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Marketing Plans

Benefits of marketing your practice

Marketing is the planning and execution of the production, pricing, promotion and distribution of goods and services, to create exchanges that achieve individual and business objectives.

Put simply, marketing is about matching every part of your business with your clients so that:

You meet their needs.
They are aware that you meet their needs.
They are motivated to buy from you and,
They are motivated to keep buying from you.

If you don’t achieve these outcomes, clients won’t buy from you and you will go out of business. It won’t matter that you make the best product in the world or if you are very good at bookkeeping and administration – poor marketers go out of business.


Sell the Benefits

Clients won’t buy from you if they can’t receive benefits from doing so. Clients always ask “What’s in it for me?” when deciding whether to buy.

When producing goods or services, make sure that you provide clients with more benefits than your competitors. When pricing, make sure that clients are getting good value (in view of the benefits and the price) and you are making a good profit. When promoting, sell the benefits – make sure the benefits are prominent in your message and are clearly explained. Distribution should make it easy for your clients to buy the product and enjoy the benefits.


The Marketing Process

1. Research your Market Environment

Research your industry and your competitors, and establish who your target clients or target market are for your goods and services. Only once you know:

Who your clients are, what their needs are and how much they are prepared to pay, and
Who your competitors are, what they sell and at what price(s),
Can you decide how to position your goods or services in your target market(s) and develop a marketing plan to achieve your goals.


2. Develop and Implement your Marketing Plan

Marketing covers much more than advertising goods or services. When developing your marketing plan, consider how you will use the elements of your marketing mix to attract clients, meet their needs and keep them coming back for more.

The elements of the marketing mix are the 4 P’s:

Product
Price
Promotion
Place (distribution)

Product

To your clients, your Product is all of the features, advantages and benefits that they can enjoy from buying your goods or services. Your Product is not only the goods or services that your business offers but also includes:

People within your business and the service they give,
The packaging of the product or service, and,
The processes that you have to make buying easier and more enjoyable

The product element is the client’s entire experience of dealing with your business from the quality of client service that you give to the image, environment and facilities of your business premises.


Price

Price relates to your pricing strategy that includes the setting of prices for your products or services. Pricing should take into consideration how much the market is prepared to pay (market demand pricing) and mark-ups that are needed to cater for overheads, other costs and profit margins. The provision of credit to clients, the costs of credit and volume discounting and also aspects of pricing.

Promotion

Promotion relates to how you make your clients aware of your goods or services and the benefits that they can receive by buying them. Promotional activities include:

Advertising – where you pay for your message to be sent to your target clients through newspaper, radio, television, magazine, outdoor signage, web sites and telephone directories.
Publicity comes from sending press releases to print and media, giving interviews to the media and from favourable word of mouth. From these activities, information reaches your target clients through articles that are published in newspapers, magazines and TV, at no charge.
Sales Promotions are short term non-routine incentives that a business offers to encourage purchase of products or services that include coupons and competitions.
Personal Selling is the use of personal presentations and meetings to sell services. Effective personal selling requires the use of good interpersonal skills, excellent product service knowledge and the ability to sell the benefits of the goods or services to the prospective client.
Direct Marketing includes sending letters, emails and brochures to individual target clients. Often followed by personal selling or telemarketing, direct marketing activities normally use a client database to identify and contact target clients, and to record details about interactions with these clients. (Note: the option of promoting your business through Direct marketing may be subject to privacy legislation).

Place

Place relates to the distribution element of marketing and covers issues such as methods of distribution, distribution channels and the location of the business.

3. Review and Improve

After you have implemented your marketing plan, determine how well it has increased your sales and profits and make any necessary improvements.

If your marketing plan is written down it will be easier for you to see how your plan has performed and where improvements can be made. Where possible, establish goals and benchmarks so that you can identify more clearly how well your plan has worked and where improvements are necessary.

Should you have any further queries about the benefits of marketing, please contact us on 0121 355 4774 or email info@je-consulting.co.uk or send us an enquiry.


 
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