategies used by competitors. That way you will acquire a thorough understanding of how to price your product, and you can determine if your prices are in line with competitors, if they are in line with industry averages and what adjustments you can make to bring them in line.
The key to success is to have a well-planned strategy, to establish your policies and to constantly monitor prices and operating costs to ensure profits. Keep abreast of changes in the marketplace because these changes can affect your bottom line.
What’s the acceptable gross margin for your particular industry?  This is very important to know, it is a great success indicator if you can operate within it.


5.  Use the data to Develop an Effective Promotional Strategy

·         Advertising Media
·         print media (newspaper, magazine, classified ads, Yellow Pages advertising, brochure)
·         radio
·         television
·         networking
·         business cards
·         Ad specialties such as tee shirts, hats, buttons, pens
·         Online media
·         E mail Marketing
·         Ezines

Develop a promotional strategy that uses various media for promoting your business. Monitor the different media identifying those that most effectively promote your business. Concentrate on developing material for these formats that clearly identifies your services, its location and price.



Three reasons why you want to take the trouble here:

This data will help convince bankers and investors that you understand your industry, your local business conditions, and your realistic profit/growth opportunities. It will also help you in making key decisions in your business as you go along, develop and grow.
Research, Market, Test for a Strong
Plan!
Here are three great reasons to invest the time in market research:
1. Create a stronger business and marketing plan with compelling, accurate financial comparisons for your industry.
2. When you decide to grow and need investors or bankers, this will improve your chances when applying for loans, opening new accounts, or working to fund your business through angel investors or venture capitalists.
3. If you know your competition you will know where the pitfalls lie and will be able to determine your financial success and also possibly determine their weak points.



Watch for upcoming E-book on this subject, “Choosing Your Customers, Marketing to Them for Life.”
Additional information at:  info@mondaymorningmarketeer.com.
Expected release date September 1, 2011.

You can listen to a fifteen minute audio version similar to this blog at:  


For More on this Topic:
 "Folly of Marketing Plan in Your Head, 101 Compelling Reasons to Write One" 

This blog post can be reproduced in its entirety with the following information:
© Joanne Quinn-Smith 2011, Monday Morning Marketeer™ 412-628-5048

Or on its unique radio channel at:
Joanne Quinn-Smith is the Creative Energy Officer of Dreamweaver Marketing Associates in Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania and an expert on Web 2.0 Branding.
Joanne has also been designated by the 2009 U.S. Small Business Administration as the Small Business Journalist of the Year for her work with information relevant to and advocacy of small businesses.
Follow at:  https://twitter.com/monmornmarketer


Phone:  412-628-5048

Monday, September 5, 2011

MondayMorningMarketeer, 9 Marketing Objectives to Pursue in Your Strategic Plan





9 Marketing Objectives to Pursue
in Your Strategic Plan

Many crazy scenarios come to mind on this one.
Would you ever take off in a plane without a flight plan?  How about calling the travel agent to book a trip and asking her for a ticket.  When she asks where you want to go you say, “I don’t know, anywhere?”  Or how about the gal that walks out the door one day and decides to find a husband, no plan, no criteria, no idea of what she is looking for, she’s just going to marry the first guy who asks her.  (Actuallly this last one probably happens more often than we can recount here.)

You should by now have done some research and discovered who your target market is and you should have some market data so now you can make some educated decision on what your goals should be.  Your marketing objectives should be the means to achieve your sales objectives.  You should come up with marketing objectives that address every group. Your marketing objectives should follow the same rules as the sales objectives, and be measurable.  Even non numbers people like me will have to come up with some quantifiable goals that can be measured later to see if you reach them.
So here are tips for the goals and marketing suggestion portion of your plan.

1. Segment Your Target Market

You should have marketing objectives that address each group in your target market. Each demographic in your target market should have a predefined message.  If you are selling cell phones to teenagers and parents and seniors, the message is definitely not the same.  I read an article recently about a Las Vegas resort that targets toddler to 92 years olds.  What do you think, is the message unique for each market?

2.   Good Data is a Good Goal
For this reason, you need to have good data about the sizes of your market, potential market, and your current customer base. To this data, add information such as recognized opportunities, your customers' buying rates, and other behavioral issues. This information will help you estimate the numbers you need to attach to your marketing objectives.
For example, imagine this scenario:
a.  You know your 2,500 customers each bought an average of 2.5 of your widgets last year.
b.  You've also identified a new market of 3,500 potential customers (at your current market share percentage) that you're estimating will buy an average of 2 widgets each for the year.
c. In addition, you've identified an opportunity to add a service contract for customers that would cost 10% of the product cost.
Know what you have to sell!
Your marketing objective for existing customers could then be: To increase your current customers' buying rate by 20% and sell service contracts to 50% of those customers.
Your marketing objective for new customers could then be: Sell your widgets to 50% of the new market, create a buying rate within that group of 2 units per year, and sell service contracts to 50% of that group.


