8 Keys to a Strong Marketing Strategy
The Building Blocks to Successful Marketing:
It’s More than Sales and Advertising
by
Julie Chance
Whether you’re a Fortune 500 company or a one person shop, to be
successful, you must have a marketing strategy and you must implement it
consistently. However, it doesn’t have to cost a fortune and you don’t
have to be a creative genius.
The key is developing a marketing strategy that forms a solid
foundation for your promotional efforts. Implementing promotional
activities such as advertising, direct mail or even networking and
one-to-one sales efforts without a marketing strategy is like buying
curtains for a house you are building before you have an architectural
plan. How would you even know how many curtains to buy or what size they
needed to be?
You can develop a strong marketing foundation by:
1. Defining your product or service: How is your product or service packaged? What is it that your customers
are really buying? You may be selling web-based software tools but your
clients are buying increased productivity, improved efficiency and cost
savings. And if you offer several products or services which ones are the
most viable to promote?
2. Identifying your target market: Everyone or anybody might be potential clients for your product. However,
you probably don’t have the time or money to market to Everyone or
Anybody. Who is your ideal customer? Who does it make sense for you to
spend your time and money promoting your service to? You might define your
ideal customer in terms of income, age, geographic area, number of
employees, revenues, industry, etc. For example a massage therapist might
decide her target market is women with household incomes of $75,000 or
more who live in the Uptown area.
3. Knowing your competition: Even if
there are no direct competitors for your service, there is always
competition of some kind. Something besides your product is competing for
the potential client’s money. What is it and why should the potential
customer spend his or her money with you instead? What is your competitive
advantage or unique selling proposition?
4. Finding a niche: Is there a market
segment that is not currently being served or is not being served well? A
niche strategy allows you to focus your marketing efforts and dominate
your market, even if you are a small player.
5. Developing awareness: It is
difficult for a potential client to buy your product or service if they
don’t even know or remember it exists. Generally a potential customer will
have to be exposed to your product 5 to 15 times before they are likely to
think of your product when the need arises. Needs often arise
unexpectedly. You must stay in front of your clients consistently if they
are going to remember your product when that need arises.
6. Building credibility: Not only must
clients be aware of your product or service, they also must have a
positive disposition toward it. Potential customers must trust that you
will deliver what you say you will. Often, especially with large or risky
purchases, you need to give them the opportunity to “sample”, “touch”, or
“taste” the product in some way. For example, a trainer might gain
credibility and allow potential customers to “sample” their product by
offering free, hour long presentations on topics related to their area of
specialty.
7. Being Consistent: Be consistent in
every way and in everything you do. This includes the look of your
collateral materials, the message you deliver, the level of customer
service, and the quality of the product. Being consistent is more
important than having the “best” product. This in part is the reason for
the success of chains. Whether you’re going to Little Rock, Arkansas or
New York City, if you reserve a room at a Courtyard Marriott you know
exactly what you’re going to get.
8. Maintaining Focus: Focus allows for
more effective utilization of the scarce resources of time and money. Your
promotional budget will bring you greater return if you use it to promote
a single product to a narrowly defined target market and if you promote
that same product to that same target market over a continuous period of
time.
Before you ever consider developing a brochure, running an ad,
implementing a direct mail campaign, joining an organization for
networking or even conducting a sales call, begin by mapping a path to
success through the development of a consistent, focused marketing
strategy.
Strategies-by-DESIGN is a Dallas, Texas based firm that
helps small and medium sized businesses Map A Path to Success by providing
consulting, training and skills based coaching in the area of marketing strategy
development. For more information go to
www.strategies-by-design.com or call 972-701-9311.
|