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The Marketing Best Practices
Newsletter
More Info?
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Steps for Creating
The
Business to Business
Marketing Plan
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By:
Amelia Kassel
www.infotoday.com
One of the fundamental procedures involved in any successful
business operation is creating and implementing a business to business marketing plan. A
market is a particular group of buyers—or in the case of libraries,
users or clients—who needs services. A marketing plan consists of
several components, each of which is described below.
Before writing a
business to business marketing plan, it is necessary to define your
target market and to understand its needs. This involves conducting
market research, which Eric Lease Morgan describes as using
transaction log analysis, circulation records, user surveys, focus
group interviews, and information interviews to provide insight on
what your customers really expect.
To write a
business to business marketing plan, follow the numbered outline below.
1. Prepare a mission statement.
The mission statement clearly and succinctly describes the nature of
the business, services offered, and markets served—usually in a few
sentences. Sometimes for larger companies it’s combined with a vision
statement that can be two to three paragraphs in length. Some examples
of mission statements can be found at
http://www.csuchico.edu/mgmt/strategy/module1.
2. List and describe target or niche markets.
In this section, list and describe potential groups of users or
clients. After you create the list, identify various segments of a
market. Segments can include specific types of people in a company by
role—for example, chief executive officer, chief financial officer, or
marketing director. Department heads are another type of market
segment. For segmenting the consumer market, consider age groups. In
addition, niche markets are an integral part of marketing. Within a
target market of attorneys, for instance, there may be niche groups
such as trial or malpractice attorneys. In some instances, targeting
by firm size is an important consideration.
3. Describe your services.
As mentioned above, it’s necessary to conduct market research to
understand your market and to identify the services they require. At
the same time, inventory the services you currently offer and identify
new services you wish to provide. Determine what it will take to
provide these services in terms of staff, expertise, and costs.
4. Spell out marketing and promotional strategies.
Various strategies work better for different target markets and,
therefore, several may be required to triumph. The key for successful
marketing is understanding what makes someone want to use or buy
services and what type of marketing strategy they respond to. This
requires you to learn needs, problems, industry trends, and buzzwords.
To get up to speed for a particular business market, read trade
journals and attend professional conferences to meet prospective users
or buyers in person. Become active in various groups whenever possible
and form strategic alliances. Find out what works best for the markets
you serve.
This is a trial-and-error process that requires testing and
interaction with clients or prospective clients, although reading case
studies and interviewing and consulting with libraries that have
already had marketing achievements is one way to save time. To this
end, I have included some references at the end of this article that
contain success stories of other libraries.
Basic marketing strategies include the following:
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Network, either in person or electronically,
by participating in discussion groups online where your target
markets congregate. |
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Direct marketing involves sending out sales
letters, capability brochures, flyers, or special offers on a
regular, repeated basis to the same group of prospects. Direct
marketing can only work if you speak the language of your target
market and contact them regularly. |
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Advertise in print media or directories, often
with a specific offer to reap the benefit of an immediate response
or sales. Advertising lends credibility (image advertising) and,
like direct marketing, must be continuous. |
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Devise training programs that increase
awareness about your services. |
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Write articles for local media or professional
journals and newsletters that describe the benefits of your
services. |
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Direct or personal selling is the one-on-one
selling, often on site at a prospect’s office or company. Direct
sales are a particularly costly form of marketing since you only
reach one person at a time. However, if you present your services to
a group of people at a company, such as people from a particular
department or several department heads, direct sales can be
beneficial. |
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Send out publicity and press releases through
local newspapers, radio, and television stations. |
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Participate in trade shows at the local or
regional level. |
When a strategy works, repeat it. But if it
fails, and you have done it right, drop it. The ability to develop and
implement each of the strategies above requires learning and honing
new skills. It will most likely be necessary to read marketing and
sales books, attend courses or workshops, or hire consultants and
specialists to assist you as necessary.
5. Identify and understand the competition.
As part of the market planning process, you must learn about your
competitors and how to position yourself in relation to them. Describe
your strengths and what you want to emphasize. Once you identify both
direct and indirect competition (for example, the Internet as indirect
competition), you can determine how and why your services are special
and benefit users in a particular way. You can compete based on value,
price, product, or service, or some combination of these. Your unique
position in the marketplace must be touted in your marketing programs
and marketing literature.
6. Establish marketing goals that are quantifiable.
Marketing goals can include setting the number of new clients you
would like to acquire, the number of people you would like to reach,
or the amount of income you would like to generate. Be realistic and
practical in establishing your goals. Take a good look at the
available skills and resources that you can commit to implement and
integrate your goals into your marketing plan effectively. Study the
budget requirements for the strategies you select and plan
accordingly.
7. Monitor your results carefully.
By monitoring results, you determine which of your marketing
strategies are working and which are not. Identify strategies that
generate leads and sales. This involves tracking and evaluating
customers’ responses to each marketing strategy. Survey or interview
regular users for comments about why they find a service important.
As
you get to know your repeat clients better, meet with them for
detailed feedback and ask them for ideas and suggestions about how you
can introduce your products and services to more prospects who are
just like them. Client comments are invaluable for creating or
enhancing your market literature, and you can also learn and
incorporate terms or language common to a particular user group
through this process.
Just as valuable, these interviews lead to
statements that can be used as testimonials (with permission of
course) and in future brochures and promotional activities.
Hints and Tips for Beginners
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Concentrate your efforts on finding customers
who provide you with ongoing or repeat business. |
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Create a customer profile based on interviews
as a way to understand existing clients. When you know why a
customer comes back, you will be able to identify more of the same.
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Stay focused on your target markets.
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Don’t scatter your efforts. This is especially
important for directing a particular marketing strategy to a
specific group. |
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Be persistent. Marketing projects are the
sorts of things that often need to be repeated over and over before
permanent change is achieved. |
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Be prepared to revise your plan as you learn
what works and what doesn’t. |
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Don’t be afraid of failure. When a strategy
fails, view it as part of trial-and-error that you can learn from,
and as a natural part of the process. |
This Is Really a Plan for Success
Any successful business must have knowledge about prospective or
current clients and must implement a business to business marketing
plan that is regularly
revised. Marketing is beginning to catch on in libraries, and
librarians are hearing more and more about it. Unlike the longer-term
strategic planning documents, marketing plans in libraries should be
revised annually, like a business model, and should reflect changes
and revised goals based on the previous year’s experience.
A
business to business marketing plan is an important tool for making your library
victorious in this age of change, where working smarter is necessary
to achieve your desired results.
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