Growing the top line with a marketing audit
A marketing audit enables you to review your company's strengths and weaknesses, priorities and market segments, internal make up and personality as a basis for developing a successful marketing strategy for the future.
The best way to conduct a marketing audit is to ask all your key employees to complete an independent review along the following lines:
- Profile of the company
What is your understanding of the nature of the company, its situation, and its mission? - Personal profile
What is your role in the company and why do you like working here? - Trends that affect the company
What is happening in the business environment that can affect the company? - The customer base
Who is the company serving and how? What do our customers want? - Trends that affect the customers
What will our customers want in the future and how might this differ from what they want right now? - Competition
What is the competition and what are they doing to meet customers' needs? - Customer service
What is good customer service and how can we improve it? - Key customers
Typically, a large proportion of our income comes from a relatively small number of customers. How did we acquire them, how profitable are they, and what are we doing to retain them? - Current marketing activities
What customers are we currently targeting and how? - Recruiting and training
What kind of people does the company need to meet the challenges of tomorrow? - E-commerce
How should we plan to develop our marketing to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the net? - And finally...
If there were one thing you would do differently in marketing, what would it be?
Once the separate reviews are completed you can collate the returns and try to understand what implications they have for your future marketing strategy. If our experience with clients is anything to go by you will be pleasantly surprised by the insights of your employees, and the pointers they provide for your future direction.
For many businesses, coming up with a product or service that is innovative or meets the requirements of a niche market can seem the most important steps towards success.
Getting in front of a potential new client, perhaps to make a presentation, is only one step towards securing new business.
When a business carries out any marketing, it must make sure that it complies with the rules governing the protection of data and privacy.
Related services
- Home
- Who we are
- What we do
- Technology
- Business news
- Calculators
- Resources
- Business
- Personal
- Tax
- Budget 2012
- Paying less income tax
- Year end tax planning
- Minimising capital taxes
- Tax efficient investments
- Financial planning guide
- Tax planning for business owners
- Tax rates and allowances
- Offshore issues update
- VAT
- PAYE and NI
- IR35 Centre
- Tax and business calendar
- Autumn Statement 2011
- Budget archive
- Finance Bill 2012
- The Finance Bill 2011
- 2011 PAYE Update
- Regulation changes from April 2012
- Links
- Contact
- Business
- Business start-up
- Limited companies
- Business finance
- Partnerships
- Your customers
- Your employees
- Sales and marketing
- Brand awareness: making your mark
- The value of a marketing plan
- Assess your competitors
- Direct marketing
- Growing the top line with a marketing audit
- How much to spend on marketing?
- Selling benefits not features
- SWOT analysis - look before you market
- Distance Selling Regulations: an introduction
- Advertising: complying with the rules
- Promote your business: PR
- Promote your business: advertising
- Promote your business: marketing
- IT and e-business
- Business regulations
- Business and the environment
- Selling your business
- Personal
- Tax
- Links
