ArticlesStrategic marketing planning IT’S ALREADY MID-YEAR! HOW ARE YOUR STRATEGIC MARKETING EFFORTS TRACKING AGAINST PLAN? How to Assess Marketing Progress and Refine Plan. For this article, we are making two basic - yet crucial - assumptions: 1) You have an annual business plan, and 2) You created a supporting strategic marketing plan - designed to realize the vision within the business plan. If you don’t have either of these things, then this becomes a short article: Do yourself a favor…take control of your firm’s destiny by creating a business plan with a supporting strategic marketing plan. For those of you that have made commitments to the value of planning: It’s time for a reality check. Conduct a Mid-Year Marketing Assessment against plan. Then, if needed, dig deeper and do a Marketing Audit. There are two basic reasons that we resist checking our progress against plan: we are fearful of what we’ll discover, scared of falling short; and/or we (think that we) simply do not have the time. To conquer this resistance, take these three steps to conduct a Mid-Year Marketing Assessment: 1. Form an Evaluation Committee, composed of representatives involved in the original creation, and execution, of the plan. This solidifies that it’s not just one person that has succeeded or failed; you’re all in this together. To ensure objectivity during this assessment, invite one trusted person outside of the original planning team – perhaps the Director of Human Resources; the CFO; an outside marketing consultant – anyone who has the firm’s best interests in mind but hasn’t been involved first-hand in the plan. 2. Divvy up responsibilities. To share the burden of accountability, assign each committee member to collect and analyze a specific aspect of the data. One person will summarize the state of the firm, the target markets, and the overall national (and global, if relevant) business economy – noting any shifts since the plan was first developed. Another person will look at the action plan calendar to determine which activities were carried out well; which activities fell short or were not attempted; and which new, unexpected activities popped up and possibly distracted or took the plan off-course. Yet another person will work with accounting to determine the ‘numbers’. These will include YTD labor/expense costs compared to pre-defined hard and soft returns – both anticipated and realized. Distribute all of findings prior to the off-site meeting. 3. Refine the Strategic Marketing Plan. Set aside three hours to meet off-site; all committee members will come to this meeting prepared. Use the time wisely. Create a tight, effective agenda: Introduction: Expected Outcome of Today’s Meeting. 5 minutes. Offer Feedback on Findings (distributed a few days prior to meeting). 40 minutes. Acknowledge Value of Hard and Soft Returns. 75 minutes. Refine the Plan. 1 hour. Document any revisions to the plan, and report progress on a bi-weekly basis. Change is inevitable, so it’s important that you be flexible with your plan. Through this Mid-Year Marketing Assessment, you may discover that you need to dig much deeper in order to set your firm up for marketing success. ZweigWhite is available to conduct a Marketing and Business Development Audit to examine your business development relationship-building cycle; marketing systems; team organization; marketing messages; collateral materials; and more. This audit serves to check your approach compared to ZweigWhite wisdom and industry best practices, helping your firm to make the most of its resources in support of the business vision. The ZweigLetter and AE Marketing Letter |
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