Monday, August 15, 2016

The Two Page Marketing Plan




Target Market (Psychological and Physical Descriptions)

The first item that I like to address in a simple marketing plan is the psychological characteristics of your target market. The psychological characteristics tend to center on the thoughts, needs, mindset, and feelings of the chief decision maker at your target client. If the chief decision maker feels overwhelmed with running a business, they may need someone to help them with a business plan and time management. If the chief decision maker fears a risk related to their business, they may need someone to help them mitigate or eliminate the risk. If the chief decision maker wants to rapidly grow their business, they may need someone to help them with sales, marketing, and business development. In each case, the thoughts, needs, mindset, and feelings of the chief decision maker are driving the purchasing habits of the business. To establish a psychological profile for your target market, it is generally best to solicit advice and input from your current clients on why they work with you. If your business is new, you will have to perform market research to your establish why your target decision makers will want to work with you. This is also sometimes referred to in the sales genre as your target market’s problems or pain points. If you understand what ails your typical client, you can align your messaging as a solution to their problems or pain points. This will be discussed in fuller detail below.

The second item that I like to address in a simple marketing plan is the tangible characteristics of your target market. The tangible characteristics include the level of sales, the number of employees, the lines of revenue, and the ownership structure. The tangible characteristics of your target market help define your target market in a way that allows you to target your marketing efforts more efficiently. If you work with businesses with less than 5M in revenue and less than twenty employees, you are not going to waste any of your marketing energies on multi-national corporations. If you work with multi-national corporations, you are not going to waste your marketing energies on closely held businesses. In each case, the physical characteristics of your ideal client help define the pool of prospects that should be targeted with marketing resources.

Messaging

The third item that I like to address in a simple marketing plan is the messaging that I am going to convey to existing customers, new prospects, and strategic partners. To build a compelling marketing message, it is generally best to tie the messaging to your methodology for meeting the chief decision makers’ psychological needs. If the chief decision maker wants to rapidly grow their business to build a more affluent lifestyle, it is best to focus on how your product or service will help increase revenues or reduce costs and achieve the stated goal of a more affluence. If the chief decision maker wants to protect the value of their business, it is best to focus on how your product or service will help mitigate or eliminate the risk to protect the value. With respect to most consulting businesses, the goal will generally be to increase sales, reduce costs, or reduce risk to achieve a demonstrated rate of return on the decision makers’ investment with respect to the value of the business. For example, more sales, if serviced or produced efficiently, will generally result in more profit and more business value.

Channels

The fourth item that I like to address in a simple marketing plan is the channels that are going to be used to convey your message. Your choices include, but are not limited to, direct contact with prospects in your target market, networking with strategic partners that work in the same target market as you, writing articles that directly speak to the pains and problems of your target market, and public speaking to members of your target market or your pool of strategic partners. Writing and communication with your target may also take the form of blogs that directly speak to your target audience and strategic partners or social media posts that speak to your target audience and strategic partners. If you want the messaging within each channel to be persuasive, you should seek to provide value with each communication. Value will often take the form of providing the target prospect with information that they can apply to their business to create immediate value. In terms of the hierarchy of the various channels, direct contact is generally the most effective method because it allows you to directly communicate with the target prospect without any middle person. Networking is generally the next most effective method because the act of the referral can help build the know, like, and trust factor before any initial communications commence. Writing and speaking are generally next in the hierarchy and each will be more successful if you are directly communicating with decision makers.

Metrics

The fifth item that I like to address in a simple marketing plan is the establishment of metrics. This is just a fancy way of saying that you should track where your prospects, clients, and referrals come from so that you can focus more time on the most effective resources. If you find that direct contact with clients is the most successful channel for you, you want to analyze how you compiled your prospect list, how you successfully moved the prospect down the value funnel, and how you ultimately closed the sale. If you find that 90% of your business comes from referrals (there is a heavy need to establish know, like, and trust up front), you want to analyze who is referring business to you, how you can find more of your ideal strategic partners, and how you can continue to provide value to your best referral partners.

Conclusion

The primary goal of this post is to help business owners develop a simple marketing plan that they can implement in their business in a short period of time. As the business becomes more complex, there may be additional items that need to be considered. But, this outline provides you with the basic elements of an effective marketing structure. If you would like to discuss how you can incorporate these principles into your business, please email me at bkerrigan@whcpa.com or call me at 774-306-6135.

Brian Kerrigan

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