Description
Marketing is important because it embraces nearly every facet of your social enterprise. Production responds to what market research discovers about customer preferences for quality and packaging, which in turn are factors determining price. Market research also lends itself to new-product development based on what consumers want and identifies promotion techniques to reach new customers.
T
he
he
Mark
Mark
eting
eting
Plan
Plan
Chapter 5
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O
“Emerson said that if you build a better
mousetrap the world will beat a path
to your door, and that may have been
true then … but it’s not true now. No
one will come. You have to package
and promote that mousetrap. Then
they will come.”
— King C. Gillette
Gillette Razors
verview: Marketing is the process of planning and executing a strategy to
get goods and services to customers. The components of marketing can be
described as the “four P’s” or the marketing mix. Product consists of the products
and services that your social enterprise furnishes; it is characterized by quality,
assortment, packaging, and guarantees. Price is the amount you will charge cus-
tomers for the products or services. Promotion is how you will create awareness of
your products or services in the marketplace; advertising, publicity, and sales are
aspects of promotion. Place (distribution) is how you will bring your products or
services to your customers; distri-
bution comprises wholesalers,
retailers, multilevel marketers, and
sales representatives. The mar-
keting mix is a set of tools and
techniques social enterprises use
to achieve their marketing objec-
tives in their target market. Your
marketing plan will emphasize cer-
tain “P’s” in its mix more than oth-
ers.
Marketing is important
because it embraces nearly every
facet of your social enterprise.
Production responds to what mar-
ket research discovers about customer preferences for quality and packaging, which
in turn are factors determining price. Market research also lends itself to new-prod-
uct development based on what consumers want and identifies promotion tech-
niques to reach new customers. Helpful or friendly marketing staff may inspire cus-
tomers to buy products or services. Finally, management makes strategic decisions
impacting operations based on marketing information about competitors’ prices and
positions.
Chapter 5
Marketing Synergies
“The most effective and efficient marketing plans are
those that maximize the synergy between products, distri-
bution channels, price, and promotion. A unified promo-
tional strategy across an entire product line saves money
and presents a consistent image of the enterprise in the
consumer’s mind. From a selection of complementary
products, significant economies of scale in raw materials
and packaging can be realized. Products with similar pro-
duction processes allow for development of specialization
and attainment of high-quality standards.”
— Heather Shapter, SC/Haiti Business Advisor
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
118
This chapter will help you understand the tools and techniques of marketing and
apply them to your social enterprise. It guides you through steps to develop your
marketing plan by setting objectives and deciding on a strategy for each marketing
component.
EXHIBIT 5A: INFORMATION FLOWS FOR THE MARKETING PLAN
FINANCIAL
PLAN
SALES PLAN
SALES TARGETS
OPERATIONAL
PLAN
PRODUCTION
TARGETS,
PRODUCT,
DEVELOPMENT,
INVENTORY,
CONTROL,
DISTRIBUTION
MARKETING
OBJECTIVES
HR PLAN
MARKETING/SALES
STAFF
SOCIAL
ENTERPRISE
OBJECTIVES
MARKET RESEARCH
TARGET MARKET
STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENT
COMPETITORS
INDUSTRY
ANALYSIS
MARKETING
PLAN
PRODUCT, PRICE,
PROMOTION, AND
PLACE STRATEGIES
Guide to Icons
This chapter periodically uses icons (below) next to certain questions or sec-
tions to alert the reader to the fact that decisions made in the operations plan
have implications for other segments of the business plan. The information flow
diagram in exhibit 6A illustrates these relationships.
Financials = Human Resources = Marketing =
Informations Systems = Operations =
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5
Marketing Objectives
DETERMINING MARKETING OBJECTIVES
Rationale: Once you have laid out the objectives for your social enterprise, you can
develop strategies for your marketing mix. Stating marketing objectives directs the
development of your marketing plan. Marketing objectives should contribute toward
achievement of the overall business objectives (chapter 2)—i.e. how much do you
need to sell to achieve X% cost recovery or profit/loss—and should be based on the
information gleaned in market research (chapters 3 and 4).
Marketing objectives must:
4Be clear.
4Be measurable.
4Be achievable.
4Have a stated time frame.
4Include a sales forecast (at least one marketing objective).
Examples of Marketing Objectives
4Increase product awareness of new product X within the target market by 25 per-
cent in one year.
4Inform the target population about service Y’s leading features and benefits com-
pared with the competition’s, increasing sales by 10 percent over the next six
months.
4Reduce price of product Z or service Z by 10 percent and increase market share
by 5 percent in the first quarter in target market W.
4Improve brand awareness so that a minimum of 50 percent of target customers
will recognize your brand over the next fiscal year.
4Change formula for product V and reintroduce it in a new target market by 2001.
4Enhance service W to include A, B, and C features demanded by the target popu-
lation to increase sales by 30 percent over the next year.
4Increase average gross profit margin 3 percent per product or service.
Gross profit—expressed
as a percentage; shows the
percentage of return an
enterprise earns over the
cost of the merchandise
sold (costs of goods sold).
Gross profit margin—is
calculated by dividing gross
profit by sales.
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EXHIBIT 5C: TARTINA MARKETING OBJECTIVES
APRIL 1999 – APRIL 2000
4Raise awareness of TARTINA brand by 50 percent
4Reach sales target of U.S. $58,976
4Sell 62,500 units (all products)
4Secure average gross profit margin of 16 percent per product
Managing the Double Bottom Line:
120
EXHIBIT 5B: OBJECTIVES LINKED TO STRATEGIES
Objective Marketing Strategy Mix
Increase target market W share Reduce price of product Z by 10 percent Price
by 5 percent in first quarter
Launch improved service Y Redesign declining service Y according to new Product
market in 2001 customer specifications/wants
Introduce product X in new target Expand distribution to sports concessions Place
market to reach more youth and men
Increase product awareness of Aggressive sampling campaign using point Promotion
new product Z in target market of purchase and coupons to encourage
by 25 percent in one year trying new product
Marketing manager, business manager, PO business advisor, partner pro-
gram manager, sales staff
Developing Marketing Objectives for the Social Enterprise
? Determine the marketing objectives for your social enterprise.
? Refer to the examples (exhibits 5B and 5C) for assistance or inspiration.
Marketing objectives are included in the Business Plan.
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5
Product Strategy
PRODUCT/SERVICE FEATURES AND BENEFITS
Rationale:
The products and services that succeed are those that offer benefits to customers
that are greater than their costs. Customers are interested in products for their bene-
fits, not their features.
Understanding the features and benefits of your products and services will help
you develop your marketing campaign by highlighting the aspects that are the most
important to your customers. It will also assist you in differentiating your products
from your competitors’ and affect a variety of pricing and positioning strategies.
Definition of Product Features and Benefits
Features are characteristics of a product or service that deliver a benefit. Features
are usually easily describable attributes such as size, model, design, color, hours of
businesses, functionality, brand, packaging, quality, shelf life, etc. For instance, if
your social enterprise provides marketing services to its target population, features of
that service might include branding, professional sales and marketing staff, training
in promotion methods, employment opportunity, and technical assistance on prod-
uct development.
Benefits are advantages a product offers the customer. Benefits are more difficult to
detect because they are often intangible. The most compelling benefits of a product
or service are those that render emotional or financial rewards. Emotional rewards
make customers feel better about themselves, such as feeling socially or environ-
mentally conscious, more attractive, or more self-confident. Financial rewards, like
saving money or increasing income, are other benefits a social enterprise might offer
customers.
Using the above example of the marketing service, benefits for your customer
(i.e., self-employed women) are access to markets, or a guaranteed market for its
products; cost savings on—and access to—professional services; skills enhancement;
and increased self-esteem, income, and economic opportunity.
PO business advisor, marketing manager, business manager, sales staff
Clarifying Product/Service Features and Benefits
? Create a Product/Service Features and Benefits Table (exhibit 5D).
? Fill in the table identifying the features of each of your products or services and
their corresponding benefits.
? Be sure to complete this exercise from the customer’s point of view, not your
own.
? Then, in a paragraph or two, briefly describe the service or product of your social
enterprise, emphasizing the benefitsto the customer. Focus on the areas in which
your product or service has a distinct advantage over the competition’s. Refer to
any problem in the target market for which your service or product provides a
solution. Make a convincing argument that people are, or will be, willing to pay
for your solution.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
122
EXHIBIT 5D: PRODUCT/SERVICE FEATURES AND BENEFITS TABLE
TARTINA Peanut Butter Financial Services
Features Benefits Features Benefits
High in protein Good nutrition Small working capital A vehicle to grow the
loan business
Slightly sweet flavor Kids love it; therefore Weekly repayment Ease of repayment
easy for mothers
“100% natural” A clear conscience; Collateral free Access to credit
no worries about
unsafe chemical
additives
Expiration date Freshness guaranteed Easy application Convenient; low
progress stress
Economical Saving money Savings Economic security
20-oz. plastic container Convenient, reusable Solidarity group Emotional support,
technical assistance,
and networks
Produced by local Peace of mind; Short loan cycles Fits business cycle/
economically pleasure from other activities; lowers
disadvantaged “helping to make a risk
Haitians difference”
Know Your
Competitors’
Products
Be sure that your staff is
intimately familiar with
your competitors’ prod-
ucts or services. When
conducting this exercise
with TARTINA staff, we
were surprised to find
out that this was not the
case, so we conducted
a product comparison
during the business
plan development work-
shop. This was not the
ideal approach because
it limited us to compar-
ing physical features
and considering only
the opinions of the par-
ticipants. Obviously,
comparative analyses
such as this one are
easier for social enter-
prises selling products
than for those selling
services. At any rate,
educating staff about
features and benefits of
competitors’ products
and services is an oblig-
atory part of staff train-
ing and continuing
development.
FEATURES AND BENEFITS OF COMPETITORS’ PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Rationale:
Analyzing the features and benefits of your strongest competitors’ products and serv-
ices may give you ideas about how to improve, refine, or change your products and
services when you develop your product strategy to increase your market share or
sales volume.
Marketing manager, business manager, PO business advisor, sales staff
? Complete the Product/Service Features and Benefits Table for your competitors’
products and services that are the same as yours.
? If you completed this product study in your competitive analysis (chapter 4), skip
this section.
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5
PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE
Rationale:
The product’s life cycle is the process through which a product enters, grows, satu-
rates, and leaves the market. During the life span of your product or service, you
will reformulate your marketing strategy several times—not only as a result of
changes in market conditions or new competitors but also in response to changes in
customers’ interest and requirements for the product. The four stages of a product’s
life cycle are introduction, growth, maturity, and decline. Each stage is marked by
specific characteristics.
Stages of a Product Life Cycle
4Introduction—when new-product sales are slow, and profits are nonexistent,
because of heavy costs of production and promotion. Often during this stage
there are few competitors, pro-
motion is heavy, and the focus
is on getting potential customers
to try the product rather than
on the developing the brand.
4Growth—a period of rapid
market acceptance of the prod-
uct and dramatic increase in
sales and profit. After a product
takes off, copycat competitors
enter the market. During the
growth stage marketing shifts to
creating brand preferences, and
promotion lessens.
4Maturity—marked by flattening sales and stabilizing, then decreasing, profits. The
market becomes saturated and price competition can be fierce. Marketing efforts
at this stage concentrate on targeting a new market of buyers and taking market
share from competitors by price cutting or relaunching the product. When you
see a product advertised as having a “new” or “improved formula” or as “now
recyclable,” that is usually a good indication of a mature product after a face-lift.
4Decline—indicated by falling sales and often rapid and eroding profits. At this
stage an enterprise must decide whether it wants to try to rejuvenate the product
by investing in development and aggressive marketing or to quietly admit defeat
and exit the market. For example, in the advent of electricity, gas lamp producers
either integrated the new technology into their products or went out of business.
Product Life Cycles
4 Products have a distinct beginning and an end.
4 Profits increase, level off, and then decline, depending
on the stage in the product's life.
4 There are marketing and sales challenges at each
stage in the product’s life.
4 Managers must make strategic decisions based on
where a product is in its life cycle.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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EXHIBIT 5E: STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS OF PRODUCT LIFE CYCLES
Example From TARTINA Enterprise
Mamba peanut butter is in the mature stage of the life cycle. Sales increase dur-
ing this stage, but at a declining rate. As Mamba sales level off, TARTINA profit
margins narrow. Price competition is severe. The best way to extend the life of
this product and keep profits healthy is to modify it (alter the taste, color, labeling,
packaging), design new promotion, or develop new product uses. TARTINA has
entered into the stage of the product life cycle where it is one brand among many
others already well known in the marketplace. It has to figure out its comparative
advantages and implement a promotion program that shouts them from the hill-
tops!
Two strategic issues emerge from the recognition that peanut butter is in the matu-
rity stage:
4TARTINA needs to find ways to develop the Mamba brand name to increase
sales within its market.
4TARTINA must find ways to postpone peanut butter’s entrance into the decline
stage of the product life cycle. One of the best ways to do this is to introduce
product modifications—new packaging, new flavors, etc. This approach serves
to differentiate the product from its competitors and temporarily escape the
heat from the direct competition. TARTINA has identified a market niche for
sweetened peanut butter, a flavor that is not offered by the competition and
will serve to more directly target the tastes of children.
Karapinia is in the introduction stage of the product life cycle; it is a new product
in the Port-au-Prince retail outlet. This means that sales volume will be low, costs
high, and distribution limited; losses are likely. It is the riskiest stage of the life
cycle. The positive side is that there is little direct competition in this stage.
Knowing this will help TARTINA make decisions regarding whether Karapinia
should even be pursued at this time. Perhaps the business cannot afford any losses
and should wait until profits from other products are healthier. On the other
hand, the market research and test market results conducted prior to the prepara-
tion of the business plan pointed to the great potential of this product.
One strategic issue emerges from the recognition that Karapinia is in the introduc-
tion stage:
4The potential success of this product makes the risk of introducing it into the
market a worthwhile one. In addition, the expected revenues to be realized
from large sales of peanut butter and grapefruit jam will be used to finance
development of Karapinia. As sales for Karapinia increase, these revenues will
in turn finance TARTINA’s future growth when peanut butter enters the decline
stage of the product life cycle.
Test marketing—conducting a
small-scale promotion or introduction
of a good to gather information useful
in full-scale product introduction or
promotion.
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5
4 4
4
4
Passion Fruit Jam
& Karapinia
Chadéque
Mamba
SALES
PROFIT
INTRODUCTION GROWTH MATURITY DECLINE
Same as previous exercise
Mapping The Life Cycle of Products/Services
? Plot your products or services on the Product Life Cycle Chart (exhibit 5F).
? Write in narrative form the strategic implications that emerge from the stage of
your products in their respective life cycles (exhibit 5E).
PRODUCT POSITIONING
Rationale:
Positioning defines your products and services relative to your competition’s.
Reviewing the features and benefits of your products or services against those of
your competition helps you see where you may or may not have a comparative
advantage. Completing a positioning exercise is part of the analytical process of
determining your product strategy. The information obtained may lead you to make
specific changes to your product features, distribution, or price to gain a compara-
tive advantage against a certain competitor. Conversely, if a competitor is particularly
daunting, you might use this positioning information to move out of a given market.
Same as previous exercise
Positioning Products/Services
? Positioning is a matrix exercise. Price is always used as measure down one side of
the matrix. On the other side, use product features that provide the most impor-
tant benefits to your customers, such as quality, taste, packaging, etc.
EXHIBIT 5F: PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE FOR TARTINA
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
126
? Prepare a matrix for each product (exhibit 5G).
? Draw on information obtained in your competitive analysis and market research,
including customer surveys, and from your sales force, vendors, and outlet man-
agers to get an indication of your position relative to your competition’s.
EXHIBIT 5G: MAMBA PEANUT BUTTER PRICE/QUALITY POSITIONING
Rebo 4
Zoul 4
Jif 4
Tacha 4
Dorey 4
Adventist
4
Pidy 4
TARTINA 4
Developing a product strategy requires synthesizing the information obtained from
your research on target markets and customers, comparison of product features and
benefits, competitor analysis and positioning analysis, and review of stages of the
product life cycle. This information paints a complete picture of the market and
your place in it, enabling you to develop a strategy for your product or service.
To ensure that new-product developments are feasible, it is important that both
production and marketing/sales staff participate in developing product strategy.
Rationale:
The product strategy is one part of your marketing plan aimed at achieving your
overall marketing objectives. (Remember that each “P”—product, price, place, and
promotion—in the marketing mix has its own strategic plan, with all four making up
the marketing plan in its entirety.) A product strategy consists of any changes you
make to the features of your product or service, information on in-process or future
activities relate d to the development of new products/services, consolidation of the
product line, etc. The strategy informs how these changes help achieve marketing
objectives for the product.
TARTINA's Position
for Mamba vis-à-
vis its Competitors
On the right hand side of
the matrix we see 5 brands
closely positioned accord-
ing to their price and quali-
ty. Jif, the American
import, is the most expen-
sive and the best quality
peanut butter on the mar-
ket. Zoul and Adventist are
cheap, but lag way behind
in quality. TARTINA's main
contenders are Pidy and
Dorey for its position as the
"economic" and "good
value" peanut butter
choice.
C
O
S
T
QUALITY
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5
“PRODUCT” CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES
FOR SERVICE BUSINESSES
Nonmaterial Product
When you sell a service, you are selling intangibles—a technique, advice, a
process, or a result. Customers may have difficulty discerning what specific
benefits they are buying.
Strategy: Define your services and package them so that their benefits
are more tangible to customers. Accompany services with complementary
manuals, tools, and templates to make the services more “material.” Link
services to a “product output” so that customers feel they are clearly get-
ting something concrete for their money. For example, rather than sell
generic business training, sell a “business plan” and ensure that cus-
tomers walk away with one in hand. Bundling services with products can
make services more discernible; management information (MIS) technical
assistance can be sold as a complete system with software or manual
records.
Quality Is Subjective
There are few standards for measuring quality in service businesses. When
customers pay for accounting or legal services, they are not usually qualified
to assess the quality of the service itself. In this case, quality is based on
trust or amiable relationships with the service providers. For example, if your
business sells counseling services, your customers’ patronage of your
social enterprise is grounded in their relationship with a staff member they
like. This leaves your enterprise vulnerable to losing customers if the staff
member quits.
Strategy: Develop your reputation and image as a high-quality service busi-
ness by using customer references and testimonials. Document your
methodology and emphasize training of your staff. Build customer identifi-
cation with the enterprise through branding—“X Enterprise Marketing
Methods”—and emblazon materials with your logo and name. When possi-
ble, encourage customer contact with different staff members.
Limited Use
Most small and micro businesses operate with narrow margins and limited
cash and therefore carefully weigh the benefits of each investment. Paying
for professional services is fairly low on such customers’ list of priorities, and
they may prefer to invest their money in technology, equipment, or employ-
ees. Additionally, the nature of many service businesses does not invite fre-
quent, repeated use; for example, training, accounting, or legal services
may be sought only a few times a year.
Strategy: Stay close to the customers, understand their needs and wants,
and tailor your services accordingly. Use customer satisfaction surveys or
evaluations as a standard procedure after providing a service. They are
ideal instruments for fine-tuning services to fit the changing needs of cus-
tomers. You may find that you need to diversify your service portfolio or
seek greater market coverage.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
128
Marketing manager, business manager, sales staff, PO business advisor, pro-
duction manager, production agents
Developing a Product Strategy
This exercise has two parts. Retrieve information from chapter 3 for background.
? Market description: In a few lines, describe your current target market and
future trends germane to each product. Give an indication of the demand ten-
dency for your product relative to its life cycle stage. Describe customer demand
as it pertains to particular product features.
? Product strategy: State the sales target for the product or service. Indicate who
the primary consumer is, and specify whether the consumer is different from the
purchaser/decision-maker. Detail which changes will be made to enhance each
product’s features and how this will (1) help your products gain comparative
advantages in the marketplace and (2) meet your marketing objectives.
Product strategy is included in the Business Plan.
The example in exhibit 5H illustrates how the product strategy for Mamba peanut
butter aims to meet overall marketing objectives in unit sales and dollar value as
well as to develop TARTINA brand awareness.
EXHIBIT 5H: PRODUCT STRATEGY FOR MAMBA PEANUT BUTTER
Market Description
The overall demand for spicy and regular peanut butter appears to be experiencing
positive growth, although at a declining rate, according to supermarket manage-
ment. (Industry statistical information on demand trends is not available.) Factors
explaining this growth trend include the rural to urban migration; increasing num-
bers of women joining the professional work force, leaving them less time to make
homemade peanut butter; and the homemade peanut butter maker’s lack of
access to peanuts. The spicy and regular flavors of peanut butter have consistently
been the biggest sellers in the TARTINA product line, making up 50 percent of all
sales. In fact, the social enterprise has not been able to keep pace with the
demand for its peanut butter, particularly for the spicy flavor.
Product Strategy
Sales target: 18,300 units (U.S. $27,727)
The social enterprise will continue to emphasize the sale of spicy peanut butter as
the “star” of its product line. The spicy flavor will be complemented by the regular
flavor to meet customer demand. The regular flavor will be produced at a ratio of
1:4 to that of spicy peanut butter.
The social enterprise proposes to introduce a new flavor, sweetened peanut
butter, in supermarkets in Port-au-Prince. This flavor is offered by international
brands such as Jif and Skippy but is not produced by any local food processors.
With international peanut brands costing 40 to 50 percent more than local brands,
this flavor remains out of reach of most urban Haitians. By offering a more afford-
able sweetened peanut butter brand, TARTINA can access a previously untapped
market.
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Comparative Advantages
There are four primary comparative advantages to introduction of this new flavor:
4It will serve to differentiate TARTINA from other brands. Even with planned
promotional efforts, it will be difficult for TARTINA to make a name for itself in
the spicy and regular peanut butter markets, where other brands are well estab-
lished and have developed loyalty.
4It will offer a market niche that currently is not served by local peanut produc-
ers.
4The lower competition for this flavor should alleviate some of the pressure on
profit margins.
4Offering new varieties of a product is one of the most effective ways to prolong
the product’s mature phase before it goes into decline.
Thus, the TARTINA peanut butter product line will be as follows:
Peanut Butter Flavors Primary Consumer Purchaser/Decision-Maker
Regular Adults and children Mothers/Wives
Spicy (principal flavor) Adults Mothers/Wives
Sweetened Children Mothers
PRODUCT LINE STRATEGY
Rationale:
If your social enterprise offers more than one product, you will need to develop a
strategy for your entire product line.
Clarification of a Product Line Strategy
A product line strategy should maximize synergies in your marketing mix, produc-
tion process, or raw materials acquisition. Examples of product line synergies are
cross-selling several products to a single market, economies of scale that spread
fixed costs over a larger number of products, economies of bulk purchase of raw
materials for products that have shared ingredients, and promotional vehicles to
build brand awareness for all products in the line under the same brand name.
A product line strategy capitalizes on wider benefits of product changes (or addi-
tions and deletions). Examples include narrowing a product line by discontinuing
certain products or services because their costs of production, management, distri-
bution, etc., are too high and they fail to offer synergic values. Product/service spe-
cialization, or “niche” development, is one approach to narrowing product line.
Another option is to widen a product line by rendering additional services or pro-
ducing new goods that add value to the product mix. TARTINA’s introduction of
new flavors of Mamba peanut butter was a low-cost, high-value strategy to differen-
tiate a mature product and leverage economies of bulk purchase and scale through-
out its product line.
Product line—an enter-
prise's group of products or
services that are recognized
as having a certain func-
tional coherence and are
sold to the same market or
marketed through the same
outlets.
Cross-selling—a market-
ing strategy for selling sev-
eral products across a
product line or brand by
placing them together in
display or using other tac-
tics to encourage pur-
chasers to buy more than
one item in the line or
brand.
Economies of bulk
purchase—realizing cost
savings by purchasing in
volume.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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Same as previous exercise minus production agents
Preparing the Product Line Strategy
? Write a product line strategy for the products and services in your social enter-
prise. Focus on synergies created across the line and on how changes to specific
product features or number of products will benefit your overall business.
Product line strategy is included in the Business Plan.
EXHIBIT 5I: TARTINA PRODUCT LINE STRATEGY
The product line strategy has been formulated to balance the need for focus with
that for offering a sufficient variety of products to decrease fixed costs per prod-
uct. The focus required refers to the need to build expertise, especially in the
areas of food transformation and marketing of a limited range of products. Prior to
the preparation of the business plan, 23 different products made up the TARTINA
product line. With such a long list, product specialization was very difficult to
achieve, creating problems of standardization and quality control. Similarly,
preparing a cohesive marketing strategy for such a sprawling line of products with-
in the framework of a small enterprise was not possible. Potential economies of
bulk purchase for containers were also being lost with the addition of every new
product size. A wide-ranging product line significantly complicated enterprise
management of inventory control, accounting, sales, and production reporting.
In terms of specialization, the ideal TARTINA product line would consist of
one product. However, “cross-selling” of products is also required to reduce the
fixed cost of sales per product. The fixed costs of each sales visit, product delivery,
and payment collection need to be spread out over as many products as possible.
Seven highly complementary products have been retained in the TARTINA
product line. Simply put, peanut butter and jam belong together. Peanut butter
and jam or jelly spread on bread is a common Haitian breakfast. This combination
is also sometimes packed in children’s lunch boxes or eaten as a snack during the
day. Karapinia (sugar- and spice-coated peanut snack) stands apart from the jam,
jelly, and peanut butter products. But one of its synergistic values comes from the
fact that, like peanut butter, its basic ingredient is the peanut.
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Distribution Strategy
The distribution (place) strategy articulates how you will get your products or servic-
es to your customers. If your clients are business owners, distribution is a key com-
ponent of alleviating a common constraint the self-employed poor face—gaining
access to markets. Both the TARTINA and the retaso social enterprises (see chapters
4 & 9) focused heavily on distribution strategy as a major aspect of their interven-
tions linking the self-employed poor to markets. For service industries, distribution
strategy may rest on the hours of operation and location of your services and on
whether they are convenient and easily accessible for your customer. For manufac-
turing businesses, distribution of products to markets entails placing them in com-
mercial or artisan outlets and often involves intermediaries such as sales agents,
transportation services, storage, etc. A good distribution strategy should give atten-
tion to efficacy, efficiency, cost, and customer service.
Vocabulary
Avoid confusion between “markets” and “distribution channels;” often they are
one and the same. If you are not selling directly to your final customer, then your
actual customer will be part of the distribution channel for your product or serv-
ice. As well, the method for distributing your products or services to the market is
included in the distribution channel.
Customer
PAP supermarkets
Sales agents
Storage at ADE in PAP
Transportation
TARTINA Production Center
Customer
PAP institutional
staff client
Sales agents
Transportation
TARTINA Production Center
Community members in
Colline and surrounding
area
Clients
TARTINA Production Center
EXHIBIT 5J: EXAMPLE OF DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL
FOR TARTINA PRODUCTS
Distribution channels—
the various routes that
products and services take
as they travel from the
manufacturer or producer to
the consumer. Distribution
channels include all inter-
mediaries, such as trans-
portation, storage, sales
representatives, whole-
salers, retailers, etc. Each
member of the channel
seeks to maximize profits,
and these costs are passed
on to the consumer.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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PO business advisor, marketing manager, program management (parent &
partner), sales staff, finance manager, logistics/operations manager
Identifying Markets and Methods of Distribution
? Review the list of current and potential actual customers you identified in chap-
ter 3. Add any customers you may have overlooked.
? Put your actual customer markets in a table and rank them in order of impor-
tance (in terms of potential volume of sales or revenue) for each product. In the
example in exhibit 5K, 1 is high, or very important, and 5 is low, or less impor-
tant.
? Next, identify the best methods for reaching these distribution channels using the
Distribution Matrix (exhibit 5L).
EXHIBIT 5K: TARTINA RANKING OF ACTUAL CUSTOMER MARKETS
Product Supermarkets Minimarts Institutions Vendors Center Individuals
Mamba 1 2 3 4
Karapinia 2 3 1
Markets for TARTINA Products
Retailers—supermarkets, convenience stores, artisan markets, specialty stores,
informal market vendors
Institutional customers—restaurants, hotels, organizations, agencies, trade
groups, schools, etc.
Production center—selling wholesale from production site
Individuals—clients/employees of TARTINA sell to individual friends, family and
community members
EXHIBIT 5L: TARTINA DISTRIBUTION MATRIX
METHOD Supermarkets Minimarts Institutions Individuals Vendors Center
Sales agents • • • •
Direct sales • •
Clients/employees • •
Distributors N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Staff • •
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Methods for Distributing TARTINA Products
Sales force—sales representatives who sell products to retail or institutional mar-
kets.
Direct sales (also called multilevel)—similar to sales techniques used by private
companies like Amway and Shaklee, TARTINA uses individuals as distributors to
sell products to colleagues. In return, individuals receive a percentage of profit
margin on per-unit sales.
Social enterprise or implementing partner staff—selling directly to individuals,
institutions, retail outlets.
Clients—selling products in their communities.
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF THE DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS
Rationale:
Prior to deciding which channels you will use to distribute products to your cus-
tomers, you will need to assess the “return on investment” from distribution options
available by delineating the costs of each option. The return on investment is meas-
ured by the benefits realized from making the investment, which is expressed in
actual sales and the potential for future sales through, for example, building brand
awareness.
Same as previous exercise
Analyzing Distribution Options
Step 1
? List the advantages and disadvantages for each potential market in the distribu-
tion channel. An example is given in exhibit 5M, Comparison of Distribution
Channel Options for TARTINA (Markets).
? Synthesize your analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of your markets
and methods for reaching them.
? Based on this analysis, summarize in one or two sentences the implications of
your analysis for your distribution strategy for both markets and methods of
reaching them.
Step 2
? Repeat the steps above for potential methods for reaching your market in each
distribution channel. An example is given in exhibit 5N, Comparison of
Distribution Channel Options for TARTINA (Methods).
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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Supermarkets/Minimarts
• Largest market. Offers
potential to achieve signifi-
cant sales volume, which is
not possible in other markets
• More economical to use
sales agents for this market
than for sales to institutions.
One sales agent is able to
realize a greater volume of
sales
• Market demand for Mamba
is expected to continue to
increase
• Good visibility for building
brand awareness
• Opportunities to cross-sell
products
• Stiff competition
• Gross profit margin is the
lowest of the three options.
When peanuts are purchased
for more than 12 gourdes,
money is lost with every unit
sale of Mamba
• Follow-up/customer service
necessary
• Product quality requirements
are high
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• Profit per unit is higher than
for supermarkets, but lower
than for sales to individuals
• Little or no direct competition
at the point of sales
• Competitive advantage of
convenience of availability at
the work site sells the prod-
uct
• Quality requirements are
lower than for supermarkets
• Opportunities for contracts
with hotels, schools, etc.
•Limited sales volume
potential.
I•Most profitable per unit
• Purchase is in cash
• Simplest sales approach: no
sales follow-up necessary
and accounting procedures
simplified
• Informal vendors offer poten-
tial for distributing small
satchels of Karapinia
• Quality requirements are
lower than for supermarkets
Currently only one individual
purchasing from production
site. Poor market potential
to realize significant sales
volume
The two ingredients necessary to achieve the program’s cost recovery goal are significant sales
volume and a healthy unit profit margin. Supermarkets offer the greatest potential for reaching
significant sales volume, but the unit profit margin in this market is unhealthy. The enterprise is
currently losing money when it sells in supermarkets. To pursue crucial supermarket distribution,
TARTINA will increase production and sales force efficiency to lower unit costs on mature prod-
ucts. Institutions and individuals offer healthier profit margins as the expense of the intermediary
(sales staff) is cut out and because institutional employees are willing to pay more for the con-
venience of having the product come to them. Significant sales volume will be very difficult to
achieve in these markets, however, unless TARTINA can interest a large percentage of staff in
large institutions to purchase TARTINA Mamba on a regular basis or pursue contracts to sell to
schools, hotels, etc.
Implication for distribution strategy: Since the retail market is the only market that offers the
potential sales volume to make the enterprise self-sufficient, this will be considered the primary
market; other channels will be considered complementary to supermarket distribution.
EXHIBIT 5M: COMPARISON OF DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL OPTIONS FOR
TARTINA
(MARKETS)
Supermarkets/Minimarts Institutions Individual Vendors
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EXHIBIT 5N: COMPARISON OF DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL OPTIONS
FOR TARTINA
(METHODS)
Sales Agents
• Can secure large
commercial con-
tracts
• Connections with
merchants
• Professional image
• Focused only on
selling TARTINA
• Best method for
achieving target
sales volume
• Substantially
increases costs and
reduces per-unit
profit margins
• Transportation,
storage, inventory,
and management
complexities
• Under the current
structure staff
agents are deliver-
ing products, which
is not a cost-effi-
cient use of their
time
• Requires strong
inventory manage-
ment systems
Direct Sales
• Low-cost alternative
to hiring sales staff
• Able to sell to
organizations that
are not reached
through center,
clients or sales
agents
• Difficult to control
quality of represen-
tation
• Low volume
• Potential for hidden
cost of inventory
stagnation, follow-
up due to disinter-
ested salespeople
• Usually cannot
reach commercial
markets
• Successful direct
sales require train-
ing, which cancels
out cost advantage
• Direct sales to individ-
uals
• No sales costs
incurred
• Cash sales only
• No follow-up
• Income impact on
clients
• Higher per-unit rev-
enue on sales
• No/low market formal
access
• No transportation to
sell outside immediate
area
• Low-volume sales
• No/low sales cost
• Can sell products
on credit to cus-
tomers; attracts
larger customers
• Access to organi-
zational trans-
portation
• Not trained in
sales techniques
• Difficult to access
commercial mar-
kets because of
limited time, con-
nections,
sales skills
• Time divided
between other
responsibilities
• Adds complexities
about roles and
responsibilities
A formal sales force is the best vehicle to secure a large volume of sales. Salary structures,
work schedules, and number of sales agents will be thoroughly analyzed to ensure maximum
benefit. Management of sales personnel and staff development are key. Experienced sales
force translates into healthy sales levels and a consistent, professional presentation of TARTINA
products. Direct sales reduce costs and help build brand awareness as institution employees
tend to have more time to listen to the TARTINA story than they would have when picking up
their weekly groceries. There is also no competition from local producers in this arena.
However, there are hidden costs of follow-up and inventory stagnation, and there is little possi-
bility for reaching sales targets. Client offer little value in the distribution strategy toward achiev-
ing marketing objectives, although there is direct financial benefit for clients to sell their own
products. TARTINA staff members selling TARTINA products is a conflict of interest, so they will
be limited to distributing products on site to community residences.
Implication for distribution strategy: Focus on professional sales staff as the main method
for reaching retail distribution channels. Sales staff will also take over a portion of institutional
channels; other methods will complement the sales force.
Sales Agents Clients TARTINA Staff Direct Sales
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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PRIORITIZE LOCATION OF MARKETS FOR DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS
Rationale:
Before deciding which channels you will use to distribute products to your cus-
tomers, you will have to decide where you will distribute them. Location plays a
large role in determining return on distribution investment. You want to find the
most lucrative markets and the most cost-effective means of reaching them. In chap-
ter 3, you located your target market and studied market trends. This should give
you useful information in deciding where to distribute products.
Determining Market Locations
Criteria such as density of target customers, concentration of prospective distribution
outlets, and distance to and range of locations are important variables in weighing
cost advantages or disadvantages of a particular distribution channel. Consider sav-
ings like distributing several products through the same channels; also analyze less
obvious expenses, for example, managing inventory, accounting procedures, and
servicing products. Although it is tempting to place your products in every location
with a viable target market, distributing to many different locations exacts a heavy
cost burden. Therefore, the most effective strategy, especially for a new social enter-
prise, is to distribute to a few select markets.
Same as previous exercise
Prioritizing Markets
? Identify the location of markets for each product.
? Prioritize them according to cost advantages and potential returns.
? Compile the information into a table (exhibit 5P).
? Write out a justification based on cost advantage for selecting market locations as
related to product or service distribution (exhibit 5Q).
EXHIBIT 5P: TARTINA PRODUCT LINE AND
PRIMARY MARKET LOCATIONS
Product Line Primary Secondary
Regular peanut butter Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
market/individual
Sweetened peanut Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
butter market/individual
Grapefruit jam Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
market/individual
Passion fruit jam Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
market/individual
Karapinia Colline and Individuals PG and PAP Individuals/
surrounding area vendors
Colline—small town where production center is located
Petit Goave—provincial capital, largest city in the region of Colline
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FORMULATE A DISTRIBUTION STRATEGY
Rationale:
Your distribution strategy should be a synthesis of the exercises you did on types of
markets, market locations, and methods of distribution. Essentially, putting together
a distribution strategy requires answering the “where, when, who, how, and what” of
distribution.
Same as previous exercise
Formulating the Distribution Strategy
? Prepare a Distribution Channels Map illustrating exactly how you intend to move
your product or service from the point of origin to your customer. (An example
for TARTINA is given in exhibit 5R.)
? Use the following questions as a guide in formulating your distribution strategy.
(An example of the distribution strategy for TARTINA is given in exhibit 5S.)
• Where? Detailed plan for number and location of target markets.
• When? Plan for time period (should correspond to business plan).
• Who? Staff/contractors required to carry out distribution strategy.
• How? Method that will be used to distribute product at every level of the dis-
tribution chain.
• What are the budgetary implications? Cost to distribute product/service
according to proposed strategy.
• What synergies does your distribution strategy capture?
• How does your distribution strategy contribute to achieving the overall mar-
keting objectives?
Distribution strategy is included in the Business Plan.
Customer
PAP
supermarkets
Sales
agents
TARTINA
Production
Center
Institutions
and institu-
tional staff
Sales Direct
agents sales
TARTINA
Production
Center
Petit Goave
clients at sales
point
Sales
agents
TARTINA
Production
Center
Colline
customers
TARTINA
Production
Center
or
ADE office
Community
members in
Colline and
surrounding area
Clients
TARTINA
Production
Center
EXHIBIT 5R: DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS MAP FOR TARTINA PRODUCTS
Port-au-Prince Markets Markets Outside of Port-au-Prince
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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EXHIBIT 5Q: DISTRIBUTION STRATEGY FOR TARTINA
I. Markets and Locations
The social enterprise business plan focuses on markets where both significant sales
volume and healthy profit margins can be realized. In order of priority, they are
Port-au-Prince (PAP), the localities—Petit and Grand Goave—surrounding the pro-
duction site, and PAP institutions. The combination of these three markets is
required to maximize marketing objectives.
Synergies: In each market, cross-selling of products is the focus. Cross-selling not
only increases sales but also increases sales capacity. Also, with cross-selling signifi-
cant economies of scale can be achieved by being able to sell more products to
the same customer.
Port-au-Prince—Supermarkets: Port-au-Prince and the surrounding area have
the highest concentration of TARTINA customers. The PAP retail market is the
only market that offers the potential of a sufficient sales volume to make the
enterprise financially viable. Distribution expenses, including transportation,
inventory management and tracking, and accounting, will have to be carefully
managed to ensure cost-effectiveness of distribution. Competition for local peanut
butter and grapefruit jam is stiff, however, and will limit profit margins for these
more mature products.
Port-au-Prince—Institutions: PAP institutions will be considered complementary
to the supermarket distribution channel. Customers who purchase TARTINA prod-
ucts one month at their place of work will be directed to make a repeat purchase
at the supermarket. Sales agents will prospect institutions for large contracts.
1. Petit and Grand Goave—artisan markets, vendors, and individuals in the two
towns located close to the TARTINA production site and ADE offices.
2. Production Center—direct sales to individuals in the community and sur-
rounding areas from the center itself.
Serving these markets is cheaper than serving the more distant PAP supermarkets
because of lower transportation costs and elimination of at least one link in the
distribution chain. Sales from the social enterprise production site and to nearby
community members constitute artisan markets.
Quality standards are much lower in Petit and Grand Goave’s artisan markets than
in the sophisticated commercial markets of PAP. The artisan markets, however, do
not offer the large sales volume potential of PAP. Clients in these markets have less
disposable income and are far more price sensitive than their PAP counterparts.
Product sales in the vicinity of the ADE office in Colline are also an excellent pro-
motional vehicle for ADE’s community work done outside of the social enterprise.
Any other channel through which this market is served is complementary to the
supermarket distribution channel in PAP.
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II. Method of Distribution
Sales force: Professional sales staff will be the main method for reaching large
retail markets in PAP. The experience of sales agents will translate into healthy
sales levels and a consistent, professional presentation of TARTINA products.
Direct sales: These are sales by sales staff or clients to employees within an insti-
tution or organization. This is an appealing market for TARTINA products as insti-
tutional employees are willing to pay slighter higher prices than at the supermar-
ket because of the convenience of having the products come to them. It is also a
good way to build awareness for the TARTINA brand. There is no competition
from local producers in this arena, and employees tend to have a little more time
to listen to the TARTINA story than they would have when picking up their week-
ly groceries. On their own, institutional sales do not offer the potential to achieve
the sales volume required to meet the enterprise’s commercial objectives.
Clients: Worthy of special note is the recent introduction of clients as sales agents
for the Karapinia product in their communities. This is an exciting development at
many levels. In the strict commercial sense, sales have been impressive.
Additionally, this opportunity has given the clients, those who transform the
peanuts and other ingredients into Karapinia, a new understanding of the con-
sumer’s perspective. This is already having positive effects on production
processes. Clients are also learning new sales skills and other entrepreneurial
abilities.
Price Strategy
Pricing your product or service is the linchpin of viability and, thus, one of the most
important business decisions you will make. The key is setting a price your target
market is willing to pay for your product or service that at a minimum recovers your
costs and preferably generates a profit for your social enterprise. No section in the
business plan can be completed in total isolation, and this is especially true for
price. Pricing decisions are based on your costs, the effect of competition, and the
customer’s perception of your product’s or service’s value and the amount they are
willing to pay for it. This section provides a framework for developing a price strate-
gy for your enterprise. The decisions you make later in your human resources and
operations plans will also have a bearing on price, which may necessitate returning
to this section when you prepare your final business plan.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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PRICE FLOORS AND CEILINGS
The term price floor is used to indicate your cost—the lowest price you can offer
and still break even. If you decide to set the price below cost, it should be for a
temporary, specific strategic purpose such as to
introduce a new product to the market.
The price ceiling is sometimes characterized
by “what the market will bear” and hinges on two
important variables. The first is customers’ “per-
ceived value,” or the maximum price customers
will pay, based on what the product is worth to
them. The second is competitors’ prices for the
same or similar product or service.
Once you understand the price floor and ceil-
ing, you can make an informed decision about how to price your product or serv-
ice.
Most social enterprises use cost-based pricing. While it is important to be
mindful of costs when setting your prices, also think about your business from the
customer’s perspective. If the customer doesn’t perceive value worth paying for at
a price that enables you to cover costs, you may have to diversify your product
portfolio or even change the business you plan to enter.
BREAK-EVEN ANALYSIS
A break-even analysis determines at which point your revenues from sales equal
your costs. Called the break-even point or, aptly, in French, point mort or “death
point,” it also establishes your price floor. Exhibit 5S is an illustration of a break-
even in a business. The following exercises will help you determine the amount of
revenue your enterprise needs to generate and the number of units it must sell to
break even.
EXHIBIT 5S: BREAK-EVEN
Price Versus Cost
4Cost is the total of the fixed and variable expenses
(costs to you) to manufacture or offer your product or
service.
4Price is the amount per unit that customers pay for your
product or service.
$10,000
$7,500
$5,000
$2,500
0
1,000 5,000 10,000
S
A
L
E
S
&
C
O
S
T
S
NUMBERS OF UNITS SOLD
OPERATING PROFIT
BREAK-EVEN POINT
OPERATING LOSS
Price floor—the lowest price you
can offer your customers and still
break even.
Price ceiling—the maximum price
customers will pay based upon
what the product is worth to them.
Break-even point—the point at
which revenues from sales equal
costs.
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Determining Costs
Rationale:
The first step is to determine the costs to manufacture your product or offer your
service. Once you know your costs, you can calculate your break-even point.
Definition of Fixed and Variable Costs
Variable costs are the expenses that vary with the amount of services rendered or
goods produced. They include costs such as raw materials, transportation costs for
distributing products, inputs or materials used, and wage or piece-rate labor. For
example, the number of trainers you hire to teach business development courses
may be dependent on how many classes will be taught. For TARTINA, the quantity
of peanuts needed is dependent on the amount of peanut butter made. Some vari-
able costs, like technical consulting expenses, are not specifically related to units
produced yet fall into this category.
EXHIBIT 5T: EXAMPLE OF UNIT VARIABLE COSTS FOR TARTINA
Plain Peanut Butter (16 oz.) Price in Gourdes
1
Peanuts 5.000
Transportation (1 sack of 16 marmites over 1 km at 1.50 gde/sack) 0.060
Storage (1 gde for 1 sack of 16 marmites of peanuts) 0.000
Wood for heating 1.000
Water (1 bucket/1 km) 0.060
Salt 0.200
Grinder (500 gdes/5,000 times) 0.100
Pot (100 gdes/1,000 times) 0.010
Wooden spoon (1 gde/1,000 times) 0.001
Metal spoon (5 gdes/1,000 times) 0.005
Straw winnowing tray (20 gdes/1,000 times) 0.020
Small bucket (3.5 gdes/1,000 times) 0.004
Small wooden table (100 gdes/10,000 times) 0.100
Apron (75 gdes/5,000 times) 0.015
Tablecloth (75 gdes/2,000 times) 0.004
Screen (75 gdes/5,000 times) 0.015
Gallon jug (3 gdes/500 times) 0.006
Labor (1/2 hour at 4 gdes per hour) 2.000
Transportation to PAP (1 bucket = 45 jars at 8 gdes/bucket) 0.180
Depot fee 0.050
Label 1.000
Jar 10.000
Total 19.531
1
Gourdes are the local Haitian currency; there are 16.5 gourdes to $1 US.
Unit costs—the costs to produce
one unit of output.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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Calculating Variable Costs
Calculating variable costs is trickier than calculating fixed costs because it requires
breaking out costs of all inputs used in producing one unit of a good. Therefore, if
you are offering a training service, you will need to calculate all costs related to pro-
viding that training. This might include a contracted trainer’s fee, materials, space (if
you plan to rent space outside your regular office), snacks you will provide, etc.
Reusable supplies, such as pens, need to be costed by their estimated life span, or
their total cost divided by the number of times you can use them.
There are simpler methods to determine variable costs than ours, exhibit 5T; we
recommend that you round-off to make this task more user friendly. Our example is
presented this way for demonstrative purposes.
Explanation of TARTINA’s Variable Costs
TARTINA’s variable manufacturing cost per 16-ounce unit of peanut butter is
19.531 gourdes (rounded off to 19.5). Prices for peanuts, TARTINA’s largest variable
cost, fluctuate depending on the harvest, going as high as 16 gourdes per marmite
(5.5 lbs.) and squeezing margins. The competition sells its peanut butter for between
30 and 35 gourdes in supermarkets. This gives TARTINA only 10.5 - 15.5 gourdes
per unit margin ($0.63 - $0.93) when peanuts sell for the low price of 12 gourdes
per marmite to cover its fixed costs and earn a net profit (profit after expenses). In
addition, when distributing through supermarkets, TARTINA has to determine a
wholesale price that includes room for retailers’ 20% markup. Therefore, Mamba’s
selling price to supermarkets is 25 gourdes per unit, and the supermarket’s selling
price is 33 gourdes for TARTINA brand.
Fixed costs, or “overhead” (for development projects these costs are also referred to
as direct costs), are the expenses that don’t vary according to production volume or
number of services rendered. They usually include rent for office and storage space;
insurance and utilities; office equipment, such as telephones, fax machines, comput-
ers, radios, etc.; audits and evaluations; and salaries or a portion of salaries attrib-
uted to the project. Depreciation of assets is also a fixed cost.
Total fixed costs are found in the Profit and Loss Statement on line item “total
operating costs” (Chapter 8 “Financial Plan”).
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Allocating Overhead: A “Quick and Dirty” Calculation
For social enterprise programs working through one or more partners, diffi-
culties in assigning overhead can occur. This is particularly true if the part-
ners engage in several activities unrelated to the social enterprise program
and if any costs are shared between programs, such as office space, trans-
portation, supplies, and staff.
One simplified method of assigning overhead is as follows:
1. Add the total costs of the organization for all programs, excluding salaries
and fringe benefit.
2. Then divide by the total number of staff members. This will give you a dol-
lar value of overhead per staff member, excluding salaries and fringe ben-
efits.
