* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download promotion/marketing communication
Pricing strategies wikipedia , lookup
Bayesian inference in marketing wikipedia , lookup
Elaboration likelihood model wikipedia , lookup
Consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup
Targeted advertising wikipedia , lookup
Audience measurement wikipedia , lookup
Affiliate marketing wikipedia , lookup
Sales process engineering wikipedia , lookup
Advertising management wikipedia , lookup
Social media marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing research wikipedia , lookup
Food marketing wikipedia , lookup
Customer engagement wikipedia , lookup
Ambush marketing wikipedia , lookup
Neuromarketing wikipedia , lookup
Product planning wikipedia , lookup
Sports marketing wikipedia , lookup
Multi-level marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing plan wikipedia , lookup
Digital marketing wikipedia , lookup
Youth marketing wikipedia , lookup
Guerrilla marketing wikipedia , lookup
Viral marketing wikipedia , lookup
Target market wikipedia , lookup
Marketing channel wikipedia , lookup
Target audience wikipedia , lookup
Multicultural marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing strategy wikipedia , lookup
Street marketing wikipedia , lookup
Green marketing wikipedia , lookup
Internal communications wikipedia , lookup
Global marketing wikipedia , lookup
Sensory branding wikipedia , lookup
Direct marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing mix modeling wikipedia , lookup
Marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
PROMOTION/MARKETING COMMUNICATION INTRODUCTION TO PROMOTION Building good customer relationships calls for more than just developing a good product, pricing it attractively, and making it available to target customers. Companies must also communicate their value propositions to current and prospective customers, and what they communicate should not be left to chance. All of their communications must be planned and blended into carefully integrated marketing communication programs. Good communication is crucial element in a company’s efforts to build profitable customer relationships. PROMOTION MIX/MARKETING COMMUNICATION MIX a) The company’s total promotion mix (marketing communication mix) consists of the specific blend of advertising, public relations, sales promotion, personal selling and direct marketing tools that a company uses to persuasively communicate customer value and build customer relationships. The five major types of promotion are: Advertising—any paid form of non-personal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods, or services by an identified sponsor using tools like print, broadcast, internet and outdoor. PROMOTION MIX/MARKETING COMMUNICATION MIX b) c) Sales promotion—short-term incentives to encourage the purchase of a product or service using tools such as discounts, premium, coupons, displays and demonstrations. Public relations—building good relations with the company’s various publics by obtaining favourable publicity, building up a good corporate image and handling or heading off unfavourable rumours, stories and events. This involves promotion tools such as press releases and special events. PROMOTION MIX/MARKETING COMMUNICATION MIX d) e) Personal selling—personal presentations by the firm’s sales force for the purpose of making sales and building customer relationships using promotion tools like sales presentations, trade shows etc Direct marketing—direct connections with carefully targeted individual consumers to both obtain an immediate response and cultivate lasting customer relationships—use of mail, telephone, e-mail, internet, direct response TV etc to communicate directly with specific consumers. PROMOTION MIX/MARKETING COMMUNICATION MIX Marketing communication goes beyond specific promotion tools. The product’s design, its price, the shape and colour of its package, and the stores that sell it all communicate something to the buyers. The entire marketing mix—promotion, product, price and place—must be coordinated for greatest communication impact. NEW MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS REALITIES Companies, in past decades, perfected the art of mass marketing—selling highly standardised products to masses of consumers—and developed effective mass media communication techniques to support the strategies. They invested a lot of money in the mass media to reach masses of consumers with a single ad. Today marketing managers face marketing communication realities: some new NEW MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS REALITIES Consumers are changing. a) They are better informed and more communication empowered. They can use internet and other technologies to seek out information own their own rather than relying on market supplied information. They can easily connect with other consumers to exchange brand related information Changing Marketing strategies. b) Marketers are developing focused marketing programs designed to build closer relationship with customers in more narrowly defined micro-markets. NEW MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS REALITIES Vast improvements in information technology are speeding the movement toward segmented marketing. They can amass detailed customer information, keep closer track of customer needs, and tailor their offerings to narrowly target groups. Sweeping changes in communication technologies cause remarkable changes in the ways in which companies and customers communicate with each other. c) The new information and communication tools such as cell phones, ipods, internet, satellite give companies new media for interacting with targeted customers. They also give consumers more control over nature and timing of messages they choose to send and receive. NEW MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS REALITIES Shift in marketing communication model as a result of movements toward segmented marketing and explosive developments ICT d) The dominance of TV, magazine and other mass media is declining. Advertisers are now adding a broad selection of more specialised and highly targeted media to reach smaller market segments with more personalised messages. The new media range