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ADVERTISING PLANNING & STRATEGY BEFORE DEVELOPING THE ADVERTISEMENT…LET US REVIEW THE MARKETING PLAN 1. Product Description – What are you Marketing? 2. Market Assessment – What is your overall assessment of the market where you compete? 3. Source of Business – Where do you expect business to come from? 4. Competitors – What is your competition and how does it position itself? 5. Marketing Objectives – What are the marketing objectives of the brand? STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS SELECTING THE TARGET AUDIENCE UNDERSTANDING TARGET AUDIENCE DECISION MAKING DETERMINING THE BEST POSITIONING DEVELOPING A COMMUNICATION STRATEGY SETTING A MEDIA STRATEGY STEP 1 – SELECTING TARGET AUDIENCE PROFILING A TARGET AUDIENCE 1. Demographics - These are easy to identify but not always enough to describe a target audience. >>Age >>Education >>Income >>Place of Residence >>Gender 2. Geographics – It addresses the country, climate, region and state of the target audience. It considers the characteristics of people living in a particular area. However, like Demographics, it should never be used as primary selection criteria for a target audience. PROFILING A TARGET AUDIENCE 3. Psychographics – It defines the target audience in terms of values, attitudes and lifestyle. Examples can be someone’s attitude towards western wear, willingness to take risk, concern about the society and environment, political opinions, etc. >>Concept of Personality Traits : Self-esteem, intelligence, and introversion/ extroversion. >An ad says – “95% of the doctors believe that sodium is good for your teeth…..our toothpaste contains sodium” (intelligence). >Eg : “Bindas Bol”. AWARENESS AND ATTITUDE CONSIDERATIONS FOR TARGET AUDIENCE BUYER GROUPS Buyer Group Awareness & Attitude Considerations Users Brand Loyal • Highest awareness • Most positive brand attitude, likely to immunize against competitive message Favorable Brand Switchers • Awareness should be high, but must be measured • Positive brand attitude, but only moderate preference Non-users Other brand switchers • May or may not be aware • Neutral or positive attitude Other Brand Loyal • May or may not be aware • Strong positive attitude for loyal brand likely will immunize against our message LOYALTY IN TARGET AUDIENCE SELECTION Loyal – highly satisfied with their brand and are unlikely to switch Vulnerable – Satisfied with their brand, but little perceived risk in switching Frustrated – Not satisfied with their brand, but feel the risk is greater than the potential gain in switching Switchable – Neither satisfied with their brand nor inhibited from switching LOYALTY IN TARGET AUDIENCE SELECTION Satisfaction High High Low Risk In Switching Low FRUSTATED LOYALS SWITCHABLE VULNERABLE COST IMPLICATION & BRAND LOYALTY 1. Loyal I. Our Brand Loyal > Inexpensive to maintain; need to remind them of their positive attitude towards the brand, reinforcing brand equity. > However, if we want to increase their usage, that could be expensive. II. Other Brand Loyal > Beyond the reach of our brand and they do not have sufficiently positive motivation to try our brand. > Giving the product free of cost so that they try our brand may also not ensure the usage. > Expensive products and those with longer purchase cycles would present too high a cost and risk COST IMPLICATION & BRAND LOYALTY 2. Vulnerable I. Our Brand Vulnerable > They have a positive attitude towards our brand but do not see it better than some other brands. > Maintaining positive attitude is easy but to retain or increase their usage will cost more as the brand shall be competing with other favorable brands. II. Other Brand Vulnerable > Their disposition to try other brands keeps them from being very costly, unless they have tried and rejected our brand. > Try to provide an incentive for trial COST IMPLICATION & BRAND LOYALTY 3. Frustrated I. Our Brand Frustrated > Maintaining the current usage will be inexpensive (due to whatever perceived risk) but to increase brand equity, usage and satisfaction will be expensive. II. Other Brand Frustrated > Attracting them to our brand will be expensive (due to whatever perceived risk) . Advertisements and promotions shall be planned to break those perceived risks and barriers. COST IMPLICATION & BRAND LOYALTY 4. Switchable I. Our Brand Switchable > Excessive advertisement and promotion shall be done to retain or increase usage. > Strengthening the Brand Image is very important II. Other Brand Switchable > Attracting them to our brand will be as expensive as retaining our brand