then. Two groups of experienced marketers are implementing the plan. One
is the board of directors, many of whose members are executives of major
financial corporations or their spouses. The other group has been recruited
from businesses that are using their association with the Ailey company for
their own marketing purposes. For example, Healthsouth Corporation pro-
vides free physical therapy to the dancers and benefits from the association
in marketing its chain of sports medicine clinics. Jaguar, the official car of
Alvin Ailey, has made a large donation in exchange for this designation and
the right to use Alvin Ailey in advertising and for access to the its mailing
list. With an audience that is almost half African American and 43 percent
of which is between the ages of 19 and 39, Ailey is providing access to an
important market for its corporate partners and earning their enthusiastic
support.^22
VALUATION AND CONTROL
To deal with the many surprises that occur during the implementation of marketing
plans, the marketing department continuously has to monitor and control marketing
activities. In spite of this need, many companies have inadequate control procedures.
This conclusion was reached in a study of 75 companies of varying sizes in different
industries. The main findings were these:
■ Smaller companies do a poorer job of setting clear objectives and establishing
systems to measure performance.
■ Less than half of the companies studied knew their individual products’ prof-
itability. About one-third of the companies had no regular review procedures for
spotting and deleting weak products.
■ Almost half of the companies fail to compare their prices with those of the com-
petition, to analyze their warehousing and distribution costs, to analyze the
causes of returned merchandise, to conduct formal evaluations of advertising ef-
fectiveness, and to review their sales force’s call reports.
■ Many companies take four to eight weeks to develop control reports, which are
occasionally inaccurate.
Table 6.6 lists four types of marketing control needed by companies: annual-plan
control, profitability control, efficiency control, and strategic control.
ANNUAL-PLAN CONTROL
The purpose of annual-plan control is to ensure that the company achieves the sales,
profits, and other goals established in its annual plan. The heart of annual-plan con-
trol is management by objectives. Four steps are involved (Figure 6-11). First, manage-
ment sets monthly or quarterly goals. Second, management monitors its performance
in the marketplace. Third, management determines the causes of serious performance
deviations. Fourth, management takes corrective action to close the gaps between
goals and performance.
This control model applies to all levels of the organization. Top management sets
sales and profit goals for the year that are elaborated into specific goals for each lower
level of management. Each product manager is committed to attaining specified lev-
els of sales and costs; each regional and district sales manager and each sales repre-
sentative is also committed to specific goals. Each period, top management reviews
and interprets the results.
Managers use five tools to check on plan performance: sales analysis, market-share
analysis, marketing expense–to–sales analysis, financial analysis, and market-based
scorecard analysis.
part five
Managing and
Delivering Marketing
(^696) Programs
E