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Kotler, Armstrong Principles of Marketing 4e Chapter 14 Direct and Digital Marketing Chapter Objectives 1. Explain the nature of direct and digital marketing. 2. Discuss the benefits of direct and digital marketing to both marketing organisations and their customers, and identify the reasons for the rapid growth in this area of integrated marketing communication. 3. Discuss the various direct marketing techniques and their application. 4. Explain how direct and digital marketing campaigns are developed, pretested, implemented and evaluated. 5. Discuss the public policy and ethical issues facing direct and digital marketers. Direct and Digital Marketing • Internet is a public network. • Intranet: secure websites accessed by company employees only. • Extranet: websites accessed by both employees and known customers. • Customer relationship management (CRM): – – – – one-to-one marketing (OnetoOne) direct marketing or direct-order marketing E-marketing interactive marketing Direct and Digital Marketing • Another feature of a direct and digital marketer is a digital knowledge base: – A database of frequently asked questions or solutions to problems maintained by a company to assist customers. Figure 14.1 Methods of Interacting With Customers What Is Direct Marketing? • ‘Direct marketing is an interactive system of marketing which uses one or more advertising media to effect a measurable response and/or transaction at any location.’ (Bob Stone, Successful Direct Marketing Methods. 4th ed, Lincolnwood, Illinois: NTC Business Books, 1988), p. 3. ) Table 14.1 Forms of Direct and Online Marketing Table 14.2 Mass Marketing Versus One-to-One Marketing What Is Digital Marketing? • Digital marketing entails interaction with known customers and others in the marketing channel, on a one-to-one basis, often in real time, to maintain value-laden relationships and to generate a measurable response and/or transactions using electronic network tools and technologies. What Is Digital Marketing? • We live in an increasingly wired world, making up a large part of the economy. • Consumers are more knowledgeable and increasingly selective about whom they will accept communication from. • Marketing organisations have changed in form and value as a result of digitisation, globalisation and deregulation. • Other roles for the web include relationship management. • Due to interactivity in real-time, online marketing fits more closely with direct response marketing than with the old mass-marketing paradigm. Digital One-to-One Marketing Strategy • The net permits interactive communication and is useful for business processes such as order taking and processing. • The net facilitates CRM. • However, household use of the net differs in different countries even when they are culturally close. • Australasian marketing organisations seem less willing to interact online on a one-to-one basis than those in the UK. • Content analysis of Australasian websites shows an absence of features required for international transactions or CRM in other than local markets. Marketing organisations have changed in form and value as a result of: A. B. C. D. E. digitisation globalisation deregulation all of the above none of the above Figure 14.2 Industry Examples of Customer Differentiation Direct and Digital Database Use • Direct and digital marketing entails development and maintenance of electronic databases to interact with past, present and/or potential customers and others in the marketing channel, on a one-to-one basis, often in real time, and where the databases are used to maintain value-laden relationships and to generate a measurable response and/or transactions through the integrated use of electronic network tools and technologies. How Are Direct and Digital Marketing Databases Used? • Marketing organisations use their databases in a number of ways: 1.Identifying prospects 2.Deciding which customers should receive a particular offer 3.Deepening customer loyalty 4.Reactivating customers 5.Data mining Ben is checking for patterns and trends that might exist in his customer database. He is engaging in: A. B. C. D. E. data imaging data mining data evaluation data segmentation data regression How Are Direct and Digital Marketing Databases Used? 1. Identifying prospects – Many companies generate sales leads by advertising their products or offers. Ads generally have a response feature, such as a business reply card or toll-free phone number. The database is built from these responses. How Are Direct and Digital Marketing Databases Used? 2. Deciding which customers should receive a particular offer – Companies identify the profile of an ideal customer for an offer. Then they search their databases for individuals most closely resembling the ideal type. By tracking individual responses, the company can improve its targeting precision over time. How Are Direct and Digital Marketing Databases Used? 3. Deepening customer loyalty – Companies can build customers’ interest and enthusiasm by remembering their preferences and by sending appropriate information, gifts, or other materials. How Are Direct and Digital Marketing Databases Used? 4. Reactivating customers’ purchases – The database can help a company make attractive offers of product replacements, upgrades, or complementary products just when customers might be ready to act. How Are Direct and Digital Marketing Databases Used? 5. Data mining – Companies maintain many databases in what today are large data warehouses. Data mining entails checking databases for patterns and trends that are hypothesised to exist, or in order to find new connections between data item. Modern software enables open-ended queries that involve systematic searches for relationships and patterns within and between databases. Figure 14.5 An Integrated Direct Marketing Approach Direct and Digital Tools and Techniques (1) • • • • Direct Print and Reproduction Direct Mail Catalogues Direct-response television, radio and print marketing • Telemarketing Direct mail is a popular medium because it: A. can be personalised B. permits target selectivity C. is flexible D. allows early testing and response measurement E. all of the above Direct and Digital Tools and Techniques (2) • • • • Telesales Electronic Dispensing and Kiosks Direct Selling Electronic Shopping Evaluating Direct Marketing Results • Direct and online marketing organisations are usually interested in a number of measures of performance concerning individual programs and integrated campaigns alike to allow later monitoring of results such as: – – – – – – – sales lead generation database generation fulfilment response product inquiries sales response profitability return on the investment made in programs and campaigns – lifetime customer value Evaluating Digital Marketing Results • Online Marketing Communications measures: – Web-centric measures (log files, page impressions) – Audience-centric (cookies) measures – Network-centric measures • Digital Marketing Channel Performance • Relationship Management • Customer Lifetime Value Evaluating Database Performance • Three main criteria have been identified as: – Recency of purchase – Frequency of purchase – Monetary value of purchase Privacy • Privacy concerns cover such aspects as cross-referencing data on individuals, access to lists by the unscrupulous and the issue of unwanted mail. • SPAMMING: sending unsolicited email to large numbers of people with a view to making a sale. • The best solution is to ask people which product categories—if any—they would like to receive information about.