Introduction
A marketing audit is a comprehensive, systematic, independent, and periodic examination of a company’s marketing environment, objectives, strategies, and activities with a view to identifying problem areas and opportunities and recommending a plan of action to improve the company’s marketing performance.
Here’s a detailed plan for conducting a marketing audit:
1. Set Clear Objectives for the Audit
Define what you hope to achieve with the audit. This could be to improve overall marketing performance, identify opportunities for expansion, or rectify issues that are hindering progress.
2. Assemble Your Audit Team
This should include a mix of internal stakeholders from various departments (marketing, sales, customer service, etc.) and, if possible, external consultants who can provide an unbiased perspective.
3. Marketing Environment Audit
Evaluate the internal and external influences that affect your organization’s market and marketing efforts.
- Internal Factors: Assess your company’s internal environment, including marketing strategy, structure, systems, staff, and skills.
- External Factors: Examine the macro (political, economic, sociocultural, technological, legal, environmental) and micro (customers, competitors, distributors, suppliers) factors that could affect your marketing.
4. Marketing Strategy Audit
Review the current marketing strategy.
- Evaluate the segmentation, targeting, and positioning strategies.
- Check if the marketing objectives align with the business’s overall objectives.
- Review the current marketing mix (product, price, place, promotion) and assess their effectiveness.
5. Marketing Organization Audit
Examine how well your marketing organization is structured and whether it allows your team to effectively carry out its duties and communicate.
6. Marketing Systems Audit
Review the marketing systems for gathering, storing, analyzing, and accessing market information. Assess your organization’s marketing information system, marketing planning system, marketing control system, and new product development system.
7. Marketing Productivity Audit
Evaluate the profitability of different elements of your marketing strategy. This might involve analyzing the return on investment (ROI) of specific campaigns or marketing channels.
8. Marketing Function Audit
Examine the effectiveness of the key functions of marketing such as sales, advertising, content marketing, email marketing, social media marketing, SEO, SEM, and PR.
9. Carry Out a SWOT Analysis
Identify the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats related to your marketing efforts.
10. Prepare an Audit Report
Summarize the findings of the marketing audit in a clear, detailed report. Highlight areas of strength, areas that need improvement, and provide actionable recommendations.
11. Implement Changes
Develop an action plan to implement the changes suggested by the audit and monitor their impact on marketing performance.
Remember, a marketing audit should not be a one-time event but a regular occurrence. It helps keep your marketing efforts aligned with your business goals, spot opportunities and issues early, and stay ahead in a rapidly changing marketing environment. A marketing audit should be performed at least once a year or when there are significant changes in the market environment or business strategy.




