Title: Principles of Business BUS101
1Principles of Business(BUS101)
- Donald R. Simon, Esq.
- Adjunct Professor - Digital Photography
- Spring 2009
2Principles of Business - Class 4
- Lecture Marketing 101
- Lecture Drafting a Marketing Plan
- Assignment Marketing Plan
3Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Most small biz owners do not really understand
the process of marketing. - Being a successful marketer requires a number of
make-it-or-break-it skills that separate the
mediocre (or failed) biz from the successful one. - Some less-than-stellar products and services are
quite successful thanks to 1st class marketing
efforts (e.g., McDonalds).
4Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- You are no longer someone with a camera.
- You must consider yourself a small biz
proprietor. Operating as a small biz is
mandatory to be competitive and help guarantee
survival. - Know your objective and craft your marketing
message accordingly.
5Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- In any marketing campaign, it is important to
think about - What is your target market?
- What is your budget?
- What medium or media will you use?
- After roll-out, what were the results?
- What adjustments need to be made?
6Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Definitions.
- Marketing the manner in which product (or
service) development, sales, advertising, public
relations, publicity, distribution, and pricing
are bundled together into an overall plan
designed to deliver your company's products (or
services) to the marketplace and, hence, to the
ultimate customer. - Advertising the paid promotion of goods,
services, companies, and ideas by an identified
sponsor.
7Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Definitions.
- Public relations (or PR) influencing public
opinion, through the presentation of a clients
image, message, and product or service. - Publicity focused on generating editorial media
coverage for an organization and/or its products. - Sales either directly or indirectly connecting,
convincing, and contracting with customers to
purchase your products (or services).
8Principles of Business - Class 4
9Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Advertising.
- Paid promotion of goods, services, companies, and
ideas by an identified sponsor. - Good advertising is about repetition, but
repetition costs . - View advertising as an important investment
instead of a dreaded expense. - When starting out, focus on low-cost advertising
methods, networking, and referrals to get your
first clients.
10Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Advertising.
- To help be cost-effective, use one of these three
methods of developing your advertising - Create your ads in-house, either by writing them
yourself or by utilizing and employee who has
advertising and creative talent. - Work with freelance copywriters, designers, media
buyers, etc. - Hire an advertising agency to handle all of your
advertising needs.
11Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Advertising.
- To find the advertising resource thats right for
your biz, watch, read, or listen to media, select
the ads you like, and then call the biz thats
doing the advertising and find out who produced
the ad. - Or simply network with other small biz owners,
vendors, and customers who have advertised and
ask questions about what worked for them. - Shop around for services.
12Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Yellow Pages
- Largely created for, and belong to, hometown
retailers and service suppliers. - If your clientele is primarily local, consider
the Yellow Pages first. - Allows smaller biz to compete with bigger ones.
- Often your product or service may fit in more
than one category.
13Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Newspapers
- Generally requires less cash outlay than other
forms of advertising. - Great for specific targeting (such as zoned
advertising) in which areas of town are targeted
for specific advertising content in news sections
tailored to them. - Have a shorter shelf life than other forms of
print advertising.
14Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Radio
- Good for targeting a specific demographic group
or geographic area. - Allows for short lead times and can be directed
to people in their cars. - Studies indicate that approx. 75 of the
responses to radio advertising occur in the 1st
week after being aired. - Frequency is important! Important to run ads
over and over again to catch attention.
15Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Television
- Adds prestige to the biz, but with significant
costs. - Network buys running your ad over an entire
networkobviously very expensive. - Local time and Cable TV purchasing time on your
local TV station of cable system. - Production costs can run the gamut.
16Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Local and National Magazines
- Advertiser can better target a specific audience
than a newspaper ad. - Has a longer shelf life than other media.
- Can be a high-budget item relative to other
media, especially for high-profile publications.
17Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Local and National Magazines
- Must plan magazine ads well in advance.
- Cross your fingers when it comes to placement of
your ad. - The more upscale the audience and the bigger its
audience, the more expensive the space.
18Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Direct Mail
- Refers to the mailing of flyer and ads directly
to a specific audience. - The success or failure of any direct mail
campaign to the quality of both the mailing list
and the promotional piece. - Relatively high cost.
19Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Direct Mail--your own program
- Collect existing pieces you like and use them as
examples for your design. - Purchase or rent a customer list.
- Consider using a postcard where possible.
- Stagger mailings so you dont have too many phone
calls at once.
20Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Internet and Email
- Greatest direct mail medium of all time.
- Not referring to spam.
- Targeted emails to lists of current and potential
customers who have give you permission to
communicate with them via email. - You get permission through personal contacts
generated by phone conversations, sales calls,
networking requests, etc.
21Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Internet and Email--advantages
- Postage is free.
- Response rates are generally higher than other
direct mail applications. - Frequency is free.
- Printing is free.
- Contact is immediate.
22Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Types of Advertising.
- Other Advertising Media
- Billboards.
- Transportation.
- Flyers.
- Posters.
- Handbills.
23Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Public Relations.
- Networking.
- Referrals/Word-of-mouth.
- Personal appearances.
- Some PR efforts are undertaken to directly
generate sales, while others will aim to educate,
inform, and plant the seeds for future sales.
24Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Public Relations.
- Networking.
- Chambers of Commerce, Rotary Club, etc.
- Friends, family, church, school, social
organizations. - A phone call, a flyer in the mail, a casual
mention during a conversation. - Be thought and careful when networking with
people you know.
25Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Public Relations.
- Networking.
- Make sure you have professional-looking biz cards
and dont be shy about handing them out. - Follow-up every networking opportunity with a
phone call or email the next day. - Set up a cross-referral system with other small
biz.
26Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Public Relations.
- Referrals/Word-of-mouth.
- You hear a radio spot that says that the Greasy
Spoon Café has the best burgers in town. - 5 minutes later, a friend that its Dannys Diner
that serves the best burgers. - If you are like most people, youll believe your
friend. Such is the power of word-of-mouth
referrals.
27Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Public Relations.
- Referrals/Word-of-mouth.
- Owner cant dictate the script of a referral like
in a radio ad. - Word-of-mouth referrals tell it the way the
client sees it, not as the owner would like the
client to see itso make sure your service (or
product) is up to snuff. - Be sure to follow-up with satisfied clients and
urge them to refer their friends and family to
you.
28Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Publicity.
- In effect, free advertising in the form of
feature stories and product (or service)
announcements distributed via print or broadcast
media. - Effective as a promotional tool because
prospective clients give more credibility to what
they read or hear when it comes from news
sources. - You dont pay for publicity, but can spend time
and to generate it.
29Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Publicity.
- Downside to publicity like word-of-mouth, is
difficult to control what is said about your
company or your products (or services). - Make sure that what you are about to publicize
can withstand media scrutiny.
30Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Publicity.
- Issue a press release.
- Use a catchy headline and create a
hooksomething thats interesting. - Typical subject matter the opening of a new
store, introduction of a new product (or
service), or procurement of an important new
client or key employee. - Research to find the appropriate biz editor or
reporter. - Use Getting It On the Air and In Print.
31Principles of Business - Class 4
- Marketing 101
- Publicity.
- Write an article for your local newspaper on a
subject that relates to your or your biz. - Give talks or teach classes about your profession
or biz to local groups such as the local Chamber
of Commerce, Rotary Club, civic associations, and
other groups.
32Principles of Business - Class 4
33Principles of Business - Class 4
- Drafting a Marketing Plan
34Principles of Business - Class 4
- Drafting a Marketing Plan
- What Is it?
- Contains information about your company and its
products, marketing objectives and strategies, as
well as how you will measure the success of your
marketing activities. - Describes all the marketing activities you'll
perform during a specified time period (usually
one year).
35Principles of Business - Class 4
- Drafting a Marketing Plan
- What Is it?
- Documents the costs associated with your planned
marketing activities as well as the measurements
you'll use to determine success. - Most often, a marketing plan is a component of a
biz plan. Marketing plans sometimes stand alone
but should always support and be closely linked
to a companys biz objectives.
36Principles of Business - Class 4
- Drafting a Marketing Plan
- Why Prepare One?
- Helps you establish, direct and coordinate your
marketing efforts. - Forces you to assess your marketplace and how it
affects your biz. - Provides a benchmark for later measurement.
- Preparing a marketing plan guides you in
developing a successful marketing strategy. - Update the marketing plan regularly.
37Principles of Business - Class 4
- Drafting a Marketing Plan
- Who Reads It?
- You, your staff, and media advisors.
- Sophisticated investors, potential biz partners,
or loan officers at banks will mostly likely ask
for one or want to see it as part of your biz
plan.
38Principles of Business - Class 4
- Drafting a Marketing Plan
- Assignment (Due 2/09/09)
- Market Analysis. Who is your target market?
- Budget. How much can you spend?
- Media. How will you reach your target market?
- Goals. What do you wish to accomplish?
- Schedule. What is your implementation
schedule? - 12 pt. type, double-spaced, 1 margins, no
minimum page requirement.
39Principles of Business - Class 5
- Go over Marketing Plans
- Lecture Bidding, Sales, and Negotiating
- Lecture Owners Wear Many Hats
- Assignment no assignment