3. Next, make a list of staff members involved in the social enterprise
program and
4. In the next column the amount of time they dedicate to it.
5. Then note each staff member’s salary plus fringe benefits in a dollar
amount. In our example, the production manager spends 100 percent of
his time working for the enterprise, and his full salary is $6,500 per year
including fringe benefits. The director spends 10 percent of his time on
enterprise activities, and his salary is $25,000 per year including fringe
benefits.
6. In the next column, calculate a dollar value for overhead allocation based
on the percentage of time worked on the project. For example, since the
director is charged 10% to the program, his allocation to overhead is
$10% of $1,200, or $120.
7. Total the columns for salaries and overhead allocation. Adding the totals
for the two columns will give you a figure for overhead or fixed costs to
allocate to your social enterprise. (See following example.)
Obviously, this method is not 100 percent accurate, but it is probably a close
enough estimate.
Example (fictitious Organization):
(1) Total organizational overhead: $30,000 per year (excluding salaries and
fringe benefits)
Total staff (all programs): 25
(2) Formula: $30,000 = $1,200 for annual overhead per staff member
25
(3) (4) (5) (6) (7)
Personnel Time on Percent of Salary + Overhead Allocation Total
Project Fringe in $
Business Manager 50% $10,000 (.5 of $20,000) $600 (.5 of $1,200) $10,600
Production Manager 100% $6,500 $1,200 $7,700
Trainer 30% $4,545 (.3 of $15,000) $363 (.3 of $1,200) $4,908
Marketing Manager 100% $18,000 $1,200 $19,200
Director 10% $2,500 (.10 of $25,000) $120 (.10 of 1,200) $2,620
Secretary 25% $1,000 (.25 of $4,000) $300 (.25 of 1,200) $1,300
Total $42,545 $3,783 $46,328
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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Calculate Break-Even Points
The break-even analysis considers four variables: fixed costs, variable costs, quantity
and price. The most commonly used break-even point determines the number of
units that must be sold for an enterprise to cover its costs. Yet it can be also used as
a sensitivity analysis to derive the break-even at different levels of output, prices
and fixed and variable cost structures. The best approach is to isolate the variables
over which you have the most control and focus on them when analyzing your
break-even.
Quantity—What does your market research tell you about the size of your target?
(chapter 3) What is your level of capacity; how much are you capable of producing?
(chapter 6)
Price—How much are your customers willing to pay for your product? (chapter 3)
Variable costs—Are your variable costs well estimated and calculated for present
time and near future? (chapter 5)
Fixed Costs—Are your fixed costs reasonable to support your operations? (chapter
6, 7, and 8)
For example, making peanut butter is a variable cost business, meaning that a large
part of its cost depends on the price of the raw materials, peanuts, which range from
as low as 10 gourdes per marmite to as much as 16 gourdes per marmite. When
prices of peanuts go up, margins narrow, and TARTINA must produce and sell more
to cover its costs. Therefore, TARTINA should calculate its break-even at different
variable cost levels to determine how much the price of peanuts affects its bottom
line.
Break-even is presented here, rather than in the chapter on finance to emphasize
the importance in formulating a price strategy based on real costs.
Marketing manager, production manager, business manager, PO business
advisor, accountant, partner program manager, sales staff
Calculating the Break-Even Point
To complete this section, you will need historic information on the variable and
fixed costs of your enterprise. If yours is a new venture, you may need to first
work through the rest of the manual to have enough information to calculate
your break-even point. Full details of TARTINA’s financial information can be
found in chapter 8. Its production costs are presented in chapter 6.
? A lot of pricing is chicken and egg stuff. Arriving at the right price takes several
iterations.
? Begin by calculating your variable costs for each product or service (19.5 for
Mamba).
? Then, estimate annual production costs by product. Production costs are derived
by multiplying variable costs per product by the number of products you plan to
produce over a year; these figure are then added together. Therefore, 18,300
total units of Mamba are projected at a cost 356,850 gourdes or $21,627 (19.5 x
18,300).
? Total production costs for all products. TARTINA’s total annual production costs
are $45,974 of all four types of products.
? Now, what is the breakdown of production costs per product in percentage
(some products have higher unit manufacturing costs than others)? For example,
Sensitivity analysis—a tool used to
project expense and income levels by
manipulating cost and revenue vari-
ables in a company, such as changes
to production level, costs of inputs
(fixed or variable), or prices.
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Mamba production costs are $21,627 out of a total cost of $45,974. Expressed
as a percentage, that’s 47%, whereas, Karapinia and Grenadia represent 14%
each and Chadèque 25%.
? Next, you will have to allocate your total fixed costs based on the percentage of
production costs for each product manufactured.
• TARTINA’s total fixed costs are $146,729; 47% of this figure is $70,372.
Therefore, $70,372 of fixed costs are then allocated to Mamba.
? Input fixed and variable costs into the following break-even formulas.
? Calculate break-even points for each product.
? Perform a sensitivity analysisto test break-even by manipulating different cost,
output and price variables.
Formula for Calculating Break-Even Units
To determine how many units must be produced and sold to break even, use the
following formula:
Fixed costs
Price per unit – Variable cost per unit
= Number of units needed to break even
*The denominator for this formula is also called unit contribution margin (selling price per
unit – variable cost per unit).
EXAMPLE #1: CALCULATING BREAK-EVEN NUMBER OF UNITS FOR MAMBA
Data Needed:
• Variable costs per unit for Mamba = 19.5 gourdes ($1.18)
• 47% fix cost allocation for Mamba is $70,372
• Selling price for Mamba is 25 gourdes to supermarkets ($1.52)
• Currency exchange: 16.5 gourdes = $1 US
Formula: FC $70,372
P-VC
= Q
1.52 - 1.18
= 206,976
TARTINA must sell 206,976 units of Mamba to break-even. Ouch!
EXAMPLE #2: CALCULATING BREAK-EVEN REVENUE FOR MAMBA
For demonstrative purposes only.
Formula: FC $70,372
1-(VC/Price)P-VC
= Q
1-(1.18/1.52)
= $319,872
Mamba has slim margins of just $0.34 per unit. Therefore, at the current selling price and
production costs, TARTINA needs revenues of $319,872 just to cover its costs of Mamba.
Ouch!
This of course is not the full picture. TARTINA has not projected break-even until year
seven, which could mean that they are right on target with planned sales of 18,300 units of
Mamba for revenue of $27,727 in the first year.
Unit contribution
margin—captures the
profit margin plus the fixed
costs per unit sold. Unit
contribution margin is used
in the break-even calcula-
tion to determine how many
units of a product or serv-
ice must be sold to equal
the fixed and variable costs.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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Results
Results of the break-even analysis can tell you if your enterprise is potentially viable.
They evoke questions like: Do we have the capacity to manufacture X amount of
product or render X number of services? Is there a sufficient market for this quantity
of services or products? Does our enterprise structure support the marketing func-
tions necessary to sell this quantity at our break-even price or above it? If breakeven
results appear daunting, how are they projected over time? Do they become more
attainable as the enterprise operates with greater efficiency? If not, are you in the
wrong business?
PRICE ELASTICITY AND SENSITIVITY
Rationale:
In analyzing the buying sensitivities of your target market, one variable was price.
Understanding how sensitive your market is to changes in price helps you determine
how much “wiggle room,” or price elasticity, you have to raise your prices. Factors
that influence price elasticityare supply and demand: the availability of the product
or service and of good substitutes, their respective prices, and the extent to which
the product or service is desired. If ample supply exists through competitors and
substitutes, that puts downward pressure on your price. On the other hand, if
demand is high for a product or service, exceeding what can be supplied through
competitors and substitutes, price elasticity is high, meaning that you will have room
to increase prices. Customer purchasing power and staying power (ability to do
without a given product or service) are other factors that contribute to price sensitiv-
ity.
Unfortunately, most social enterprises have little flexibility when pricing their
products and services. This is because they operate in industries characterized by
low barriers to entry and high competition or because they render services to disad-
vantaged business owners that have little money to spend on services.
This manual gives no explicit exercise to establish price elasticity for the products
or services in your industry. Merely reflect on the information you gathered during
market research (which should be sufficient to denote price elasticity) and apply it
when developing your price strategy.
PRICE STRATEGY
Once you have calculated your break-even points and studied price sensitivity, you
are ready to set your price.
Using Subsidy in Price
If you are considering subsidizing your price with donor
funds, you should be aware of (1) the amount of subsidy
provided, (2) how it is being used (subsidizing what), (3)
what its purpose is, (4) its duration, and (5) your plan for
self-reliance. Using donor funds to artificially lower prices
distorts the market and is not a sustainable strategy in the
long term. We recommend that you use subsidy toward
covering your fixed costs and that you reflect this in your
financial plan (see chapter 8).
Price elasticity—measures cus-
tomers' responsiveness to changes in
price via quantities purchased.
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STRATEGIES FOR ESTABLISHING PRICE
4Set a low price on one or more products to make quick sales that will support
another product in development. (TARTINA could use this price strategy for plain
Mamba to support the costs of developing sweet and spicy Mamba.) This strategy
increases cash flow, even though it might mean a net loss for the period.
4Set the price to meet a desired profit or sales goal, indicated in the marketing
objectives.
4Establish a high price to make high profits initially. This strategy is used to recover
research and development costs or to maximize profits on an introductory prod-
uct before competitors enter the market. (TARTINA entertained this strategy as an
option for pricing Karapinia.)
4Set a price equal to the competitor’s. This strategy is often used with commodi-
ties, when prices are relatively well established (e.g., peanut butter), or when
there is no other basis for setting the price. When using your competitor’s price as
your “ceiling,” the challenge is to lower your costs below that ceiling so you can
generate more revenue.
4Establish a low price (compared with the competition’s) to penetrate the market
and capture a large number of customers. This strategy can also be used to
achieve nonfinancial marketing objectives such as product or brand awareness. It
works if you are able to maintain profitability at a low price through high sales
volume and efficient service delivery/production. Most private companies that use
this strategy subsidize prices in the short term to achieve penetration, then raise
their prices.
4Base the price on the customer’s perception of the value of your product or serv-
ice. This price strategy is one of the most important in social enterprise programs
that render services to the self-employed. Financial service programs do an excel-
lent job at providing services at higher-than-market prices, based on value to their
customers. To use a value-based price strategy, you will have to be thorough in
your market research and fully aware of the benefits your customers want and the
perceived value of those benefits (how much are they willing to pay for them).
4Charging “what customers are willing to pay” is usually a nonstarter. This passive
approach to pricing is sometimes used by social entrepreneurs who want to be
fair to their low-income clients. But price is a business tool. “Withstanding the
test of the market” is both pricing your products appropriately and giving cus-
tomers something they want.
PRICE STRATEGIES LINKED TO DISTRIBUTION AND PROMOTION
4Your pricing strategy might include discounts for customers who offer you a busi-
ness benefit; for example, giving cash discounts to customers who pay promptly
or in advance of receipt. This rewards those who help your social enterprise
maintain a steady, positive cash flow. Offering discounts for large orders often
makes economic sense when the cost per unit to sell or deliver a product declines
as the quantity increases.
4
Seasonal discounts given to buyers who purchase during a product’s slow season
reward customers who assist the social enterprise in balancing its cash flow and in
meeting production targets.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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4Trade-in allowances for return of old products that you can either reuse or resell
for a profit may benefit both the social enterprise and customers.
4Promotional allowances often make financial sense and should be linked with
promotional strategies. For example, you might offer reduced-price coupons at
point-of-purchase displays or outlets that sell your social enterprise’s product.
First-time “low-price” offers are a way to attract new customers.
Same as previous exercise
Formulating a Price Strategy
? Use break-even point analysis as a starting point for your price strategy.
? Reflect on the price strategies described above and consider which ones may be
appropriate for your product or service.
? Use the list of questions in the Price Strategy Framework (below) as a guide to
developing a basic price and beyond basic price strategy.
Price strategy is included in the Business Plan.
PRICE STRATEGY FRAMEWORK
(Also see example of how questions are used to formulate a price strategy for
TARTINA, exhibit 5U).
Basic Price
4At what basic price should each product or service be set?
4Will the basic price be different for different customers? For example, when dis-
tributing through a middleman such as a retailer or trader, you must also consider
the price he will charge the consumer and leave room for the middleman’s
markup.
The basic unit price of each product should be assessed with the following
points in mind:
4Prices should help achieve the marketing objectives.
4Prices need to be set to cover variable costs and contribute to covering fixed costs
with the sale of each product.
4Will prices be the same as, higher than, or lower than those of the competition?
4Can price be a competitive advantage for any of your social enterprise’s products
or services?
4Is price one of the most important criteria used by the consumer in selecting your
product? How price sensitive is the target market for each product or service?
4With price comes a certain perception. A lower price is not always the best strate-
gy. A higher price is often associated with higher quality. Is this the case for your
enterprise’s products or services?
4Is the pricing objective to “skim” the market—take a small piece of the market
with a larger profit margin—or to “penetrate” the market—offer a lower price
with the objective of wider sales?
4How will pricing impact accounting systems? Is your social enterprise’s accounting
system able to capture a complex pricing strategy?
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Beyond Basic Unit Price
4Determine strategies for discounts and allowances, one price vs. flexible pricing,
different prices for different geographical locations, freight absorption (transporta-
tion costs included in price)—free on board destination pricing, vs. free on
board shipping dictates whether the supplier or the buyer pays shipping costs in
the price.
4What are competitors’ strategies on these fronts? Is there an opportunity for your
social enterprise to offer a competitive advantage?
EXHIBIT 5U: PRICE STRATEGY FOR TARTINA ENTERPRISE
1. Context
Market research into customer buying motives for the products in the TARTINA
product line was conducted in January 1999. This research confirmed that price
sensitivity runs high for every product in the product line. The degree of price
elasticity depends on the distribution channel and the maturity of the product. In
terms of distribution channels, direct sales offer the greatest room for flexibility
given that purchasers are willing to pay extra for the convenience of having the
product come to them. Supermarkets in PAP, however, offer little margin for price
flexibility because stiff competition from other local brands on the shelves pushes
prices down. There is an another element of the supermarket distribution channel
that affects the ability of TARTINA Enterprise to raise its prices. In this market,
TARTINA acts as a wholesaler; the supermarket is the intermediary that sells to the
consumer. This additional link in the distribution chain limits TARTINA’s ability to
raise prices.
The fewer links that exist in the distribution chain outside of PAP offer an
advantage in pricing flexibility. However, this advantage is offset by the lower dis-
posable income of the customer target group in areas outside of PAP.
The “new” products of Karapinia, passion fruit jam and sweetened peanut
butter, will translate into some room to increase prices. Such increases will not be
significant, however, given the overall price sensitivity of clients purchasing food-
stuffs and the unstable economic situation in the country.
2. Pricing Strategy
The pricing strategy for products in the TARTINA product line reflects the follow-
ing considerations:
4It covers unit variable costs and a percentage markup to spread over fixed costs.
4Sales prices will remain competitive, but competing on price is not the most
important basis of competition. The comparative advantages of TARTINA prod-
ucts lie in characteristics and benefits other than price, and these will be the
most important factors in positioning the products vis-a-vis the competition’s.
4The plan is not to undercut competition using donor funding because we want
customers to switch to TARTINA from the competition (for peanut butter and
grapefruit jam) for reasons other than price. We want to create brand loyalty.
Likewise for new products, we are targeting customers who are open to trying
Free on board destination (FOB)—
when the supplier bears the shipping
costs.
Free on board shipping point—
buyer bears transportation costs from
point of origin.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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to new products and new flavors—for whom price is not the No. 1 factor when
deciding to purchase a new product.
4The seasonality of raw materials (fruit and peanuts) is not reflected on the
supermarket shelves. For jams and jellies, shelf life is up to two years. This per-
mits producers to process enough products during the harvest season to last the
rest of the year. No price increase is evident during the year for jams and jellies.
For peanut butter, there is a slight increase in supermarket prices toward the
end of the two peanut harvest seasons. This increase is kept minimal, however,
by the fierce competition between local brands.
3. Per-Unit Prices for Each Product (16 oz. size)
For Supermarket Customers:
Mamba: 25 gourdes Karapinia: 5 gourdes (small satchel)
Chadèque: 26 gourdes Grenadia: 26 gourdes
Prices will be modestly higher (2 to 3 gourdes) for individual and
institutional customers.
Note: Prior to developing the business plan, TARTINA conducted a feasibility test
that eliminated products that were not (and did not have the potential to be)
financially viable.
Promotion Strategy
The overall objective of your promotion strategy is to contribute toward achieving
the marketing objectives. It is the vehicle for informing your target market about
your enterprise and the products or services it is offering in the marketplace.
Although many social enterprises place significant emphasis on providing services or
products appropriate for their target market, ironically, few focus on raising aware-
ness of their existence once they are available in the market. Attracting customers
through promotional efforts is a critical piece of the viability equation, and it
requires money. The original TARTINA budget allocated substantial financial
resources to training and supplies but included zero resources for promotion. It is a
mistake to assume customers will automatically become conscious of your products,
and of the benefits they offer, without an organized campaign to impart this infor-
mation. Since money in social enterprise programs is always limited, your promotion
strategy must be developed with care and creativity. Much of the information gath-
ered in chapter 3 on the characteristics of your target market and how to reach cus-
tomers will help you with developing your promotional strategy.
A promotion plan articulates:
4How you will raise customer awareness of your products or services.
4What message you will convey to your customers.
4Specific methods you will use to deliver and reinforce your message.
4How you will secure sales.
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5
LOGOS
Rationale:
A logo is a visual picture that
reminds people of who your
enterprise is and what it does.
Recognizable logos—for example,
for the Olympics, Mercedes, Nike,
or Microsoft—immediately remind
people of the firm and the prod-
ucts or services it sells. Logos are
especially important promotional
tools for social enterprises that tar-
get illiterate customers.
Marketing manager, sales staff, business manager, PO business advisor, part-
ner program manager, external graphic artist (if desired)
Creating a Logo
? Create a logo for your social enterprise. Solicit assistance from a graphic designer
if necessary.
? All key enterprise stakeholders should agree on the firm’s logo.
THE PROMOTIONAL MESSAGE
Rationale:
Every enterprise sends a message in its marketing; this message should motivate cus-
tomers to purchase your product or service and state your competitive position.
The promotional message can emphasize particular benefits, such as “low-price
leader,” “convenient one-day service,” or “always fresh.” A message can also exploit
a market niche, as in “Telecommunications Serving Kampala Small Businesses” or
“Palm Oil Marketers.” It can also be more subtle, triggering a customer’s emotions
or self-image, like this one from an alternative-jobs newspaper: “Change your job,
change the world; work for social change.” All Americans are familiar with the emo-
tional appeal of McDonald’s marketing message, “You deserve a break today.”
Tips for Creating Logos
4A logo is a visual picture that reminds people of who
your business is and what it does.
4Logos can be abstract.
4Don’t try to tell a complicated story with a logo; keep it
simple.
4Logos should use symbols that are easy to remember
and recognize.
4Put the name of your social enterprise under your logo
to reinforce identification.
4Employ a graphic designer or use a computer art pro-
gram to help create a logo.
EXHIBIT 5V: TARTINA PROMOTIONAL MESSAGE
TARTINA Enterprise changed the message “100% natural,” which focused on
product benefits, because it seemed too limiting, since it applied only to spicy
and regular peanut butter. The new message—“Tastes and feels sooooo good!”—
draws attention to product quality and to the benefits TARTINA products provide
to the community.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
152
Same as previous exercise
Creating a Promotional Message
We have already noted that customers mainly buy the benefits that products and
services provide, not their features. In other words, customers are more concerned
about how a product or service will affect their lives than about how it achieves
those results. In writing your promotional message, you must tell customers what
they will get when they purchase your product or service, such as security, an
enhanced self-image, a more profitable business, etc., rather than detailing what
your product does.
? Begin by reflecting on three of the “four P’s” of marketing discussed at the begin-
ning of this chapter:
Product: What are the benefits your product or service offers that customers
are seeking?
Price: Is there a cost advantage of your product or service for customers?
Place: Are there advantages of convenience or comfort associated with the
locations where your products or services will be sold?
? Next, use the “five F’s” (below) to further analyze how your product or service
fills a range of benefits customers look for. Professional marketers, use this “five
F’s” formula as a way to remember advantages customers are seeking when they
make a purchase.
Functions: How does your product or service meet specific
needs of your customers?
Finances: How will the purchase of your product or service
change your customers’ financial situation? Does your pro-
duct or service render long-term savings benefits, such as
increased productivity or efficiency?
Freedom: Will customers gain time and have peace of
mind in other areas of their lives if they purchase your
product or service?
Feelings: How does your product or service make cus
tomers feel about themselves? Will it improve their self-
image?
Future: How will your product or service affect their lives
over time? Will it be available in the future? Will support
and service continue to be available? Will this increase
your customers’ sense of security?
? Now you probably have a substantial list of benefits your product or service
offers customers. Customers want as many benefits as possible, but you will have
to prioritize which ones to emphasize in your promotional message. Bear in
mind that there are other ways than your promotional message to communicate
the benefits of your product or service, such as excellent service or a high-quality
product that speaks for itself. Concentrate on the one or two benefits that will
most effectively motivate customers to purchase your product or service and that
most strongly define the competitive position of your enterprise.
? Write your promotional message. It should be very brief—no more than one
line—and simple, so that it is easy to remember.
EXHIBIT 5W: “FS” BEHIND TARTINA BRAND
“Tastes and feels sooooo good!”
FUNCTION—TARTINA’s yummy tasting peanut
butter in several savory flavors.
FINANCIAL—Less expensive than many other
brands, saving money over time.
FREEDOM—Guilt free high protein food; con-
tributing to social good by purchasing TARTINA
brand; available in many convenient locations;
expiration date ensures freshness.
FEELINGS—fosters “good parent,” “concerned
citizen taking action” self-image.
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THE PROMOTIONAL VEHICLE
Rationale:
Once you have decided on the message you want to convey, you must then figure
out how that message will reach customers. There are many marketing mediums to
consider. Advertising, trade shows, and public relations efforts are just some of the
possibilities. Some promotional vehicles will be more suitable for your enterprise
and product/service than others. This section is designed to help you focus on cost-
effective promotional vehicles that will yield the best results—i.e., increase your
sales.
Selection of Promotional
Vehicles
Quantity, cost, mix, and fit are
important considerations when
selecting promotional vehicles for
your enterprise. Be sure that the
medium you choose will actually
reach your target customers and
that it is appropriate to your
image. Most customers need to be
exposed to marketing materials
several times before they decide
to purchase a product or service.
Therefore, repetition and exposure from a variety of different sources are also
important considerations. Finally, affordability can be a strong factor in selecting
which promotional vehicle you will ultimately use.
Types of Promotional Vehicles
4 Brochures—leaflets, informational handouts, inserts. Brochures are an excellent
low-cost promotional vehicle as long as your target customers are literate. Bro-
chures are especially useful for service businesses because they enable you to
describe your services in lieu of tangible products.
4 Print media—advertising in newspapers, newsletters, magazines, and trade and
specialty publications. Cost varies greatly for print ads: from little to nothing for
ads in local newsletters to expensive ads in publications with national circulation.
Before buying ad space in a publication, be certain that its readership matches
your target market.
4 Posters/fliers—a low-cost option. These can be posted locally or handed out in
communities. Fliers and posters are a good means of advertising events or “act-
now” opportunities to try your product or service.
4 Broadcast media—radio and television. Although television is inappropriate for
social enterprises in many markets, well-targeted radio advertising can reap sur-
prising benefits.
4 Direct mail—mass-mailed fliers, catalogs, brochures, and coupons. Direct mail is
generally associated with high costs and low returns. Moreover, it is a highly
impractical form of promotion in developing countries.
4 Public relations—public service announcements (PSAs), celebrity spokesper-
sons, newspaper feature or news articles. These are seemingly attractive promo-
tional vehicles for social enterprises because they are free. Although public rela-
The Wrong Promotional Vehicle
If your enterprise offers business services to poor entre-
preneurs who cannot afford luxury items, or lack basic
infrastructure like electricity, television is probably not the
best way to reach them. Television is also a powerful
medium that can easily intimidate or alienate poor people,
possibly contradicting the image of a trustworthy business
aimed at helping them. In addition, TV advertising is very
expensive and a good way to blow your program’s pro-
motional budget in one fell swoop.
