1 / 29

Marketing Planning

Marketing Planning. Lecture 3 Karen Knibbs Marketing Practice – U14210 S2 09/10. Learning Objectives. By the end of this session, you should be able to: Explain the role and benefits of marketing planning Identify the stages in the Planning Process Understand a range of analysis tools

Télécharger la présentation

Marketing Planning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marketing Planning Lecture 3 Karen Knibbs Marketing Practice – U14210 S2 09/10

  2. Learning Objectives By the end of this session, you should be able to: • Explain the role and benefits of marketing planning • Identify the stages in the Planning Process • Understand a range of analysis tools • To appreciate the role of marketing control and evaluation

  3. Planning: Definitions “A systematic process of forecasting the future business environment and deciding on the most appropriate goals, objectives and positions for best exploiting that environment.” Planning is anactivity and a process= formalised The marketing PLAN; “Provides clear and unambiguous statement [of intent] about the strategies and actions that will be implemented, by whom, when and with what [anticipated/required] outcomes.” Kotler et al (2005)

  4. Why Plan? • Planning helps: • to develop systematic, long-term thinking • to create an organised approach • to develop specificity & consistency • to get agreement from colleagues & support from non-marketers • common goals and mutual benefits • to identify sources of competitive advantage

  5. Benefits of Planning Brassington & Pettitt, (2006)

  6. Rationale for planning • Planning should answer questions including: • Why are we here? • What business are we in? • Where are we now? = S&W • What issues do we face? • PESTLE analysis / =O&T • Where do we want to be? • Goals vs. capabilities • How do we get there? • Activities and Controls

  7. Planning coordinates all marketing activity Last semester in Principles of Marketing, we looked one-by-one at many elements of a Marketing Plan, so now we need to link these together: • Environmental analysis: PESTLE, SWOT • Understanding customers: Buyer Behaviour • Setting strategy: Segmentation, targeting and positioning • 4P’s/ 7P’s Marketing Mix: Marketing Programme

  8. Planning framework McDonald (2007) 1. Mission Phase One – Goal Setting 2. Corporate Objectives 3. Marketing Audit • Environmental analysis: PESTLE, SWOT • Understanding customers: Buyer Behaviour • Segmentation, targeting and positioning • 4P’s/ 7P’s Marketing Mix Phase Two – Situation Review 4. SWOT Analyses 5. Assumptions = Core strategy 6. Marketing objectives & strategies Phase Three – Strategy Formation 7. Estimated results 8. Alternative plans & mixes Phase Four – Resource Allocation & Monitoring 9. Budget Measurement & Review 10. 1st yr detailed implementation plan

  9. 1 2 3 6 5 4 7 8 Brassington & Pettitt, (2006) Other Authors’ suggested contents • Executive summary • Situation Analysis • Market Summary • targets, demo-graphics , needs, trends, growth • SWOT Analysis • Competition • Product Offering • CSF’s – opportunities and threats • Marketing Strategy • Mission • Marketing Objectives • Financial Objectives • Target markets • Positioning • Strategies • Marketing Mix • Marketing Research • Financials • Sales vs. Expense Forecasts • Controls • Implementation • Milestones • Marketing Organisation • Contingency Planning • Kotler & Keller (2009)

  10. Marketing Planning for Small Businesses (SME) Brassington & Pettitt, (2006)

  11. Executive Summary / Mission statement • Should contain: • brief overview of the proposed plan • main objectives & recommendations • clear indication of timescales involved • And allow senior management to quickly grasp the plan’s major points Day (1990) 4 characteristics of effective mission statements: • Future oriented • Reflects value and orientations of the leader • States strategic purpose • Enabling – provides clear guidelines for each SBU

  12. Group Vision & Mission

  13. Mission statement or Corporate objectives Sets out: • Specific long-term objectives for the company and organisation as a whole • Like all objectives, should be SMART: • Specific, Measurable, Actionable, Realistic, Timed Objectives will include: • Performance Objectives • Directional Objectives • External Objectives • Internal Objectives

