A simple spreadsheet can provide a useful tool for creating and controlling the marketing budget.
The most important thing is to both have a budget and to monitor expenditure against plan throughout the year. The budget is the financial expression of the Marketing Plan which provides the strategic vision, rationale and implementation programme. The budget also helps impose a discipline and control for the marketing team and is usually approved by management as the authority to invest in the marketing programme.
Some may find it helpful to include detail work sheets that feed summated figures into a summary page. Comment boxes can also prove useful to add explanation to the individual figures without adding line items for each. Of course larger operations may have sophisticated software to record and measure all transaction but it remains important to remember marketing is not accounting, so the budget tool should be an aid not an end in itself.
There are 2 ways of creating the budget:- 1) to ‘cost the need’ or 2) to invest what can be afforded. Cost the need is unlikely to be affordable to the typical b-2-b company so it comes down to a percentage of sales budget. There are no hard and fast rules as to what this figure should be. However some companies apply the percentage to product lines so well established products enjoy larger budgets than new products which actually need more support to gain traction.
Establishing actual costs can come from suppliers or past experience to build up the budget required to support the marketing plan. And finally include a sum for contingencies - the unforseen costs or even commitments made on behalf of the company in a weak moment by the MD!
Recent blogs have looked at some of the big ticket items in many typical b-2-b budgets and suggested it is time to re-think the marketing mix rather than simply revamp the previous year's budget. Take a look at the index for related articles.
No comments:
Post a Comment