Copyright ©2000 Sutia Kim Alter. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)
tions can yield positive benefits, relying on them as part of your promotional mix
is unwise because of the hidden costs of time spent writing and sending out press
releases or efforts to solicit journalists that go nowhere. And since it is difficult to
control what a journalist will write, PR can distort your enterprise's public image.
In the end, these articles often do not even reach your target customers. If you
choose to use public relations as a promotional vehicle, be discriminating, realis-
tic, and clear about your objectives. Select community publications or newsletters
that are compatible with your reputation and image. Pursue "celebrities" you have
access to who will draw the attention of your target customers. For example, a
soccer player from a regional team may be more appropriate than a movie star.
4 Advertising gifts—giveaway items emblazoned with your enterprise's logo, such
as stickers, calendars, desk sets, T-shirts, and magnets. These items vary in cost
but can be an effective means of developing brand recognition. Stickers are rela-
tively inexpensive and are popular in many countries.
4 Sampling—distribution of free product samples. This promotional vehicle is
especially useful for introductory products, when you want to promote use or
knowledge of a new product rather than a known product. There are costs of
staff time to give out samples and the cost of the product itself.
4 Informal marketing—activities such as speaking at public events or attending
conferences. Like public relations, informal marketing offers a cost advantage but
often does not reach a social enterprise's target customers. There may be other
advantages to informal marketing, such as developing strategic alliances or raising
public awareness for your firm. Be clear about your objectives before committing
time to this promotional vehicle.
4 Telephone directory listings—an often overlooked but cheap and appropriate
means of promotion for many social enterprises.
4 Trade shows—useful for two reasons. Participation in trade shows raises your
profile and offers new business opportunities, such as strategic alliances with
commercial partners or sharing information. Trade shows, however, can be costly
in staff time and exhibition costs if not well targeted.
4 Merchandising displays—on-site, point-of-purchase offers presented to cus-
tomers at the time of sale to encourage impulse purchases. Merchandising dis-
plays are good promotional vehicles for cross-selling products because they allow
an enterprise to display its full product line. They are also an effective branding
mechanism. Note that some retail outlets may charge for displays that take up
shelf space.
4 Billboards—brightly colored signs with your logo and a strong visual image.
These are an excellent choice in countries sensitive to brand image and with low
literacy rates among target customers. The cost varies by country, depending on
whether the billboard is a formal means of paid advertising controlled by the
state or simply a sign erected on a public roadside by the enterprise itself.
4 Special offers—discounts, two-for-one deals, free trials, etc. Such enticements
enable your social enterprise to increase sales and build its market share. The
costs of discounted prices or giveaways must be figured into your bottom line.
4 Information meetings—an oral presentation introducing your enterprise and its
services or products. This form of promotion, often used by microfinance institu-
tions, is also a good way to attract potential customers to service businesses.
Information meetings are particularly effective when you target market is not lit-
erate.
Managing the Double Bottom Line:
154
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Business manager, marketing manager, PO business advisor, sales staff,
accountant
Planning Your Promotional Vehicles
Locate the Promotional Vehicle Worksheet (exhibit 5X) in The Workbook or create
your own. This exercise is a precursor to preparing your promotional strategy and
budget.
L Reflect on the information gleaned about your target customers in chapter 3 as
you look through the list of promotional vehicles and answer the following ques-
tions.
L Reach. Which promotional vehicles will best reach your target customers, in
terms of both geographic location and your customers' access to the vehicles
used?
L Fit. Which ones best fit your enterprise's image and the product you want to promote?
L Frequency. How often and when will you use the promotional vehicles? Are
there seasonal upswings or downturns in your business cycle?
L Cost. What costs are associated with using the vehicles? Will you have to buy
space or contract for professional assistance (in design, printing, production,
advertising, or public relations)?
L What are the annual costsfor your promotional vehicles? This information will be
used as the basis of your marketing budget in the financial section of your busi-
ness plan. Don't forget to calculate costs of staff time or product samples in your
projected annual promotion costs.
EXHIBIT 5X: PROMOTIONAL VEHICLES FOR TARTINA
VEHICLE REACH FIT FREQUENCY COST
1 (low) - 5 high) (per year)
Print - - - -
Broadcast - - - -
Direct Mail - - - -
Brochures 2 2 Annually/or as needed to update information $550
Flier/poster 3 3 New product launches/ promotional campaigns $360
Sampling 2 5 Monthly, each major retailer Covered by
sales
salaries
Informal 1 1 When opportune; ADE Director N/A
PR 4 2 Quarterly press releases N/A
Trade shows 4 5 Biannual PAP Food Fair $800
Gifts - - - -
Phone book 2 1 Annual space ad plus phone listing $25
Displays 4 4 Two months per year, major retailers $400
Billboards 4 3 Once, sign on main road to Colline $30 to artist
Information meetings 1 3 When opportune for direct sales agents N/A
Special offers 2 4 Quarterly to correspond to product launcher, $500 in
academic year, summer and post X-Mas redeemed
coupons
TOTAL COSTS $2,665
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LOW-/NO-COST PROMOTIONAL OPTIONS
In addition to using the aforementioned conventional promotional vehicles, you can
employ a number of creative options to promote your enterprise. Usually, little addi-
tional cost is involved, and these options can produce tremendous benefits.
Consider the following when you prepare your promotional plan.
4Cross-selling—exhibiting several different products in one display. Cross-selling
builds brand awareness across multiple products and entices customers to try your
other products if they are already familiar with one.
4Personal sales—carried out by sales, marketing, or other staff at sales locations.
Staff members can add a personal touch by offering customers samples to try,
telling them about the products and the enterprise, and giving out coupons.
4Strategic alliance—a complementary company with which you share promotion,
sales, or distribution functions. Several types of alliances can be formed:
• Joint advertising—when two firms are mentioned in a single ad and share the
costs. Special events are popular among nonprofits; firms underwrite the costs
of an event and display their banners, T-shirts, and literature at the event.
• Licensing—when one firm grants another permission to use its name, trade-
mark, or product. For example, Save the Children licenses its name and logo
to a clothing manufacturing company for a line of ties and scarves distributed
in retail outlets. SC receives financial benefit for its programs and increases its
name recognition without having to manage a clothing business.
• Professional or in-kind exchanges—a creative way to broker promotional deals
through nonfinancial exchanges with businesses that want services or products
from your enterprise. In the Moscow Winter Olympic Games, a noncash deal
worth more than $1 million, trading coffee and programming for advertising,
was brokered between Columbia House Coffee, the games’ sponsor, and
Turner Productions.
4Referrals and testimonials—a satisfied customer is the most powerful means to
promote your social enterprise. Your job is to "delight the customer" so the cus-
tomer will refer your enterprise and services/products to others. You can capitalize
on customer referrals by inviting satisfied customers to speak at information meet-
ings or help with samplings, product demonstrations, or special promotions. Also,
you can make their comments indelible by including them as testimonials in print-
ed promotional material.
4Cause-related marketing—exploiting the social value of your enterprise for
advertising purposes. Cause-related marketing can take the form of a strategic
alliance (above) with another firm (usually a large corporation) that provides
money, technical assistance, and/or promotion in exchange for using your social
enterprise in its advertising. The corporation is usually motivated by the opportu-
nity to improve its public image, smooth community relations to make way for
business expansion or penetrate new markets. Some well-known examples
include Benetton's sponsorship of AIDS awareness and American Express' raising
consciousness for hunger relief with Washington, D.C.-based Share our Strength
(SOS). Some social enterprise entrepreneurs find it demoralizing to join ranks with
large corporations, believing that they are exploiting their target population, while
others find that mutually beneficial relations are forged.
Managing the Double Bottom Line:
156
Licensing Can
Help Serve the
Double Bottom
Line
Licensing offers certain
advantages to social
enterprises concerned
with meeting the social
objectives. A licensing
agreement with a private,
for-profit firm relieves a
social enterprise from
business management so
it can stick to the social
business of "doing good."
Licensing also provides
the enterprise with a guar-
anteed market and high-
quality technical assis-
tance, although revenues
will be substantially less
than if the social enterprise
managed the business
itself.
For example, the social
objectives of your enter-
prise might be to supply
jobs to and develop the
technical competence of
clients who produce
leather goods. Your enter-
prise might choose to
focus on core competen-
cies like production tech-
niques and community
organizing rather than
manage multiple business
functions. In this case, the
enterprise might license
the entrepreneur-made
products to a company
that would handle market-
ing of the leather goods.
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A more applicable form of cause-related marketing is to allude to social objec-
tives in your promotional messages, literature, and advertising. Although this is a
good way to get publicity, it can be a double-edged sword. A social enterprise bak-
ery found that it lost customers when it advertised that its bread was made by inter-
nally displaced people and refugees because that conjured up images of unsanitary
manufacturing conditions. TARTINA Enterprise discovered that social consciousness
was generally low among its poorly educated consumers in Haiti, but many retail
customers chose to carry TARTINA products because they wanted to support the
cause.
Same as previous exercise
Planning Low/Cost Marketing Options
? Locate the Low-/No-Cost Promotional Options Worksheet in The Workbook or
create your own. Exhibit 5Y provides an example for TARTINA
EXHIBIT 5Y: LOW-/NO-COST PROMOTIONAL OPTIONS FOR TARTINA
VEHICLE REACH FIT FREQUENCY COST
(per year)
Cross-selling 4 5 No additional
costs
Personal sales 3 4 Covered by sales
salaries
Strategic alliances
Type:
Referrals 1 4 No additional
costs
Cause-related 2 3 Time to forge
marketing corporate
relationships
Other
TOTAL COSTS -0-
1 = worst choice 5 = best choice
PACKAGING
Packaging refers to a product's physical package (box, container, jar, wrapping, etc.)
or labels, or a service's presentation. Although packaging does not fall directly under
the auspices of promotion, good packaging can certainly help promote products and
services. Moreover, it is an aspect of marketing that is sorely undervalued by social
enterprises and, therefore, is worth mentioning here.
Packaging enhances your professional image and helps commercialize your
social enterprise at little or no additional cost, and it doesn't require changing the
product or service. TARTINA first used crude plastic containers for its peanut butter
that were difficult to open and close and sometimes leaked, dripping grease down
the sides and smearing the laser-printed label. Its new jars with screw-on tops are
marginally more expensive but, with their new label, are much more attractive and
commercial looking (exhibit 5Z).
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
158
Tips for Packaging
Packaging has many variables and is difficult to address generically, so we simply
give you a few hints for packaging your product or service.
4Remember that because the package of your product or presentation of your
service is the first contact a potential customer has with it, the package represents
the product's entire identity and image.
4Use the five F's to tailor packaging to customer wants (see TARTINA example in
exhibit 5Z below).
4Your packaging should attract—even call out to—your target customer.
4Your name and logo should be clearly visible.
The new label, a significant improvement over the existing one, has the following
benefits:
4It is fashioned after import labels. There is a great demand for imported food-
stuffs, which are considered to be of higher quality than the local competition.
The new label should have a positive impact on the TARTINA image. In addi-
tion, it will attract customers who aspire to purchase imported peanut butter or
jam but can only afford local brands. (feelings)
4The label was designed with the female shopper in mind; the pastel colors and
floral patterns are visually appealing to women. (functions, feelings)
4The label includes a paper safety seal, which is an inexpensive way to assure
the customer that the product has not been tampered with. This is an important
feature differentiating the product from the local competition, which does not
have safety seals. (freedom, future)
4Similarly, nutrition information is provided on the new TARTINA label, which is
a comparative advantage relative to the local competition. (freedom, feelings,
future)
EXHIBIT 5Z: NEW TARTINA LABEL
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EXHIBIT 5AA: PROMOTIONAL PERSONNEL FOR TARTINA
Position/task In- Hire Contract One Time or Duration PT Annual
house Recurring /FT Cost‡
Marketing Manager FT
Marketing Assistant
Market Researcher 1 time
(product study) 4 weeks
Events Coordinator Recurring 8 weeks PT
Alliance Coordinator
Graphic Designer 2 (label/logo)
Other
‡ For permanent staff include salary plus benefits.
Formulate a Promotion Strategy
Your promotional strategy will be a synthesis of the work completed in this section
and will be included in your final business plan.
PO business advisor, marketing manager, business manager, sales staff,
external marketing consultant (if desired)
Crafting a Promotional Strategy
? Develop a promotional strategy for your social enterprise.
? You will have to formulate a promotional strategy for each product or service you
are offering.
? Locate the Promotional Strategy Worksheet in The Workbookor create your own.
MARKETING PERSONNEL
After plotting the vehicles for your promotion strategy, consider the effect of these
choices on enterprise personnel. In the cost columns of the two previous work-
sheets, you were to some extent tasked with reviewing human resource implica-
tions. At this point you must examine personnel needs in concrete terms. Will you
need to hire marketing staff, or can you outsource the marketing functions?
PO business advisor, marketing manager, business manager, human resource
manager (if applies)
Determining Marketing Staff Needs
The symbols and below denote financial and human resource implications of
marketing decisions, information that will be used to develop your financial plan.
These implications may cause you to revisit some promotional choices.
? Make a list of marketing personnel by position or task.
? Indicate whether staff is currently available in-house or you have to hire either
new permanent staff or contract for temporary staff.
? Indicate whether promotional staff is needed on a full-time or part-time basis.
? Estimate total annual costs for each person. If you need a full-time permanent
professional, include benefits in your projections.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
160
? Restate your marketing objectives in the first column, followed by products in
the next column, then the promotional vehicles you plan to use, and finally
your strategic rationale. The strategic rationale explains how your choice of pro-
motional vehicles will contribute toward the achievement of your marketing
objectives.
? Refer to the example of TARTINA's promotional strategy in exhibit 5BB for assis-
tance or inspiration.
Promotional strategy included in the Business Plan.
Increase brand
awareness and
sales
Product aware-
ness
Increase brand
awareness and
increase sale
levels
(sales target of
U.S. $58,976)
Peanut butter
and grape-
fruit jam
Karapinia
and passion
fruit jam
All products
Personal sales
Point-of-purchase (POP)
displays
Sampling
Point-of-purchase dis-
plays
Sampling
In-store display posters
Point-of-purchase
displays
Cross-selling
Personal sales
Special offers
Trade shows
Customers are already aware of the existence
of the products. POP promotion will help
TARTINA's voice be heard among the several
other competitors on the market.
For success in launching the passion fruit jam
and the Karapinia products, it is not brand
awareness that should rule but awareness of
the products themselves, which are virtually
unknown.
• “Tasting is believing!” It will encourage cus-
tomers to switch brands, as is required in
the competitive peanut butter market, or to
purchase a new product, such as passion
fruit jam, instead of their regular flavor.
• POP and posters can increase the TARTINA
brand presence in some stores that current-
ly do not have shelf space available for new
brands or new products.
• Multiple TARTINA products will be on dis-
play, and promotional staff will offer sam-
ples of any or all of the products to interest-
ed shoppers to taste (and purchase!).
• Cross-selling is cost-effective as it uses
one vehicle to simultaneously promote mul-
tiple products.
• The sales will offer a market research
opportunity. Promotional agents will gain
firsthand information on customers' buying
motives and product preferences.
• Coupons and discounts at POP displays
will encourage impulse purchases by cus-
tomers trying TARTINA products.
• These will be primarily aimed at forming
strategic alliances and increasing presence
in some stores that currently do not carry
TARTINA products.
In summary, the promotional strategy will put its accent on per-
sonal sales, product presentation, taste tests, and development of
promotional material for in-store displays. Additional funds have
been included in the business plan's promotional budget to poten-
tially use in larger-scale publicity material, such as print advertis-
ing, PR, and stickers with the TARTINA logo, which are popular
among children. The costs and benefits of this type of publicity
will be further evaluated before any disbursement of these promo-
tional funds.
EXHIBIT 5BB: PROMOTIONAL STRATEGY FOR TARTINA ENTERPRISE
Marketing Product Promotional Vehicle Strategic Rationale
Objective
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5
Sales Plan
The sales plan flows from the marketing plan. Remember that at least one marketing
objective must include a sales forecast expressed in unit sales or currency value.
TARTINA uses both in its objectives (see marketing objectives in the first section of
this chapter). The sales plan is concerned with turning prospective customers
reached through marketing into purchasers. It articulates the structure and strategy
of closing deals and the costs to do so.
SALES STRUCTURE
Staff members charged with selling responsibilities are the pulse of income genera-
tion in your social enterprise. Simply put, without sales there is no income.
Marketing manager, business manager, PO business advisor, HR manager,
external sales consultant (if desired)
Establishing a Sales Structure
The symbols and below denote financial and human resource implications of
sales decisions, information that will be used to develop your financial plan.
What is your sales structure?
L Do you have a sales force? How many people?
L At what point do sales personnel achieve "full capacity"? When do you decide to
hire more sales staff?
L Do you use internal staff (employees) or contract staff (sales firm,
free agents)?
L Do salespeople have additional responsibilities? If so, which ones?
L Are other people charged with selling your product or service? Who?
L Who supervises sales personnel/functions? Is this person charged with other
responsibilities? If so, which ones?
L Are individual sales staff charged with different responsibilities? How are respon-
sibilities organized?
L How is territory divided up among sales staff? Geographical region, product, cus-
tomer type?
L What type of training do sales staff receive? How often is training
conducted?
L Who is responsible for training sales staff?
L How do you ensure that sales targets are met (use a quota system, assign targets
for sales staff, etc.)?
L Summarize sales structure.
Summary included in the Business Plan.
SALES COSTS
Marketing manager, accountant, business manager, PO business advisor, HR
manager
Estimating Sales Costs
Give careful thought to the following questions, and then project your social enter-
prise's selling expenses based on your sales structure. All the information in this sec-
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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tion will be used in the financial plan. An example is provided in 5CC.
? How are sales staff remunerated? Salary? Commissions? A combination of the
two?
? Which out-of-pocket expenses incurred by sales staff are reimbursed?
Transportation, communications, travel, meals, etc.?
? Do sales staff receive a petty cash advance?
? What type of incentive program do you use to motivate staff? Financial bonuses?
Nonfinancial rewards?
Sales cost information will be used in the Financial Plan (Chapter 8).
EXHIBIT 5CC: MONTHLY SELLING EXPENSES EXAMPLE
Sales Staff Base or Commission Bonuses Expenses Benefits Training and
and Status Salary Supervision
Martine Du Pré 15% of sales 20% of $15 for Health, sick, 20% Marketing
Senior sales $100/mo. price per unit sales price transport vacation Manager
$1,000 for per unit per/mo. salary spread
targets after quota over 5 sales
(per/mo. quota) staff - $55
Luc Dominique $80/mo. 15% of sales None $15 for No benefits Same (above)
Trainee price per unit Bonuses transport until post- Trainer $55
$800 for to trainer trainee
targets status
(per/mo. quota)
Marketing manager, sales staff, PO business advisor, business manager,
external marketing/sales consultant (if desired)
SALES STRATEGY
The sales strategy explains the mechanics of the sales approach your social enter-
prise will employ to realize its targets.
Developing a Sales Strategy
Use the following questions as a guide to craft your sales strategy:
? Who identifies potential new customers?
? Who makes the initial customer contact?
? What are the follow-up procedures after the first customer contact?
? Are incentives, bonuses, or rewards given for new-customer acquisition?
? How is customer contact made—in person, by phone, by mail?
? At what point does the sales staff decide to stop pursuing a lead?
? How frequently are existing customers contacted? Are they contacted for addi-
tional, add-on, or new-product sales?
? What kind of customer service or terms do you provide to ensure repeat patron-
age (credit, returns, etc.)?
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5
? To what extent do sales personnel participate in "personal selling" (a marketing
tactic), such as taste tests, or marketing events, such as trade shows?
? Summarize sales strategy.
Narrative summary included in the Business Plan.
THE SALES PLAN
The sales plan aligns quantitative targets with the sales forecasts in marketing objec-
tives (exhibit DD: Information Flows for Sales Planning). Annual sales plans are seg-
mented by product and broken down into monthly or quarterly figures (exhibit 5EE:
Annual Sales Plan for Mamba). Subsequently, monthly sales projections are made for
individual sales representatives. Setting targets and accomplishing them are a func-
tion of your sales structure and strategy. The sales plan requires giving thought to the
division of sales territory; time for sales calls, new-customer acquisition, and servic-
ing products; number of personnel; and seasonality of business cycles (chapter 6)
and capabilities of individual sales agents.
Targets for individual sales reps are delineated for a certain time period by prod-
uct, revenue, volume, customers, or a combination thereof. The sales plan example
in exhibit 5FF shows monthly sales objectives for Sales Agent Martine Du Pré. There
is also a column for units sold. Comparing actual sales performance with projected
targets helps managers project future sales more accurately and determine if sales
personnel are performing as expected. This example divides sales targets equally
between the five TARTINA sales reps (320 x 5 = 1,600) for the month of December
2000. This plan is probably not realistic because it does not account for lower sales
productivity of trainees like Luc Dominique or dense territories like Port-au-Prince,
which will yield a higher sales volume than secondary markets.
SALES FORECAST
$58,976 & 62,500 UNITS
CORRESPONDING SALES PLANS FOR REPS BY PRODUCT,
VOLUME, REVENUE, TERRITORY, ETC.
MAMBA
18,300
UNITS
$27,727
CHADÉQUE
7,400
UNITS
$9,891
GRANADIA
6,400
UNITS
$10,085
KARAPINIA
30,400
UNITS
$9,212
ANNUAL PLANS
SHARED W/
PRODUCTION
MONTHLY
PLAN
EXHIBIT 5DD: INFORMATION FLOWS FOR SALES PLANNING
This diagram illustrates the steps involved in sales planning and shows that sales
information is shared with production or operations.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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PO business advisor, production manager, marketing manager, sales staff,
business manager
Establishing Sales Targets
? Develop an annual sales plan for each product.
? Locate blank Sales Plan Worksheet located in The Workbook or create your
own.
? Prepare monthly sales plans for each sales representative that are linked to annu-
al sale targets (if you have a sales force).
? If you are using another structure to sell your products or services, show how you
will achieve sales targets using that structure in a written monthly or quarterly
plan.
? Use TARTINA examples for inspiration or assistance.
Sales targets are included in the Business Plan.
EXHIBIT 5EE: ANNUAL SALES PLAN
PRODUCT: MAMBA
MONTH QUANTITY UNIT PRICE LOCAL CURRENCY U.S. $
Apr-99 1,200 25 30,000 1,818
May-99 1,200 25 30,000 1,818
Jun-99 1,050 25 26,250 1,591
Jul-99 1,050 25 26,250 1,591
Aug-99 1,100 25 27,500 1,667
Sep-99 1,250 25 31,250 1,894
Oct-99 1,250 25 31,250 1,894
Nov-99 1,300 25 32,500 1,970
Dec-99 1,600 25 40,000 2,424
Jan-00 1,600 25 40,000 2,424
Feb-00 1,700 25 42,500 2,576
Mar-00 2,000 25 50,000 3,030
Apr-00 2,000 25 50,000 3,030
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TOTAL 18,300 457,500 $27,727
EXHIBIT 5FF: MONTHLY SALES PLAN
3
Market Channel
Existing Customers
Supermarkets
Boutiques
Institutions
New Customers
Total Sales Objective
for the Month
Customer
Big Star
Delimart
Starmart
Villa Creole
Super-Q
Minimart
Product
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Mamba
Chadèque
Karapinia
Mamba
Karapinia
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Karapinia
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Karapinia
Sales/Mo.
Objective
Volume
150
40
75
90
40
50
40
10
100
25
200
15
10
25
100
320
110
150
400
Sales/Mo.
Objective
Revenue
*
3,750
1,040
1,950
2,250
1,040
1,300
1,000
260
500
625
1,000
375
260
650
500
Revenue:
16,490=
$1,000
Units
Sold/Mo.
(Actuals)
Total
Revenue
Realized:
*
Sales projections given in gourdes.
Explanation:
Sales plan shows sales targets by product and customer for Sales Agent, Martine Du
Pré. The last column, Units Sold Monthly, are the actual amount of products she sold
at the end of the month. These actuals are reconciled with projected targets to moni-
tor agents’ performance and the market.
3
Template prepared by Kellogg Corps Consultants, J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management,
Aug. 5, 1998.
