Start-up tips
Once you've
developed your marketing strategy, there is a "Seven
P Formula" you should use to continually evaluate
and reevaluate your business activities. These seven are: product,
price, promotion, place, packaging, positioning and people. As products,
markets, customers and needs change rapidly, you must continually
revisit these seven Ps to make sure you're on track and achieving
the maximum results possible for you in today's marketplace.
Product
To begin with,
develop the habit of looking at your product as though you were
an outside marketing consultant brought in to help your company
decide whether or not it's in the right business at this time. Ask
critical questions such as, "Is your current product or service,
or mix of products and services, appropriate and suitable for the
market and the customers of today?"
Whenever you're
having difficulty selling as much of your products or services as
you'd like, you need to develop the habit of assessing your business
honestly and asking, "Are these the right products or services
for our customers today?"
Is there any
product or service you're offering today that, knowing what you
now know, you would not bring out again today? Compared to your
competitors, is your product or service superior in some significant
way to anything else available? If so, what is it? If not, could
you develop an area of superiority? Should you be offering this
product or service at all in the current marketplace?
Prices
The second P
in the formula is price. Develop the habit of continually examining
and reexamining the prices of the products and services you sell
to make sure they're still appropriate to the realities of the current
market. Sometimes you need to lower your prices. At other times,
it may be appropriate to raise your prices. Many companies have
found that the profitability of certain products or services doesn't
justify the amount of effort and resources that go into producing
them. By raising their prices, they may lose a percentage of their
customers, but the remaining percentage generates a profit on every
sale. Could this be appropriate for you?
Promotion
The third habit
in marketing and sales is to think in terms of promotion all the
time. Promotion includes all the ways you tell your customers about
your products or services and how you then market and sell to them.
Small changes
in the way you promote and sell your products can lead to dramatic
changes in your results. Even small changes in your advertising
can lead immediately to higher sales. Experienced copywriters can
often increase the response rate from advertising by 500 percent
by simply changing the headline on an advertisement.
Place
The fourth P
in the marketing mix is the place where your product or service
is actually sold. Develop the habit of reviewing and reflecting
upon the exact location where the customer meets the salesperson.
Sometimes a change in place can lead to a rapid increase in sales.
Packaging
The fifth element
in the marketing mix is the packaging. Develop the habit of standing
back and looking at every visual element in the packaging of your
product or service through the eyes of a critical prospect. Remember,
people form their first impression about you within the first 30
seconds of seeing you or some element of your company. Small improvements
in the packaging or external appearance of your product or service
can often lead to completely different reactions from your customers.
Positioning
The next P is
positioning. You should develop the habit of thinking continually
about how you are positioned in the hearts and minds of your customers.
How do people think and talk about you when you're not present?
How do people think and talk about your company? What positioning
do you have in your market, in terms of the specific words people
use when they describe you and your offerings to others?
Develop the
habit of thinking about how you could improve your positioning.
Begin by determining the position you'd like to have. If you could
create the ideal impression in the hearts and minds of your customers,
what would it be? What would you have to do in every customer interaction
to get your customers to think and talk about in that specific way?
What changes do you need to make in the way interact with customers
today in order to be seen as the very best choice for your customers
of tomorrow?
People
The final P
of the marketing mix is people. Develop the habit of thinking in
terms of the people inside and outside of your business who are
responsible for every element of your sales and marketing strategy
and activities.
It's amazing
how many entrepreneurs and businesspeople will work extremely hard
to think through every element of the marketing strategy and the
marketing mix, and then pay little attention to the fact that every
single decision and policy has to be carried out by a specific person,
in a specific way. Your ability to select, recruit, hire and retain
the proper people, with the skills and abilities to do the job you
need to have done, is more important than everything else put together.
Many of the best business plans ever developed sit on shelves today
because the [people who created them] could not find the key people
who could execute those plans.