Road map marketing checklist
Clip and give to your manufacturer partnersby Reed Stith
Choose target markets
Determine key markets to penetrate, both existing and potential. Prioritize the
opportunities based on profit potential and match with your strengths.
1) Internal audit
____ Evaluate existing sales, marketing and financial information to sort sales by industry, geography, account,
application and competition.
____ Evaluate manufacturer and distributor strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT) in terms of what matters to the customers.
Survey customers, the distributor and manufacturer.
2) External audit
____ Utilize secondary research (association data,
published studies, trade magazines) and primary research (mail or phone surveys, focus
groups) to identify and prioritize potential sales by industry, geography, account,
application and competition. This step involves information sharing between distributor and manufacturer, including knowledge of specific
applications and accounts.
Conduct field trips
Visit key customers to develop the road
map for the manufacturer and distributor sales forces to follow when attacking the target
markets.
1) Visit existing and potential customers to understand
their perspective.
Document the customers processes to produce finished
products from raw materials. Where are the bottlenecks and inefficiencies? What issues
concern the customer the most? Learning these answers will help you understand the costs
involved in the customers business. Next, identify where your products and
value-added services fit into the customers needs. What can you offer that is so
valuable the customer will pay for it? These initial field trips will make selling easy,
because you are speaking the customers language. You should be able to determine the
actual cost savings your product or service will generate for the customer, such as faster
production, reduced scrap, lower labor expense, decreased warranty claims, fewer shipments
to receive, etc.
Once you understand the customers primary problems
and how your company can help, you must uncover the system the customer uses to make the
purchasing decision. Who has the most influence: purchasing, production, maintenance,
design engineering? Is it a team decision? Who can say no? Who must say yes? Determine
where, how and why customers buy:
____ Where: direct, specialty distributors, catalogs
____ How: purchase orders, integrated supply agreements,
maintenance credit cards
____ Why: availability, price, delivery, technical support,
ease of use
____ Also, identify which applications of your products and
services offer the highest value to the customer. Sort them in priority order, from the
customers viewpoint.
Find out how customers prefer to receive new product and
value-added service information. Do they prefer training schools, joint calls with
manufacturers and distributors, or periodic faxes or e-mails? Which trade shows do they
attend, and which trade magazines do they read? Finally, when preparing training materials
for the inside and outside sales staff, gather the following information:
____ Determine the 10 most frequently asked questions
(FAQs) from purchasing, engineering, maintenance and general management.
____ Identify the 10 most common customer objections.
____ Get input from manufacturer and distributor sales
forces to come up with the best answers.
____ Determine annual usage of your products or services.
To help with forecasting, find the variables that relate to this usage. For example, does
annual usage correlate with the size of the plant, number of employees or the number of
finished products produced? Find one or two bridge factors that can be used to estimate
potential sales at similar customers.
2) Get input from distributor management and salespeople.
A smart marketing partner will get input from the
management, inside sales and outside sales forces of several key distributors. Often, a
distributor advisory board fills this function. The key objectives are to:
____ Identify major (non-price) obstacles to penetrating
the target markets (specifications, competitors strong brand, lack of customer
understanding, incomplete product line, government approvals).
____ Identify the distributors needs and concerns
with the target markets (sales leads, training, literature, competitive information).
____ Determine complementary products and value-added
services distributors offer target markets. This helps illustrate the total value the
distributor can provide as part of the new marketing program.
____ Understand the distributors sales and marketing
priorities. This avoids the trap of introducing a new product or service that conflicts
with the goals of the distributor.
Develop marketing support tools
Only now, with information from the
previous steps, can you create tangible marketing tools such as literature, videotapes and
demonstration displays. The following is a good place to start.
1) Explain the background and dominant issues in the target
industry.
2) Review growth trends in the target industry.
3) Describe legal and regulatory factors that a sales force
needs to know. Supply the proper documentation of approvals, etc.
4) Identify existing and potential sales volume by specific
geographic area. Dont make vague promises about the new opportunity.
5) Include specific account information, customer names and
contact details. Help the sales force accomplish quick successes.
6) Include specific sales potential by account, using
bridge factors.
7) Explain how the industry makes buying decisions. Give
tips on how to work within the culture of the industry. Provide examples.
8) Demonstrate how to use sales aids. Have an adequate
supply of items so everyone can practice.
9) Reinforce value that differentiates the product or
service. Help overcome price objections.
10) Focus on benefits that help address the customers
priorities. Use documented case studies from pilot programs to prove benefits.
11) Integrate all sales tools, such as local ads combined
with direct mail prior to a local trade show, followed by scheduled sales calls using new
demonstration kit. Suggest a schedule for all marketing communications in support of
target market effort. Make it simple.
12) Provide adequate lead time to implement mailings and
customer training seminars.
13) Provide a planning system for the distributor sales
force to:
____ Establish specific plans and measurable goals by
account.
____ Determine specific sales tactics to use with each
account.
____ Commit to timetables, based on most likely successes
first.
____ Identify out-of-pocket costs, and who pays.
14) Agree to monitor results on a regular
basis (at least quarterly)
Reed Stith is principal of IDC3, a
distribution consulting firm. He can be reached at (330) 656-2023 or at rstith@idc3.com.
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