A marketing plan is a detailed roadmap that outlines your marketing strategies, tactics, costs and projected results over a period of time. Your marketing plan and budget keeps your entire team focused on specific goals – it’s a critical resource for your entire company.
Some statistics have shown that up to 85% of small- to mid-size companies operate from a budget only — without a written plan to accompany it. This explains why so many marketers are tactically focused – they’re figuring out how to spend a defined budget, instead of thinking about goals and strategies.
Writing a marketing plan is a time-consuming exercise, but it forces you to think through your strategies and relevant tactics. A good marketing plan typically includes:
Note: You can create a detailed marketing plan using our guided, online template in our marketing planning and management app.
It takes time to develop a good marketing plan and budget, but it’s important because it ties all of your activities to tangible goals.
It’s also a great opportunity to focus on the future, generate new ideas, and inspire your team. Even a simple plan is better than none, but when you invest more effort upfront, you’ll have a better roadmap toward your goals.
Best Case | Neutral Case | Worst Case |
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Your marketing plan is a detailed roadmap to meet your goals.
You recognize that the time you invest to create a solid plan is perhaps the best time you’ll invest all year – it helps you work through new strategies, issues, ideas, and numbers. When it’s done, your team focuses on executing the plan and measuring your progress all year long. As a result, you’ve been able to hit your goals, grow your business, and enjoy the journey. |
You’re incredibly busy, so it’s difficult to invest the time in a detailed marketing plan. Instead, you develop a basic plan that’s based on last year’s version.
You include general revenue goals, general sales strategies, and basic campaigns; you stick with proven techniques. Budgets are based on last year’s numbers. You could be more ambitious with your revenue goals if your company were willing to try new things, but each year you stick with the tried-and-true. |
You don’t create a marketing plan. You have a budget, but the numbers are haphazard. Things change so quickly – why spend the time?
You take a similar approach with the strategies that should drive a marketing plan. You probably don’t have a positioning or brand strategy; you’re missing out on distribution channels or partnerships; your campaigns are ineffective and you may not invest in customer retention. A plan is a compass. Without one, you may be traveling in the right direction, but it’s incredibly difficult to stay on course – and that can drastically limit your success. |
Access detailed step-by-step plans in our new marketing website.
It’s free to use
Since your plan should address your budget and all of your strategies and tactics, you’ll need to review your brand strategy, pricing strategy and distribution channels beforehand. You’ll also outline your major marketing campaigns for the year since they’ll be in your budget.
Design your plan to achieve the goals that you define:
If you need to do anything to strengthen your product line and better support your positioning, address those issues in your plan.
You don’t need to list every campaign — just outline your major promotional plans for the year. You’ll need to set your budget too, so the more planning you do now, the better. Your plans should include:
When you’ve finished your plan and budget, it’s time to execute.
You may need to create new messages, literature, websites or other tools and processes for your marketing campaigns, but after that, focus on generating and managing your customers.
EVERYTHING YOU NEED FOR YOUR MARKETING PLAN PROJECT