3.    Marketing Goal of Your Website: 
A large audience of fans or members
Establish success metrics for
your website.
Do not assume that if you build it, they will come, your goal for your websites should be:
a.  Give good information that makes it a resource.
b. Make it interactive enough that it becomes “sticky” and people revisit
c. Use a blog to make it more interactive and “sticky”
d. Engage visitors through social media
e. Make sure your numbers are measurable and you get demographics and search results, a large number of visitors tell you if your goals are being met.


4.    Marketing Goal for  Sales of Products or Services
Yes this information has to be quantifiable but needs also to be set apart for various segments in the market place, you should have goals for and measure:
a.  In person sales if you are brick and morter
b. Website conversions, those actually coming to your from your websiste.
Know when you have hit your
marketing bulls eye.
c. Social media sales:  how many clients do you want to convert from your social media efforts such as LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook Fanpages
d. Direct sales, what is your goal for those you will set appointments with and call on

5.    Marketing Objectives for Referrals from satisfied customers
Referral sales, how many sales should come from satisfied customers referring you.   You should have a referral program in place and goals as to how many referrals you would like to have from each satisfied customer and also be prepared to reward them.

6.   Goals for Leads to Potential Customers

Also if you have professional services businesses or businesses whose products or services are too complicated to be sold directly via the web. The object is to get interested visitors to minimally fill out a form with at least an email address so that the company can follow up and stay in touch or better yet get them to make an appointment to come in.


  7. Establish Long-Term Marketing Goals and Work Backwards.
First you need daily short-term goals, but how will you know what they should be if you don’t know where you’d like to be three to five years from now?  Once you have that big picture, then you can work backwards breaking this ideal scene down into short-term goals, defining these milestones that need to be achieved along the way to this long-term goal.  You should keep a list of resources you need, set artificial deadlines for yourself and do the best to keep them.  Also it’s important to follow an “ inch by inch”  plan by breaking everything into bite size pieces.
Work backwards:
·         Five years,
·         Three years,
·         Two Years,
·         One Year,
·         Six months,
·         Ninety Days.
Remember the old adage, “Mile by mile,it’s a trial.  Inch by inch it’s a cinch.”
Try limiting your ninety day plan to three specific goals that you want to accomplish. Write out each goal and put a due date next to it. Then write out each step that needs to be taken and what type of assistance do you need to accomplish it, what tools, what resources. Finally, take out your calendar and schedule in the time like you do your business appointments that make you money. This may seem like a passive activity but marketing is what is going to convert those suspects into clients by feeding your business pipeline. The way to stay on track with the commitment you have made to yourself by developing your plan is to put it in your calendar in indelible INK.  No fair using white out.

8.  Stay on Track by Staying Committed to Goals That Will Increase Your Bottom Line.
Beware of marketing goals that are just keeping you busy but don’t contribute directly to the long-term goas you have set up for yourself.  Some people confuse activity with results, don’t be one of them. If you don’t believe your marketing goals are worthwhile, you won’t make the necessary effort to achieve them. 

9. Start Your Day by Reviewing Your Marketing Goals.
Every morning review your goals.  Keep them in plain view – by your desk or next to your computer.  Having them constantly in front of you will keep you aware of opportunities that cross your path to help you achieve those goals.  I like to keep them on the wall behind my computer and then I have three by five cards with one goal scattered around-in appointment books, books that I am reading, on the visor in my car and yes, on the bathroom and bedroom mirrors.



Watch for upcoming E-book on this subject, “Choosing Your Customers, Marketing to Them for Life.”
Additional information at:  info@mondaymorningmarketeer.com.
Expected release date October 1, 2011.

You can listen to a fifteen minute audio version similar to this blog at: 9 Objectives to Pursue in Your Strategic Marketing Plan



For More on this Topic:
 "Folly of Marketing Plan in Your Head, 101 Compelling Reasons to Write One" 



This blog post can be reproduced in its entirety with the following information:
© Joanne Quinn-Smith 2011, Monday Morning Marketeer™ 412-628-5048

Or on its unique radio channel at:
Joanne Quinn-Smith is the Creative Energy Officer of Dreamweaver Marketing Associates in Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania and an expert on Web 2.0 Branding.
Joanne has also been designated by the 2009 U.S. Small Business Administration as the Small Business Journalist of the Year for her work with information relevant to and advocacy of small businesses.
Follow at:  https://twitter.com/monmornmarketer


Phone:  412-628-5048