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Three Keys To Sound Marketing Plans For Your Food Manufacturing Business

How effectively are you marketing your food manufacturing business? How are you integrating marketing principles into your business strategy to not only keep existing customers walking through the door, but attract new ones as well? Are you marketing your business at all?

How effectively are you marketing your food manufacturing business? How are you integrating marketing principles into your business strategy to not only keep existing customers walking through the door, but attract new ones as well? Are you marketing your business at all?

Don’t feel bad if you’ve answered no to one or more of these questions. To some people marketing can be a rather scary concept — something they know they should be doing on some level, but maybe not quite sure how to go about it. To others, marketing is an expense and something practiced without a plan or on an ad hoc basis. And usually when either scenario is the case, it gets pushed to the side.

But marketing shouldn’t be viewed as a daunting task. When used properly, it works. So let’s start changing perceptions today, and begin to use marketing to better position your business to capture a larger share of the market.

Outlining objectives

Before launching any sort of marketing tactic, the first thing you need to do is identify your objectives, i.e. what are you trying to accomplish? In considering objectives, you must know who your audience is, or more specifically, who you are trying to influence. When thinking of the objectives for your business, think big picture. For example:

  • Where do you envision your business being in one, two and five years from now?
  • Are you looking to expand your services and products into bigger retailers?
  • Are you looking to expand your company’s brand(s) or private-label brand(s)?
  • Are you trying to raise awareness of your business and separate yourself in a crowded market?

Along with identifying objectives, a second part of this step is to determine desired results and establish timelines for each one. For example, if you would like to expand your services and products into bigger retailers, what is your target percentage increase, and when are you forecasting to reach that mark: six months, one year, 18 months?

Listing results and timelines not only helps you stay focused on the big picture of what you’re trying to achieve, but serves as a benchmark to measure success against. Objectives are measurable. If you’ve achieved your results within the timeline, mission accomplished. But if the effort has fallen short, a reevaluation of your strategies and tactics is in order.

Establishing strategies   

Now that you’ve identified your objectives, the next step is to establish strategies. Marketing strategies are the ideas that serve as the foundation of an overall marketing plan. They’re approaches that help you focus efforts and resources on achieving your goals. Typically there will be three to four strategies that support each objective. Using the same example from above, if an objective is to expand your services and products into bigger retailers, strategies could be:

  • Establish brand awareness among a defined group of persons within specific areas or industries
  • Develop a comprehensive public relations campaign to deliver proof of how well you deliver products or services to existing customers
  • Deliver company capabilities directly to each target audience member through a comprehensive advertising campaign
  • Place emphasis on professional development of sales staff to ensure they have the tools needed to engage larger retailers

Much like the objectives, marketing strategies are long-term approaches are designed to be in place for the duration of the campaign or for a period until the objectives are met. They are generally tiered via priority and can be adjusted during the campaign depending on specific results.

Determining tactics and execution

With the objectives and strategies in place, it’s time to determine the proper marketing tactics and put them into action. Tactics are where the rubber meets the road, as they are the specific actions that will help you leverage your strategies to meet your objectives.   

In looking at the example above where we developed strategies to support an objective to expand your services and products into bigger retailers, what do you think could be some good marketing tactics to employ? Potential tactics for the strategies could be:

  • Deliver brand-based online advertisements for placement in trade-based and consumer websites
  • Develop news releases and case studies that tout your company’s breadth of product and high level of customer service
  • Establish a presence on social media sites to engage customers and tout your services
  • Host training seminars with the sales force and create new selling tools for them

Tactics should be chosen based on the criteria that directly support the strategies. Unlike the objectives and strategies, which are designed for the long-term, tactics can be executed and have an end date of a short duration, or can stretch the entirety of the campaign.

Conclusion

As you begin to consider a marketing plan for your company, you need to consider objectives, strategies and tactics. All too often a business will run an ad somewhere or start a blog because they think they need to do “something” to promote their company; these are standalone tactics with no real strategy or action plan behind them. The best way to approach marketing is to develop objectives based on where you want to take the business, and devise your strategies and tactics to support your objectives. Following these steps will go a long way toward removing the unknowns of marketing, while delivering measureable analytics on which to judge what works, and what does not for your brand or company.   

Steve Staedler is a senior account executive at Brookfield, Wis.-based LePoidevin Marketing. He can be reached at 262-754-9550 or [email protected].

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