What Clients Say About Us:

We needed a marketing firm that would be able to develop a professional brand image consistent with our company’s expertise and quality, and who already had a good understaing of GA and could get up to speed quickly. We would highly recommend Aviation Marketing Consulting for your aviation business.

Jim & Reese Leach - Windward Aviation

Aviation Marketing Consulting provides a full range of marketing consulting services for the aviation industry. Our services include advertising, branding, marketing communications, promotion, strategic planning, marketing plans, web development, public relations, and online marketing.

Reach us by phone: 801-820-0020
or email through our Contact Us page

Archive for the ‘Strategic Planning’ Category

Marketing Strategy Vs. Tactics

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012
Upside-down-house

Without a well thought out plan - you may end up with results that are not quite what you expected

One of the issues that continues to pop-up in marketing discussions with clients is the concept of strategy versus tactics; I thought it would be beneficial to explain the key differences.

Basically, marketing breaks down into three parts:

1. Set Goals: What do you want your marketing to achieve?
2. Determine Strategy: How will you achieve your objectives?
3. Select Tactics: Which marketing tools are the most effective for implementing the strategy and achieving the goals?

Let’s use the analogy of building a house to explain how each relates to another.

Setting Goals: This is simple; you want to build a house, but what kind of house? Will it be a Victorian mansion or a modest ranch? The more detailed your goals, the more likely you are to achieve them.

Strategy: When building a house, you do not start by randomly nailing 2 x 4 boards and building the framework; first, you need a “blueprint” to work from – one  that specifies the style of house: Colonial, Ranch, Victorian; size of the house, bedrooms, baths; materials to be used: brick, wood, stone, et cetera. In marketing, your building blueprint is your marketing plan; this is the document that explains the strategy you will use to achieve your goals.

Select Tactics: In home-building, carpentry, plumbing and electrical work could be thought of as the “tactics” used to achieve the end goal, in this case, a house. In marketing, the tactics you may use are advertising, public relations, online marketing and social media.

How does this approach work in marketing?

Well you don’t start by saying “I need a brochure,” that is a tactic.

First, establish your goals, e.g., increase gross sales 20% each year and by 10% next quarter.

Next, determine your strategy, such as “I will employ a direct-sales effort; my sales people will make face-to-face presentations to qualified prospects and close 20% of those efforts”. Your marketing plan includes the following critical information to support your strategy:

  • An in-depth demographic description of the customer base
  • The important reasons why customers will choose to purchase from this company
  • The key benefit that makes us unique and differentiate us from our competitors

Finally, we utilize our tactics: “We will use telemarketing and e-mail marketing to set up initial meetings; during these meetings, we will utilize a PowerPoint presentation and provide a competitive analysis brochure as a leave-behind with all prospective clients.

Getting Your Aviation Business Ready for Primetime: Step 2

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

Spending $ to make $ for your aviation business goals

Question: How much money should you spend on marketing?

Answer: The least amount to achieve your business goals.

Response: Goals? What goals?

You should know what goals I’m talking about: the one-month, twelve-month, five-year sales projections that you and your staff are committed to reaching. So, if all goes well, in a few years you’re going to sell your business for a huge profit and retire to Tahiti.

Step 2 – You have to spend money to make money.

To do so, you’ll need clear and objective sales goals for your aviation business.

Without goals you’re flying without a magnetic compass – let alone a GPS, so start developing sales goals and track them religiously. Once you start tracking sales, you should be able to determine approximately how much money it takes to get a new customer.

Let’s do some math with a basic blueprint for developing an aviation business sales & marketing budget.

If you secured, for example, ten customers last year that generated $10,000 in revenue ($100,000 in gross sales), and after deducting all expenses, salary and overhead, your net profit would be $1,000 per customer ($10,000 total).

However, by carefully tracking your marketing and sales expenses, you may determine it costs $1,000 to get each new customer (thus a $10,000 marketing budget). But after deducting cost of sales and marketing, which, unfortunately, ate up all your profit, the results are discouraging.

But let’s look forward to this year.

GOAL:  To increase sales by 30%, requiring you to secure 13 new customers.

So how much do you need? That’s right, $13,000.

Here’s how to get the $13,000:

You have $10,000 from last year (which of course you’ll roll over to this year). Plus you have ten new customers from last year, AND because you provide such excellent service and value, you estimate you’ll retain five who will produce about the same revenue as last year. Because there were no sales or marketing costs for these repeat customers, your business realized $5,000 of additional gross profit, of which $3,000 will be allocated to this year’s marketing budget, giving you the necessary $13,000 budget you need – AND your business nets a nice $2,000 profit for this year.

Can you be this disciplined in establishing your marketing budget for your aviation business?

As you can see, if you keep growing your business and are diligent tracking new customer acquisition costs, you can and will grow your business quite nicely year over year.

Got A Question Aircraft Charter Maintenance Avionics FBOs Regional Airlines Non Profit Organizations Light Sport Flight Training

We Are Proud Members of These Aviation Organizations:

  • NBAA
  • AOPA
  • Westchester Aviation Association

Visit our Social Media pages: