Write a Marketing Plan for Your Home
Business
Many people include their marketing
plan as a section in their business plan.
Really, though, marketing is important enough that it
deserves a plan of its own, separate from the technical
details of the business. Here’s what your marketing plan
should include.
Your Marketing
Strategy
It might sound silly, but it’s good to get the
core of your marketing plan written down, just so people
can see what the rest of your plan is aiming at. Keeping
your strategy in mind can also be good when you receive
offers to place ads here, there and everywhere – you can
ask yourself whether it really fits in with your overall
strategy.
Your Competitors
You should have a list of everyone in your area
who could be considered to be a competitor, followed by
how you plan to differentiate yourself from
them.
Advertising
Your marketing plan should contain a
comprehensive list of all the advertising you plan to
undertake. This includes a website, advertising in
newspapers, leaflets, and so on. For each method of
advertising you should list an estimated cost, and the
number of customers you expect the advertising to bring
in. This allows you to work out your ‘cost of
acquisition’, which is how much you need to spend on
advertising to bring in a customer. The market works out
so that this will be more for higher-end customers, and
less for lower-end ones.
Pricing
Your marketing plan should also list all of the
pricing policies you plan to have, as well as any special
offers that you think will be good. That doesn’t mean
that you can’t make up new offers later, but it’s still
good to have some on the plan for the
long-term.
An Example
The Catering & Cake Co.: Marketing
Plan
Strategy: Our marketing strategy will be
to advertise sufficiently that we will be the first
company coming to mind when catering is needed in the
Anytown/Othertown area. Marketing will be especially
targeted towards people arranging weddings and people
planning corporate events, so we will always be looking
out for new ways to reach these customers. We will not
repeat any marketing effort where the COA proves to be
more than 20% of the profit those customers
provide.
Competitors: In the Anytown area, the
established catering companies are Cathy’s Catering and
Funfoods. Cathy’s Catering mainly cater for low-end
corporate events, while Funfoods specialise in food for
children’s parties. Our position in the middle-market
means that we would be unlikely to provide children’s
birthday cakes, and could provide a higher-quality
alternative to Cathy’s Catering for corporate
customers.
The company that we believe would be our
main competitor is Luxury Food and Cakes, based in the
Othertown area. They serve the same kinds of food we plan
to, and to similar events. However, we differentiate
ourselves from them by offering our food at far lower
prices. While they use more expensive ingredients, our
taste tests have shown that most consumers are unable to
tell in blind taste tests which food cost more. Offering
mostly indistinguishable quality at a lower price gives
us a powerful way to move in on Luxury’s
customers.
Advertising (in order of
decreasing cost-effectiveness):
Leafleting $0.01 printing per leaflet,
10,000 leaflets, plus delivery at $100 = $200.
Projected 50 customers. COA $4.
Local newspaper $500 per half page, run
once monthly. Projected 100 customers, COA $5.
Corporate mailshots $0.10 printing per
mail, 100 mails, plus delivery at $20 = $30.
Projected 3 customers, COA $10 (however, customers are
high-value).
‘Weddings’ magazine $200 quarter page,
quarterly. Projected 20 customers, COA $10.
Pricing:
Basic catering: cost + 50%.
Deluxe catering: cost + 70%.
Cake: cost + 100%.
Large cake: cost + 80%.
Personalised cake (large only): cost +
120%.
Special Offers: Business is slower in
winter than in summer, so there are special winter deals.
For example, we plan to offer ‘every third person free’
on basic catering to give extra value for corporate
functions in the winter months (November, December,
January, February). There will also be a ‘free champagne’
offer with the deluxe catering in these
months.
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