switchable, assuming they have not tried and rejected our brand. COST IMPLICATION IN TARGET AUDIENCE SELECTION Loyalty Grouping Cost to Protect Users Cost to Attract Non-users Loyal Low Very high Vulnerable Low-moderate Moderate-high Frustrated Moderate Moderate Switchable Moderate-high Moderate-high SEGMENTATION Primary use of segmentation is in defining a target market and not a target audience. Segmentation is defined as “the division of a mass market into distinct groups which have common characteristics, needs, and similar responses to marketing action.” Once the target market is selected, we must identify the target audience. The variable which is used here is ‘attitude’ towards product category and brand. While selecting the target audience, we are looking for groups of people in the target market who hold relatively similar attitudes towards category usage and brands within the category. LINKING TARGET AUDIENCE & STRATEGY Target audience selection will determine whether we are looking at customers or non-customers, and this in turn will determine whether the target audience action objective is trial, repeat purchase or increase usage. All this shall become a part of the strategic communication planning. Communication Strategy for trial will be different from that driving repeat purchase. For Trial – Coupons, rebates, refunds and sampling For Repeat – Loyalty cards, games and contests, premiums Communication Strategy for different loyalty groupings will be different for different groups as well as for customers and noncustomers. CASE STUDY Eurostar – How Mr. JetSet Made Eurostar Mean Business STEP 2 – UNDERSTANDING TARGET AUDIENCE DECISION MAKING At this stage the Marketing Manager / Adv. Manager tries to understand how the consumers go about making decisions to buy products or utilize services. There are mainly two models of consumer decision making: 1. Behavioral Process The proponents of this theory believe that it is impossible to understand what is going on inside a consumer’s mind. They rely upon analysis of observations or self-reports of actual behavior. Accordingly they try to create positive associations. Eg. 2. Cognitive Process This process tries to understand what is going on inside a consumer’s mind while making a purchase decision. (Need – Information Search & Evaluation – Purchase – Post Purchase Evaluation) BEHAVIORAL SEQUENCE MODEL Introduced by Rossiter & Percy, it is based on cognitive process models of buyer behavior. One needs to determine decision stages, then for each stage establish: >> Individuals involved and the roles they play >> Probable location >> Timing >> Description of how it is accomplished The completed model guides positioning, communication strategy & Media Strategy. (((At the end of the lecture students shall be able to understand and develop Behavioral Sequence Model for various purchase decisions of products or services. ))) DECISION PARTICIPANTS In order to understand the process how consumers reach buying decisions, one must understand who is involved in that decision. There are five potential roles people can play in decisions leading to purchase: 1. Initiator – One who suggests the purchase 2. Influencer – Who recommends or discourages the purchase 3. Decider – Who makes the actual choice 4. Purchaser – Who does the actual purchasing 5. User – Who uses or consumes the product or service It is important to understand them because advertising and other marketing communication is not just aimed at individuals but at individuals in a role. ROLES & MESSAGE OBJECTIVE Different messages are required for people playing different roles in marketing communication. The communication objective remains the same but the communication message is different for different participants. Eg: In planning a holiday both travel agents and friends might act as initiators or influencers but the marketing messages are different for both of them. DECISION PARTICIPANT GRID Many a times a single individual can play all the decision participants role and many a times more people are involved in the purchase decision (Eg. A student buying a chocolate himself). At many occasions, the providers of the product or service are also decision participants. Grid For a Holiday Role in Decision Target Audience Consumer Provider Initiator Self, friends, family Travel Agent Influencer Self, friends, family Agent, Resorts, and destinations Decider Self, companion Purchaser Self, companion User Self, companion Travel agent DEVELOPING TARGET AUDIENCE DECISION MAKING MODEL Once the decision participants are identified, the next step is to see