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doc_413552706.pdf
Marketing is important because it embraces nearly every facet of your social enterprise. Production responds to what market research discovers about customer preferences for quality and packaging, which in turn are factors determining price. Market research also lends itself to new-product development based on what consumers want and identifies promotion techniques to reach new customers.
T
he
he
Mark
Mark
eting
eting
Plan
Plan
Chapter 5
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“Emerson said that if you build a better
mousetrap the world will beat a path
to your door, and that may have been
true then … but it’s not true now. No
one will come. You have to package
and promote that mousetrap. Then
they will come.”
— King C. Gillette
Gillette Razors
verview: Marketing is the process of planning and executing a strategy to
get goods and services to customers. The components of marketing can be
described as the “four P’s” or the marketing mix. Product consists of the products
and services that your social enterprise furnishes; it is characterized by quality,
assortment, packaging, and guarantees. Price is the amount you will charge cus-
tomers for the products or services. Promotion is how you will create awareness of
your products or services in the marketplace; advertising, publicity, and sales are
aspects of promotion. Place (distribution) is how you will bring your products or
services to your customers; distri-
bution comprises wholesalers,
retailers, multilevel marketers, and
sales representatives. The mar-
keting mix is a set of tools and
techniques social enterprises use
to achieve their marketing objec-
tives in their target market. Your
marketing plan will emphasize cer-
tain “P’s” in its mix more than oth-
ers.
Marketing is important
because it embraces nearly every
facet of your social enterprise.
Production responds to what mar-
ket research discovers about customer preferences for quality and packaging, which
in turn are factors determining price. Market research also lends itself to new-prod-
uct development based on what consumers want and identifies promotion tech-
niques to reach new customers. Helpful or friendly marketing staff may inspire cus-
tomers to buy products or services. Finally, management makes strategic decisions
impacting operations based on marketing information about competitors’ prices and
positions.
Chapter 5
Marketing Synergies
“The most effective and efficient marketing plans are
those that maximize the synergy between products, distri-
bution channels, price, and promotion. A unified promo-
tional strategy across an entire product line saves money
and presents a consistent image of the enterprise in the
consumer’s mind. From a selection of complementary
products, significant economies of scale in raw materials
and packaging can be realized. Products with similar pro-
duction processes allow for development of specialization
and attainment of high-quality standards.”
— Heather Shapter, SC/Haiti Business Advisor
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
118
This chapter will help you understand the tools and techniques of marketing and
apply them to your social enterprise. It guides you through steps to develop your
marketing plan by setting objectives and deciding on a strategy for each marketing
component.
EXHIBIT 5A: INFORMATION FLOWS FOR THE MARKETING PLAN
FINANCIAL
PLAN
SALES PLAN
SALES TARGETS
OPERATIONAL
PLAN
PRODUCTION
TARGETS,
PRODUCT,
DEVELOPMENT,
INVENTORY,
CONTROL,
DISTRIBUTION
MARKETING
OBJECTIVES
HR PLAN
MARKETING/SALES
STAFF
SOCIAL
ENTERPRISE
OBJECTIVES
MARKET RESEARCH
TARGET MARKET
STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENT
COMPETITORS
INDUSTRY
ANALYSIS
MARKETING
PLAN
PRODUCT, PRICE,
PROMOTION, AND
PLACE STRATEGIES
Guide to Icons
This chapter periodically uses icons (below) next to certain questions or sec-
tions to alert the reader to the fact that decisions made in the operations plan
have implications for other segments of the business plan. The information flow
diagram in exhibit 6A illustrates these relationships.
Financials = Human Resources = Marketing =
Informations Systems = Operations =
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Marketing Objectives
DETERMINING MARKETING OBJECTIVES
Rationale: Once you have laid out the objectives for your social enterprise, you can
develop strategies for your marketing mix. Stating marketing objectives directs the
development of your marketing plan. Marketing objectives should contribute toward
achievement of the overall business objectives (chapter 2)—i.e. how much do you
need to sell to achieve X% cost recovery or profit/loss—and should be based on the
information gleaned in market research (chapters 3 and 4).
Marketing objectives must:
4Be clear.
4Be measurable.
4Be achievable.
4Have a stated time frame.
4Include a sales forecast (at least one marketing objective).
Examples of Marketing Objectives
4Increase product awareness of new product X within the target market by 25 per-
cent in one year.
4Inform the target population about service Y’s leading features and benefits com-
pared with the competition’s, increasing sales by 10 percent over the next six
months.
4Reduce price of product Z or service Z by 10 percent and increase market share
by 5 percent in the first quarter in target market W.
4Improve brand awareness so that a minimum of 50 percent of target customers
will recognize your brand over the next fiscal year.
4Change formula for product V and reintroduce it in a new target market by 2001.
4Enhance service W to include A, B, and C features demanded by the target popu-
lation to increase sales by 30 percent over the next year.
4Increase average gross profit margin 3 percent per product or service.
Gross profit—expressed
as a percentage; shows the
percentage of return an
enterprise earns over the
cost of the merchandise
sold (costs of goods sold).
Gross profit margin—is
calculated by dividing gross
profit by sales.
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EXHIBIT 5C: TARTINA MARKETING OBJECTIVES
APRIL 1999 – APRIL 2000
4Raise awareness of TARTINA brand by 50 percent
4Reach sales target of U.S. $58,976
4Sell 62,500 units (all products)
4Secure average gross profit margin of 16 percent per product
Managing the Double Bottom Line:
120
EXHIBIT 5B: OBJECTIVES LINKED TO STRATEGIES
Objective Marketing Strategy Mix
Increase target market W share Reduce price of product Z by 10 percent Price
by 5 percent in first quarter
Launch improved service Y Redesign declining service Y according to new Product
market in 2001 customer specifications/wants
Introduce product X in new target Expand distribution to sports concessions Place
market to reach more youth and men
Increase product awareness of Aggressive sampling campaign using point Promotion
new product Z in target market of purchase and coupons to encourage
by 25 percent in one year trying new product
Marketing manager, business manager, PO business advisor, partner pro-
gram manager, sales staff
Developing Marketing Objectives for the Social Enterprise
? Determine the marketing objectives for your social enterprise.
? Refer to the examples (exhibits 5B and 5C) for assistance or inspiration.
Marketing objectives are included in the Business Plan.
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Product Strategy
PRODUCT/SERVICE FEATURES AND BENEFITS
Rationale:
The products and services that succeed are those that offer benefits to customers
that are greater than their costs. Customers are interested in products for their bene-
fits, not their features.
Understanding the features and benefits of your products and services will help
you develop your marketing campaign by highlighting the aspects that are the most
important to your customers. It will also assist you in differentiating your products
from your competitors’ and affect a variety of pricing and positioning strategies.
Definition of Product Features and Benefits
Features are characteristics of a product or service that deliver a benefit. Features
are usually easily describable attributes such as size, model, design, color, hours of
businesses, functionality, brand, packaging, quality, shelf life, etc. For instance, if
your social enterprise provides marketing services to its target population, features of
that service might include branding, professional sales and marketing staff, training
in promotion methods, employment opportunity, and technical assistance on prod-
uct development.
Benefits are advantages a product offers the customer. Benefits are more difficult to
detect because they are often intangible. The most compelling benefits of a product
or service are those that render emotional or financial rewards. Emotional rewards
make customers feel better about themselves, such as feeling socially or environ-
mentally conscious, more attractive, or more self-confident. Financial rewards, like
saving money or increasing income, are other benefits a social enterprise might offer
customers.
Using the above example of the marketing service, benefits for your customer
(i.e., self-employed women) are access to markets, or a guaranteed market for its
products; cost savings on—and access to—professional services; skills enhancement;
and increased self-esteem, income, and economic opportunity.
PO business advisor, marketing manager, business manager, sales staff
Clarifying Product/Service Features and Benefits
? Create a Product/Service Features and Benefits Table (exhibit 5D).
? Fill in the table identifying the features of each of your products or services and
their corresponding benefits.
? Be sure to complete this exercise from the customer’s point of view, not your
own.
? Then, in a paragraph or two, briefly describe the service or product of your social
enterprise, emphasizing the benefitsto the customer. Focus on the areas in which
your product or service has a distinct advantage over the competition’s. Refer to
any problem in the target market for which your service or product provides a
solution. Make a convincing argument that people are, or will be, willing to pay
for your solution.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
122
EXHIBIT 5D: PRODUCT/SERVICE FEATURES AND BENEFITS TABLE
TARTINA Peanut Butter Financial Services
Features Benefits Features Benefits
High in protein Good nutrition Small working capital A vehicle to grow the
loan business
Slightly sweet flavor Kids love it; therefore Weekly repayment Ease of repayment
easy for mothers
“100% natural” A clear conscience; Collateral free Access to credit
no worries about
unsafe chemical
additives
Expiration date Freshness guaranteed Easy application Convenient; low
progress stress
Economical Saving money Savings Economic security
20-oz. plastic container Convenient, reusable Solidarity group Emotional support,
technical assistance,
and networks
Produced by local Peace of mind; Short loan cycles Fits business cycle/
economically pleasure from other activities; lowers
disadvantaged “helping to make a risk
Haitians difference”
Know Your
Competitors’
Products
Be sure that your staff is
intimately familiar with
your competitors’ prod-
ucts or services. When
conducting this exercise
with TARTINA staff, we
were surprised to find
out that this was not the
case, so we conducted
a product comparison
during the business
plan development work-
shop. This was not the
ideal approach because
it limited us to compar-
ing physical features
and considering only
the opinions of the par-
ticipants. Obviously,
comparative analyses
such as this one are
easier for social enter-
prises selling products
than for those selling
services. At any rate,
educating staff about
features and benefits of
competitors’ products
and services is an oblig-
atory part of staff train-
ing and continuing
development.
FEATURES AND BENEFITS OF COMPETITORS’ PRODUCTS OR SERVICES
Rationale:
Analyzing the features and benefits of your strongest competitors’ products and serv-
ices may give you ideas about how to improve, refine, or change your products and
services when you develop your product strategy to increase your market share or
sales volume.
Marketing manager, business manager, PO business advisor, sales staff
? Complete the Product/Service Features and Benefits Table for your competitors’
products and services that are the same as yours.
? If you completed this product study in your competitive analysis (chapter 4), skip
this section.
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PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE
Rationale:
The product’s life cycle is the process through which a product enters, grows, satu-
rates, and leaves the market. During the life span of your product or service, you
will reformulate your marketing strategy several times—not only as a result of
changes in market conditions or new competitors but also in response to changes in
customers’ interest and requirements for the product. The four stages of a product’s
life cycle are introduction, growth, maturity, and decline. Each stage is marked by
specific characteristics.
Stages of a Product Life Cycle
4Introduction—when new-product sales are slow, and profits are nonexistent,
because of heavy costs of production and promotion. Often during this stage
there are few competitors, pro-
motion is heavy, and the focus
is on getting potential customers
to try the product rather than
on the developing the brand.
4Growth—a period of rapid
market acceptance of the prod-
uct and dramatic increase in
sales and profit. After a product
takes off, copycat competitors
enter the market. During the
growth stage marketing shifts to
creating brand preferences, and
promotion lessens.
4Maturity—marked by flattening sales and stabilizing, then decreasing, profits. The
market becomes saturated and price competition can be fierce. Marketing efforts
at this stage concentrate on targeting a new market of buyers and taking market
share from competitors by price cutting or relaunching the product. When you
see a product advertised as having a “new” or “improved formula” or as “now
recyclable,” that is usually a good indication of a mature product after a face-lift.
4Decline—indicated by falling sales and often rapid and eroding profits. At this
stage an enterprise must decide whether it wants to try to rejuvenate the product
by investing in development and aggressive marketing or to quietly admit defeat
and exit the market. For example, in the advent of electricity, gas lamp producers
either integrated the new technology into their products or went out of business.
Product Life Cycles
4 Products have a distinct beginning and an end.
4 Profits increase, level off, and then decline, depending
on the stage in the product's life.
4 There are marketing and sales challenges at each
stage in the product’s life.
4 Managers must make strategic decisions based on
where a product is in its life cycle.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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EXHIBIT 5E: STRATEGIC IMPLICATIONS OF PRODUCT LIFE CYCLES
Example From TARTINA Enterprise
Mamba peanut butter is in the mature stage of the life cycle. Sales increase dur-
ing this stage, but at a declining rate. As Mamba sales level off, TARTINA profit
margins narrow. Price competition is severe. The best way to extend the life of
this product and keep profits healthy is to modify it (alter the taste, color, labeling,
packaging), design new promotion, or develop new product uses. TARTINA has
entered into the stage of the product life cycle where it is one brand among many
others already well known in the marketplace. It has to figure out its comparative
advantages and implement a promotion program that shouts them from the hill-
tops!
Two strategic issues emerge from the recognition that peanut butter is in the matu-
rity stage:
4TARTINA needs to find ways to develop the Mamba brand name to increase
sales within its market.
4TARTINA must find ways to postpone peanut butter’s entrance into the decline
stage of the product life cycle. One of the best ways to do this is to introduce
product modifications—new packaging, new flavors, etc. This approach serves
to differentiate the product from its competitors and temporarily escape the
heat from the direct competition. TARTINA has identified a market niche for
sweetened peanut butter, a flavor that is not offered by the competition and
will serve to more directly target the tastes of children.
Karapinia is in the introduction stage of the product life cycle; it is a new product
in the Port-au-Prince retail outlet. This means that sales volume will be low, costs
high, and distribution limited; losses are likely. It is the riskiest stage of the life
cycle. The positive side is that there is little direct competition in this stage.
Knowing this will help TARTINA make decisions regarding whether Karapinia
should even be pursued at this time. Perhaps the business cannot afford any losses
and should wait until profits from other products are healthier. On the other
hand, the market research and test market results conducted prior to the prepara-
tion of the business plan pointed to the great potential of this product.
One strategic issue emerges from the recognition that Karapinia is in the introduc-
tion stage:
4The potential success of this product makes the risk of introducing it into the
market a worthwhile one. In addition, the expected revenues to be realized
from large sales of peanut butter and grapefruit jam will be used to finance
development of Karapinia. As sales for Karapinia increase, these revenues will
in turn finance TARTINA’s future growth when peanut butter enters the decline
stage of the product life cycle.
Test marketing—conducting a
small-scale promotion or introduction
of a good to gather information useful
in full-scale product introduction or
promotion.
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5
4 4
4
4
Passion Fruit Jam
& Karapinia
Chadéque
Mamba
SALES
PROFIT
INTRODUCTION GROWTH MATURITY DECLINE
Same as previous exercise
Mapping The Life Cycle of Products/Services
? Plot your products or services on the Product Life Cycle Chart (exhibit 5F).
? Write in narrative form the strategic implications that emerge from the stage of
your products in their respective life cycles (exhibit 5E).
PRODUCT POSITIONING
Rationale:
Positioning defines your products and services relative to your competition’s.
Reviewing the features and benefits of your products or services against those of
your competition helps you see where you may or may not have a comparative
advantage. Completing a positioning exercise is part of the analytical process of
determining your product strategy. The information obtained may lead you to make
specific changes to your product features, distribution, or price to gain a compara-
tive advantage against a certain competitor. Conversely, if a competitor is particularly
daunting, you might use this positioning information to move out of a given market.
Same as previous exercise
Positioning Products/Services
? Positioning is a matrix exercise. Price is always used as measure down one side of
the matrix. On the other side, use product features that provide the most impor-
tant benefits to your customers, such as quality, taste, packaging, etc.
EXHIBIT 5F: PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE FOR TARTINA
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
126
? Prepare a matrix for each product (exhibit 5G).
? Draw on information obtained in your competitive analysis and market research,
including customer surveys, and from your sales force, vendors, and outlet man-
agers to get an indication of your position relative to your competition’s.
EXHIBIT 5G: MAMBA PEANUT BUTTER PRICE/QUALITY POSITIONING
Rebo 4
Zoul 4
Jif 4
Tacha 4
Dorey 4
Adventist
4
Pidy 4
TARTINA 4
Developing a product strategy requires synthesizing the information obtained from
your research on target markets and customers, comparison of product features and
benefits, competitor analysis and positioning analysis, and review of stages of the
product life cycle. This information paints a complete picture of the market and
your place in it, enabling you to develop a strategy for your product or service.
To ensure that new-product developments are feasible, it is important that both
production and marketing/sales staff participate in developing product strategy.
Rationale:
The product strategy is one part of your marketing plan aimed at achieving your
overall marketing objectives. (Remember that each “P”—product, price, place, and
promotion—in the marketing mix has its own strategic plan, with all four making up
the marketing plan in its entirety.) A product strategy consists of any changes you
make to the features of your product or service, information on in-process or future
activities relate d to the development of new products/services, consolidation of the
product line, etc. The strategy informs how these changes help achieve marketing
objectives for the product.
TARTINA's Position
for Mamba vis-à-
vis its Competitors
On the right hand side of
the matrix we see 5 brands
closely positioned accord-
ing to their price and quali-
ty. Jif, the American
import, is the most expen-
sive and the best quality
peanut butter on the mar-
ket. Zoul and Adventist are
cheap, but lag way behind
in quality. TARTINA's main
contenders are Pidy and
Dorey for its position as the
"economic" and "good
value" peanut butter
choice.
C
O
S
T
QUALITY
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5
“PRODUCT” CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES
FOR SERVICE BUSINESSES
Nonmaterial Product
When you sell a service, you are selling intangibles—a technique, advice, a
process, or a result. Customers may have difficulty discerning what specific
benefits they are buying.
Strategy: Define your services and package them so that their benefits
are more tangible to customers. Accompany services with complementary
manuals, tools, and templates to make the services more “material.” Link
services to a “product output” so that customers feel they are clearly get-
ting something concrete for their money. For example, rather than sell
generic business training, sell a “business plan” and ensure that cus-
tomers walk away with one in hand. Bundling services with products can
make services more discernible; management information (MIS) technical
assistance can be sold as a complete system with software or manual
records.
Quality Is Subjective
There are few standards for measuring quality in service businesses. When
customers pay for accounting or legal services, they are not usually qualified
to assess the quality of the service itself. In this case, quality is based on
trust or amiable relationships with the service providers. For example, if your
business sells counseling services, your customers’ patronage of your
social enterprise is grounded in their relationship with a staff member they
like. This leaves your enterprise vulnerable to losing customers if the staff
member quits.
Strategy: Develop your reputation and image as a high-quality service busi-
ness by using customer references and testimonials. Document your
methodology and emphasize training of your staff. Build customer identifi-
cation with the enterprise through branding—“X Enterprise Marketing
Methods”—and emblazon materials with your logo and name. When possi-
ble, encourage customer contact with different staff members.
Limited Use
Most small and micro businesses operate with narrow margins and limited
cash and therefore carefully weigh the benefits of each investment. Paying
for professional services is fairly low on such customers’ list of priorities, and
they may prefer to invest their money in technology, equipment, or employ-
ees. Additionally, the nature of many service businesses does not invite fre-
quent, repeated use; for example, training, accounting, or legal services
may be sought only a few times a year.
Strategy: Stay close to the customers, understand their needs and wants,
and tailor your services accordingly. Use customer satisfaction surveys or
evaluations as a standard procedure after providing a service. They are
ideal instruments for fine-tuning services to fit the changing needs of cus-
tomers. You may find that you need to diversify your service portfolio or
seek greater market coverage.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
128
Marketing manager, business manager, sales staff, PO business advisor, pro-
duction manager, production agents
Developing a Product Strategy
This exercise has two parts. Retrieve information from chapter 3 for background.
? Market description: In a few lines, describe your current target market and
future trends germane to each product. Give an indication of the demand ten-
dency for your product relative to its life cycle stage. Describe customer demand
as it pertains to particular product features.
? Product strategy: State the sales target for the product or service. Indicate who
the primary consumer is, and specify whether the consumer is different from the
purchaser/decision-maker. Detail which changes will be made to enhance each
product’s features and how this will (1) help your products gain comparative
advantages in the marketplace and (2) meet your marketing objectives.
Product strategy is included in the Business Plan.
The example in exhibit 5H illustrates how the product strategy for Mamba peanut
butter aims to meet overall marketing objectives in unit sales and dollar value as
well as to develop TARTINA brand awareness.
EXHIBIT 5H: PRODUCT STRATEGY FOR MAMBA PEANUT BUTTER
Market Description
The overall demand for spicy and regular peanut butter appears to be experiencing
positive growth, although at a declining rate, according to supermarket manage-
ment. (Industry statistical information on demand trends is not available.) Factors
explaining this growth trend include the rural to urban migration; increasing num-
bers of women joining the professional work force, leaving them less time to make
homemade peanut butter; and the homemade peanut butter maker’s lack of
access to peanuts. The spicy and regular flavors of peanut butter have consistently
been the biggest sellers in the TARTINA product line, making up 50 percent of all
sales. In fact, the social enterprise has not been able to keep pace with the
demand for its peanut butter, particularly for the spicy flavor.
Product Strategy
Sales target: 18,300 units (U.S. $27,727)
The social enterprise will continue to emphasize the sale of spicy peanut butter as
the “star” of its product line. The spicy flavor will be complemented by the regular
flavor to meet customer demand. The regular flavor will be produced at a ratio of
1:4 to that of spicy peanut butter.
The social enterprise proposes to introduce a new flavor, sweetened peanut
butter, in supermarkets in Port-au-Prince. This flavor is offered by international
brands such as Jif and Skippy but is not produced by any local food processors.
With international peanut brands costing 40 to 50 percent more than local brands,
this flavor remains out of reach of most urban Haitians. By offering a more afford-
able sweetened peanut butter brand, TARTINA can access a previously untapped
market.
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5
Comparative Advantages
There are four primary comparative advantages to introduction of this new flavor:
4It will serve to differentiate TARTINA from other brands. Even with planned
promotional efforts, it will be difficult for TARTINA to make a name for itself in
the spicy and regular peanut butter markets, where other brands are well estab-
lished and have developed loyalty.
4It will offer a market niche that currently is not served by local peanut produc-
ers.
4The lower competition for this flavor should alleviate some of the pressure on
profit margins.
4Offering new varieties of a product is one of the most effective ways to prolong
the product’s mature phase before it goes into decline.
Thus, the TARTINA peanut butter product line will be as follows:
Peanut Butter Flavors Primary Consumer Purchaser/Decision-Maker
Regular Adults and children Mothers/Wives
Spicy (principal flavor) Adults Mothers/Wives
Sweetened Children Mothers
PRODUCT LINE STRATEGY
Rationale:
If your social enterprise offers more than one product, you will need to develop a
strategy for your entire product line.
Clarification of a Product Line Strategy
A product line strategy should maximize synergies in your marketing mix, produc-
tion process, or raw materials acquisition. Examples of product line synergies are
cross-selling several products to a single market, economies of scale that spread
fixed costs over a larger number of products, economies of bulk purchase of raw
materials for products that have shared ingredients, and promotional vehicles to
build brand awareness for all products in the line under the same brand name.
A product line strategy capitalizes on wider benefits of product changes (or addi-
tions and deletions). Examples include narrowing a product line by discontinuing
certain products or services because their costs of production, management, distri-
bution, etc., are too high and they fail to offer synergic values. Product/service spe-
cialization, or “niche” development, is one approach to narrowing product line.
Another option is to widen a product line by rendering additional services or pro-
ducing new goods that add value to the product mix. TARTINA’s introduction of
new flavors of Mamba peanut butter was a low-cost, high-value strategy to differen-
tiate a mature product and leverage economies of bulk purchase and scale through-
out its product line.
Product line—an enter-
prise's group of products or
services that are recognized
as having a certain func-
tional coherence and are
sold to the same market or
marketed through the same
outlets.
Cross-selling—a market-
ing strategy for selling sev-
eral products across a
product line or brand by
placing them together in
display or using other tac-
tics to encourage pur-
chasers to buy more than
one item in the line or
brand.
Economies of bulk
purchase—realizing cost
savings by purchasing in
volume.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
130
Same as previous exercise minus production agents
Preparing the Product Line Strategy
? Write a product line strategy for the products and services in your social enter-
prise. Focus on synergies created across the line and on how changes to specific
product features or number of products will benefit your overall business.
Product line strategy is included in the Business Plan.