from specialty magazines, internet catalogs, e-mail, podcasts, cell phones. TV channels are on internet, cell phones, ipods etc. INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS The shift from mass marketing to targeted marketing, and corresponding use of a larger, richer mixture of communication channels and promotion tools, poses a problem for companies. In the consumer’s mind, messages from different media and different promotion approaches all become part of a single message about the company. Conflicting messages from different sources can result in confused company images, brand positions and customer relationship. Companies often fail to integrate their various communication channels—Mass media advertisements say one thing, a price promotion sends a different signal and a product label creates still another message etc. INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS Companies now adopt the concept of Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC)—carefully integrating and coordinating the company’s many communication channels to deliver a clear, consistent and compelling message about the organisation and its products. IMC ties together all of the company’s messages and images. The company’s advertising, personal selling, public relations, direct marketing and sales promotion have the same message, look and feel on TV, radio, print, e-mail, website etc INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS Advertising Sales Promotion Consistent, clear and compelling company and product messages Direct Marketing Personal Selling Public Relations STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) Integrated marketing communications involves identifying the target audience and shaping a well-coordinated promotion program to elicit the desired audience response. The steps in developing an effective integrated communications and promotion program involves: Identifying the target audience Determining the desired response Designing or choosing a message Choosing the media through which to send the message Selecting the message source Collecting feedback STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS 1) Identifying the target audience. The audience may be potential buyers or current users, those who make the buying decisions, or those who influence it. The audience may be individuals, groups, special publics or the general public. The target audience will affect the communicator’s decisions on what, how and when it will be said; and who will say it. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS 2) Determining the desired response. This involves deciding what response is sought. The marketing communicator needs to know where the target audience now stands and to what stage it needs to be moved in the buyer readiness stages. Buyer readiness stages are stages consumers normally pass through on their way to making a purchase. The stages are Awareness, Knowledge, Liking, Preference, Conviction and Purchase. The company must first build awareness and knowledge of its products in a target market that is totally unaware of the product or know only its name. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS If the target consumers know the product, the marketing communicator must build the feeling about the product. This will involve moving consumers through liking (feeling favourable about the product), preference (preferring the product to other products or brands) and conviction (believing that the product is the best for them). If some members of the target market are in conviction stage, the company must lead them to take the final step of purchase through special promotion prices or premiums. Marketing communications alone can not create positive feelings and purchases for the product. The product itself must also provide a superior value for the customer. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS 3) Designing or choosing a message. This involves developing an effective message. The message should get Attention, hold Interest, arouse Desire and obtain Action— the AIDA model The marketing communicator must decide what to say (Message Content) and how to say it (Message Structure and Format). In the message content, the communicator has to figure out an appeal or theme that will produce the desired response. There are 3 types of appeals: Rational, Emotional and Moral. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS Rational appeals relate to the audience’s self interest and show that the product will produce the desired benefits. a) • Examples are messages that show product quality, value or performance Emotional appeals attempt to stir up either negative or positive emotions that can motivate purchase. b) • • Communicators use such positive emotional appeals as love, pride, joy and humour. Communicators can also use negative emotional appeals such as fear, guilt and shame in order to get people to do things they should (brush their teeth, buy new tires) or to stop doing things they shouldn’t (smoke, too much drinking, eat fatty foods) STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS Moral appeals are directed to the audience’s sense of what is right and proper. c) • a. b. They are often used to urge people to support such social causes as a cleaner environment and aid to the needy, or combat such social problems as drug abuse, discrimination, spousal abuse etc. Under message structure, the communicator must also decide which of 3 ways to use to structure the message: Whether to draw a conclusion or leave it to the audience to do it. Whether to present a one sided argument (mentioning only product’s strengths) or two sided argument. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS c. Whether to present the strongest arguments first or last. Under message format, the marketing communicator must decide on the headline, illustration, pictures, shape, message size, position, colour, sounds, voices, body language (facial expressions, gestures, dress, posture, hairstyle) depending on whether it is a print, radio or TV message. