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Testing Your Values, Living Your Brand

Build your business plan around core values and never forget what those values are.
Posted by Tim Berry | April 21, 2009
URL: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/201344

Value-based marketing can help you flesh out your business plan with a better sense of what to do and why. You don't just design your logo. You live it. You become what you say it stands for.

For example, take the computer dealer whose self-image and marketing literature are based on providing extra service for small business customers. The value proposition is about reliability, reassurance, competence and building relationships with clients instead of just selling boxes to customers; there is an implied price premium. That business can't just assert that position, it has to live it in all phases of the business. For example:

Many businesses are in danger of forgetting what they're about. You can't advertise "friendly skies" and not make every effort to have friendly employees. You can't advertise hospitality and offer hostility. You can't advertise service and offer long lines and frustration. You can't have gourmet pricing and bad fast food.



How does that work into business planning? Frankly, very well.

Start by defining your value proposition. Ask yourself what benefit you offer, what need do you fulfill, to what kind of customer and at what price level. That's your value proposition.

If you're going to be good at this, stay skeptical. Test it. Could your competitors say the same thing? Would it be as true for them as it is for you? If the answer is yes, then you don't have it right yet. When you feel like you have the value proposition right, build your strategy around it. How do you deliver on your promise? How do you get the word out?

This is where most businesses stop. Be better than most. With your value proposition in hand, go department by department, function by function, through your business. Look at every function you have -- all the way from the top and the marketing and sales areas, through your operations, fulfillment and even finance and accounting -- and check for whether what you're doing supports, ignores or takes away from your value proposition.

Then turn that into concrete action points, steps to be taken, milestones, dates and deadlines - then you'll have a better business plan.

Tim Berry is the president of Palo Alto Software Inc., based in Eugene, Ore., which produces business planning software. He is also the author of 3 Weeks to Startup and The Plan-As-You-Go Business Plan, published by Entrepreneur Press. Follow him on Twitter: @Timberry