It’s time to revise your marketing plan for the year.
In our experience working with different clients, this is something lots of SMEs and junior in-house marketers struggle with.
You might ask for a marketing plan for the year but instead you get back a content calendar or a wish-list of things they’d like to do. This isn’t a strategy, this is tactics.
What is Marketing planning? It is all about understanding your context, setting sensible objectives and then translating those into meaningful activities.
Here's a set of resources that will help create your marketing plan.
The combination of these two exercises will give you a better idea of what’s changing in your market and industry, and how these changes can impact your business.
Set the right objectives
When setting your marketing goals, it is important to link them to your wider business objectives. If your business goals and objectives don't link up then they are not able to help take your business to where it needs to be.
Consider:
By understanding your wider business objectives, you can see how marketing can contribute to helping you achieve them. But be sure to distinguish between the business objectives marketing are actually accountable for, versus the ones they aren’t.
Ultimately, setting goals is better than deciding it’s too complex and doing nothing. Set specific, measurable and numerical goals. Even if the goals you initially set turn out to be the wrong ones, you can iterate from there.
Once you’ve set your objectives, you need to translate them into strategies that you can execute.
So, to define which strategies you’ll need, take one of your goals and think about what marketing needs to do to help you achieve it. No need to get too specific at this stage - think big picture.
For example, if your goal is to bring in 100 new customers by the end of the quarter, your strategies could include:
Rinse and repeat for each of your business goals.
Take a look at how marketing strategy fits into this three-year strategy waterfall example.
The next step is to determine your tactics.
Tactics are the specific actions and activities you need to carry out to make your strategies happen.
Let’s use our earlier example.
Your goal is to bring in 100 new customers by the end of the quarter.
Your strategies are:
So, your tactics might include:
For each tactic, assign a key metric to track that will help you measure it against your strategies and business goals. This will help you determine how successful those tactics are and whether you need to make any changes.
Finally, set a framework for how you’ll measure ROI.
We should note that marketing ROI metrics can often be misleading if they’re measuring the wrong thing. There are numerous pitfalls that can seriously obscure your view of how well your campaigns are delivering:
To accurately measure ROI, keep things simple.
Here are three key metrics to consider:
Measuring these metrics will give you a broad view of whether your marketing campaigns are delivering ROI. Once you know that, go a little deeper and study your pipeline. Look at lead quality and how quickly they convert into sales.
If you’re struggling, see our guide on how to accurately measure ROI - and what to do with your findings.
When it comes to marketing planning, it pays to have years of experience in your back pocket to help you get it right.
Our marketing directors have decades of experience analysing business goals and translating them into meaningful marketing activities.
If you’re struggling with your marketing plan, feel free to get in touch here.