Create Your 12-Month Marketing Calendar
Tara McMullin
Lesson Info
2. Create Your 12-Month Marketing Calendar
Lessons
Class Introduction
10:38 2Create Your 12-Month Marketing Calendar
14:12 3Real Life Marketing Calendar Example
18:28 4Identify Your Marketing Campaigns
06:07 5Examples of Identifying Audiences
18:22 6Example of Actual Marketing Campaign
09:32 7Analyze Your Past Marketing Disappointments to Discover Opportunities
30:59 8Identify & Research Your Target Customers
08:35Social Listening
05:39 10Front-End Surveys
05:05 11Back-End Surveys
03:37 12Market Trends
04:57 13Analytics
04:29 14Prospect Interviews
03:48 15Live Presentations
07:36 16More Reasons Marketing Campaigns Fail
06:54 17The Problems Your Customer Faces
15:50 18Customer Awareness Exercise
30:21 19Guest Interview: Lacy Boggs
25:07 20Create Your Campaign Building Blocks
37:43 21Building Your Campaign
12:19 22Lesson 1-21 Review
04:15 23Start with the Sale in Mind
15:21 24Sales Page Exercise
26:49 25Draft Eye-Catching Headlines
28:10 26Find The Customers You Need to Reach Your Goal
18:18 27Lead Generation Systems
20:23 28Craft Your Messaging Using Customer Awareness
30:46 29Create Your Campaign Schedule
30:16 30Example of Campaign Creation
29:35 31Develop Your Follow-Up Plan
32:13 32Setting Your Campaign Goals
09:52 33Real Life Example of Campaign Goals
13:11 34Analyze Your Campaign Results
10:15 35Marketing Plan Review Session
09:05Lesson Info
Create Your 12-Month Marketing Calendar
"Create Your 12 Month Marketing Calendar." Now I know that marketing often feels like the last thing on your list. Actually, it's the first thing in your mind but it's the last thing that ends up getting actually done. Because I know you guys. You love what you do so much that you are all focused on your product, you're focused on your service, you're focused on delivering your very, very best to your customers and clients. And that means that those marketing pieces, those marketing items on your to-do list keep getting transferred to the next day, and the next day, and the next day. And they don't actually get the priority that they deserve. Now the reason for that this is often because you don't have a real plan. You have an idea of what you're supposed to be doing but you don't actually have it set out in a way that gives you deadlines, that gives you constraints, that gives you focus. And I know that that's what all of you need to really make marketing a priority. So let's talk abo...
ut some of the reasons that you don't plan. Again, I'm just going to be shattering objections here all day long. So if you came thinking, "I don't know about this, Tara." Be prepared to get converted. All right, so you don't plan because you're afraid that planning is a waste of time because you change your business so often. Yes? Does that resonate? You're coming up with new products and services all the time, you're thinking about a pivot all the time, you're thinking about honing in on a different kind of customer all the time. And so planning just seems like, "I don't know. How could I even look 12 months out in advance? How could I look three months out in advance? I don't know what my business is going to look like." So that's the first reason you don't plan. The second reason you don't plan is simply you don't make time for it. You don't set aside half a day, an hour to figure out what you're going to sell and when. This doesn't have to take a long time, but you do have to make time for it. You also don't plan because you don't know what you're going to sell. Because again, you're constantly thinking about, "What am I going to need to sell?" Instead of, "What do I want to sell? How am I going to make up for this down month? What else can I sell? What else can I add into the mix here?" And so you don't plan because you never quite know what your needs are going to be. And then finally, you're not confident in your ability to predict results. And if you can't predict results or if you don't even feel like you're moving in that direction, how can you really plan things out? So let's talk about why all of these objections, all of these reasons are not the case. So first and foremost, the reason you're…with changing your business so often. Planning actually helps you stick with a strategy longer. One of the reasons your business changes so often is because you're not planning for it to stay the same or to stay on a particular course. So planning, this process of actually looking 12 months in advance can help you stay the course and give you a better idea of whether the course that you're on is actually the course you want to be on. And not only that, but then sticking with a strategy actually helps you to generate traction. So the more you stick with one thing, the longer people have to associate you and your brand with that thing. If you're changing things up all the time it's hard to get traction, it's hard to get recognition, it's hard for people to really understand what it is that you do, or that your company does, or what it is that you're offering. So that takes care of the first objection. Now the second one is that you don't make time, and good news is you are making time for it right now. So you have already succeeded in one piece of the puzzle. Good for you. So that takes that one off. The next one is that you don't know what to sell. This is easy. Step one, make a list of all the things that you have available to sell. Most business owners that I know, not all, but most have a lengthy list of things they could sell at any point in time, half of which we forget about. I am as guilty of this is as you guys are, trust me. So the first step really here, and you can start doing this in your head. I'll give you a little bit of time to