Marketing strategy
Updated: June 4, 2021
By Ginger S. Myers

Mastering Marketing

Is Your Marketing Strategy Working?

Who’s Your First and Best Customer?

Target Marketing involves breaking a market into segments and then concentrating your marketing efforts on one or a few key segments. Having a good grasp of your target market makes the promotion, pricing, and distribution of your products and/or services easier and more cost-effective. It provides a focus to all of your marketing activities.

Targeting a specific market does not mean that you are excluding people who do not fit your criteria. Rather, target marketing allows you to focus your marketing dollars and brand message on a specific market that is more likely to buy from you than other markets.

Example of target market segments for locally grown foods or local services include:

  • Health-conscious food buyers
     
  • Customers sharing similar purchasing values
     
  • Community builders
     
  • Seasonal products
     
  • Retail, Wholesale, or a blend of both.

Test & Track

But simply identifying your target segments and hoping you’re reaching those customers may not be enough to guarantee your marketing success. Trying to guess at your marketing strategy and effectiveness is a guaranteed way to fail. People and market dynamics are just too complicated.

Everything you do in your business will be a test. When you try something that produces good results, you’ll keep it. When you do something that doesn’t produce, you need to stop doing it. Sounds simple, but a surprising number of businesses keep repeating a marketing strategy because it’s easier, or they don’t have another, or they’ve convinced themselves it’s a good approach with willful disinformation.

To grow your business effectively, it’s vital that you know what is working and what isn’t. There just isn’t enough time, energy, and money to waste on things that produce nothing for your company. Tracking is simply keeping track of what marketing efforts you are using, and exactly how many responses you are getting from each one. Ask customers how they heard about the business, collect coupons, code sales offers, and mail responses. Without this information, you’ll waste a great deal of time and money, and lose even more in missed sales.

Is Your Marketing on Target?

According to Mitch Levinson’s Guerilla Marketing concepts, you can be pretty sure you’re not marketing properly if any of these seven danger signals are present:

  1. Your sales are driven mostly by price.
     
  2. Customers cannot distinguish your products or services from those of your competitors.
     
  3. You use disconnected sales gimmicks.
     
  4. You do not have a unified plan for imparting your message to your customers and to the trade.
     
  5. Most sales leads come from your sales staff.
     
  6. Longtime customers say, “I didn’t know you offered that.”
     
  7. You do not have a customer or prospect database.
     

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Mastering Marketing is produced by Ginger S. Myers and is published periodically containing important seasonal marketing information. 

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