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Welcome to Kings Cross Business Forum’s Business Improvement Welcome to Kings Cross Business Forum’s Seminar Business Advanced Marketing Strategies Improvement Seminar Thursday 16 October 2008 Funding your business Tuesday 28 April 2008 Supported by: Supported by: Advanced Marketing for Micro-Businesses What is ‘marketing’? • • • • Sales !! Advertising !! PR !! Er… that’s it !! • “Business has only two functions marketing and innovation.” Peter Drucker Marketing is: • The process of planning and executing the conception, pricing, promotion, and distribution of goods, services, and ideas to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organisation objectives. In English • Providing goods and services to satisfy customer’s perceived needs, at a profit. • First and every time. Outcomes of Marketing • Acquire more customers • Persuade each customer to buy more products • Persuade each customer to buy more expensive products or up selling each customer • Persuade each customer to buy more profitable products The Four P’s • • • • Product Price Promotion Place Product Breakdown Guarantee Augmented Product Branding Actual product Core product Features After sales Core Product Price • The price to be charged for products and services should be determined in the light of the prospect's likely cost-benefit ratio and the financial ability to pay according to the payment terms. Promotion • ‘Promotion’ is the toughest section in any marketing strategy, given the information explosion and the reduced time purchasers have to consider any documentation. • Segmentation is important to avoid a ‘scatter gun’ approach Place • ‘Place’ deals with the distribution channels by which your prospects will be able to buy and receive your products and services. Segmentation • The process of dividing the total market for a product or service into smaller, more manageable subsets or groups of customers. • www.healthadvantage-hmo.com Considerations • Measurable – Can the buyers be identified • Substantial – Are there sufficient numbers to target • Accessible – Can this segment be contacted • Relevant – Is the product relevant to this segment Targeting • Using demographics and related information in a customer database to select the most appropriate recipients for a specific campaign • www.isoft.com Buyer’s Behaviour • Who buys (the decision maker) • How do they buy? • When do they buy? • Where do they buy? • Why do they buy? • The challenge is to understand how customers might respond to the different elements of the marketing mix that are presented to them. Marketing Communications • Informing potential customers of your organisation’s marketing using a number of different methods know as the marketing communications mix Marketing Communications Mix • • • • • • • Press Radio TV Direct mail WOM Promotion Branding Advertising Say what you mean Direct Mail • Mail shots • Must have the right list (usually quantitative research based) • Use a broker or buy direct • Make your own list • www.royalmail.com Word of Mouth • Advertising that occurs when people share information about products or promotions with friends. • How can the marketer control WOM? • Influence key decision makers • Create a ‘niche’ must have product • Appeal to a particular group (green issues) Branding A name, term, sign, symbol or design, or a combination of these, intended to identify the goods or services of the seller or group of sellers, and to differentiate them from a competitor. E- marketing • Marketing via the Internet. • Entry cost barriers are lowered. • National borders are removed. Internet • Email • Web presence • Maintenance Email • [email protected] • [email protected] Web presence • Design (message) not an IT function • Message strategy – what do you want to say to them • Targeting the audience – whom are you trying to reach? • Search engine optimisation Maintenance • Regular updating. • Be careful not to leave out of date information on your web site. • Layout can become dated very quickly. Buyer’s behaviour in a downturn • Buyer’s will be more receptive to money saving opportunities (cost cutting) • Brand loyalty becomes even more important • Feel good for less • High ticket priced items need to have flexible payment terms • It is important to remember that business does not stop during a down turn Marketing during a downturn • Adapt your message to push the right buttons • “will save you money” • “free delivery or add on” • During a downturn buyers will not stop buying. They will be looking for added value Businesses that do well in a downturn • Supermarkets – people still want to eat and drink out. During a recession they do it home • Food take away – same as above • DVD suppliers • Money saving alternatives Remember • Advertisings is usually the first budget to be cut. • This means that you can get better rates • Companies that do well in a downturn are quite aggressive with their marketing www.centa.co.uk Join King’s Cross Jointhe the King’s Cross Business Business Forum Forum: Contact: Contact: Business Initiatives Business Initiatives T: 6019 T:020 0207974 7974 6019 E: E:[email protected] [email protected] W: W:www.camden.gov.uk/kxbf www.camden.gov.uk/kxbf Key networking event: Next event: KXBF directory KXBFbusiness business improvement seminar 08/09 launch Tuesday 28 October 2008 12:00pm – 2:30pm Thursday 22 May 2008: 18:00 the London Credit Crunch: Workforce –Surviving 20:00pm: New Solutions Architecture The British Library Business & IP Centre Supported by: Supported by: