Marketing planning - the link with strategy
Businesses
that succeed do so by creating and keeping customers. They do this by providing
better value for the customer than the competition.
Marketing
management constantly have to assess which customers they are trying to reach
and how they can design products and services that provide better value
(“competitive advantage”).
The main
problem with this process is that the “environment” in which businesses operate
is constantly changing. So a business must adapt to reflect changes in the
environment and make decisions about how to change the marketing mix in order
to succeed. This process of adapting and decision-making is known as marketing
planning.
Where does marketing planning fit in with
the overall strategic planning of a business?
Strategic planning (which you will cover in your studies of “strategy” is concerned
about the overall direction of the business. It is concerned with marketing, of
course. But it also involves decision-making about production and operations,
finance, human resource management and other business issues.
The objective of a strategic plan is to set the direction of a
business and create its shape so that the products and services it provides
meet the overall business objectives.
Marketing has
a key role to play in strategic planning, because it is the job of marketing
management to understand and manage the links between the business and the
“environment”.
Sometimes this
is quite a straightforward task. For example, in many small businesses there is
only one geographical market and a limited number of products (perhaps only one
product!).
However,
consider the challenge faced by marketing management in a multinational
business, with hundreds of business units located around the globe, producing a
wide range of products. How can such management keep control of marketing
decision-making in such a complex situation? This calls for well-organised
marketing planning.
What are the key issues that should be
addressed in marketing planning?
The following
questions lie at the heart of any marketing (or indeed strategic) planning
process:
• Where are we
now?
• How did we get there?
• Where are we heading?
• Where would we like to be?
• How do we get there?
• Are we on course?
• How did we get there?
• Where are we heading?
• Where would we like to be?
• How do we get there?
• Are we on course?
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