EXHIBIT 5I: TARTINA PRODUCT LINE STRATEGY
The product line strategy has been formulated to balance the need for focus with
that for offering a sufficient variety of products to decrease fixed costs per prod-
uct. The focus required refers to the need to build expertise, especially in the
areas of food transformation and marketing of a limited range of products. Prior to
the preparation of the business plan, 23 different products made up the TARTINA
product line. With such a long list, product specialization was very difficult to
achieve, creating problems of standardization and quality control. Similarly,
preparing a cohesive marketing strategy for such a sprawling line of products with-
in the framework of a small enterprise was not possible. Potential economies of
bulk purchase for containers were also being lost with the addition of every new
product size. A wide-ranging product line significantly complicated enterprise
management of inventory control, accounting, sales, and production reporting.
In terms of specialization, the ideal TARTINA product line would consist of
one product. However, “cross-selling” of products is also required to reduce the
fixed cost of sales per product. The fixed costs of each sales visit, product delivery,
and payment collection need to be spread out over as many products as possible.
Seven highly complementary products have been retained in the TARTINA
product line. Simply put, peanut butter and jam belong together. Peanut butter
and jam or jelly spread on bread is a common Haitian breakfast. This combination
is also sometimes packed in children’s lunch boxes or eaten as a snack during the
day. Karapinia (sugar- and spice-coated peanut snack) stands apart from the jam,
jelly, and peanut butter products. But one of its synergistic values comes from the
fact that, like peanut butter, its basic ingredient is the peanut.
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5
Distribution Strategy
The distribution (place) strategy articulates how you will get your products or servic-
es to your customers. If your clients are business owners, distribution is a key com-
ponent of alleviating a common constraint the self-employed poor face—gaining
access to markets. Both the TARTINA and the retaso social enterprises (see chapters
4 & 9) focused heavily on distribution strategy as a major aspect of their interven-
tions linking the self-employed poor to markets. For service industries, distribution
strategy may rest on the hours of operation and location of your services and on
whether they are convenient and easily accessible for your customer. For manufac-
turing businesses, distribution of products to markets entails placing them in com-
mercial or artisan outlets and often involves intermediaries such as sales agents,
transportation services, storage, etc. A good distribution strategy should give atten-
tion to efficacy, efficiency, cost, and customer service.
Vocabulary
Avoid confusion between “markets” and “distribution channels;” often they are
one and the same. If you are not selling directly to your final customer, then your
actual customer will be part of the distribution channel for your product or serv-
ice. As well, the method for distributing your products or services to the market is
included in the distribution channel.
Customer
PAP supermarkets
Sales agents
Storage at ADE in PAP
Transportation
TARTINA Production Center
Customer
PAP institutional
staff client
Sales agents
Transportation
TARTINA Production Center
Community members in
Colline and surrounding
area
Clients
TARTINA Production Center
EXHIBIT 5J: EXAMPLE OF DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL
FOR TARTINA PRODUCTS
Distribution channels—
the various routes that
products and services take
as they travel from the
manufacturer or producer to
the consumer. Distribution
channels include all inter-
mediaries, such as trans-
portation, storage, sales
representatives, whole-
salers, retailers, etc. Each
member of the channel
seeks to maximize profits,
and these costs are passed
on to the consumer.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
132
PO business advisor, marketing manager, program management (parent &
partner), sales staff, finance manager, logistics/operations manager
Identifying Markets and Methods of Distribution
? Review the list of current and potential actual customers you identified in chap-
ter 3. Add any customers you may have overlooked.
? Put your actual customer markets in a table and rank them in order of impor-
tance (in terms of potential volume of sales or revenue) for each product. In the
example in exhibit 5K, 1 is high, or very important, and 5 is low, or less impor-
tant.
? Next, identify the best methods for reaching these distribution channels using the
Distribution Matrix (exhibit 5L).
EXHIBIT 5K: TARTINA RANKING OF ACTUAL CUSTOMER MARKETS
Product Supermarkets Minimarts Institutions Vendors Center Individuals
Mamba 1 2 3 4
Karapinia 2 3 1
Markets for TARTINA Products
Retailers—supermarkets, convenience stores, artisan markets, specialty stores,
informal market vendors
Institutional customers—restaurants, hotels, organizations, agencies, trade
groups, schools, etc.
Production center—selling wholesale from production site
Individuals—clients/employees of TARTINA sell to individual friends, family and
community members
EXHIBIT 5L: TARTINA DISTRIBUTION MATRIX
METHOD Supermarkets Minimarts Institutions Individuals Vendors Center
Sales agents • • • •
Direct sales • •
Clients/employees • •
Distributors N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Staff • •
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Methods for Distributing TARTINA Products
Sales force—sales representatives who sell products to retail or institutional mar-
kets.
Direct sales (also called multilevel)—similar to sales techniques used by private
companies like Amway and Shaklee, TARTINA uses individuals as distributors to
sell products to colleagues. In return, individuals receive a percentage of profit
margin on per-unit sales.
Social enterprise or implementing partner staff—selling directly to individuals,
institutions, retail outlets.
Clients—selling products in their communities.
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF THE DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS
Rationale:
Prior to deciding which channels you will use to distribute products to your cus-
tomers, you will need to assess the “return on investment” from distribution options
available by delineating the costs of each option. The return on investment is meas-
ured by the benefits realized from making the investment, which is expressed in
actual sales and the potential for future sales through, for example, building brand
awareness.
Same as previous exercise
Analyzing Distribution Options
Step 1
? List the advantages and disadvantages for each potential market in the distribu-
tion channel. An example is given in exhibit 5M, Comparison of Distribution
Channel Options for TARTINA (Markets).
? Synthesize your analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of your markets
and methods for reaching them.
? Based on this analysis, summarize in one or two sentences the implications of
your analysis for your distribution strategy for both markets and methods of
reaching them.
Step 2
? Repeat the steps above for potential methods for reaching your market in each
distribution channel. An example is given in exhibit 5N, Comparison of
Distribution Channel Options for TARTINA (Methods).
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
134
Supermarkets/Minimarts
• Largest market. Offers
potential to achieve signifi-
cant sales volume, which is
not possible in other markets
• More economical to use
sales agents for this market
than for sales to institutions.
One sales agent is able to
realize a greater volume of
sales
• Market demand for Mamba
is expected to continue to
increase
• Good visibility for building
brand awareness
• Opportunities to cross-sell
products
• Stiff competition
• Gross profit margin is the
lowest of the three options.
When peanuts are purchased
for more than 12 gourdes,
money is lost with every unit
sale of Mamba
• Follow-up/customer service
necessary
• Product quality requirements
are high
D
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• Profit per unit is higher than
for supermarkets, but lower
than for sales to individuals
• Little or no direct competition
at the point of sales
• Competitive advantage of
convenience of availability at
the work site sells the prod-
uct
• Quality requirements are
lower than for supermarkets
• Opportunities for contracts
with hotels, schools, etc.
•Limited sales volume
potential.
I•Most profitable per unit
• Purchase is in cash
• Simplest sales approach: no
sales follow-up necessary
and accounting procedures
simplified
• Informal vendors offer poten-
tial for distributing small
satchels of Karapinia
• Quality requirements are
lower than for supermarkets
Currently only one individual
purchasing from production
site. Poor market potential
to realize significant sales
volume
The two ingredients necessary to achieve the program’s cost recovery goal are significant sales
volume and a healthy unit profit margin. Supermarkets offer the greatest potential for reaching
significant sales volume, but the unit profit margin in this market is unhealthy. The enterprise is
currently losing money when it sells in supermarkets. To pursue crucial supermarket distribution,
TARTINA will increase production and sales force efficiency to lower unit costs on mature prod-
ucts. Institutions and individuals offer healthier profit margins as the expense of the intermediary
(sales staff) is cut out and because institutional employees are willing to pay more for the con-
venience of having the product come to them. Significant sales volume will be very difficult to
achieve in these markets, however, unless TARTINA can interest a large percentage of staff in
large institutions to purchase TARTINA Mamba on a regular basis or pursue contracts to sell to
schools, hotels, etc.
Implication for distribution strategy: Since the retail market is the only market that offers the
potential sales volume to make the enterprise self-sufficient, this will be considered the primary
market; other channels will be considered complementary to supermarket distribution.
EXHIBIT 5M: COMPARISON OF DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL OPTIONS FOR
TARTINA
(MARKETS)
Supermarkets/Minimarts Institutions Individual Vendors
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EXHIBIT 5N: COMPARISON OF DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL OPTIONS
FOR TARTINA
(METHODS)
Sales Agents
• Can secure large
commercial con-
tracts
• Connections with
merchants
• Professional image
• Focused only on
selling TARTINA
• Best method for
achieving target
sales volume
• Substantially
increases costs and
reduces per-unit
profit margins
• Transportation,
storage, inventory,
and management
complexities
• Under the current
structure staff
agents are deliver-
ing products, which
is not a cost-effi-
cient use of their
time
• Requires strong
inventory manage-
ment systems
Direct Sales
• Low-cost alternative
to hiring sales staff
• Able to sell to
organizations that
are not reached
through center,
clients or sales
agents
• Difficult to control
quality of represen-
tation
• Low volume
• Potential for hidden
cost of inventory
stagnation, follow-
up due to disinter-
ested salespeople
• Usually cannot
reach commercial
markets
• Successful direct
sales require train-
ing, which cancels
out cost advantage
• Direct sales to individ-
uals
• No sales costs
incurred
• Cash sales only
• No follow-up
• Income impact on
clients
• Higher per-unit rev-
enue on sales
• No/low market formal
access
• No transportation to
sell outside immediate
area
• Low-volume sales
• No/low sales cost
• Can sell products
on credit to cus-
tomers; attracts
larger customers
• Access to organi-
zational trans-
portation
• Not trained in
sales techniques
• Difficult to access
commercial mar-
kets because of
limited time, con-
nections,
sales skills
• Time divided
between other
responsibilities
• Adds complexities
about roles and
responsibilities
A formal sales force is the best vehicle to secure a large volume of sales. Salary structures,
work schedules, and number of sales agents will be thoroughly analyzed to ensure maximum
benefit. Management of sales personnel and staff development are key. Experienced sales
force translates into healthy sales levels and a consistent, professional presentation of TARTINA
products. Direct sales reduce costs and help build brand awareness as institution employees
tend to have more time to listen to the TARTINA story than they would have when picking up
their weekly groceries. There is also no competition from local producers in this arena.
However, there are hidden costs of follow-up and inventory stagnation, and there is little possi-
bility for reaching sales targets. Client offer little value in the distribution strategy toward achiev-
ing marketing objectives, although there is direct financial benefit for clients to sell their own
products. TARTINA staff members selling TARTINA products is a conflict of interest, so they will
be limited to distributing products on site to community residences.
Implication for distribution strategy: Focus on professional sales staff as the main method
for reaching retail distribution channels. Sales staff will also take over a portion of institutional
channels; other methods will complement the sales force.
Sales Agents Clients TARTINA Staff Direct Sales
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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PRIORITIZE LOCATION OF MARKETS FOR DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS
Rationale:
Before deciding which channels you will use to distribute products to your cus-
tomers, you will have to decide where you will distribute them. Location plays a
large role in determining return on distribution investment. You want to find the
most lucrative markets and the most cost-effective means of reaching them. In chap-
ter 3, you located your target market and studied market trends. This should give
you useful information in deciding where to distribute products.
Determining Market Locations
Criteria such as density of target customers, concentration of prospective distribution
outlets, and distance to and range of locations are important variables in weighing
cost advantages or disadvantages of a particular distribution channel. Consider sav-
ings like distributing several products through the same channels; also analyze less
obvious expenses, for example, managing inventory, accounting procedures, and
servicing products. Although it is tempting to place your products in every location
with a viable target market, distributing to many different locations exacts a heavy
cost burden. Therefore, the most effective strategy, especially for a new social enter-
prise, is to distribute to a few select markets.
Same as previous exercise
Prioritizing Markets
? Identify the location of markets for each product.
? Prioritize them according to cost advantages and potential returns.
? Compile the information into a table (exhibit 5P).
? Write out a justification based on cost advantage for selecting market locations as
related to product or service distribution (exhibit 5Q).
EXHIBIT 5P: TARTINA PRODUCT LINE AND
PRIMARY MARKET LOCATIONS
Product Line Primary Secondary
Regular peanut butter Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
market/individual
Sweetened peanut Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
butter market/individual
Grapefruit jam Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
market/individual
Passion fruit jam Port-au-Prince Supermarkets Petit Goave Artisan
market/individual
Karapinia Colline and Individuals PG and PAP Individuals/
surrounding area vendors
Colline—small town where production center is located
Petit Goave—provincial capital, largest city in the region of Colline
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5
FORMULATE A DISTRIBUTION STRATEGY
Rationale:
Your distribution strategy should be a synthesis of the exercises you did on types of
markets, market locations, and methods of distribution. Essentially, putting together
a distribution strategy requires answering the “where, when, who, how, and what” of
distribution.
Same as previous exercise
Formulating the Distribution Strategy
? Prepare a Distribution Channels Map illustrating exactly how you intend to move
your product or service from the point of origin to your customer. (An example
for TARTINA is given in exhibit 5R.)
? Use the following questions as a guide in formulating your distribution strategy.
(An example of the distribution strategy for TARTINA is given in exhibit 5S.)
• Where? Detailed plan for number and location of target markets.
• When? Plan for time period (should correspond to business plan).
• Who? Staff/contractors required to carry out distribution strategy.
• How? Method that will be used to distribute product at every level of the dis-
tribution chain.
• What are the budgetary implications? Cost to distribute product/service
according to proposed strategy.
• What synergies does your distribution strategy capture?
• How does your distribution strategy contribute to achieving the overall mar-
keting objectives?
Distribution strategy is included in the Business Plan.
Customer
PAP
supermarkets
Sales
agents
TARTINA
Production
Center
Institutions
and institu-
tional staff
Sales Direct
agents sales
TARTINA
Production
Center
Petit Goave
clients at sales
point
Sales
agents
TARTINA
Production
Center
Colline
customers
TARTINA
Production
Center
or
ADE office
Community
members in
Colline and
surrounding area
Clients
TARTINA
Production
Center
EXHIBIT 5R: DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS MAP FOR TARTINA PRODUCTS
Port-au-Prince Markets Markets Outside of Port-au-Prince
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
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EXHIBIT 5Q: DISTRIBUTION STRATEGY FOR TARTINA
I. Markets and Locations
The social enterprise business plan focuses on markets where both significant sales
volume and healthy profit margins can be realized. In order of priority, they are
Port-au-Prince (PAP), the localities—Petit and Grand Goave—surrounding the pro-
duction site, and PAP institutions. The combination of these three markets is
required to maximize marketing objectives.
Synergies: In each market, cross-selling of products is the focus. Cross-selling not
only increases sales but also increases sales capacity. Also, with cross-selling signifi-
cant economies of scale can be achieved by being able to sell more products to
the same customer.
Port-au-Prince—Supermarkets: Port-au-Prince and the surrounding area have
the highest concentration of TARTINA customers. The PAP retail market is the
only market that offers the potential of a sufficient sales volume to make the
enterprise financially viable. Distribution expenses, including transportation,
inventory management and tracking, and accounting, will have to be carefully
managed to ensure cost-effectiveness of distribution. Competition for local peanut
butter and grapefruit jam is stiff, however, and will limit profit margins for these
more mature products.
Port-au-Prince—Institutions: PAP institutions will be considered complementary
to the supermarket distribution channel. Customers who purchase TARTINA prod-
ucts one month at their place of work will be directed to make a repeat purchase
at the supermarket. Sales agents will prospect institutions for large contracts.
1. Petit and Grand Goave—artisan markets, vendors, and individuals in the two
towns located close to the TARTINA production site and ADE offices.
2. Production Center—direct sales to individuals in the community and sur-
rounding areas from the center itself.
Serving these markets is cheaper than serving the more distant PAP supermarkets
because of lower transportation costs and elimination of at least one link in the
distribution chain. Sales from the social enterprise production site and to nearby
community members constitute artisan markets.
Quality standards are much lower in Petit and Grand Goave’s artisan markets than
in the sophisticated commercial markets of PAP. The artisan markets, however, do
not offer the large sales volume potential of PAP. Clients in these markets have less
disposable income and are far more price sensitive than their PAP counterparts.
Product sales in the vicinity of the ADE office in Colline are also an excellent pro-
motional vehicle for ADE’s community work done outside of the social enterprise.
Any other channel through which this market is served is complementary to the
supermarket distribution channel in PAP.
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5
II. Method of Distribution
Sales force: Professional sales staff will be the main method for reaching large
retail markets in PAP. The experience of sales agents will translate into healthy
sales levels and a consistent, professional presentation of TARTINA products.
Direct sales: These are sales by sales staff or clients to employees within an insti-
tution or organization. This is an appealing market for TARTINA products as insti-
tutional employees are willing to pay slighter higher prices than at the supermar-
ket because of the convenience of having the products come to them. It is also a
good way to build awareness for the TARTINA brand. There is no competition
from local producers in this arena, and employees tend to have a little more time
to listen to the TARTINA story than they would have when picking up their week-
ly groceries. On their own, institutional sales do not offer the potential to achieve
the sales volume required to meet the enterprise’s commercial objectives.
Clients: Worthy of special note is the recent introduction of clients as sales agents
for the Karapinia product in their communities. This is an exciting development at
many levels. In the strict commercial sense, sales have been impressive.
Additionally, this opportunity has given the clients, those who transform the
peanuts and other ingredients into Karapinia, a new understanding of the con-
sumer’s perspective. This is already having positive effects on production
processes. Clients are also learning new sales skills and other entrepreneurial
abilities.
Price Strategy
Pricing your product or service is the linchpin of viability and, thus, one of the most
important business decisions you will make. The key is setting a price your target
market is willing to pay for your product or service that at a minimum recovers your
costs and preferably generates a profit for your social enterprise. No section in the
business plan can be completed in total isolation, and this is especially true for
price. Pricing decisions are based on your costs, the effect of competition, and the
customer’s perception of your product’s or service’s value and the amount they are
willing to pay for it. This section provides a framework for developing a price strate-
gy for your enterprise. The decisions you make later in your human resources and
operations plans will also have a bearing on price, which may necessitate returning
to this section when you prepare your final business plan.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
140
PRICE FLOORS AND CEILINGS
The term price floor is used to indicate your cost—the lowest price you can offer
and still break even. If you decide to set the price below cost, it should be for a
temporary, specific strategic purpose such as to
introduce a new product to the market.
The price ceiling is sometimes characterized
by “what the market will bear” and hinges on two
important variables. The first is customers’ “per-
ceived value,” or the maximum price customers
will pay, based on what the product is worth to
them. The second is competitors’ prices for the
same or similar product or service.
Once you understand the price floor and ceil-
ing, you can make an informed decision about how to price your product or serv-
ice.
Most social enterprises use cost-based pricing. While it is important to be
mindful of costs when setting your prices, also think about your business from the
customer’s perspective. If the customer doesn’t perceive value worth paying for at
a price that enables you to cover costs, you may have to diversify your product
portfolio or even change the business you plan to enter.
BREAK-EVEN ANALYSIS
A break-even analysis determines at which point your revenues from sales equal
your costs. Called the break-even point or, aptly, in French, point mort or “death
point,” it also establishes your price floor. Exhibit 5S is an illustration of a break-
even in a business. The following exercises will help you determine the amount of
revenue your enterprise needs to generate and the number of units it must sell to
break even.
EXHIBIT 5S: BREAK-EVEN
Price Versus Cost
4Cost is the total of the fixed and variable expenses
(costs to you) to manufacture or offer your product or
service.
4Price is the amount per unit that customers pay for your
product or service.
$10,000
$7,500
$5,000
$2,500
0
1,000 5,000 10,000
S
A
L
E
S
&
C
O
S
T
S
NUMBERS OF UNITS SOLD
OPERATING PROFIT
BREAK-EVEN POINT
OPERATING LOSS
Price floor—the lowest price you
can offer your customers and still
break even.
Price ceiling—the maximum price
customers will pay based upon
what the product is worth to them.
Break-even point—the point at
which revenues from sales equal
costs.
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5
Determining Costs
Rationale:
The first step is to determine the costs to manufacture your product or offer your
service. Once you know your costs, you can calculate your break-even point.
Definition of Fixed and Variable Costs
Variable costs are the expenses that vary with the amount of services rendered or
goods produced. They include costs such as raw materials, transportation costs for
distributing products, inputs or materials used, and wage or piece-rate labor. For
example, the number of trainers you hire to teach business development courses
may be dependent on how many classes will be taught. For TARTINA, the quantity
of peanuts needed is dependent on the amount of peanut butter made. Some vari-
able costs, like technical consulting expenses, are not specifically related to units
produced yet fall into this category.
EXHIBIT 5T: EXAMPLE OF UNIT VARIABLE COSTS FOR TARTINA
Plain Peanut Butter (16 oz.) Price in Gourdes
1
Peanuts 5.000
Transportation (1 sack of 16 marmites over 1 km at 1.50 gde/sack) 0.060
Storage (1 gde for 1 sack of 16 marmites of peanuts) 0.000
Wood for heating 1.000
Water (1 bucket/1 km) 0.060
Salt 0.200
Grinder (500 gdes/5,000 times) 0.100
Pot (100 gdes/1,000 times) 0.010
Wooden spoon (1 gde/1,000 times) 0.001
Metal spoon (5 gdes/1,000 times) 0.005
Straw winnowing tray (20 gdes/1,000 times) 0.020
Small bucket (3.5 gdes/1,000 times) 0.004
Small wooden table (100 gdes/10,000 times) 0.100
Apron (75 gdes/5,000 times) 0.015
Tablecloth (75 gdes/2,000 times) 0.004
Screen (75 gdes/5,000 times) 0.015
Gallon jug (3 gdes/500 times) 0.006
Labor (1/2 hour at 4 gdes per hour) 2.000
Transportation to PAP (1 bucket = 45 jars at 8 gdes/bucket) 0.180
Depot fee 0.050
Label 1.000
Jar 10.000
Total 19.531
1
Gourdes are the local Haitian currency; there are 16.5 gourdes to $1 US.
Unit costs—the costs to produce
one unit of output.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
142
Calculating Variable Costs
Calculating variable costs is trickier than calculating fixed costs because it requires
breaking out costs of all inputs used in producing one unit of a good. Therefore, if
you are offering a training service, you will need to calculate all costs related to pro-
viding that training. This might include a contracted trainer’s fee, materials, space (if
you plan to rent space outside your regular office), snacks you will provide, etc.
Reusable supplies, such as pens, need to be costed by their estimated life span, or
their total cost divided by the number of times you can use them.
There are simpler methods to determine variable costs than ours, exhibit 5T; we
recommend that you round-off to make this task more user friendly. Our example is
presented this way for demonstrative purposes.
Explanation of TARTINA’s Variable Costs
TARTINA’s variable manufacturing cost per 16-ounce unit of peanut butter is
19.531 gourdes (rounded off to 19.5). Prices for peanuts, TARTINA’s largest variable
cost, fluctuate depending on the harvest, going as high as 16 gourdes per marmite
(5.5 lbs.) and squeezing margins. The competition sells its peanut butter for between
30 and 35 gourdes in supermarkets. This gives TARTINA only 10.5 - 15.5 gourdes
per unit margin ($0.63 - $0.93) when peanuts sell for the low price of 12 gourdes
per marmite to cover its fixed costs and earn a net profit (profit after expenses). In
addition, when distributing through supermarkets, TARTINA has to determine a
wholesale price that includes room for retailers’ 20% markup. Therefore, Mamba’s
selling price to supermarkets is 25 gourdes per unit, and the supermarket’s selling
price is 33 gourdes for TARTINA brand.
Fixed costs, or “overhead” (for development projects these costs are also referred to
as direct costs), are the expenses that don’t vary according to production volume or
number of services rendered. They usually include rent for office and storage space;
insurance and utilities; office equipment, such as telephones, fax machines, comput-
ers, radios, etc.; audits and evaluations; and salaries or a portion of salaries attrib-
uted to the project. Depreciation of assets is also a fixed cost.
Total fixed costs are found in the Profit and Loss Statement on line item “total
operating costs” (Chapter 8 “Financial Plan”).
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5
Allocating Overhead: A “Quick and Dirty” Calculation
For social enterprise programs working through one or more partners, diffi-
culties in assigning overhead can occur. This is particularly true if the part-
ners engage in several activities unrelated to the social enterprise program
and if any costs are shared between programs, such as office space, trans-
portation, supplies, and staff.
One simplified method of assigning overhead is as follows:
1. Add the total costs of the organization for all programs, excluding salaries
and fringe benefit.
