Transforming businesses from obstacles to prosperity!

Thank you for taking the time to investigate what we have to offer. We created this service to assist you in making your company the very best. We differentiate ourselves from what others define as a consultant. The main difference between consulting versus counseling is preeminent in our mind.

A consultant is one that is employed or involved in giving professional advice to the public or to those practicing a profession. It is customary to offer a specific offering without regard to other parameters that may affect the ultimate outcome.

A counselor is one that is employed or involved in giving professional guidance in resolving conflicts and problems with the ultimate goal of affecting the net outcome of the whole business.

We believe this distinction is critical when you need assistance to improve the performance of your business. We have over thirty years of managing, operating, owning, and counseling experience. It is our desire to transform businesses from obstacles to prosperity.

I would request that you contact me and see what BMCS can do for you, just e-mail me at (cut and paste e-mail or web-site) stevehomola@gmail.com or visit my web-site http://businessmanagementcouselingservices.yolasite.com

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Mission, Vision, Founding Principle

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Groucho Marx

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Monday, April 9, 2012

The Right Marketing Plan

A marketing plan should be a written document, not scratching on a cocktail napkin or recalled from memory. To take your business to the next level requires preparing a written marketing action plan every quarter.

Without a 90-day marketing GPS to guide you to your destination, treacherous roadblocks and time-consuming detours can keep you from reaching your goals. Even if you are a one-person sales department, you should know where your leads are coming from.
Try not to look at planning as an obligatory to-do, but as a way to solve tangible problems like generating awareness and improving credibility. Think of it as a way to solve lead generation problems before they arise. Here are some checklist steps to guide you:

1. Attack strategy quarterly. Begin developing a strategy-driven marketing action plan every 90 days. Marketing plays a vital role in successful business ventures, yet many sales people often overlook its systematic implementation. Put down on paper how you are going to do three things:
-- Generate leads for the sales team
-- Build awareness of what your company sells
-- Enhance the credibility of the organization
2. Think strategic first. Too many individuals believe that the tactical plan -- the newsletters, press kits, trade shows, banners, 800-numbers, display advertisements, logos and giveaways -- comes before the strategic plan. Those promotional, publicity and advertising tactics (and there are hundreds to choose from) should be contained within a well-orchestrated marketing action plan. But first create your strategic messages that will generate leads, build awareness and enhance credibility.
3. Update what's happening now. The situation analysis introduces the company and includes:
-- A brief overview of the product or service
-- A brief overview of the personnel involved
-- A past history of the company
-- Its present performance
-- Financial information, if appropriate
4. Profile away. Profiling is a bad word these days, but it works here. The product or service profile provides information regarding the specific items you intend to market. By addressing the following categories, a profile emerges. They include:
-- Position Statement: The niche the product or service is intended to occupy
-- Description: The product or service described in detail
-- Pricing: The methods used to establish pricing. Questions such as, "Will discounts be offered?" are asked
-- Market maturity: The overall market maturity is addressed
-- Quality/Reliability: What level of quality is being portrayed? What's the relation to price?
-- New market potential: The potential size of the market is assessed
-- Delivery of service: An explanation of the service delivery mechanism is given
-- Packaging: Includes overall presentation of the product or service and its delivery
-- Image: The impression customers receive from employees, facility, furnishings, stationary, etc.
5. Make the first the last. The executive summary consists of a one-page, top-level summary of the entire plan. It's placed at the front of the document, but it's the last thing you'll write. Its purpose is to convey the gist of the plan to stakeholders, investors and anyone else who needs to know these facts in a hurry:
-- The scope of the plan in an outlined paragraph
-- The product or service being marketed
-- For whom the plan is being prepared
-- The time period the plan covers
-- The geographic area where the implementation occurs
-- The strategic messages and the tactics to get them to the target markets
If you manage to write two or three paragraphs for each of the topics, you'll end up with plenty. But no more than 10 pages, please. From there, you can refine your tactics. More important, you've taken a big step forward because you've written your strategy down on paper.
I invite your comments!

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for sharing such a nice information on Marketing, for more details click on Marketing Management.

    ReplyDelete