  14. Internal External Internal & External Current marketing situation or AUDIT Should include: • Market situation • Competitive situation • Macro environment situation • (PESTLE) • Product situation • Price situation • Promotion situation • Place (distribution) situation

  15. Situation Audit

  16. SWOT Analysis

  17. Opportunity and issue Analysis • Should include: • Strengths and Weaknesses • Opportunities and Threats • Issue analysis • defining the main or critical issues / CSF’s (issues given priority weightings) the plan must address

  18. Setting Objectives Types of Objectives: • Quantitative targets - e.g. financial, operating, etc. • Philosophical targets - vision and values. • Qualitative targets - service levels, etc. • These are be expressed in terms of: • Corporate objectives • Marketing objectives • Financial objectives • Objectives need prioritising and to be SMART: • Specific • Measurable • Achievable (Actionable) • Realistic • Timed (timescale provided)

  19. Qualitative targets Brassington & Pettitt, (2006)

  20. Marketing Strategy • Includes: • target market • positioning • marketing mix • customer service • research and development • marketing research

  21. Marketing Strategies and Actions • Strategic Actions provide the means by which a company sets out to achieve its marketing objectives. Achieved by (one or more): • Repositioning the product • Improving product packaging / other mix elements • Amending prices • Improving productivity • Standardisation • Changing sales or customer mix

  22. Action Programmes • Attempts to answer: • what will be done? • when? • who by? • at what cost and using which resources?

  23. Marketing & other Departments • Marketing has a bridging / integration role with other operational departments: • Research & Development (R&D) • Engineering • Purchasing • Manufacturing • Operations • Finance & Accounts • Credit

  24. Marketing Programme Sample from Boudler Stop Café • Marketing plan: • Turning strategies into implementable actions. • A detailed written statement specifying target markets, marketing programmes, responsibilities, time scales and resources to be used within the defined budgets. • Marketing (Action) programmes: • Actions, often tactical, using marketing mix variables to gain advantage within target market. • Specify means of implementing the marketing strategy. • Detailed as part of the marketing plan.

  25. Control and Evaluation Process • Measures include: • performance measurements • evaluation mechanisms • feedback mechanisms • contingency planning • Budgets / Profit & Loss Brassington & Pettitt, (2006)

  26. Marketing Costs and Profitability Analysis Brassington & Pettitt, (2006)

  27. Problems with planning • Companies become obsessed with the process or technique rather than the actual content and delivery of the plan!! • Unreliable or insufficient market research data can make plans flawed from beginning! • New companies • too busy? • Small companies • not important/ no skills/ restrictive? • Mature companies • Unnecessary / cumbersome? • Fast changing markets • not useful / responsive? • However all organisations should plan!

  28. Enhancing customer service Increasing profitability Vs. Long-term value creation Short-term profit Vs. Revenue maximisation Cost minimisation Vs. Marketing Planning is Essential! Conflicting pressures make choices difficult:

  29. Further reading Chapters as per Unit handbook. Texts: • Burk Wood, M., (2007). Essential guide to Marketing Planning. Harlow: FT Prentice Hall. • Hatton (2000). The definitive guide to marketing planning. • Kotler,(2003). Marketing Management. • McDonald, M., (2005). Marketing Plans: how to prepare them, how to use them. Oxford: Elsevier/Butterworth-Heinemann. • McDonald & Payne, (2006) (2e). Marketing plans for service businesses. • Westwood, (2004) (2e). How to write a marketing plan. Journal articles: • Gilmore, Carson, & Grant (2001). SME marketing in practice. Marketing Intelligence and Planning. 19 (1), p6-11. • Greenley, Hooley & Saunders. (2004). Management processes in marketing planning. European Journal of Marketing. 38 (8), p933-955 .

More Related