'Jellies & Jaffas': Applying PR Smith's SOSTAC Marketing Model to an Online Confectionery Start-Up

PEER LEARNING: QQI - Applying Marketing Theory to eBusiness - Confectionery - Digital Marketing Certification Programme DkIT (2016)

7 Pages Posted: 6 Sep 2016 Last revised: 17 May 2021

Date Written: September 3, 2016

Abstract

This report sets about explicating how the SOSTAC Model (Smith, 2011) makes possible a systematic design and implementation of a digital marketing plan. SOSTAC is an acronym for the six core components to be considered when generating a marketing plan: situation (S), objectives (O), strategy (S), tactics (T), action (A) and control (C). Each component represents a stage in the cycle of planning, and each stage is of equal importance to successful marketing planning, implementation, and review (Chaffey & Smith, 2013). Now widely accepted as the forerunner system for implementing marketing plans and communications strategies, SOSTAC is an extension of the traditional SWOT analysis, that is, a situational analysis of the strengths (S), weaknesses (W), opportunities (O), and threats (T) facing a business at the outset, when introducing a new product line, or when engaging in an organizational change process.

Thus, the premises of this report are two-fold. First the report sets about detailing each stage of the SOSTAC model in sequence as it can be applied to start-up online business. Second, the report explicates each stage as a component of a digital marketing plan critiquing the necessary and sufficient operations that may or may not be applied to a start-up online business. Finally, conclusions are drawn as to the suitability of the model’s application to a small to medium sized online business.

Suggested Citation

Cowley-Cunningham, Michelle B., 'Jellies & Jaffas': Applying PR Smith's SOSTAC Marketing Model to an Online Confectionery Start-Up (September 3, 2016). PEER LEARNING: QQI - Applying Marketing Theory to eBusiness - Confectionery - Digital Marketing Certification Programme DkIT (2016), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2834279 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2834279

Michelle B. Cowley-Cunningham (Contact Author)

Royal Statistical Society ( email )

NCFB
Dublin
Ireland

University of Oxford ( email )

CSLS
Oxford
United Kingdom

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
6,835
Abstract Views
13,951
Rank
1,994
PlumX Metrics