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Communicating Customer Value: Advertising and Public Relations Chapter 12 Rest Stop: Previewing the Concepts • • • • Define the five promotion mix tools for communicating customer value Discuss the changing communications landscape and the need for integrated marketing communications Describe and discuss the major decisions involved in developing an advertising program Explain how companies use public relations to communicate with their publics 12 - 2 First Stop: Microsoft vs. Apple • Apple’s “Get a Mac” campaign attacks Microsoft, helps Apple increase market share • Microsoft’s retaliatory “I’m a PC” campaign, followed by the “Laptop Hunters” campaign, strikes a chord with Windows users • Microsoft’s advertising features actual users • Turns around Apple’s categorization of PC users as stodgy and boring 12 - 3 Promotion mix • The specific blend of promotion tools that the company uses to persuasively communicate customer value and build customer relationships 12 - 4 Five Major Promotion Tools Advertising Sales promotion Paid form of nonpersonal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods, or services by an identified sponsor Short-term incentives to encourage the purchase or sale of a product or service Personal selling Personal presentation by the firm’s sales force for the purpose of making sales and building customer relationships Public relations Building good relations with the company’s various publics by obtaining favorable publicity, building up a good corporate image, and handling or heading off unfavorable rumors, stories, and events Direct marketing Direct connections with carefully targeted individual consumers to both obtain an immediate response and cultivate lasting customer relationships The New Marketing Communications Model • Major factors changing today’s marketing communications • Changing consumers • Changing marketing strategies • Sweeping advances in communications technology • Companies these days are doing less broadcasting and more narrowcasting 12 - 6 Integrated marketing communications • Carefully integrating and coordinating the company’s many communications channels to deliver a clear, consistent, and compelling message about the organization and its products 12 - 7 Figure 12.1 – Integrated Marketing Communications 12 - 8 Integrated Marketing Communications • Recognize all points where the customer may encounter the company’s brands • Deliver a consistent and positive message at each contact The “HD loves HB” integrated marketing communications campaign uses a rich, well-coordinated blend of promotion elements to successfully deliver Häagen-Dazs’ unique message 12 - 9 Marketing at Work • Following bigbudget ad flops, SoBe abandoned traditional media • Digital and interactive media are key to SoBe’s new marketing approach SoBe’s new bottom-up approach blends interactive digital content with traditional media and hands-on PR to engage customers in the most effective way The Nature of Advertising • Reaches masses of geographically dispersed buyers at a low cost per exposure • Enables the seller to repeat a message often • Can build up long-term image for a product • Can trigger quick sales • Consumers tend to view advertised products as more legitimate 12 - 11 The Nature of Personal Selling • Is most effective in building up buyers’ preferences, convictions, and actions • Allows all kind of customer relationships to spring up • Is a company’s most expensive promotion tool • Buyers feel a greater need to listen and respond to personal selling 12 - 12 The Nature of Sales Promotion • Attracts consumer attention • Offers strong incentives to purchase • Can be used to dramatize product offers and boost sagging sales • Invites and rewards quick responses • Effects are short-lived • Not very effective in building long-run brand preference and customer relationships 12 - 13 The Nature of Public Relations • Is very believable • Reaches many prospects • Dramatizes a company or product • Economical if used with other mix elements With personal selling, the customer feels a greater need to listen and respond, even if the response is a polite “No thank-you” 12 - 14 The Nature of Direct Marketing • Message is directed to a specific person • Message is immediate and customized • Allows a dialogue between the marketing team and the consumer 12 - 15 Figure 12.2 – Push vs. Pull Promotion Strategy 12 - 16 Push strategy • Sales force and trade promotion are used to push the product through channels • Producer promotes the product to channel members who in turn promote it to final consumers Pull strategy • Company spends a lot of money on consumer advertising and promotion to induce final consumers to buy the product, creating a demand vacuum that pulls the product through the channel Figure 12.3 – Major Advertising Decisions 12 - 18 Setting Advertising Objectives • Advertising objective: A specific communication task to be accomplished with a specific target audience during a specific period of time • Advertising objectives can be classified by their primary purpose: • To inform • To persuade • To remind 12 - 19 Informative advertising • Issued heavily when introducing a new-product category • Objective is to build primary demand Persuasive advertising • Becomes more important as competition increases • Objective is to build selective demand Reminder advertising • Important for mature products • Helps to maintain customer relationships and keep consumers thinking about the product Comparative Advertising • Some persuasive advertising becomes comparative advertising or attack advertising Over the past few years, Verizon Wireless and AT&T have attacked each other ruthlessly in comparative ads 12 - 21 Setting the Advertising Budget • Advertising budget: The dollars and other resources allocated to a product or a company advertising program • Methods: • • • • Affordable method Percentage-of-sales method Competitive-parity method Objective-and-task method 12 - 22 Setting the Advertising Budget • Affordable method: Setting promotion budget at the level management thinks the company can afford • Percentage-of-sales method: Setting promotion budget at a certain percentage of current or forecasted sales or as a percentage of the unit sales price 12 - 23 Setting the Advertising Budget • Competitive-parity method: Setting the promotion budget to match competitors’ outlays • Objective-and task method: Developing the promotion budget by • Defining specific objectives • Determining the tasks that must be performed to achieve these objectives • Estimating the costs of performing these tasks 12 - 24 Advertising Strategy • The plan by which the company accomplishes its advertising objectives • Major elements: • Creating messages • Selecting media Breaking through the clutter: Today’s consumers, armed with an arsenal of weapons, are increasingly choosing not to watch ads 12 - 25 Madison & Vine • The merging of advertising and entertainment to break through the clutter and create new avenues for reaching consumers with more engaging messages NBC’s The Biggest Loser and health-club chain 24 Hour Fitness have created a product placement partnership that fully and thematically integrates the brand with the show Forms of Madison & Vine • Advertainment - Aims to make ads themselves so entertaining that people want to watch them • Brand entertainment or brand integrations Making the brand an inseparable part of some other form of entertainment • Most common form is product placements 12 - 27 Message Strategy • Advertiser must next develop a compelling creative concept • Creative concept: Compelling big idea that brings the advertising message strategy to life in a distinctive and memorable way • Creative concept guides the choice of specific appeals to be used in an advertising campaign 12 - 28 Message Strategy • Advertising appeals should be: • Meaningful – Pointing out benefits that make the product more desirable or interesting to consumers • Believable – Consumers must believe that the product or service will deliver the promised benefits • Distinctive – Should tell how the product is better than competing brands 12 - 29 Execution Style • The approach, style, tone, words, and format used for executing an advertising message Execution styles: This ad creates a nostalgic mood around the product. “So I baked her the cookies she’s loved since she was little” Types of Execution Styles Slice of life Shows one or more “typical” people using the product in a normal setting Lifestyle Shows how a product fits in with a particular lifestyle Fantasy Creates a fantasy around the product or its use Mood or image Builds a mood or image around the product or service, such as beauty, love, intrigue, or serenity Musical Shows people or cartoon characters singing about the product Personality symbol Creates a character that represents the product Technical expertise Shows the company’s expertise in making the product Scientific evidence Presents survey or scientific evidence that the brand is better or better liked than one or more other brands Testimonial evidence or endorsement Features a highly believable or likable source endorsing the product Consumer-Generated Messages • User-generated advertising efforts can produce new ideas and fresh perspectives on the brand • Boost consumer involvement and with the brand Online crafts marketplace/community Etsy.com ran a contest inviting consumers to tell the Etsy.com story in 30-second videos. The results were “positively remarkable” 12 - 32 Marketing at Work • PepsiCo’s Doritos brand has been very successful with user-generated advertising Consumer-generated messages: Last year, three Doritos “Crash the Super Bowl” ads finished in USA Today’s top five. This “Pug goes for the chips” ad tied for first place. 