Marketing Plan Template: Exactly What to Include
To grow your business,
you need a marketing plan. The right marketing plan identifies everything from
1) who your target customers are to 2) how you will reach them, to 3) how you
will retain your customers so they repeatedly buy from you.
Done properly, your
marketing plan will be the roadmap you follow to get unlimited customers and dramatically
improve the success of your organization. To help you succeed, use this proven
marketing plan template, and the information below details the 15 key sections
you must include in your marketing plan.
Section 1: Executive
Summary
Complete your Executive
Summary last, and, as the name implies, this section merely summarizes each of
the other sections of your marketing plan.
Your Executive Summary
will be helpful in giving yourself and other constituents (e.g., employees,
advisors, etc.) an overview of your plan.
Section 2: Target
Customers
This section describes
the customers you are targeting. It defines their demographic profile (e.g.,
age, gender), psychographic profile (e.g., their interests) and their precise
wants and needs as they relate to the products and/or services you offer.
Being able to more
clearly identify your target customers will help you both pinpoint your
advertising (and get a higher return on investment) and better “speak the
language” of prospective customers.
Section 3: Unique
Selling Proposition (USP)
Having a strong unique
selling proposition (USP) is of critical importance as it distinguishes your
company from competitors.
The hallmark of several
great companies is their USP. For example, FedEx’s USP of “When it absolutely,
positively has to be there overnight” is well-known and resonates strongly with
customers who desire reliability and quick delivery.
Section 4: Pricing &
Positioning Strategy
Your pricing and
positioning strategy must be aligned. For example, if you want your company to
be known as the premier brand in your industry, having too low a price might
dissuade customers from purchasing.
In this section of your
marketing plan, detail the positioning you desire and how your pricing will
support it.
Section 5: Distribution
Plan
Your distribution plan
details how customers will buy from you. For example, will customers purchase
directly from you on your website? Will they buy from distributors or other
retailers? And so on.
Think through different
ways in which you might be able to reach customers and document them in this
section of your marketing plan.
Section 6: Your Offers
Offers are special deals
you put together to secure more new customers and drive past customers back to
you.
Offers may include free
trials, money-back guarantees, packages (e.g., combining different products
and/or services) and discount offers. While your business doesn’t necessarily
require offers, using them will generally cause your customer base to grow more
rapidly.
Section 7: Marketing
Materials
Your marketing materials
are the collateral you use to promote your business to current and prospective
customers. Among others, they include your website, print brochures, business
cards, and catalogs.
Identify which marketing
materials you have completed and which you need created or re-done in this
section of your plan.
Section 8: Promotions
Strategy
The promotions section
is one of the most important sections of your marketing plan and details how
you will reach new customers.
There are numerous
promotional tactics, such as television ads, trade show marketing, press
releases, online advertising, and event marketing.
In this section of your
marketing plan, consider each of these alternatives and decide which ones will
most effectively allow you to reach your target customers.
Section 9: Online
Marketing Strategy
Like it or not, most
customers go online these days to find and/or review new products and/or
services to purchase. As such, having the right online marketing strategy can
help you secure new customers and gain competitive advantage.
The four key components
to your online marketing strategy are as follows:
Keyword Strategy:
identify what keywords you would like to optimize your website for.
Search Engine
Optimization Strategy: document updates you will make to your website so it
shows up more prominently for your top keywords.
Paid Online Advertising
Strategy: write down the online advertising programs will you use to reach
target customers.
Social Media Strategy:
document how you will use social media websites to attract customers.
Section 10: Conversion
Strategy
Conversion strategies
refer to the techniques you employ to turn prospective customers into paying
customers.
For example, improving
your sales scripts can boost conversions. Likewise increasing your social proof
(e.g., showing testimonials of past clients who were satisfied with your
company) will nearly always boost conversions and sales.
In this section of your
plan, document which conversion-boosting strategies you will use.
Section 11: Joint
Ventures & Partnerships
Joint ventures and
partnerships are agreements you forge with other organizations to help reach
new customers or better monetize existing customers. For example, if you sold
replacement guitar strings, it could be quite lucrative to partner with a
guitar manufacturer who had a list of thousands of customers to whom it sold
guitars (and who probably need replacement strings in the future).
Think about what
customers buy before, during and/or after they buy from your company. Many of
the companies who sell these products and/or services could be good partners.
Document such companies in this section of your marketing plan and then reach
out to try to secure them.
Section 12: Referral
Strategy
A strong customer
referral program could revolutionize your success. For example, if every one of
your customers referred one new customer, your customer base would constantly
grow.
However, rarely will you
get such growth unless you have a formalized referral strategy. For example,
you need to determine when you will ask customers for referrals, what if
anything you will give them as a reward, etc. Think through the best referral strategy
for your organization and document it.
Section 13: Strategy for
Increasing Transaction Prices
While your primary goal
when conversing with prospective customers is often to secure the sale, it is
also important to pay attention to the transaction price.
The transaction price,
or amount customers pay when they buy from you, can dictate your success. For
example, if your average customer transaction is $100 but your competitor’s
average customer transaction is $150, they will generate more revenues, and
probably profits, per customer. As a result, they will be able to outspend you
on advertising, and continue to gain market share at your expense.
In this section of your
plan, think about ways to increase your transaction prices such as by
increasing prices, creating product or service bundles/packages, and so on.
Section 14: Retention
Strategy
Too many organizations
spend too much time and energy trying to secure new customers versus investing
in getting existing customers to buy more often.
By using retention
strategies such as a monthly newsletter or customer loyalty program, you can
increase revenues and profits by getting customers to purchase from you more
frequently over time.
Identify and document
ways you can better retain customers here.
Section 15: Financial
Projections
The final part of your
marketing plan is to create financial projections. In your projections, include
all the information documented in your marketing plan.
For example, include the
promotional expenses you expect to incur and what your expected results will be
in terms of new customers, sales and profits. Likewise include your expected
results from your new retention strategy. And so on.
While your financial
projections will never be 100% accurate, use them to identify which promotional
expenses and other strategies should give you the highest return on investment.
Also, by completing your financial projections, you will set goals (e.g., your
goals for your referral program) for which your company should strive.
Completing each of the
15 sections of your marketing plan is real work. But, once your marketing plan
is complete, it will be worth it, as your sales and profits should soar. To
save you time, I have developed this marketing plan template that can be completed
quickly and easily.