how the roles played by them relate to the decision process itself. This model utilizes a grid which requires to identify the probable stages (Need Arousal – Evaluate Options – Purchase – Usage – Post Purchase Evaluation) in decision making, and then for each stage determine: who is involved; where that stage in the decision is likely to occur; when each stage occurs in relation to other decision stages; and how that stage is likely to occur. TARGET AUDIENCE DECISION MAKING MODEL Decision Stage Need Arousal Individuals Involved & Decision Roles Where stage is likely to occur. Timing of stage How stage is likely to occur Brand Consideration Purchase Usage DECISION STAGES Need Recognition Search Alternative Evaluation Purchase Usage DECISION STAGES Decision stages are different for different brands and different product category. It is not necessary that all the decision stages will occur with every product. Eg. FMCG Products amongst brand loyal. >>> Decision Stages in Low Involvement versus High Involvement Products DECISION ROLES Once we identify the decision stages for consumers making choices in a category, we must identify everyone who might play a part in the decision process, and the role or roles they play at each decision stage.. Where the Decision Stage is Likely to Occur? >>This understanding helps in better Media Planning Decisions and where to place the ads. Timing of the Decision Stage? >>This understanding helps in deciding when to schedule our ads in media? How the Decision Stage is Likely to Occur? >>Understanding how a decision stage will occur is the first step towards establishing a positioning strategy. TARGET AUDIENCE DECISION MAKING GRID FOR A HOLIDAY Refer Distributed Sheet STEP 3: DETERMINING THE BEST POSITIONING Positioning strategy is the choice of target market segments, which determine where the business competes, and the choice of differential advantage, which dictates how it competes. Where you want to compete? – Identifying the target market…. How you want to compete? – Serving the target market more effectively…. STEP 3: DETERMINING THE BEST POSITIONING Marketing Mix – All those variables a marketer controls, and which are used to achieve the marketing objectives of the company. These are divided into following four groups: 1. Product – A product is an item that satisfies what a consumer demands 2. Price – It is the amount a customer pays for the product. The Marketer must be aware of the Customer Perceived Value. 3. Promotion - All of the methods of communication that a marketer may use to provide information to different parties about the product. Promotion comprises elements such as: advertising, public relations, sales organisation and sales promotion. 4. Place - Refers to providing the product at a place which is convenient for consumers to access. MARKETING MIX AND POSITIONING High BRAND ‘D’ P R I C E BRAND ‘C’ BRAND ‘E’ BRAND ‘A’ BRAND ‘B’ Low Few PRODUCT FEATURES Many MARKETING MIX AND POSITIONING All the components of the marketing mix must be understood in order to develop the positioning and communication strategy. To achieve the marketing objectives the company must know as much knowledge as possible about the market. >>How the competitors are positioned in the market?? >>How the company’s product / service is positioned currently in the market?? >>What benefit the consumers are seeking in the market?? MARKETING MIX AND POSITIONING Overall the Marketing Mix shall be seen as providing ‘consumervalue’. These benefits the consumer will relate to their underlying motivations and will take action accordingly. Product / Service must provide attributes that are seen as offering particular benefits to the consumer. Price must be seen within the context of a price-value relationship. Place or Distribution must provide convenient access to the product as well as positive store image. Promotion will alert the consumer to these potential benefits IDENTIFYING AND DEFINING THE MARKET Markets are defined on the basis of consumer’s perception about a particular category of product and not how we define the market. The reason to understand how markets are defined is that it permits to make more effective positioning decisions for new products; else the brand might fall under cannibalization. Eg. Soft drinks. There might not be a need to launch a new product in the same category. Eg. Nestle’s frozen pizzas; Chocolate Lux. WAYS TO DEFINE A MARKET The most traditional way of describing markets is simply to look at broad category and then break it down by whatever characteristics of the product make sense. Few ways of defining a ‘Market’ : 1. Cross Elasticity – When the Change in price of one brand influences the sales of other brand, they may be considered substitutable, and therefore a part of the same market. Eg: Reliance's Positioning strategies in telecom market. WAYS TO DEFINE A MARKET 2. Perceived Similarity – It is a way of looking at markets in terms of how consumers perceive the brands in a particular category. Consumers are asked to list down the products they use for a particular task or in a particular situation. Products that are felt to be appropriate for the same usage situation are considered as similar, hence defining a market. Eg. Alcohols, Perfumes, Cars etc. While there are methods to understand what similarities consumers see in a particular category, it is difficult to understand how consumers are defining this market. ‘Perceived similarity’ is more important in showing a relation between products than in defining markets. WAYS TO DEFINE A MARKET 3. Hierarchical Market Definition It assumes that the consumers look at the characteristics of a product in a particular order. In marketing it is termed as Partitioning a market. When consumers are asked to describe how products in a category differ they tend to reply in terms of four general characteristics: 1. Type of product – What kind of product it is? 2. End Benefit – Why do you consume/use it? 3. Usage Situation – When do you consume it? 4. Brand name – Differences amongst various brands available? Take the example of cars…. WAYS TO DEFINE A MARKET Knowing the answer of these questions will help the marketing manager to understand how consumers see a particular product market and how they define the market. Eg – Coffee market SEEKING A DIFFERENTIAL ADVANTAGE In the first half we have tried to identify the market where we have to compete in the second half we shall try to understand why the target audience wants the product or service offered by the market. For consumers, brands exist to satisfy a need, and it is this need that defines the product category for them. It doesn’t matter how the marketer sees a particular category. INITIAL POSITIONING DECISIONS BRAND “how should the brand be positioned with regard to the product category?” “whether the brand’s position in relation to other brands should be in terms of ‘product users’ or the ‘product itself’. INITIAL POSITIONING DECISIONS HOW TO POSITION THE BRAND IN RELATION TO THE PRODUCT CATEGORY??? Category based positioning can be 1. Centrally Positioned – Delivers all the benefit of the category and is the best brand in the category. Eg – Cadbury, Xerox, Maggie, etc. 2. Differentially positioned – Shows the benefit which is different from the main brand. Eg – Yippie noodles INITIAL POSITIONING DECISIONS – WHETHER THE POSITIONING WILL BE IN TERMS OF PRODUCT USERS OR PRODUCT ITSELF?? User-Oriented Positioning >User is the focus not the product >It is marketed to a specific segment >When social approval is primary purchase motivation Product-Oriented Positioning >Product’s benefits is the focus in positioning >Product characteristics are the message GENERAL MODEL OF BRAND POSITIONING What is it? Category Need What does it offer? Brand Brand Awareness Benefit Brand Attitude SELECTING THE APPROPRIATE BENEFIT Considerations in Communication Selecting Benefits > It is important to the target audience? > The brand can deliver it? >It can be delivered better than other brands? for Marketing SELECTING THE APPROPRIATE BENEFIT The Expectancy-Value Model of Attitude This model is based on a person’s attitude towards an object and is measured as the sum of all the perceived benefits about it, weighted by how important each of those things are to them. Or, What the model says is that a person’s attitude towards a product will be the sum of its perceived characteristics and how important they are to what motivates that person to buy the product. COMPARATIVE EXPECTANCY-VALUE MODEL OF ATTITUDE OF TWO BRANDS Benefits Importance Weight Chocolate/ Cocoa 2 Peanuts 1 Provides Energy 1 Inexpensive Snack 3 Indulgence 3 Beliefs (Snickers) Beliefs (Cadbury) SELECTING THE APPROPRIATE BENEFIT Understanding from Expectancy-Value Model will help to evaluate positioning options in terms of: >Building uniqueness for your brand on important benefits >emphasizing important benefits your brand delivers better than others >increasing the importance of benefits that your brand delivers and decreasing the benefits your brand doesn’t deliver. 