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Highly Effective Marketing Plan (HEMP), The : A proven, practical, planning process for companies of all sizes

Highly Effective Marketing Plan (HEMP), The : A proven, practical, planning process for companies of all sizes

Author: Peter Knight
Publisher: Pearson Education Limited
Publication Date: 31 Dec 2004
ISBN-13: 9780273687863
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Description


A Highly Effective Marketing Plan (HEMP) is a process that will dramatically improve your chances of profitably selling more of your products and services. And HEMP will stop you wasting thousands, maybe millions of pounds, dollars, euros or yen on marketing initiatives that should never see the light of day.
HEMP is a straightforward, simple, 17 step plan which you can use to address your problems and opportunities whatever their size, whatever your business, whatever sector you operate in. And it’s tried, tested and proven.
Each step is detailed within the book with explanations as to why each step is necessary. Also, the benefits of completing the process sequentially are highlighted.
This is the book that will help you to:

create a highly effective marketing plan that works – in just one hour!

learn from the relevant case studies and examples and apply these to your business

really understand your business and what it is that makes people buy from you

identify the real obstacles to your plan – and how to overcome them

gain tips for how to make sure your plan is successfully implemented
 


Table of Contents


Step One - Desired Result
As Stephen Covey put it, "Begin with the end in mind." The principle of this step is: the greater the clarity of the outcome the more likely it will be accomplished.
Step Two – What’s it worth?
If you’re going to do something then value it. And identifying a monetary value helps create a universal currency, as others might view differently the worth you attach to your project. For example, "this initiative will create turnover of £5 million and produce £1 million profit in 12 months" has a clarity which will appeal to any board or bank.
Step Three – What are the consequences?
All new plans have consequences. There are potential upsides and downsides – what are they? And what will be the consequence of not implementing your plan? This chapter explores how important it is to identify every possible outcome before the plan commences: often people will be more motivated by fear of loss than by the pleasure of gain, e.g. "consider what will happen if we don’t pioneer this new initiative and our major competitor does instead."
Step Four – Targets
Who are we after? Who will be buying your product or service. And don’t just go for standard classifications; really go to town gathering information. Build a picture of these people. How old are they? How much do they weigh on average? Would they prefer to fly British Airways or Virgin? When did they last go to the cinema and what film did they see? The principle of this chapter is that you can’t know too much about your targets.
Step Five – What do they currently think and do?
Now you know who you’re after, (step four), what do these people currently think about your product and service? And as a consequence of what they think, what do they do? Do they know you for providing one product and think that’s all you do, (and as a result buy your other product from a competitor)? Have they never heard of your service or anything like it, (and therefore they currently do nothing)? Thinking precedes doing: know what your targets think.
Step Six – What do you want them to think and do?
Following on from the last chapter, we can now look at what we want people to think and having changed their mind will cause them to buy your product or service. The principle underpinning steps five and six is simple: change the thinking and you’ll change the doing patterns of your targets, (whereas so many companies try to get people to change their "doing" without thinking first.)
Step Seven – What’s the story?
What are you actually selling? This chapter prompts the exercise of succinctly writing down exactly what’s on offer. This exercise is amazing for many people who whilst believing they know what they do actually discover that either they don’t or they can’t adequately describe it.
Step Eight – The one big thing (10 second sell)
All too often peoples’ description of their service or product are boring and confusing filled with far too much irrelevant detail. This chapter distills down to the ONE big thing on offer. This chapter is what Pearson calls "The 10 second sell", and you know how effective that is.
Step Nine – What’s the benefit?
This step looks at the one big thing and asks the question: so what? What do you do for the target customer? Does this benefit them significantly? Is it compelling and how does it compare to the competition?
Step Ten – Know yourself
Is your current personality appropriate for the product or service you’re offering? There’s no point your being seen as British Airways if your product is designed for Virgin customers. There’s a built in disadvantage, which is unnecessary, for a traditional old-fashioned company offering a service which will primarily appeal to youth. This step asks the question: do you need to review the personality of your company for this new product or service to work? There are lots of examples of


Author Description


Peter Knight has run small, medium and large companies and today is Founder & Chairman of Phoenix plc, a marketing communications agency which works with clients including Motorola, First Choice, Laing, Harry Ramsden’s and many more. Phoenix employs 60 people at The Chapel of Ideas – a converted church – all of whom are engaged in effective communications via all media.
Peter is a TEC International speaker and won the speaker of the year award in 2002. He regularly is engaged by clients to speak and facilitate at conferences, business retreats & strategy planning workshops, and he also contributes to several trade publications.






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