Sunday, June 09, 2019

TMJ




Combining creative and data is essential to campaign success — but it all starts with vision and strategy.

Marketing teams are passionate about using their own creativity to power the growth of the business.

Here is how I suggest you should approach strategy as a marketing team:

Set goals and initiatives

Everything starts with objectives. So, get clear on what you want to achieve by setting goals that are actionable, measurable, and support the overall direction of the company. Then establish the initiatives (the major areas of work) that will help you successfully achieve those goals. These initiatives should be time-bound to hold you accountable for getting the work done.

Research the market
Do you really know your audience? You cannot craft and share a meaningful message unless you know who you are speaking to. Do a market analysis — research your target market to understand who will get the most value from your product or service. Then document this information in a place that the whole team can access, whether it is a simple one-page note or broken out into detailed customer personas and competitive landscape analysis.

Know the benefits
Once you understand the market, you can create messages that will really resonate. This starts with crafting your positioning strategy and clearly articulating the benefits of your product or service. To get going, you can use a simple formula like this: (This group of users) have (this specific problem), which (your company/product) uniquely solves/makes possible by providing (this value).

Define the channels
Now that you have the right messaging, you need to distribute it through the right channels. From your research, you will already know the channels your customers frequent and trust — focus on those first. Then, explore new areas for promotion and placement. Be sure to define what success will look like and set performance targets, so you can continuously monitor whether those channels are delivering a solid ROI.

Prioritize work based on what matters

You can be incredibly busy — but activity is not the same as achievement. When you stop reacting and start assessing what comes next based on your goals, you will be able to better prioritize your tasks. As new ideas and requests pop up, weigh each one against your strategy. This will bring objectivity to the planning process and ensure you are pursuing strategic marketing activities.

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