2. Then divide by the total number of staff members. This will give you a dol-
lar value of overhead per staff member, excluding salaries and fringe ben-
efits.
3. Next, make a list of staff members involved in the social enterprise
program and
4. In the next column the amount of time they dedicate to it.
5. Then note each staff member’s salary plus fringe benefits in a dollar
amount. In our example, the production manager spends 100 percent of
his time working for the enterprise, and his full salary is $6,500 per year
including fringe benefits. The director spends 10 percent of his time on
enterprise activities, and his salary is $25,000 per year including fringe
benefits.
6. In the next column, calculate a dollar value for overhead allocation based
on the percentage of time worked on the project. For example, since the
director is charged 10% to the program, his allocation to overhead is
$10% of $1,200, or $120.
7. Total the columns for salaries and overhead allocation. Adding the totals
for the two columns will give you a figure for overhead or fixed costs to
allocate to your social enterprise. (See following example.)
Obviously, this method is not 100 percent accurate, but it is probably a close
enough estimate.
Example (fictitious Organization):
(1) Total organizational overhead: $30,000 per year (excluding salaries and
fringe benefits)
Total staff (all programs): 25
(2) Formula: $30,000 = $1,200 for annual overhead per staff member
25
(3) (4) (5) (6) (7)
Personnel Time on Percent of Salary + Overhead Allocation Total
Project Fringe in $
Business Manager 50% $10,000 (.5 of $20,000) $600 (.5 of $1,200) $10,600
Production Manager 100% $6,500 $1,200 $7,700
Trainer 30% $4,545 (.3 of $15,000) $363 (.3 of $1,200) $4,908
Marketing Manager 100% $18,000 $1,200 $19,200
Director 10% $2,500 (.10 of $25,000) $120 (.10 of 1,200) $2,620
Secretary 25% $1,000 (.25 of $4,000) $300 (.25 of 1,200) $1,300
Total $42,545 $3,783 $46,328
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
144
Calculate Break-Even Points
The break-even analysis considers four variables: fixed costs, variable costs, quantity
and price. The most commonly used break-even point determines the number of
units that must be sold for an enterprise to cover its costs. Yet it can be also used as
a sensitivity analysis to derive the break-even at different levels of output, prices
and fixed and variable cost structures. The best approach is to isolate the variables
over which you have the most control and focus on them when analyzing your
break-even.
Quantity—What does your market research tell you about the size of your target?
(chapter 3) What is your level of capacity; how much are you capable of producing?
(chapter 6)
Price—How much are your customers willing to pay for your product? (chapter 3)
Variable costs—Are your variable costs well estimated and calculated for present
time and near future? (chapter 5)
Fixed Costs—Are your fixed costs reasonable to support your operations? (chapter
6, 7, and 8)
For example, making peanut butter is a variable cost business, meaning that a large
part of its cost depends on the price of the raw materials, peanuts, which range from
as low as 10 gourdes per marmite to as much as 16 gourdes per marmite. When
prices of peanuts go up, margins narrow, and TARTINA must produce and sell more
to cover its costs. Therefore, TARTINA should calculate its break-even at different
variable cost levels to determine how much the price of peanuts affects its bottom
line.
Break-even is presented here, rather than in the chapter on finance to emphasize
the importance in formulating a price strategy based on real costs.
Marketing manager, production manager, business manager, PO business
advisor, accountant, partner program manager, sales staff
Calculating the Break-Even Point
To complete this section, you will need historic information on the variable and
fixed costs of your enterprise. If yours is a new venture, you may need to first
work through the rest of the manual to have enough information to calculate
your break-even point. Full details of TARTINA’s financial information can be
found in chapter 8. Its production costs are presented in chapter 6.
? A lot of pricing is chicken and egg stuff. Arriving at the right price takes several
iterations.
? Begin by calculating your variable costs for each product or service (19.5 for
Mamba).
? Then, estimate annual production costs by product. Production costs are derived
by multiplying variable costs per product by the number of products you plan to
produce over a year; these figure are then added together. Therefore, 18,300
total units of Mamba are projected at a cost 356,850 gourdes or $21,627 (19.5 x
18,300).
? Total production costs for all products. TARTINA’s total annual production costs
are $45,974 of all four types of products.
? Now, what is the breakdown of production costs per product in percentage
(some products have higher unit manufacturing costs than others)? For example,
Sensitivity analysis—a tool used to
project expense and income levels by
manipulating cost and revenue vari-
ables in a company, such as changes
to production level, costs of inputs
(fixed or variable), or prices.
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5
Mamba production costs are $21,627 out of a total cost of $45,974. Expressed
as a percentage, that’s 47%, whereas, Karapinia and Grenadia represent 14%
each and Chadèque 25%.
? Next, you will have to allocate your total fixed costs based on the percentage of
production costs for each product manufactured.
• TARTINA’s total fixed costs are $146,729; 47% of this figure is $70,372.
Therefore, $70,372 of fixed costs are then allocated to Mamba.
? Input fixed and variable costs into the following break-even formulas.
? Calculate break-even points for each product.
? Perform a sensitivity analysisto test break-even by manipulating different cost,
output and price variables.
Formula for Calculating Break-Even Units
To determine how many units must be produced and sold to break even, use the
following formula:
Fixed costs
Price per unit – Variable cost per unit
= Number of units needed to break even
*The denominator for this formula is also called unit contribution margin (selling price per
unit – variable cost per unit).
EXAMPLE #1: CALCULATING BREAK-EVEN NUMBER OF UNITS FOR MAMBA
Data Needed:
• Variable costs per unit for Mamba = 19.5 gourdes ($1.18)
• 47% fix cost allocation for Mamba is $70,372
• Selling price for Mamba is 25 gourdes to supermarkets ($1.52)
• Currency exchange: 16.5 gourdes = $1 US
Formula: FC $70,372
P-VC
= Q
1.52 - 1.18
= 206,976
TARTINA must sell 206,976 units of Mamba to break-even. Ouch!
EXAMPLE #2: CALCULATING BREAK-EVEN REVENUE FOR MAMBA
For demonstrative purposes only.
Formula: FC $70,372
1-(VC/Price)P-VC
= Q
1-(1.18/1.52)
= $319,872
Mamba has slim margins of just $0.34 per unit. Therefore, at the current selling price and
production costs, TARTINA needs revenues of $319,872 just to cover its costs of Mamba.
Ouch!
This of course is not the full picture. TARTINA has not projected break-even until year
seven, which could mean that they are right on target with planned sales of 18,300 units of
Mamba for revenue of $27,727 in the first year.
Unit contribution
margin—captures the
profit margin plus the fixed
costs per unit sold. Unit
contribution margin is used
in the break-even calcula-
tion to determine how many
units of a product or serv-
ice must be sold to equal
the fixed and variable costs.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
146
Results
Results of the break-even analysis can tell you if your enterprise is potentially viable.
They evoke questions like: Do we have the capacity to manufacture X amount of
product or render X number of services? Is there a sufficient market for this quantity
of services or products? Does our enterprise structure support the marketing func-
tions necessary to sell this quantity at our break-even price or above it? If breakeven
results appear daunting, how are they projected over time? Do they become more
attainable as the enterprise operates with greater efficiency? If not, are you in the
wrong business?
PRICE ELASTICITY AND SENSITIVITY
Rationale:
In analyzing the buying sensitivities of your target market, one variable was price.
Understanding how sensitive your market is to changes in price helps you determine
how much “wiggle room,” or price elasticity, you have to raise your prices. Factors
that influence price elasticityare supply and demand: the availability of the product
or service and of good substitutes, their respective prices, and the extent to which
the product or service is desired. If ample supply exists through competitors and
substitutes, that puts downward pressure on your price. On the other hand, if
demand is high for a product or service, exceeding what can be supplied through
competitors and substitutes, price elasticity is high, meaning that you will have room
to increase prices. Customer purchasing power and staying power (ability to do
without a given product or service) are other factors that contribute to price sensitiv-
ity.
Unfortunately, most social enterprises have little flexibility when pricing their
products and services. This is because they operate in industries characterized by
low barriers to entry and high competition or because they render services to disad-
vantaged business owners that have little money to spend on services.
This manual gives no explicit exercise to establish price elasticity for the products
or services in your industry. Merely reflect on the information you gathered during
market research (which should be sufficient to denote price elasticity) and apply it
when developing your price strategy.
PRICE STRATEGY
Once you have calculated your break-even points and studied price sensitivity, you
are ready to set your price.
Using Subsidy in Price
If you are considering subsidizing your price with donor
funds, you should be aware of (1) the amount of subsidy
provided, (2) how it is being used (subsidizing what), (3)
what its purpose is, (4) its duration, and (5) your plan for
self-reliance. Using donor funds to artificially lower prices
distorts the market and is not a sustainable strategy in the
long term. We recommend that you use subsidy toward
covering your fixed costs and that you reflect this in your
financial plan (see chapter 8).
Price elasticity—measures cus-
tomers' responsiveness to changes in
price via quantities purchased.
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STRATEGIES FOR ESTABLISHING PRICE
4Set a low price on one or more products to make quick sales that will support
another product in development. (TARTINA could use this price strategy for plain
Mamba to support the costs of developing sweet and spicy Mamba.) This strategy
increases cash flow, even though it might mean a net loss for the period.
4Set the price to meet a desired profit or sales goal, indicated in the marketing
objectives.
4Establish a high price to make high profits initially. This strategy is used to recover
research and development costs or to maximize profits on an introductory prod-
uct before competitors enter the market. (TARTINA entertained this strategy as an
option for pricing Karapinia.)
4Set a price equal to the competitor’s. This strategy is often used with commodi-
ties, when prices are relatively well established (e.g., peanut butter), or when
there is no other basis for setting the price. When using your competitor’s price as
your “ceiling,” the challenge is to lower your costs below that ceiling so you can
generate more revenue.
4Establish a low price (compared with the competition’s) to penetrate the market
and capture a large number of customers. This strategy can also be used to
achieve nonfinancial marketing objectives such as product or brand awareness. It
works if you are able to maintain profitability at a low price through high sales
volume and efficient service delivery/production. Most private companies that use
this strategy subsidize prices in the short term to achieve penetration, then raise
their prices.
4Base the price on the customer’s perception of the value of your product or serv-
ice. This price strategy is one of the most important in social enterprise programs
that render services to the self-employed. Financial service programs do an excel-
lent job at providing services at higher-than-market prices, based on value to their
customers. To use a value-based price strategy, you will have to be thorough in
your market research and fully aware of the benefits your customers want and the
perceived value of those benefits (how much are they willing to pay for them).
4Charging “what customers are willing to pay” is usually a nonstarter. This passive
approach to pricing is sometimes used by social entrepreneurs who want to be
fair to their low-income clients. But price is a business tool. “Withstanding the
test of the market” is both pricing your products appropriately and giving cus-
tomers something they want.
PRICE STRATEGIES LINKED TO DISTRIBUTION AND PROMOTION
4Your pricing strategy might include discounts for customers who offer you a busi-
ness benefit; for example, giving cash discounts to customers who pay promptly
or in advance of receipt. This rewards those who help your social enterprise
maintain a steady, positive cash flow. Offering discounts for large orders often
makes economic sense when the cost per unit to sell or deliver a product declines
as the quantity increases.
4
Seasonal discounts given to buyers who purchase during a product’s slow season
reward customers who assist the social enterprise in balancing its cash flow and in
meeting production targets.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
148
4Trade-in allowances for return of old products that you can either reuse or resell
for a profit may benefit both the social enterprise and customers.
4Promotional allowances often make financial sense and should be linked with
promotional strategies. For example, you might offer reduced-price coupons at
point-of-purchase displays or outlets that sell your social enterprise’s product.
First-time “low-price” offers are a way to attract new customers.
Same as previous exercise
Formulating a Price Strategy
? Use break-even point analysis as a starting point for your price strategy.
? Reflect on the price strategies described above and consider which ones may be
appropriate for your product or service.
? Use the list of questions in the Price Strategy Framework (below) as a guide to
developing a basic price and beyond basic price strategy.
Price strategy is included in the Business Plan.
PRICE STRATEGY FRAMEWORK
(Also see example of how questions are used to formulate a price strategy for
TARTINA, exhibit 5U).
Basic Price
4At what basic price should each product or service be set?
4Will the basic price be different for different customers? For example, when dis-
tributing through a middleman such as a retailer or trader, you must also consider
the price he will charge the consumer and leave room for the middleman’s
markup.
The basic unit price of each product should be assessed with the following
points in mind:
4Prices should help achieve the marketing objectives.
4Prices need to be set to cover variable costs and contribute to covering fixed costs
with the sale of each product.
4Will prices be the same as, higher than, or lower than those of the competition?
4Can price be a competitive advantage for any of your social enterprise’s products
or services?
4Is price one of the most important criteria used by the consumer in selecting your
product? How price sensitive is the target market for each product or service?
4With price comes a certain perception. A lower price is not always the best strate-
gy. A higher price is often associated with higher quality. Is this the case for your
enterprise’s products or services?
4Is the pricing objective to “skim” the market—take a small piece of the market
with a larger profit margin—or to “penetrate” the market—offer a lower price
with the objective of wider sales?
4How will pricing impact accounting systems? Is your social enterprise’s accounting
system able to capture a complex pricing strategy?
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Beyond Basic Unit Price
4Determine strategies for discounts and allowances, one price vs. flexible pricing,
different prices for different geographical locations, freight absorption (transporta-
tion costs included in price)—free on board destination pricing, vs. free on
board shipping dictates whether the supplier or the buyer pays shipping costs in
the price.
4What are competitors’ strategies on these fronts? Is there an opportunity for your
social enterprise to offer a competitive advantage?
EXHIBIT 5U: PRICE STRATEGY FOR TARTINA ENTERPRISE
1. Context
Market research into customer buying motives for the products in the TARTINA
product line was conducted in January 1999. This research confirmed that price
sensitivity runs high for every product in the product line. The degree of price
elasticity depends on the distribution channel and the maturity of the product. In
terms of distribution channels, direct sales offer the greatest room for flexibility
given that purchasers are willing to pay extra for the convenience of having the
product come to them. Supermarkets in PAP, however, offer little margin for price
flexibility because stiff competition from other local brands on the shelves pushes
prices down. There is an another element of the supermarket distribution channel
that affects the ability of TARTINA Enterprise to raise its prices. In this market,
TARTINA acts as a wholesaler; the supermarket is the intermediary that sells to the
consumer. This additional link in the distribution chain limits TARTINA’s ability to
raise prices.
The fewer links that exist in the distribution chain outside of PAP offer an
advantage in pricing flexibility. However, this advantage is offset by the lower dis-
posable income of the customer target group in areas outside of PAP.
The “new” products of Karapinia, passion fruit jam and sweetened peanut
butter, will translate into some room to increase prices. Such increases will not be
significant, however, given the overall price sensitivity of clients purchasing food-
stuffs and the unstable economic situation in the country.
2. Pricing Strategy
The pricing strategy for products in the TARTINA product line reflects the follow-
ing considerations:
4It covers unit variable costs and a percentage markup to spread over fixed costs.
4Sales prices will remain competitive, but competing on price is not the most
important basis of competition. The comparative advantages of TARTINA prod-
ucts lie in characteristics and benefits other than price, and these will be the
most important factors in positioning the products vis-a-vis the competition’s.
4The plan is not to undercut competition using donor funding because we want
customers to switch to TARTINA from the competition (for peanut butter and
grapefruit jam) for reasons other than price. We want to create brand loyalty.
Likewise for new products, we are targeting customers who are open to trying
Free on board destination (FOB)—
when the supplier bears the shipping
costs.
Free on board shipping point—
buyer bears transportation costs from
point of origin.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
150
to new products and new flavors—for whom price is not the No. 1 factor when
deciding to purchase a new product.
4The seasonality of raw materials (fruit and peanuts) is not reflected on the
supermarket shelves. For jams and jellies, shelf life is up to two years. This per-
mits producers to process enough products during the harvest season to last the
rest of the year. No price increase is evident during the year for jams and jellies.
For peanut butter, there is a slight increase in supermarket prices toward the
end of the two peanut harvest seasons. This increase is kept minimal, however,
by the fierce competition between local brands.
3. Per-Unit Prices for Each Product (16 oz. size)
For Supermarket Customers:
Mamba: 25 gourdes Karapinia: 5 gourdes (small satchel)
Chadèque: 26 gourdes Grenadia: 26 gourdes
Prices will be modestly higher (2 to 3 gourdes) for individual and
institutional customers.
Note: Prior to developing the business plan, TARTINA conducted a feasibility test
that eliminated products that were not (and did not have the potential to be)
financially viable.
Promotion Strategy
The overall objective of your promotion strategy is to contribute toward achieving
the marketing objectives. It is the vehicle for informing your target market about
your enterprise and the products or services it is offering in the marketplace.
Although many social enterprises place significant emphasis on providing services or
products appropriate for their target market, ironically, few focus on raising aware-
ness of their existence once they are available in the market. Attracting customers
through promotional efforts is a critical piece of the viability equation, and it
requires money. The original TARTINA budget allocated substantial financial
resources to training and supplies but included zero resources for promotion. It is a
mistake to assume customers will automatically become conscious of your products,
and of the benefits they offer, without an organized campaign to impart this infor-
mation. Since money in social enterprise programs is always limited, your promotion
strategy must be developed with care and creativity. Much of the information gath-
ered in chapter 3 on the characteristics of your target market and how to reach cus-
tomers will help you with developing your promotional strategy.
A promotion plan articulates:
4How you will raise customer awareness of your products or services.
4What message you will convey to your customers.
4Specific methods you will use to deliver and reinforce your message.
4How you will secure sales.
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LOGOS
Rationale:
A logo is a visual picture that
reminds people of who your
enterprise is and what it does.
Recognizable logos—for example,
for the Olympics, Mercedes, Nike,
or Microsoft—immediately remind
people of the firm and the prod-
ucts or services it sells. Logos are
especially important promotional
tools for social enterprises that tar-
get illiterate customers.
Marketing manager, sales staff, business manager, PO business advisor, part-
ner program manager, external graphic artist (if desired)
Creating a Logo
? Create a logo for your social enterprise. Solicit assistance from a graphic designer
if necessary.
? All key enterprise stakeholders should agree on the firm’s logo.
THE PROMOTIONAL MESSAGE
Rationale:
Every enterprise sends a message in its marketing; this message should motivate cus-
tomers to purchase your product or service and state your competitive position.
The promotional message can emphasize particular benefits, such as “low-price
leader,” “convenient one-day service,” or “always fresh.” A message can also exploit
a market niche, as in “Telecommunications Serving Kampala Small Businesses” or
“Palm Oil Marketers.” It can also be more subtle, triggering a customer’s emotions
or self-image, like this one from an alternative-jobs newspaper: “Change your job,
change the world; work for social change.” All Americans are familiar with the emo-
tional appeal of McDonald’s marketing message, “You deserve a break today.”
Tips for Creating Logos
4A logo is a visual picture that reminds people of who
your business is and what it does.
4Logos can be abstract.
4Don’t try to tell a complicated story with a logo; keep it
simple.
4Logos should use symbols that are easy to remember
and recognize.
4Put the name of your social enterprise under your logo
to reinforce identification.
4Employ a graphic designer or use a computer art pro-
gram to help create a logo.
EXHIBIT 5V: TARTINA PROMOTIONAL MESSAGE
TARTINA Enterprise changed the message “100% natural,” which focused on
product benefits, because it seemed too limiting, since it applied only to spicy
and regular peanut butter. The new message—“Tastes and feels sooooo good!”—
draws attention to product quality and to the benefits TARTINA products provide
to the community.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
152
Same as previous exercise
Creating a Promotional Message
We have already noted that customers mainly buy the benefits that products and
services provide, not their features. In other words, customers are more concerned
about how a product or service will affect their lives than about how it achieves
those results. In writing your promotional message, you must tell customers what
they will get when they purchase your product or service, such as security, an
enhanced self-image, a more profitable business, etc., rather than detailing what
your product does.
? Begin by reflecting on three of the “four P’s” of marketing discussed at the begin-
ning of this chapter:
Product: What are the benefits your product or service offers that customers
are seeking?
Price: Is there a cost advantage of your product or service for customers?
Place: Are there advantages of convenience or comfort associated with the
locations where your products or services will be sold?
? Next, use the “five F’s” (below) to further analyze how your product or service
fills a range of benefits customers look for. Professional marketers, use this “five
F’s” formula as a way to remember advantages customers are seeking when they
make a purchase.
Functions: How does your product or service meet specific
needs of your customers?
Finances: How will the purchase of your product or service
change your customers’ financial situation? Does your pro-
duct or service render long-term savings benefits, such as
increased productivity or efficiency?
Freedom: Will customers gain time and have peace of
mind in other areas of their lives if they purchase your
product or service?
Feelings: How does your product or service make cus
tomers feel about themselves? Will it improve their self-
image?
Future: How will your product or service affect their lives
over time? Will it be available in the future? Will support
and service continue to be available? Will this increase
your customers’ sense of security?
? Now you probably have a substantial list of benefits your product or service
offers customers. Customers want as many benefits as possible, but you will have
to prioritize which ones to emphasize in your promotional message. Bear in
mind that there are other ways than your promotional message to communicate
the benefits of your product or service, such as excellent service or a high-quality
product that speaks for itself. Concentrate on the one or two benefits that will
most effectively motivate customers to purchase your product or service and that
most strongly define the competitive position of your enterprise.
? Write your promotional message. It should be very brief—no more than one
line—and simple, so that it is easy to remember.
EXHIBIT 5W: “FS” BEHIND TARTINA BRAND
“Tastes and feels sooooo good!”
FUNCTION—TARTINA’s yummy tasting peanut
butter in several savory flavors.
FINANCIAL—Less expensive than many other
brands, saving money over time.
FREEDOM—Guilt free high protein food; con-
tributing to social good by purchasing TARTINA
brand; available in many convenient locations;
expiration date ensures freshness.
FEELINGS—fosters “good parent,” “concerned
citizen taking action” self-image.
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THE PROMOTIONAL VEHICLE
Rationale:
Once you have decided on the message you want to convey, you must then figure
out how that message will reach customers. There are many marketing mediums to
consider. Advertising, trade shows, and public relations efforts are just some of the
possibilities. Some promotional vehicles will be more suitable for your enterprise
and product/service than others. This section is designed to help you focus on cost-
effective promotional vehicles that will yield the best results—i.e., increase your
sales.
Selection of Promotional
Vehicles
Quantity, cost, mix, and fit are
important considerations when
selecting promotional vehicles for
your enterprise. Be sure that the
medium you choose will actually
reach your target customers and
that it is appropriate to your
image. Most customers need to be
exposed to marketing materials
several times before they decide
to purchase a product or service.
Therefore, repetition and exposure from a variety of different sources are also
important considerations. Finally, affordability can be a strong factor in selecting
which promotional vehicle you will ultimately use.
Types of Promotional Vehicles
4 Brochures—leaflets, informational handouts, inserts. Brochures are an excellent
low-cost promotional vehicle as long as your target customers are literate. Bro-
chures are especially useful for service businesses because they enable you to
describe your services in lieu of tangible products.
4 Print media—advertising in newspapers, newsletters, magazines, and trade and
specialty publications. Cost varies greatly for print ads: from little to nothing for
ads in local newsletters to expensive ads in publications with national circulation.
Before buying ad space in a publication, be certain that its readership matches
your target market.
4 Posters/fliers—a low-cost option. These can be posted locally or handed out in
communities. Fliers and posters are a good means of advertising events or “act-
now” opportunities to try your product or service.
4 Broadcast media—radio and television. Although television is inappropriate for
social enterprises in many markets, well-targeted radio advertising can reap sur-
prising benefits.
4 Direct mail—mass-mailed fliers, catalogs, brochures, and coupons. Direct mail is
generally associated with high costs and low returns. Moreover, it is a highly
impractical form of promotion in developing countries.
4 Public relations—public service announcements (PSAs), celebrity spokesper-
sons, newspaper feature or news articles. These are seemingly attractive promo-
tional vehicles for social enterprises because they are free. Although public rela-
The Wrong Promotional Vehicle
If your enterprise offers business services to poor entre-
preneurs who cannot afford luxury items, or lack basic
infrastructure like electricity, television is probably not the
best way to reach them. Television is also a powerful
medium that can easily intimidate or alienate poor people,
possibly contradicting the image of a trustworthy business
aimed at helping them. In addition, TV advertising is very
expensive and a good way to blow your program’s pro-
motional budget in one fell swoop.