4. DEVELOPING A COMMUNICATION STRATEGY In order to develop a communication strategy, the manager must identify the communication objective. There can be four types of communication objective – 1. Category Need 2. Brand Awareness 3. Brand Attitude 4. Brand Purchase Intention CATEGORY NEED Category Need – It refers to the target audience’s feeling that it would like a particular product in order to satisfy a specific need. Category need is a perception. It becomes an objective only when 1. it is necessary to remind the target audience of his need, a forgotten need. Eg – Parachute’s new ad. or, 2. one tries to sell the need as the product’s category is new for the target audience. Under such circumstances the company must try to communicate the category benefits along with Brand Benefits. Eg: Meswak BRAND AWARENESS Brand awareness is the target audience’s ability to identify a brand within a category in sufficient detail to purchase or use it. A brand can be identified in the following two ways: Recognition and Recall >>Recognition Brand Awareness is when awareness of the brand reminds you of the category need. >>Recall Brand Awareness is when the category need occurs and you must remember brands that will satisfy that need. (Exercise) BRAND PURCHASE INTENTION It is not often a specific objective for advertising except when brand attitude is positive and a reason to buy now is required, but always an objective for promotion. BRAND ATTITUDE STRATEGY Brand attitude is that something about a product which motivates you to choose one product over the other amongst various products. It is always a communication strategy. Depending on the current standing of the product in the product category we need to create, increase, maintain, modify, change a brand attitude. CHARACTERISTICS OF BRAND ATTITUDE There are four important characteristics of Brand Attitude that we need to understand – 1. What the consumer wants now from the product 2. Brand Attitude is made up of what the consumer knows about a product. 3. What the consumer knows about a product is driven by different beliefs. 4. Brand Attitude is a relative concept – We relate to different psychological factors in buying a product. IMPORTANCE OF INVOLVEMENT AND MOTIVATION Motivation is underlying reasons which results in a particular consumer behavior. It answers the questions as why consumers behave in a particular way? Motivation can be divided into positive and negative motives. Negative Motives doesn’t mean something bad. >>Negative motives generally concern solving or avoiding problems. >>Positive motives generally involve seeking more personal satisfaction. Eg.- Kareena wearing her mother’s watch in 3 Idiots… IMPORTANCE OF INVOLVEMENT AND MOTIVATION Involvement specifies whether or not the consumer sees any risk in the decision to buy or use a product/ service. These perceived risk can be either financial or psychological. The perceived risk is determined based on the target audience. THE ROSSITER – PERCY GRID When one deals with ‘positive motives’, he actually tries to create a mood, and when one deals with ‘negative motives’, he provides information to help address a perceived problem. Rossiter and Percy in their grid refer – Positive Motives as transformational (transforming your mood) and Negative motives are informational… THE ROSSITER – PERCY GRID Low High Involvement Motivation Informational Transformational (Negative) (Positive) THE ROSSITER – PERCY GRID Grid 1 – Implementing Low Involvement Informational Brand Attitude Strategy >>Low risk purchase decisions are involved >>Motivation is to solve or avoid a problem >>In order to solve or avoid a problem, one must provide information about the brand, in terms of the benefit that will resolve the problem and provide relief through the brand. Eg: Washing Powders, soaps, etc. THE ROSSITER – PERCY GRID Grid 2 – Implementing Low Involvement Transformational Brand Attitude Strategy >>Low risk purchase decisions are involved >>Motivation is positive >>Emotional portrayal of the brand benefit is required In order to arouse correct emotional response. >>The target audience must see himself emotionally in the role of using the product. Therefore, when dealing with positively motivated behavior, the Target Audience must like the ad. Eg. Dairy Milk THE ROSSITER – PERCY GRID Grid 3 – Implementing High Involvement Informational Brand Attitude Strategy >>High risk purchase decisions are involved >>Motivation is negative >>Since the risk involved is higher, the existing attitude of the target audience must be known. >>The more negative the brand attitude, more difficult it would be for someone to accept anything the brand has to say. >>Once we have understood their attitude, we must also know what is important to