think through it then, but make a list of everything you have available to sell. Maybe it's 3 things, maybe it's 5 things, maybe it's 10 things, maybe it's 15 things. I have like five books that I could sell that I never sell because I just don't think about them. It's not that I never sell them. They sell on the side. But I could craft a whole marketing campaign around them. I don't, because I forget about them. Stop forgetting about things that make you money and start making a list of them. The next step, this isn't the only thing you have to do, the next step is to put a star next to the 1-3 things that make up 80% of your annual revenue. One to three things that make up 80% of your annual revenue. Why? Because it's actually a problem that you have so many things to sell. Because when you have so many things to sell, your marketing plans get crazy. And you're not going to stick with them because there's just too much to do. You're going to get burnt out from all the marketing that you think you're supposed to be doing. Also, it doesn't help with sticking with the strategy. It doesn't help with really getting people to pay attention to that one thing that you do really, really well. So I want you to focus on just those few offers that actually make you the vast majority of the revenue that you bring in in a year. And if you just focus all your effort on that 80% of the revenue, say that you made last year, you'll make way more than that this year because you're actually focused on the things that make you money. So I'm not saying let's reduce your revenue down to 80% of what it was last year, what I'm really saying is let's double your business growth by focusing on what really sells. Michelle and I were talking right before that you've got a lot that you could be selling, but right now you've doubled down on one-to-one work because it's where the vast majority of your revenue comes from. And so that's the only thing she's focused on now and that's going to help her really grow into the future. So those one to three things are the only thing you really need to sell. You don't need a list of 10 things. You don't need a list of five things, you need one to three offers that really showcase what it is that your business does best, and that makes you money. Okay, so that takes care of the third bullet point. Let's move on to the last one. You're not confident in your ability to predict results. Well, that's why you're here. You're here to gain that confidence. You're here to figure out how to better predict results, how to better plan for the outcomes that you want. Because the reason that you're not so good, maybe, at predicting results right now is because you don't have a plan. The more you plan, the more you can predict results. The more you can predict results, the better your plans will be. So it's a whole cycle that we're starting in on right now. So that's where we need to go from here is actually making that initial plan. And the good news is, is that I have provided for everyone watching right now a 12-month marketing calendar that you can get when you are RSVP for this class. So if you're watching this class right now live with us here on CreativeLive, just hit that RSVP button, log in to your CreativeLive account. And then in the Class Materials section, you're going to find this handy dandy marketing calendar. And this is just going to help you layout your thoughts. And you can use it year, after year, after year if you want. You just print it out as many times as you want and there is your marketing calendar. So the very first thing we need to do once we've got that calendar is think through, "Where am I going to put my offers throughout the year?" Now, the planning process here, it's going to change. As you start planning things you're going to realize, "Ooh, I made a little mistake here." Or, "Oh, I think this would be better over here." The idea is not to get it right the first time through, the idea is just to start. So the best thing you can do to start is to actually look at the year that you have coming up. So maybe you're starting in, this August 1st when we're recording this, maybe you're looking from August to August. If you want to look from September to September that works. If you're doing this at the beginning of the year which is a great time to do it, you can look January to January. I've made all of our planning, all of our calendars in just month one, month two, monthly three so that it's as easy as possible to do this whenever you want. There's no right time to do it. There's no time you absolutely have to do it. You can do it anytime. You're planning these next 12 months out. So what you want to do is look out over the course of the year and think about what are the things that you want to sell over the course of the year, and then simply put them on the calendar. When do you want to sell them? When do you want to make the money? That's why there are dollar bills. That's what's going on here if that's not 100% obvious. So maybe think, "All right, two months from now I want to sell this software. Four months from now I want to sell the next thing, then I've got a follow-up offer right after that. That's going in on month five. Month 9 is another one, and month 11 is another one." There's no rhyme or reason here. There will be, but the very first thing is just saying, "All right, I think this is what I want to do. I think this is the amount I want to sell." Now the question that always comes up during this time is how often should I run a campaign? And the answer is as always, it depends. It depends on a lot of different things. I want to give some general guidelines here because I know that this is where your brain is going. It's like, "Well, maybe I should sell something every month. Maybe I should sell something every other month." The truth is we just don't know. But depending on how your business is set up, depending on what it is that you have to sell you may sell more frequently or less frequently, and market your business more frequently or less frequently. So you're going to market less frequently if you run a launch model, maybe. So maybe you launch that big product that you have twice a year. If you do physical goods, it could be you launch your spring collection and you launch your holiday collection. It could also be digital products too. So you've got that big online course that everybody loves. You launch that in February and you launch it again in September. And that may be your two big marketing pushes. Everything else throughout the year is gravy, or it's, you're doing just a lot of brand awareness, but those are your two big marketing pushes. If you have programs with long delivery cycles, we run a program that's a year long. Actually, we run a couple of programs that are a year long. Those things don't get marketed as frequently because I'm in the delivery process for a year. So I don't want to be marketing that constantly. I wouldn't have any time to actually deliver it. If you want to utilize scarcity. So if there's a limited number of people, a limited number of spots, even a limited amount of time then you're probably going to market less frequently. Maybe you've got a smaller team. And so you just can't market more frequently, and so you choose to put all your effort into just a few times a year where you're going to really double down on marketing. And maybe you run less campaigns if you get a lot of word-of-mouth business. So business is coming to you gradually throughout the year. And there's just a couple of key times when you put a little bit more effort into it so that you get a little bit more out of it. It's on the less frequently side. You might run campaigns more frequently if you have more offers to sell, if you have shorter sale cycles. So if you can get people to buy in a 48-hour window instead of a month-long window then you should sell more frequently. If you have more leveraged products where you don't have to do a whole lot of delivery, the delivery is done for you automatically, you can sell more often. Your whole business becomes marketing at that point. And then finally, if you're leveraging more naturally urgency. In other words, people feel an urgent need for what you're selling all throughout the year, market all throughout the year. So depending on where you see yourself falling on this spectrum, you might be running a marketing campaign constantly like an automated campaign. You might be running one monthly, bimonthly, or if you're all the way on the other side, on the less frequently side, you may only be running marketing campaigns twice a year, once a year, even. Marie Forleo runs her marketing campaign once a year, B-School season. Everyone knows B-School season. So there's a lot of variety here. There really is no right answer. And I just wanted to make sure we answer that question right off the bat because I know it's the biggest headache when you start thinking about these things. It's, "Oh, gosh, how often should I be doing this?"
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Sharon
Tara, the information you delivered in this class is invaluable. I am in the launching stage of my business, and I know I need to market my business and services and I know I need to write a plan, but I didn't know how to do it. Instagram, content upgrades, Facebook, email marketing, webinars, blogging, etc. etc., I know it all. But I just couldn't get my head around how to truly use marketing campaigns for my business, and especially for my services, to reach my ideal client, help my ideal client and to reach my ideal income. You explained the why behind marketing campaigns and you showed us how to create a marketing campaign from A to Z. The whole sha-bang! You gave me the knowledge and inspiration in how to market my services, how many people I ideally want to reach and above all, a framework I can use time and time again to create a marketing campaign. I purchased the class right after seeing the live broadcast so I can use this class for planning all my next marketing campaigns. You clarified a lot and I am much more confident (and so much more less stressed haha) in creating a marketing campaign plan that works for my business and services. I learned a lot! Thank you! P.S. Love the hot seats.
Lisa Murray
Once again Tara has delivered a brilliant class. It was perfect timing for me as I am about to relaunch an existing program. I saw clearly what I missed during the first launch and I'm curious to see how the new approach based on Tara's strategies will convert. Highly practical and hugely insightful if you want to stop chasing bright shiny objects and spinning your wheels. I especially loved the launch model using where the customer is in their knowledge of your offer - brilliant!
MaryAnn
This class is well worth the time! Tara does an excellent job of not only providing a step by step system for creating a marketing campaign, but she provides clear context and insights along the way. This is important so that you're not just going through the motions and crossing your fingers that your marketing will work. She helps you understand the strategy behind the scenes so you can get the most out of the work you put in. I highly recommend this course to anyone considering doing their own marketing, or people who are already doing their own marketing and want to feel more empowered and get better results.
Student Work
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