It is February, budget time again, that time of the year when planning comes to the fore, usually as an added job that is just a pain in the rear.
A common question at this time, facing this challenge, is ‘How do I write a marketing plan’?.
I am not going to tell you ‘how’ to do it, as it will change every time, instead, I am going to give you some signposts, cornerstones, parameters, that I have seen over my 40 years of experience.
There is an easy way, and a hard way.
The easy way is to download a template and get the intern to spend a day filling in the gaps. About as useful as an umbrella in a cyclone.
Better than nothing, but only just.
Then there is the hard way, because it takes time, and requires you to use your brain, and the collective brains of others, and can be an emotional as much as analytical exercise, requiring time, energy, critical thinking, and collaboration, and making really challenging choices.
Let’s define what we mean by marketing, useful if you are going to plan for it.
My definition of marketing is the ‘generation, development, leveraging and protection of competitive advantage’.
Not a definition you will find in any textbook, but mine, evolved over 40 years of practical marketing. None of the others are wrong, they just, to my mind, do not reflect the whole task.
Competitive advantage evolves, and comes in many forms, but without it, you are in a commodity, price driven market, and you cannot win in that. The pace of evolution is these days frenetic, so writing a plan, and leaving to an occasional reference before the next budget session is useless, it has to be an evolving document.
If you can find a template that helps you do that, let me know.
Marketing is about the future, you are trying to shape it, so you are dealing with unknowns that can be sometimes qualified…. not quantified, by the use of mental models, cause and effect, domain knowledge, customer intimacy, competitive understanding, tactical agility, and a whole range of other things.
It is a jigsaw puzzle, to which you do not have the picture, and many of the pieces you do have are wrong, and many are missing, so you have to experiment, make up your own, use someone else’s cast-offs, try making your own pieces to fit.
At the end it is about making choices with imperfect information.
That is hard.
When faced with a choice that appears to be between two sub optimal outcomes, step back, and find another way. That is in itself a valid choice, and often a very good one, as it makes you think.
The greatest two problems most corporates have in planning marketing are extrapolation and confirmation bias. Add 3% to last year, and only seeing what they want to see.
That is what you get when you use a downloaded template in place of using your brain to critically assess options, information resources and market and trend sensitive antennae.
To develop a successful marketing plan, you need to find the 18th horse!
A contract drover west of Bourke, with 17 horses, his only asset, dies, and leaves them to his sons.
1/2 to the eldest, who wants to carry on the family business,
1/3 to the second, who is a great son, but has other ambitions,
1/9 to the third son, whose life revolves around the Royal Hotel in Bourke.
Think about it: None of these goes into 17.
The lawyer at the will reading sees the problem, and lends them one of his horses. Now they have 18.
9, and 6 and 2 to each son.
9 + 6 + 2 = 17, so the lawyer takes back his horse, and everyone is happy.
Your task planning marketing is to find the 18th horse
Successful Marketing is like having a great hand of cards.
Each card has a value by itself, but in isolation, that is very limited, the value of a hand is in the combination of cards you have, and in particular the combination you have compared to the combination your opponent, and how you leverage that combination. Sometimes as in bridge, the combination of your hand with that of your partner is crucial.
Context of a marketing plan
Every business will be different, the point is that a marketing plan does not, ever, evolve in isolation, it is a part of the overall strategy, and must be aligned with all the other functional responsibilities to deliver on the strategic priorities
The marketing component will also look different in each case. It may be product based, geography, market segment, and many others. These choices should be driven by strategy!
Trying to build a worthwhile marketing plan without clear, unambiguous and understood strategy with the appropriate strategic foundation in place is destined to be nothing more than a useless file stored somewhere, for no particular reason.
Cornerstones of a marketing plan
Some of the specifics within the perimeters of a marketing plan are always determined by the strategic choices that should have been made.
However, the cornerstones will generically remain the same:
Your Objective, Current position, Customer Value Proposition, and your Ideal customer.
Once you have these four, the rest of the plan becomes easier, to some extent, a matter of mechanics, trial and error, choices between the options that will best deliver the outcome.