them in the product. >>Since it’s a high involvement product, the Target Audience will definitely compare the product with the knowledge and associations he has in his brain. THE ROSSITER – PERCY GRID Grid 4 – Implementing High Involvement Transformational Brand Attitude Strategy >>High risk purchase decisions are involved >>Motivation is positive >>Emotional portrayal of the brand benefit is required in order to arouse correct emotional response. >>The target audience must feel that the brand will satisfy the social approval motivation underlying its need. Eg. Luxury cars CORPORATE IMAGE ADVERTISING Mostly it follows a transformational brand attitude strategy. The main motive in almost every ad is to build a positive brand attitude. 5. SETTING A MEDIA STRATEGY There has been an ever increasing number of media channels with varied / segmented audiences. Media selection has therefore become highly complex and has led to the growth of specialist media agencies. It is in this context that one needs to understand how media strategy can be guided by the communication strategy developed in previous topics. UNDERSTANDING KEY MEDIA CONCEPTS Reach – The percentage of the target audience exposed to an advertisement in a given time period. Frequency – The no. of times an individual member of the target audience is exposed to an advertisement in a given time period. Opportunities to See (OTS) – The cumulative exposures achieved in a given time period, usually used in media planning in place of frequency. Gross Rating Points (GRPs) – A summary statistic for the achievement of a media plan, calculated by multiplying reach by frequency. Effective Frequency – A hypothetical construct that attempts to estimate the number of OTS required to have an effect in the target audience. REACH VERSUS FREQUENCY A media plan must deal with three basic variables – reach, frequency, and timing. >>Ideal plan would enable to reach everyone in the target audience and as often as necessary to ensure a positive response. >>However, the budget constraints requires one to decide how many members of target audience can be reached successfully, how many times and when. >>Minimum Effective Frequency – Point at which advertising will begin to work. >>It is better to reach few people effectively than reaching many and without any effect. SELECTING MEDIA The Media Strategy depends on the communication objectives. 1. Brand Awareness Strategies >>Brand Recognition – For this we look for good visual content and not much time should be required for processing the message. Low Frequency will do. >>Brand Recall – Here we put the emphasis on frequency SELECTING MEDIA 2. Brand Attitude Strategies >>Low-Involvement, Informational Strategy –There is no strong visual requirement, only a brief processing time is needed, and high frequency is not required because the benefits shown in such adverts can be learnt in one or two adverts. It can be addressed by almost any medium only if the benefit need not be demonstrated. >>Low-Involvement, Transformational Strategy – Good visual content is critical. Only a brief processing time is required but frequency should be high to ensure a Positive brand attitude development. Television is the ideal medium, however, very creative radio adverts can work if it can really make one see the product. SELECTING MEDIA >>High-Involvement, Informational Strategy – It requires a longer processing time to convince the audience, therefore media emphasis is likely to be on print media. >>High-Involvement, Transformational Strategy – Higher frequency of adverts are not required as we deal with products with much longer purchase cycle. In low-involvement, transformational strategy deals with mostly FMCG products with a relatively short purchase cycle. Radio may not be a medium for HITS. DEMOGRAPHIC VERSUS DIRECT MATCHING Demographic Matching is the practice of defining a target audience in terms of specific demographic characteristics, then matching that demographic profile with the demographic profile of a media vehicle’s audience. Finding media that brand users read or watch is Direct Matching. It requires surveying the market and measure their media habits. ASSIGNMENT Discuss the positives and negatives of New Media (Mobile, internet, etc.) for achieving the advertising objectives. PUTTING EVERYTHING TOGETHER – INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATION Integrated Marketing Communication is the planning and execution of all types of marketing communication needed for a brand, service, or company in order to satisfy a common set of communication objectives. It might