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS Choosing media. The marketing communicator must select channels of communication. There are two broad types of communication channels: Personal Communication Channels—channels through which two or more people communicate directly with each other, including face to face, person to audience, over the telephone, or through the mail or e-mail. 4) a) • Examples include sales people, consumer advocates, neighbours, friends, family members, opinion leaders (people whose opinions are sought by others) STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS b) Non-personal Communication Channels—are media that carry messages without personal contact or feedback. They include Major media (Print media—newspapers, magazines, direct mail; Broadcast media—radio, TV; Display media—billboards, signs, posters; and Online media—online services, websites). They also include events—staged occurrences that communicate messages to target audiences. For example, public relations departments arrange for press conferences, grand openings etc. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS 5) Selecting the message source. The message’s impact on the target audience is affected by how the audience views the communicator. Messages delivered by highly credible sources are more persuasive. Many food companies promote to doctors, dentists, nurses, and other health care providers to motivate these professionals to recommend their products to patients. Some companies try to influence the target audience by hiring celebrity endorsers. STEPS IN DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS 6) Collecting feed back—researching the effect of sending message on the target audience. It involves asking the target audience members whether they remember the message, how many times they say it, what points they recall, how they felt about the message and their past and present attitudes toward the product and company. The communicator also measures behaviour resulting from the message—how many people bought the product, talked to others about it or visited the store. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX Companies within the same industry differ greatly in the design of their promotion mixes—some companies spend more funds on advertising while others spend more funds on personal selling and direct marketing. One of the factors that influences the company’s promotion mix is the nature of each promotion tool. Each promotion tool has unique characteristics and costs. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX Advertising— It can reach masses of geographically dispersed buyers at a low cost per exposure, and it enables the seller to repeat the message many times. For example TV and Radio advertising. Large scale advertising says something positive about the seller’s size, popularity and success. Consumers tend to view advertised products as more legitimate because of advertising’s public nature. Advertising is very expressive—it allows the company to dramatise its products through the artful use of visuals, print, sound and colour. 1. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX i. ii. Advertising can be used to build up a long-term image for a product. It can also trigger quick sales. Advertising shortcomings: It is impersonal and can not be as directly persuasive as can company sales people— one way communication with the audience, and the audience does not feel that it needs to pay attention or respond. Advertising can be very costly. For example TV and Radio adverts. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX Sales promotion includes a wide assortment of tools such as contests or coupons, which have unique qualities. They attract consumer attention, offer strong incentives to purchase and can be used to boost sagging sales. Sales promotions invite and reward quick response 2. advertising says “Buy our product”, sales promotion says “Buy it now”. Sales promotion effects are often short lived, however, are not effective in building long run brand preference and customer relationships. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX 3. 4. Public relations. It is very believable—news stories, features, sponsorships and events seem more real and believable to readers than ads do. It can also reach many prospects who avoid sales people and advertisements—the message gets to the buyers as news rather than as a sales-directed communication. Public relations can dramatise a company or product Personal Selling. It is the most effective tool at certain stages of the buying process, particularly in building up buyer’s preference, conviction and actions. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX It involves personal interaction between two or more people, so each person can observe the other’s needs and characteristics and make quick adjustments. Personal Selling also allows all kinds of relationships to develop, ranging from matter-of-fact selling relationships to personal friendships. An effective sales person keeps the customer’s interests at heart in order to build a long-term relationship by solving customer problems. The buyer usually feels a greater need to listen and respond, even if the response is a polite. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX 5. i. Sales force requires a longer-term commitment than does advertising—advertising can be turned on and off, but sales force size is harder to change. Personal selling is also the company’s most expensive promotion tool. Direct marketing. There are many forms of direct marketing—direct mail and catalogs, telephone marketing, online marketing etc. All forms of direct marketing are: Nonpublic—The message is normally directed to a specific person. DETERMINING PROMOTION MIX Immediate and customised—Messages can be prepared very quickly and can be tailored to appeal to specific consumers. Interactive—It allows a dialogue between the marketing team and the consumer, and the messages can be altered depending on the consumer response. The other factor that influences the company’s promotion mix is the promotion mix strategy: ii. iii. Push strategy—a promotion strategy that calls for using sales force and trade promotions to push the product through channels. Pull strategy—a promotion strategy that calls for spending a lot on advertising and consumer promotion to induce final consumers to buy the product. Promotion End of Lecture