Each is mutually reinforcing, making a mistake with one, either in the formulation or execution of the marketing plan will have implications beyond the immediate.
However, overriding the mechanics, you need leadership, the whole process requires leadership, as difficult choices will always be necessary.
In the absence of genuine marketing leadership, just go back to the template, and save yourself a lot of time and effort.
You will find at the intersection of the four perimeters is a little pot of gold!!
Very hard to find, very valuable when you do.
Current situation: the marketing audit
You have to have a starting point, and it is worth remembering at all times that you are not the only one in the race.
You have to have done some sort of marketing audit to determine the manner in which you can best deploy the limited resources available.
Who is currently buying your product, why, how, instead of what, are they happy with it, and what about those customers who have left you, why did they leave, what can you learn from the leaving, and so on.
In most cases, what others do will have some impact on you, some you can anticipate and accommodate, but you cannot control what others do, just your reaction to it. However insufficient consideration of the impact of competitive activity is perhaps the most common mistake I see across all the marketing plans I have ever seen, and to be fair, those I wrote going back 30 or 40 years.
A long time ago I was with Cerebos, one of the brands I managed was Cerola muesli, at that time a successful brand, and I was keen to expand the brand footprint. I saw a gap in the market between muesli and corn flakes, this was 35 years ago, and there was not the wide choice we have now. We developed a half way product we called ‘Cerola Light and Crunchy’ and launched a test market in Adelaide.
At first we did remarkably well. The logic we employed was well accepted, the retailer sell in easily achieved targets, and consumer off-take was strong after the initial burst of advertising.
Then in came Kellogg’s with a look-a-like product, ‘Just Right’, and their resources just blew us away, Light &Crunchy never had a chance in the face of the weight of the competitive reaction by Kellogg’s.
That is a lesson I did not forget. With the benefit of hindsight, it was obvious, poke a bear in the arse and he is going to turn around and give you a whack, and I did not anticipate the power of it, and I should have. Never made that mistake again.
What success looks like
Unless you know where you are going, how can you plan to get there?
Are you setting out to build a brand, expand product range, geography, actively evolve your business model, whatever it is, unless it is articulated, you have no hope of making the right choices along the way, that build cumulatively to the planned outcome.
The strategic choices that need to be made to deliver the outcomes will be different depending on the desired outcome.
Describing what success looks like as if you were already there is a way more powerful way of articulating an objective that just extrapolating it from your current position.
By putting yourself in the position of describing what it looks like, you generate an emotional commitment to achieving it much greater that if you had just extrapolated.
I am going to get myself in trouble here by shooting a sacred marketing cow.
Building a brand, or ‘branding’ used as a verb is bullshit.
‘Build my brand’ is a response I hear a lot when I ask the question ‘what is your objective, what does success look like?
It usually is associated with a significant advertising expenditure. More often than not these days it is also tied to a digital platform. ‘I am going to build my brand on Instagram’ and some general babbling about ‘content’.
I hate them both equally. If I walk past a lump of dogshit on the pavement, it is a lump of dogshit. If I take a photo of it and upload it to the web, it suddenly, miraculously becomes content. To my mind it remains a photo of a pile of dogshit.
Using ‘Branding’ as a verb is a fallacy foisted on businesses by those who do not understand the process.
Building a brand is not like building a wall, where you just put one brick on top of another.
Building a brand is a little like building a church.
A church is just a building until it becomes a place for people to come for reassurance, solace, and to encounter the rituals that make us human, then they might come back, they might bring their friends. You do not need a building for that!
The brand is the outcome, not the building.
Tomb of the unknown customer
More money is thrown at the tomb of the unknown customer than any other source of marketing waste.
Unless you can define very well indeed who your customer is, you will be wasting most of any time, effort, and money you spend.
Defining who your ideal customer is involves choices, as you also have to determine who is not, and therefore you will not spend resources trying to reach and influence them. This is really difficult for most, especially smaller businesses, to whom turning away a potential customer is an appalling thought.
Over 35 years ago I took over as Marketing Manager of the newly formed General Products Division of Dairy farmers.
The brand of yoghurt we had was Ski, and Yoplait had just launched, and the market exploded. Ski’s volumes remained about the same, but share was reduced to single figures as Yoplait had taken all the growth for itself.
During a qualitative research project aimed at understanding who was buying yoghurt, which brands they preferred and why, the researcher asked the respondents to describe each of the major brands in human terms.
Yoplait was an educated, hip, self-reliant, confident young woman, who had her life in order the way she wanted it.
Ski was a reliable 50 year old farmer in wellies.
The advertising plan that was in place when I arrived was just more of the same old stuff, trying to convince ‘Miss Yoplait’ that the wellie wearing farmer was a good choice for her.
Might not have worked very well, so it was changed.
Customer value proposition
Peter Drucker said many things, amongst which was ‘The only purpose of an enterprise is to create a customer’
And he was right.
To create a customer you must offer them value they cannot get anywhere else.
How you define value is a key part of the game here, and once everyone else is offering the same set of things, the only discriminator becomes price, and then everyone loses.
The value you add has to be differentiated, and differentiated in a way that adds value to the customer.
The ideal differentiator is one that stimulates a customer to buy something they can only get from you.
Differentiation also allows you to innovate where you will get the most value for the investment. Innovate where you are differentiated!!
If I go back to the Ski example, we focused on the fact that Ski had discrete pieces of fruit in it, rather than fruit mashed up into a homogeneous mix that was the offer of Yoplait. We knew Yoplait could not offer pieces of fruit, their processing would not allow it, and neither would the brand rules inherited from the French franchisor. Not everyone in our target market wanted fruit pieces, but those who did, came to us. While it was only 1 piece of the puzzle, Ski was the market leader in a hugely expanded market 4 years later.
The key question to ask yourself about your value proposition is: ‘How likely is it to convert a potential customer’?
Putting a number against this is challenging, but an extremely useful exercise.
A few final words
First: How do you measure it?
Anyone who knows me knows I am a bit of a measurement Nazi, who subscribes to the cliché that you get what you measure.
You don’t always, at least as an entirety, you don’t. Some things like ‘Leadership’ and ‘Culture’ are vital but very hard to measure except over time and in hindsight.
A marketing plan is a set of predictions about the future. The only thing you know for sure is that you will be wrong, question is by how much, and how much you can learn and adjust as you go to mitigate the errors and leverage the unexpected.
Feedback loops are essential at every stage, for every activity, as implementation proceeds.
It is simply a Continuous Improvement cycle, and every CI tool that is used in factories is applicable to marketing.
Ensure you are measuring each of the components of the plan that compound to deliver what you set out to achieve, but always remember that the marketing plan is a compass, not a roadmap to be followed in detail at all times in defiance of new and localised information.
If your marketing objective was to extend your geographic footprint, then that is the right measure. secondary measures may be margin and customer acquisition costs, but if they become the primary ones, you will not extend your footprint because it takes investment.
Second: Marketing Investment.
Let me give a hobby horse a run………..
Marketing is an investment in telling the future, but is treated in the books as an expense, incurred in a period, reflected in the P&L.
Therefore short term thinking absolutely dominates the manner in which marketing is considered in the corner office.
This is the single greatest institutional barrier to sensible marketing, after finding people in marketing who know what they are talking about, and can do so without the jargon and cliché so beloved because they cover their basic ignorance, or perhaps the ignorance of the basics.
Third: Success is a Pareto distribution, not a normal curve.
I noted that Drucker observed that the sole job of an enterprise was to create a customer, and he was right.
Therefore, marketing is essential.
Commercial success does not come in the normal curve we are all familiar with, where most of the outcomes are within 1 standard deviation from the mean.
Great success comes to a very few, moderate success to a few more, and most enterprises are distributed across a ‘long tail’. It is a Pareto distribution, where 5% of firms take 95% of the outcomes.
Therefore, if you are to be in the 5%, you had better get your marketing in order, and to do that, you need the four cornerstones in place.
This is a link to a verbal version of this post delivered to a group of SME owners.