be possible that only one type of marketing communication is required to meet the brand’s marketing communication objectives. Still it is IMC. TRADITIONAL ADVERTISING AND PROMOTION Advertere – ‘to turn towards’ promovere – ‘to move ahead’ Advertising contributes to long-term attitude while promotion contributes to short-term action. ‘Integrate’ comes from Latin verb ‘integrare’ which means ‘combine parts into whole’. Various forms of traditional advertising and promotion are combined and the ‘whole’ is a consistent marketing communication program or IMC. OPTIMIZING THE COMMUNICATION OBJECTIVES It is important to understand the relative strengths and weaknesses of traditional advertising and promotion in contributing to the four basic communication effects. 1. Category Need – Neither advertising nor promotion is especially strong in stimulating category need as category needs springs from some felt need or motivation. Advertising can help in positioning a category need and promotion can accelerate category need. 2. Brand Awareness – Advertising can be effective for both brand ‘recall’ and and ‘recognition’ while promotions are more effective for ‘recognition’ brand awareness. OPTIMIZING THE COMMUNICATION OBJECTIVES 3. Brand Attitude – Advertising is more effective in creating brand attitude. 4. Brand Purchase Intention – Because of their generally shortterm, tactical nature, promotions are geared to immediate action. Strong Advertising Promotion Brand Purchase Intention Brand Attitude Brand Awareness Category Need Weak Sales PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE INFLUENCE ON RELATIVE INFLUENCE OF ADVERTISING & PROMOTION Introduction Growth Maturity Time Decline PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE INFLUENCE ON RELATIVE INFLUENCE OF ADVERTISING & PROMOTION Introductory Stage During the introduction phase a company would like to quickly introduce the brand and grow to a position of strength in a market. Maximum advertising & promotion efforts are required at this stage. >>Advertising helps in making people aware about the product and in creating an image about what type of product it is. >>Promotion helps in making people aware of the product and induce them to try it. PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE INFLUENCE ON RELATIVE INFLUENCE OF ADVERTISING & PROMOTION Growth Stage At this stage, the distribution of advertising and promotion expenses depends on the nature of the product and the marketing strategy undertaken. >>If the product is a leader in the category and is more desirable as compared to the competitors, then the company should spend heavily on advertising to maintain the competitive advantage and high levels of awareness. >>If there is not much to differentiate the brand from others, the company should try promotion techniques to increase the product usage and depend on the competitors advertising to establish / increase the category need. PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE INFLUENCE ON RELATIVE INFLUENCE OF ADVERTISING & PROMOTION Maturity Stage At this stage, the expenditure will vary depending on loyalty. With high number of brand loyal, promotion techniques will not be required. However, if there is very low loyalty in the category, spending more on promotion will be more effective than using advertising. Eg – Sugar. PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE INFLUENCE ON RELATIVE INFLUENCE OF ADVERTISING & PROMOTION Decline Stage At this stage, both advertising and promotion expenditure should stop. Minimal expenditure on promotion techniques will be required till the company’s inventory lasts. ADVANTAGES OF USING ADVERTISING & PROMOTION TOGETHER When advertising has been effective in generating a strong brand attitude, all the brand’s uses of promotion become that much more effective because >>A strong brand attitude mean that when the brand will use promotion, the target audience will see the promotion as a better value. >>Strong positive brand attitude also means that when a brand’s competitors use promotion, the brand’s target audience will be less likely to respond ADVANTAGES OF USING ADVERTISING & PROMOTION TOGETHER The Ratchet Effect 1. Promotion Alone Sales Promotion Promotion Promotion ADVANTAGES OF USING ADVERTISING & PROMOTION TOGETHER 2. Advertising Alone Sales Advertising Advertising Adevrtising ADVANTAGES OF USING ADVERTISING & PROMOTION TOGETHER 3. Advertising & Promotion Sales Advertising Promotion Advertising Advertising Promotion Promotion CAMPAIGN TRACKING One must measure the responses to not only their product’s advertisement but also their competitor’s advertisements. Ways to track advertising campaigns: 1. Correlating sales with advertising and promotion spending. 