12 - 33 Selecting Advertising Media • Advertising media: Vehicles through which advertising messages are delivered to their intended audiences • Steps in advertising media selection: • • • • Determining reach, frequency, and impact Choosing among major media types Selecting specific media vehicles Choosing media timing 12 - 34 Reach Percentage of people in the target market who are exposed to an ad campaign during a given period of time Number of times the average person in Frequency the target market is exposed to the message Media impact Qualitative value of message exposure through a given medium 12 - 35 Choosing Among Major Media Types • Choose media that effectively and efficiently present the message to customers • Consider each medium’s impact, effectiveness, and cost Viewers most deeply engaged in the Discovery Channel’s Dirty Jobs series turned out to be truck-buying men, a ripe demographic for Ford’s F-Series pickups 12 - 36 Figure 12. 2 - Profiles of Major Media Types Medium Advantages Television Good mass-marketing coverage; low cost per exposure; combines sight, sound, and motion; appealing to the senses Newspapers Flexibility; timeliness; good local market coverage; broad acceptability; high believability Internet High selectivity; low cost; immediacy; interactive capabilities Direct mail High audience selectivity; flexibility; no ad competition within the same medium; allows personalization Magazines High geographic and demographic selectivity; credibility and prestige; high-quality reproduction; long life and good pass-along readership Radio Good local acceptance; high geographic and demographic selectivity; low cost Outdoor Flexibility; high repeat exposure; low cost; low message competition; good positional selectivity 12 - 37 Selecting Specific Media Vehicles • Choose the best media vehicles—specific media within each general media type • Compute the cost per 1,000 persons reached by a vehicle • Consider the costs of producing ads for different media • Balance media costs against several media effectiveness factors Figure 12. 2 – Profiles of Major Media Types Medium Limitations Television High absolute costs; high clutter; fleeting exposure; less audience selectivity Newspapers Short life; poor reproduction quality; small pass-along audience Internet Potentially low impact; the audience controls exposure Direct mail Relatively high cost per exposure; “junk mail” image Magazines Long ad purchase lead time; high cost; no guarantee of position Radio Audio only; fleeting exposure; low attention (“the half-heard” medium); fragmented audiences Outdoor Little audience selectivity; creative limitations 12 - 39 Deciding on Media Planning • Decide how to schedule the advertising over the course of a year • Choose the pattern of ads Continuity Pulsing Scheduling ads evenly within a given period Scheduling ads unevenly over a given time period Return on Advertising Investment • Net return on advertising investment divided by the costs of the advertising investment • Advertisers should regularly evaluate the: • Communication effects • Sales and profit effects 12 - 41 Advertising agency • A marketing services firm that assists companies in planning, preparing, implementing, and evaluating all or portions of their advertising programs International Advertising Decisions: Standardization • Benefits • Lower advertising costs • Greater global advertising coordination • More consistent worldwide image • Drawbacks • Ignores the fact that country markets differ greatly in cultures, demographics, and economic conditions 12 - 43 International Advertising Decisions: Standardization Standardized global advertising: VISA coordinates its worldwide advertising under the theme “more people go with VISA,” a theme that works as well in Brazil (left) as it does in the United States (right) Public Relations • Activities designed to build good relations with the company’s publics • Used to promote products, people, places, ideas, activities, nations, and organizations NHLBI’s “The Heart Truth” campaign has produced impressive results in raising awareness of the risks of heart disease in women Functions of a Public Relations Department • Press relations or press agency • Product publicity • Public affairs • Lobbying • Investor relations • Development The power of PR: Apple’s iPad and iPad2 launches created unbounded consumer excitement, a media frenzy, and long lines outside retail stores—all with no advertising, just PR 12 - 46 The Role and Impact of PR • PR has a strong impact on public awareness at a much lower cost than advertising • Can be a powerful brand-building tool • Should work hand in hand with advertising within an integrated marketing communications program to help build brands and customer relationships 12 - 47 Major Public Relations Tools • • • • • News Special events Written materials Audiovisual material Corporate identity material • Public service activities Papa John’s “Camaro Search” campaign used traditional PR media plus a host of new social media 12 - 48 Rest Stop: Reviewing the Concepts • • • • Define the five promotion mix tools for communicating customer value Discuss the changing communications landscape and the need for integrated marketing communications Describe and discuss the major decisions involved in developing an advertising program Explain how companies use public relations to communicate with their publics 12 - 49 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America. Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 12 - 50