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Marketing Plans

Marketing PlansYour company needs a vision, the vision demands a strategy, the
strategy requires a plan, and the plan requires action. A Japanese
proverb says: “Vision without action is a daydream. Action without
vision is a nightmare.” You need to prepare a detailed marketing plan. But it makes
more sense to call it a battle plan. Your plan should give you confidence
that you will win the war before you engage in the first battle.
If you aren’t introducing something better, newer, faster, or cheaper,
you shouldn’t enter the market.
A marketing plan consists of six steps: situational analysis, objectives,
strategy, tactics, budget, and controls.
1. Situational analysis. Here the company examines the macro
forces (economic, political-legal, social-cultural, technological)
and the actors (company, competitors, distributors, and
suppliers) in its environment. The company carries out a
SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and
threats). But it should really be called a TOWS analysis
(threats, opportunities, weaknesses, and strengths) because
the ordering should be from the outside in rather than the inside out. SWOT may place an undue emphasis on internal
factors and limit the identification of threats and opportunities
to only those that fit the company’s strengths.
2. Objectives. Based on identifying its best opportunities from
its situational analysis, the company ranks them and sets goals
and a timetable for achieving them. The company also sets
objectives with respect to stakeholders, company reputation,
technology, and other matters of concern.
3. Strategy. Any goal can be pursued in a variety of ways. It is
the job of strategy to choose the most effective course of action
for attaining objectives.
4. Tactics. The strategy must be spelled out in great detail regarding
the 4Ps and the actions that will be taken in calendar
time by specific individuals who are to carry out the plan.
5. Budget. The company’s planned actions and activities involve
costs that add up to the budget that it needs to achieve the
its objectives.
6. Controls. The company must set review periods and measures
that will reveal whether it is making progress toward the
goal. When performance lags, the company must revise its
objectives, strategies, or actions to correct the situation.
To facilitate the planning process, your company should work
out a standard plan format to be used by all the divisions and product
groups. This will make it possible for the plans to be reviewed, compared,
and evaluated by the planning or strategy office. One large
multinational corporation has a planning office that scores the various
plans before they are approved. The office applies such criteria as:
• Is the situational analysis fairly complete?
• Are the goals reasonable and reachable in the light of the situational
analysis?
• Does the strategy seem adequate to deliver the stated goals?