What this lesson covers
How to develop a marketing plan — the document that translates market analysis into a strategy for reaching, acquiring, and retaining customers. This lesson covers channel selection, messaging, budgeting, and measurement. It builds directly on the target market and competitive findings from Conducting Market Analysis.
Prerequisites
Conducting Market Analysis. A marketing plan without a target market profile and competitive analysis is guesswork.
The purpose of a marketing plan
A marketing plan answers three questions in sequence:
- Who are we trying to reach? (From your target market profile)
- Where do we reach them? (Channel selection)
- What do we say? (Messaging and positioning)
It then specifies a budget, a timeline, and metrics for measuring whether the plan is working.
Channel selection
A channel is any medium through which the business communicates with potential or existing customers. The right channels depend on where the target market actually pays attention — not on where the business owner is most comfortable.
Local channels
For businesses with a geographic trade area (restaurants, retail, services), local channels often produce the highest return:
| Channel | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Physical signage | Reaches everyone passing by; constant visibility | Limited to foot/vehicle traffic in the area |
| Local events (farmers markets, community festivals, sponsorships) | Face-to-face contact; community goodwill; sampling opportunities | Labor-intensive; seasonal; hard to measure directly |
| Partnerships (neighboring businesses, local organizations) | Shared audiences; mutual referral; low cost | Requires relationship-building; uneven results |
| Local press and community boards | Credibility; reaches people not on social media | Declining readership; one-time exposure |
| Word of mouth | Most trusted channel; free | Cannot be directly controlled; slow to build |
Digital channels
| Channel | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Social media (Instagram, Facebook, TikTok) | Visual; shareable; builds community; low cost | Requires consistent content creation; algorithm-dependent reach |
| Google Business Profile | Appears in local search and maps; free | Requires reviews and updates to rank; limited customization |
| Search engine optimization (SEO) | Captures high-intent searchers; long-term value | Slow to build; competitive for common keywords |
| Paid digital advertising (Google Ads, social media ads) | Immediate visibility; precise targeting; measurable | Costs money; requires ongoing management; stops when budget stops |
| Email marketing | Direct, owned channel; high conversion rates | Requires building a list; frequency management |
Choosing channels
Match channels to the target market’s behavior (documented in your market analysis):
- Discovery: How do target customers find new businesses? If word of mouth and social media dominate, invest there. If local search is how people find restaurants in the area, optimize Google Business Profile before spending on Instagram ads.
- Stage of business: Pre-opening, focus on awareness (signage, social media, local press, events). Post-opening, shift to retention (email, loyalty programs, community events). At steady state, maintain a mix that sustains acquisition while deepening loyalty.
- Budget constraints: Small businesses should start with two or three channels and execute them well rather than spreading thin across six. A well-maintained Instagram account and a strong Google Business Profile outperform a half-effort across every platform.
Messaging and positioning
Messaging translates your differentiation (from competitive analysis) into language that resonates with the target market.
Positioning statement
A positioning statement is an internal document — not customer-facing copy — that clarifies what the business stands for:
For [target market], [business name] is the [category] that [key differentiator], because [reason to believe].
Worked example:
For working adults in [neighborhood] who eat out regularly and value bold, regional flavors over generic fast-casual, [Restaurant Name] is the evening dining spot that serves Oaxacan and Yucatecan cuisine made from scratch, because the chef trained in those regions and sources ingredients from local and Mexican suppliers.
Message hierarchy
Not every message serves every purpose. Organize by priority:
- Primary message: What the business is and what it offers. This appears everywhere — signage, social profiles, website header.
- Supporting messages: Why the business is different and why the customer should care. These appear in longer-form content — social posts, email, local press features.
- Proof points: Specific evidence — reviews, credentials, sourcing details, event attendance. These build credibility over time.
Budget
Marketing budget for a new small business typically ranges from 3–10% of projected revenue, higher during launch and lower at steady state.
Worked example: 6-month launch marketing budget
| Item | Monthly cost | 6-month total |
|---|---|---|
| Signage (one-time: exterior sign, A-frame) | — | $2,500 |
| Social media content creation (photos, video) | $200 | $1,200 |
| Paid social media advertising | $400 | $2,400 |
| Google Business Profile setup and management | $0 | $0 |
| Pre-opening event (soft launch, community invite) | — | $800 |
| Monthly community event (free movie night, live music) | $300 | $1,800 |
| Printed materials (menus, flyers, business cards) | — | $400 |
| Email marketing platform | $30 | $180 |
| Total | $9,280 |
As a percentage of projected 6-month revenue (assuming ramp-up from Building Financial Projections): 192,000 = 4.8%. Reasonable for a launch period.
Every line item should connect to a channel decision. If Instagram is a primary channel, the content creation budget is not optional. If community events are a primary strategy, the event budget is a core marketing expense, not an afterthought.
Measurement
A marketing plan without measurement is a list of activities. Define what success looks like for each channel:
| Channel | Metric | How to measure |
|---|---|---|
| Social media | Followers, engagement rate, profile visits | Platform analytics |
| Google Business Profile | Search impressions, direction requests, calls | Google Business dashboard |
| Paid advertising | Click-through rate, cost per acquisition | Ad platform reporting |
| Events | Attendance, new customers attributed | Door count, “how did you hear about us?” tracking |
| Open rate, click rate, redemption of offers | Email platform analytics | |
| Overall | New customers per week, average check trend, repeat visit rate | POS data |
Review metrics monthly. If a channel consistently underperforms — spending $400/month on ads that produce two identifiable customers — redirect the budget. If a channel overperforms — community events producing 15 new regulars per event — invest more.
Customer retention
Acquiring a new customer costs more than retaining an existing one. A marketing plan that focuses only on acquisition and ignores retention will produce a business that constantly replaces its customer base.
Retention strategies:
- Consistent quality: The most effective retention tool is not a strategy — it is delivering what you promised every time.
- Recognition: Remembering regulars’ names and orders. This requires no budget, only attention.
- Email communication: Monthly updates, seasonal menus, event invitations. Not promotional spam — information the customer values.
- Loyalty programs: Simple, clear, and genuinely rewarding. A complicated points system that requires an app download is a barrier, not a benefit.
- Community events: Events give customers a reason to return beyond hunger. They convert a transactional relationship into a social one.
Guidance
- Draft a marketing plan for a business you’re developing. Start with three channels and specify what you’ll do in each, what it’ll cost, and how you’ll measure it.
- For each channel, ask: does my target market actually use this? If you don’t know, that’s a research question, not an assumption.
- Compare your marketing budget to your use of funds allocation. If marketing is 8% of the use of funds but the plan requires $15,000, the numbers need to reconcile.