The Marketing Department is crucial for promoting an organization's business and mission. It acts as the public representation of your company, overseeing the creation of all materials that reflect the business. Its primary responsibility is to engage with potential clients, customers, investors, and the community, all the while crafting a positive and cohesive image that embodies your company.
Depending on your company, the duties of the Marketing Department may include one or more of the following:
Defining and managing your brand.
This involves defining who you are, what you stand for, what you say about yourself, what you do and how your company acts. This, in turn, defines the experience you want your customers and partners to have when they interact with you.
Conducting campaign management for marketing initiatives.
Marketing proactively identifies the products and services to focus on over the course of your sales cycle, and then produces materials and communications that get the word out.
Creating content providing search engine optimization for your website.
Your website is often the first (and possibly the only) place people go for information about you. Your marketing department will be responsible for keeping Web content current, while also working to ensure your site comes up quickly when someone searches for your type of business.
Monitoring and managing social media.
Marketing should contribute to, manage and maintain your social media pages. It should also manage accounts and carefully watch what’s being posted about you online.
Producing internal communications.
Your employees need to understand your company, its values, its goals and its priorities. Marketing is often responsible for employee communications through a newsletter and/or intranet.
Serving as media liaison.
When your company is cited in the media, a member of the marketing department often acts as spokesperson for your company, or guides executives in how to respond to media queries.
Conducting customer and market research.
Research helps you define target markets and opportunities and helps you understand how your products and services are perceived.
Overseeing outside vendors and agencies.
Marketing is typically responsible for selecting and managing the agencies and vendors who produce marketing materials and or/provide marketing support. These may include ad agencies, print vendors, PR agencies or specialists, Web providers, etc.
What Are the Marketing Objectives?
Different businesses have different sales and marketing objectives. A few of the common sales and marketing objectives are:
Increase sales of products or services.
Build awareness about a brand.
Grow a company’s market share.
Innovate and launch new services and products or pivot from existing models.
Acquire new customers.
Enter international markets, expand reach and increase profits.
Comentarios