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tions can yield positive benefits, relying on them as part of your promotional mix
is unwise because of the hidden costs of time spent writing and sending out press
releases or efforts to solicit journalists that go nowhere. And since it is difficult to
control what a journalist will write, PR can distort your enterprise's public image.
In the end, these articles often do not even reach your target customers. If you
choose to use public relations as a promotional vehicle, be discriminating, realis-
tic, and clear about your objectives. Select community publications or newsletters
that are compatible with your reputation and image. Pursue "celebrities" you have
access to who will draw the attention of your target customers. For example, a
soccer player from a regional team may be more appropriate than a movie star.
4 Advertising gifts—giveaway items emblazoned with your enterprise's logo, such
as stickers, calendars, desk sets, T-shirts, and magnets. These items vary in cost
but can be an effective means of developing brand recognition. Stickers are rela-
tively inexpensive and are popular in many countries.
4 Sampling—distribution of free product samples. This promotional vehicle is
especially useful for introductory products, when you want to promote use or
knowledge of a new product rather than a known product. There are costs of
staff time to give out samples and the cost of the product itself.
4 Informal marketing—activities such as speaking at public events or attending
conferences. Like public relations, informal marketing offers a cost advantage but
often does not reach a social enterprise's target customers. There may be other
advantages to informal marketing, such as developing strategic alliances or raising
public awareness for your firm. Be clear about your objectives before committing
time to this promotional vehicle.
4 Telephone directory listings—an often overlooked but cheap and appropriate
means of promotion for many social enterprises.
4 Trade shows—useful for two reasons. Participation in trade shows raises your
profile and offers new business opportunities, such as strategic alliances with
commercial partners or sharing information. Trade shows, however, can be costly
in staff time and exhibition costs if not well targeted.
4 Merchandising displays—on-site, point-of-purchase offers presented to cus-
tomers at the time of sale to encourage impulse purchases. Merchandising dis-
plays are good promotional vehicles for cross-selling products because they allow
an enterprise to display its full product line. They are also an effective branding
mechanism. Note that some retail outlets may charge for displays that take up
shelf space.
4 Billboards—brightly colored signs with your logo and a strong visual image.
These are an excellent choice in countries sensitive to brand image and with low
literacy rates among target customers. The cost varies by country, depending on
whether the billboard is a formal means of paid advertising controlled by the
state or simply a sign erected on a public roadside by the enterprise itself.
4 Special offers—discounts, two-for-one deals, free trials, etc. Such enticements
enable your social enterprise to increase sales and build its market share. The
costs of discounted prices or giveaways must be figured into your bottom line.
4 Information meetings—an oral presentation introducing your enterprise and its
services or products. This form of promotion, often used by microfinance institu-
tions, is also a good way to attract potential customers to service businesses.
Information meetings are particularly effective when you target market is not lit-
erate.
Managing the Double Bottom Line:
154
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Business manager, marketing manager, PO business advisor, sales staff,
accountant
Planning Your Promotional Vehicles
Locate the Promotional Vehicle Worksheet (exhibit 5X) in The Workbook or create
your own. This exercise is a precursor to preparing your promotional strategy and
budget.
L Reflect on the information gleaned about your target customers in chapter 3 as
you look through the list of promotional vehicles and answer the following ques-
tions.
L Reach. Which promotional vehicles will best reach your target customers, in
terms of both geographic location and your customers' access to the vehicles
used?
L Fit. Which ones best fit your enterprise's image and the product you want to promote?
L Frequency. How often and when will you use the promotional vehicles? Are
there seasonal upswings or downturns in your business cycle?
L Cost. What costs are associated with using the vehicles? Will you have to buy
space or contract for professional assistance (in design, printing, production,
advertising, or public relations)?
L What are the annual costsfor your promotional vehicles? This information will be
used as the basis of your marketing budget in the financial section of your busi-
ness plan. Don't forget to calculate costs of staff time or product samples in your
projected annual promotion costs.
EXHIBIT 5X: PROMOTIONAL VEHICLES FOR TARTINA
VEHICLE REACH FIT FREQUENCY COST
1 (low) - 5 high) (per year)
Print - - - -
Broadcast - - - -
Direct Mail - - - -
Brochures 2 2 Annually/or as needed to update information $550
Flier/poster 3 3 New product launches/ promotional campaigns $360
Sampling 2 5 Monthly, each major retailer Covered by
sales
salaries
Informal 1 1 When opportune; ADE Director N/A
PR 4 2 Quarterly press releases N/A
Trade shows 4 5 Biannual PAP Food Fair $800
Gifts - - - -
Phone book 2 1 Annual space ad plus phone listing $25
Displays 4 4 Two months per year, major retailers $400
Billboards 4 3 Once, sign on main road to Colline $30 to artist
Information meetings 1 3 When opportune for direct sales agents N/A
Special offers 2 4 Quarterly to correspond to product launcher, $500 in
academic year, summer and post X-Mas redeemed
coupons
TOTAL COSTS $2,665
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LOW-/NO-COST PROMOTIONAL OPTIONS
In addition to using the aforementioned conventional promotional vehicles, you can
employ a number of creative options to promote your enterprise. Usually, little addi-
tional cost is involved, and these options can produce tremendous benefits.
Consider the following when you prepare your promotional plan.
4Cross-selling—exhibiting several different products in one display. Cross-selling
builds brand awareness across multiple products and entices customers to try your
other products if they are already familiar with one.
4Personal sales—carried out by sales, marketing, or other staff at sales locations.
Staff members can add a personal touch by offering customers samples to try,
telling them about the products and the enterprise, and giving out coupons.
4Strategic alliance—a complementary company with which you share promotion,
sales, or distribution functions. Several types of alliances can be formed:
• Joint advertising—when two firms are mentioned in a single ad and share the
costs. Special events are popular among nonprofits; firms underwrite the costs
of an event and display their banners, T-shirts, and literature at the event.
• Licensing—when one firm grants another permission to use its name, trade-
mark, or product. For example, Save the Children licenses its name and logo
to a clothing manufacturing company for a line of ties and scarves distributed
in retail outlets. SC receives financial benefit for its programs and increases its
name recognition without having to manage a clothing business.
• Professional or in-kind exchanges—a creative way to broker promotional deals
through nonfinancial exchanges with businesses that want services or products
from your enterprise. In the Moscow Winter Olympic Games, a noncash deal
worth more than $1 million, trading coffee and programming for advertising,
was brokered between Columbia House Coffee, the games’ sponsor, and
Turner Productions.
4Referrals and testimonials—a satisfied customer is the most powerful means to
promote your social enterprise. Your job is to "delight the customer" so the cus-
tomer will refer your enterprise and services/products to others. You can capitalize
on customer referrals by inviting satisfied customers to speak at information meet-
ings or help with samplings, product demonstrations, or special promotions. Also,
you can make their comments indelible by including them as testimonials in print-
ed promotional material.
4Cause-related marketing—exploiting the social value of your enterprise for
advertising purposes. Cause-related marketing can take the form of a strategic
alliance (above) with another firm (usually a large corporation) that provides
money, technical assistance, and/or promotion in exchange for using your social
enterprise in its advertising. The corporation is usually motivated by the opportu-
nity to improve its public image, smooth community relations to make way for
business expansion or penetrate new markets. Some well-known examples
include Benetton's sponsorship of AIDS awareness and American Express' raising
consciousness for hunger relief with Washington, D.C.-based Share our Strength
(SOS). Some social enterprise entrepreneurs find it demoralizing to join ranks with
large corporations, believing that they are exploiting their target population, while
others find that mutually beneficial relations are forged.
Managing the Double Bottom Line:
156
Licensing Can
Help Serve the
Double Bottom
Line
Licensing offers certain
advantages to social
enterprises concerned
with meeting the social
objectives. A licensing
agreement with a private,
for-profit firm relieves a
social enterprise from
business management so
it can stick to the social
business of "doing good."
Licensing also provides
the enterprise with a guar-
anteed market and high-
quality technical assis-
tance, although revenues
will be substantially less
than if the social enterprise
managed the business
itself.
For example, the social
objectives of your enter-
prise might be to supply
jobs to and develop the
technical competence of
clients who produce
leather goods. Your enter-
prise might choose to
focus on core competen-
cies like production tech-
niques and community
organizing rather than
manage multiple business
functions. In this case, the
enterprise might license
the entrepreneur-made
products to a company
that would handle market-
ing of the leather goods.
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A more applicable form of cause-related marketing is to allude to social objec-
tives in your promotional messages, literature, and advertising. Although this is a
good way to get publicity, it can be a double-edged sword. A social enterprise bak-
ery found that it lost customers when it advertised that its bread was made by inter-
nally displaced people and refugees because that conjured up images of unsanitary
manufacturing conditions. TARTINA Enterprise discovered that social consciousness
was generally low among its poorly educated consumers in Haiti, but many retail
customers chose to carry TARTINA products because they wanted to support the
cause.
Same as previous exercise
Planning Low/Cost Marketing Options
? Locate the Low-/No-Cost Promotional Options Worksheet in The Workbook or
create your own. Exhibit 5Y provides an example for TARTINA
EXHIBIT 5Y: LOW-/NO-COST PROMOTIONAL OPTIONS FOR TARTINA
VEHICLE REACH FIT FREQUENCY COST
(per year)
Cross-selling 4 5 No additional
costs
Personal sales 3 4 Covered by sales
salaries
Strategic alliances
Type:
Referrals 1 4 No additional
costs
Cause-related 2 3 Time to forge
marketing corporate
relationships
Other
TOTAL COSTS -0-
1 = worst choice 5 = best choice
PACKAGING
Packaging refers to a product's physical package (box, container, jar, wrapping, etc.)
or labels, or a service's presentation. Although packaging does not fall directly under
the auspices of promotion, good packaging can certainly help promote products and
services. Moreover, it is an aspect of marketing that is sorely undervalued by social
enterprises and, therefore, is worth mentioning here.
Packaging enhances your professional image and helps commercialize your
social enterprise at little or no additional cost, and it doesn't require changing the
product or service. TARTINA first used crude plastic containers for its peanut butter
that were difficult to open and close and sometimes leaked, dripping grease down
the sides and smearing the laser-printed label. Its new jars with screw-on tops are
marginally more expensive but, with their new label, are much more attractive and
commercial looking (exhibit 5Z).
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
158
Tips for Packaging
Packaging has many variables and is difficult to address generically, so we simply
give you a few hints for packaging your product or service.
4Remember that because the package of your product or presentation of your
service is the first contact a potential customer has with it, the package represents
the product's entire identity and image.
4Use the five F's to tailor packaging to customer wants (see TARTINA example in
exhibit 5Z below).
4Your packaging should attract—even call out to—your target customer.
4Your name and logo should be clearly visible.
The new label, a significant improvement over the existing one, has the following
benefits:
4It is fashioned after import labels. There is a great demand for imported food-
stuffs, which are considered to be of higher quality than the local competition.
The new label should have a positive impact on the TARTINA image. In addi-
tion, it will attract customers who aspire to purchase imported peanut butter or
jam but can only afford local brands. (feelings)
4The label was designed with the female shopper in mind; the pastel colors and
floral patterns are visually appealing to women. (functions, feelings)
4The label includes a paper safety seal, which is an inexpensive way to assure
the customer that the product has not been tampered with. This is an important
feature differentiating the product from the local competition, which does not
have safety seals. (freedom, future)
4Similarly, nutrition information is provided on the new TARTINA label, which is
a comparative advantage relative to the local competition. (freedom, feelings,
future)
EXHIBIT 5Z: NEW TARTINA LABEL
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EXHIBIT 5AA: PROMOTIONAL PERSONNEL FOR TARTINA
Position/task In- Hire Contract One Time or Duration PT Annual
house Recurring /FT Cost‡
Marketing Manager FT
Marketing Assistant
Market Researcher 1 time
(product study) 4 weeks
Events Coordinator Recurring 8 weeks PT
Alliance Coordinator
Graphic Designer 2 (label/logo)
Other
‡ For permanent staff include salary plus benefits.
Formulate a Promotion Strategy
Your promotional strategy will be a synthesis of the work completed in this section
and will be included in your final business plan.
PO business advisor, marketing manager, business manager, sales staff,
external marketing consultant (if desired)
Crafting a Promotional Strategy
? Develop a promotional strategy for your social enterprise.
? You will have to formulate a promotional strategy for each product or service you
are offering.
? Locate the Promotional Strategy Worksheet in The Workbookor create your own.
MARKETING PERSONNEL
After plotting the vehicles for your promotion strategy, consider the effect of these
choices on enterprise personnel. In the cost columns of the two previous work-
sheets, you were to some extent tasked with reviewing human resource implica-
tions. At this point you must examine personnel needs in concrete terms. Will you
need to hire marketing staff, or can you outsource the marketing functions?
PO business advisor, marketing manager, business manager, human resource
manager (if applies)
Determining Marketing Staff Needs
The symbols and below denote financial and human resource implications of
marketing decisions, information that will be used to develop your financial plan.
These implications may cause you to revisit some promotional choices.
? Make a list of marketing personnel by position or task.
? Indicate whether staff is currently available in-house or you have to hire either
new permanent staff or contract for temporary staff.
? Indicate whether promotional staff is needed on a full-time or part-time basis.
? Estimate total annual costs for each person. If you need a full-time permanent
professional, include benefits in your projections.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
160
? Restate your marketing objectives in the first column, followed by products in
the next column, then the promotional vehicles you plan to use, and finally
your strategic rationale. The strategic rationale explains how your choice of pro-
motional vehicles will contribute toward the achievement of your marketing
objectives.
? Refer to the example of TARTINA's promotional strategy in exhibit 5BB for assis-
tance or inspiration.
Promotional strategy included in the Business Plan.
Increase brand
awareness and
sales
Product aware-
ness
Increase brand
awareness and
increase sale
levels
(sales target of
U.S. $58,976)
Peanut butter
and grape-
fruit jam
Karapinia
and passion
fruit jam
All products
Personal sales
Point-of-purchase (POP)
displays
Sampling
Point-of-purchase dis-
plays
Sampling
In-store display posters
Point-of-purchase
displays
Cross-selling
Personal sales
Special offers
Trade shows
Customers are already aware of the existence
of the products. POP promotion will help
TARTINA's voice be heard among the several
other competitors on the market.
For success in launching the passion fruit jam
and the Karapinia products, it is not brand
awareness that should rule but awareness of
the products themselves, which are virtually
unknown.
• “Tasting is believing!” It will encourage cus-
tomers to switch brands, as is required in
the competitive peanut butter market, or to
purchase a new product, such as passion
fruit jam, instead of their regular flavor.
• POP and posters can increase the TARTINA
brand presence in some stores that current-
ly do not have shelf space available for new
brands or new products.
• Multiple TARTINA products will be on dis-
play, and promotional staff will offer sam-
ples of any or all of the products to interest-
ed shoppers to taste (and purchase!).
• Cross-selling is cost-effective as it uses
one vehicle to simultaneously promote mul-
tiple products.
• The sales will offer a market research
opportunity. Promotional agents will gain
firsthand information on customers' buying
motives and product preferences.
• Coupons and discounts at POP displays
will encourage impulse purchases by cus-
tomers trying TARTINA products.
• These will be primarily aimed at forming
strategic alliances and increasing presence
in some stores that currently do not carry
TARTINA products.
In summary, the promotional strategy will put its accent on per-
sonal sales, product presentation, taste tests, and development of
promotional material for in-store displays. Additional funds have
been included in the business plan's promotional budget to poten-
tially use in larger-scale publicity material, such as print advertis-
ing, PR, and stickers with the TARTINA logo, which are popular
among children. The costs and benefits of this type of publicity
will be further evaluated before any disbursement of these promo-
tional funds.
EXHIBIT 5BB: PROMOTIONAL STRATEGY FOR TARTINA ENTERPRISE
Marketing Product Promotional Vehicle Strategic Rationale
Objective
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5
Sales Plan
The sales plan flows from the marketing plan. Remember that at least one marketing
objective must include a sales forecast expressed in unit sales or currency value.
TARTINA uses both in its objectives (see marketing objectives in the first section of
this chapter). The sales plan is concerned with turning prospective customers
reached through marketing into purchasers. It articulates the structure and strategy
of closing deals and the costs to do so.
SALES STRUCTURE
Staff members charged with selling responsibilities are the pulse of income genera-
tion in your social enterprise. Simply put, without sales there is no income.
Marketing manager, business manager, PO business advisor, HR manager,
external sales consultant (if desired)
Establishing a Sales Structure
The symbols and below denote financial and human resource implications of
sales decisions, information that will be used to develop your financial plan.
What is your sales structure?
L Do you have a sales force? How many people?
L At what point do sales personnel achieve "full capacity"? When do you decide to
hire more sales staff?
L Do you use internal staff (employees) or contract staff (sales firm,
free agents)?
L Do salespeople have additional responsibilities? If so, which ones?
L Are other people charged with selling your product or service? Who?
L Who supervises sales personnel/functions? Is this person charged with other
responsibilities? If so, which ones?
L Are individual sales staff charged with different responsibilities? How are respon-
sibilities organized?
L How is territory divided up among sales staff? Geographical region, product, cus-
tomer type?
L What type of training do sales staff receive? How often is training
conducted?
L Who is responsible for training sales staff?
L How do you ensure that sales targets are met (use a quota system, assign targets
for sales staff, etc.)?
L Summarize sales structure.
Summary included in the Business Plan.
SALES COSTS
Marketing manager, accountant, business manager, PO business advisor, HR
manager
Estimating Sales Costs
Give careful thought to the following questions, and then project your social enter-
prise's selling expenses based on your sales structure. All the information in this sec-
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
162
tion will be used in the financial plan. An example is provided in 5CC.
? How are sales staff remunerated? Salary? Commissions? A combination of the
two?
? Which out-of-pocket expenses incurred by sales staff are reimbursed?
Transportation, communications, travel, meals, etc.?
? Do sales staff receive a petty cash advance?
? What type of incentive program do you use to motivate staff? Financial bonuses?
Nonfinancial rewards?
Sales cost information will be used in the Financial Plan (Chapter 8).
EXHIBIT 5CC: MONTHLY SELLING EXPENSES EXAMPLE
Sales Staff Base or Commission Bonuses Expenses Benefits Training and
and Status Salary Supervision
Martine Du Pré 15% of sales 20% of $15 for Health, sick, 20% Marketing
Senior sales $100/mo. price per unit sales price transport vacation Manager
$1,000 for per unit per/mo. salary spread
targets after quota over 5 sales
(per/mo. quota) staff - $55
Luc Dominique $80/mo. 15% of sales None $15 for No benefits Same (above)
Trainee price per unit Bonuses transport until post- Trainer $55
$800 for to trainer trainee
targets status
(per/mo. quota)
Marketing manager, sales staff, PO business advisor, business manager,
external marketing/sales consultant (if desired)
SALES STRATEGY
The sales strategy explains the mechanics of the sales approach your social enter-
prise will employ to realize its targets.
Developing a Sales Strategy
Use the following questions as a guide to craft your sales strategy:
? Who identifies potential new customers?
? Who makes the initial customer contact?
? What are the follow-up procedures after the first customer contact?
? Are incentives, bonuses, or rewards given for new-customer acquisition?
? How is customer contact made—in person, by phone, by mail?
? At what point does the sales staff decide to stop pursuing a lead?
? How frequently are existing customers contacted? Are they contacted for addi-
tional, add-on, or new-product sales?
? What kind of customer service or terms do you provide to ensure repeat patron-
age (credit, returns, etc.)?
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5
? To what extent do sales personnel participate in "personal selling" (a marketing
tactic), such as taste tests, or marketing events, such as trade shows?
? Summarize sales strategy.
Narrative summary included in the Business Plan.
THE SALES PLAN
The sales plan aligns quantitative targets with the sales forecasts in marketing objec-
tives (exhibit DD: Information Flows for Sales Planning). Annual sales plans are seg-
mented by product and broken down into monthly or quarterly figures (exhibit 5EE:
Annual Sales Plan for Mamba). Subsequently, monthly sales projections are made for
individual sales representatives. Setting targets and accomplishing them are a func-
tion of your sales structure and strategy. The sales plan requires giving thought to the
division of sales territory; time for sales calls, new-customer acquisition, and servic-
ing products; number of personnel; and seasonality of business cycles (chapter 6)
and capabilities of individual sales agents.
Targets for individual sales reps are delineated for a certain time period by prod-
uct, revenue, volume, customers, or a combination thereof. The sales plan example
in exhibit 5FF shows monthly sales objectives for Sales Agent Martine Du Pré. There
is also a column for units sold. Comparing actual sales performance with projected
targets helps managers project future sales more accurately and determine if sales
personnel are performing as expected. This example divides sales targets equally
between the five TARTINA sales reps (320 x 5 = 1,600) for the month of December
2000. This plan is probably not realistic because it does not account for lower sales
productivity of trainees like Luc Dominique or dense territories like Port-au-Prince,
which will yield a higher sales volume than secondary markets.
SALES FORECAST
$58,976 & 62,500 UNITS
CORRESPONDING SALES PLANS FOR REPS BY PRODUCT,
VOLUME, REVENUE, TERRITORY, ETC.
MAMBA
18,300
UNITS
$27,727
CHADÉQUE
7,400
UNITS
$9,891
GRANADIA
6,400
UNITS
$10,085
KARAPINIA
30,400
UNITS
$9,212
ANNUAL PLANS
SHARED W/
PRODUCTION
MONTHLY
PLAN
EXHIBIT 5DD: INFORMATION FLOWS FOR SALES PLANNING
This diagram illustrates the steps involved in sales planning and shows that sales
information is shared with production or operations.
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Managing the Double Bottom Line:
164
PO business advisor, production manager, marketing manager, sales staff,
business manager
Establishing Sales Targets
? Develop an annual sales plan for each product.
? Locate blank Sales Plan Worksheet located in The Workbook or create your
own.
? Prepare monthly sales plans for each sales representative that are linked to annu-
al sale targets (if you have a sales force).
? If you are using another structure to sell your products or services, show how you
will achieve sales targets using that structure in a written monthly or quarterly
plan.
? Use TARTINA examples for inspiration or assistance.
Sales targets are included in the Business Plan.
EXHIBIT 5EE: ANNUAL SALES PLAN
PRODUCT: MAMBA
MONTH QUANTITY UNIT PRICE LOCAL CURRENCY U.S. $
Apr-99 1,200 25 30,000 1,818
May-99 1,200 25 30,000 1,818
Jun-99 1,050 25 26,250 1,591
Jul-99 1,050 25 26,250 1,591
Aug-99 1,100 25 27,500 1,667
Sep-99 1,250 25 31,250 1,894
Oct-99 1,250 25 31,250 1,894
Nov-99 1,300 25 32,500 1,970
Dec-99 1,600 25 40,000 2,424
Jan-00 1,600 25 40,000 2,424
Feb-00 1,700 25 42,500 2,576
Mar-00 2,000 25 50,000 3,030
Apr-00 2,000 25 50,000 3,030
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TOTAL 18,300 457,500 $27,727
EXHIBIT 5FF: MONTHLY SALES PLAN
3
Market Channel
Existing Customers
Supermarkets
Boutiques
Institutions
New Customers
Total Sales Objective
for the Month
Customer
Big Star
Delimart
Starmart
Villa Creole
Super-Q
Minimart
Product
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Mamba
Chadèque
Karapinia
Mamba
Karapinia
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Karapinia
Mamba
Chadèque
Grenadia
Karapinia
Sales/Mo.
Objective
Volume
150
40
75
90
40
50
40
10
100
25
200
15
10
25
100
320
110
150
400
Sales/Mo.
Objective
Revenue
*
3,750
1,040
1,950
2,250
1,040
1,300
1,000
260
500
625
1,000
375
260
650
500
Revenue:
16,490=
$1,000
Units
Sold/Mo.
(Actuals)
Total
Revenue
Realized:
*
Sales projections given in gourdes.
Explanation:
Sales plan shows sales targets by product and customer for Sales Agent, Martine Du
Pré. The last column, Units Sold Monthly, are the actual amount of products she sold
at the end of the month. These actuals are reconciled with projected targets to moni-
tor agents’ performance and the market.
3
Template prepared by Kellogg Corps Consultants, J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management,
Aug. 5, 1998.
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