2. Using a panel of consumers who are questioned about their purchases and recall of advertising. 3. Continuous Tracking – Ongoing interviews of small samples of consumers, rolling the results, with moving averages for weekly, fortnightly, or monthly. CAMPAIGN WEAROUT ‘Wearout’ means that the current campaign is not performing up to the expectation, in the absence of external causes. >>Check if there is a problem with the media plan Whether it is reaching the target audience? Minimum effective frequency is being obtained? >>Over-exposure leading to diminished attention >>Interference due to new advertising when the previous advertisement was still trying to create an association. PROBLEMS IN IMPLEMENTING IMC 1. Organizational Structure – Due to the structure of any organization there might be situations that the information and materials shared with various agencies are not same. Interrelations between various departments are not smooth. 2. Low standing of Marketing Communication in an Organization – For many in top management, spending money on advertising is seen as a luxury that can be afforded only when everything else is going well. 3. Lack of Marketing Communication Specialists – Most of the times those handling the campaign specialize in a particular area of communication. Different specialists hardly talk to each other. They have their own plans, budgets and objectives. PROBLEMS IN IMPLEMENTING IMC 4. Politics and Power 5. Resistance to change – Human Nature towards any change. There can be conflicts in promotion and advertisement managers due to their own objectives. THANK YOU MODERN ADVERTISING Changing Trends One of the major constraints on the ability of any mass medium to maintain itself in the marketplace of ideas, or in the marketplace of divertissement, is the level of economic support available. The major economic support comes from advertising. Traditionally, advertising has sought to make its impression via visual and audio representations of products and brands. New ways of making impressions have been made possible by changing demographics, changing media, and improved technology. MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING MODERN ADVERTISING Alternatives and Compliments Chris Anderson, in his now-famous discussion of how “free” has become a common price for online products, said, “To follow the money, you have to shift from a basic view of a market as a matching of two parties—buyers and sellers—to a broader sense of an ecosystem with many parties, only some of which exchange cash.” Indeed, Anderson credits the media industry’s prime business model – selling readers or viewers to advertisers, rather than merely selling content to users – as the inspiration for many online business models. The practice of selling an audience instead of content is thriving, and companies are paying more than ever for those audiences. MODERN ADVERTISING Advertising activities are divided into two categories: above the line advertising and below the line advertising. Above the Line Advertising (ATL) Above the line advertising refers to traditional mass media advertising, that which is conducted in newspapers, on television, the radio, and on the internet. It is, simply, what people think of when they think of advertising. MODERN ADVERTISING The following methods are usually considered BTL advertising: • Price promotions or discounting • Coupons • Gift-with-purchase • Competitions and prizes • Monetary refunds • Loyalty incentives • Point-of-sale displays MODERN ADVERTISING Shift from Traditional to Non-traditional Advertising >>Consumers want to feel engaged >>Consumers want to feel empowered and connected, and >>Consumer interactions are easier to measure In the past, advertising has often focused on brand awareness and recognition, but non-traditional advertising seeks instead to drive sales. It aims for an efficiency of communication that traditional advertising often does not maintain. MODERN ADVERTISING Most advertisers seem to be pushing multi-platform, or through the line, campaigns. Much of the money is going into direct marketing, though brand-building through mass media remains a part of many advertising campaigns. The challenge for leaders of “traditional” media outlets is not to bow to non-traditional advertising but rather to find ways to coopt the value it offers to advertisers: consumer-specific marketing that offers direct incentive to purchase while providing the brand with data.