Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS AND DIRECT MARKETING Professor Chip Besio Cox School of Business 17-1 GET ENGAGED…IN THE TWITTERVERSE! Age of Engagement 17-2 THE COMMUNICATION PROCESS Promotional Mix • Inform Prospective Buyers • Persuade Them To Try • Remind Them of the Benefits Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) 17-3 The communication process consists of six key elements 17-4 THE COMMUNICATION PROCESS Communication Source Message Channel of Communication Receivers 17-5 The North Face Ad Who is the source? What is the message? How would you decode this ad? 17-6 The five elements of the promotional mix 17-7 THE PROMOTIONAL ELEMENTS ADVERTISING Mass Selling vs. Customized Interaction Advertising • Paid Aspect • Advantages • Nonpersonal • Disadvantages 17-8 THE PROMOTIONAL ELEMENTS PERSONAL SELLING Personal Selling • Wasted Coverage • Advantages • Disadvantages 17-9 THE PROMOTIONAL ELEMENTS PUBLIC RELATIONS Public Relations • Publicity • Advantages • Disadvantages 17-10 THE PROMOTIONAL ELEMENTS SALES PROMOTION AND DIRECT MARKETING Sales Promotion • Advantages • Disadvantages Direct Marketing • Advantages • Disadvantages 17-11 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX THE TARGET AUDIENCE Determine the Balance of the Elements Coordinate the Promotional Effort Assess Target Audience Characteristics • Consumers • Businesses 17-12 MARKETING MATTERS How Can You Reach Millenials? With Mobile Marketing! 17-13 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE Introduction Stage Growth Stage Maturity Stage Decline Stage 17-14 Promotional tools used over the product life cycle of Purina Dog Chow 17-15 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX PRODUCT CHARATERISTICS Complexity Risk Ancillary Services 17-16 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX STAGES OF THE BUYING DECISION Prepurchase Stage Purchase Stage Postpurchase Stage 17-17 How the importance of promotional elements varies during the stages of the consumer purchase decision process 17-18 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX CHANNEL STRATEGIES Push Strategy Pull Strategy • Direct-to-Consumer 17-19 A comparison of push and pull promotional strategies 17-20 The promotion decision process includes planning, implementation, and evaluation 17-21 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX DEVELOPING THE PROMOTION PROGRAM The Four “W”s: • Who is the Target Audience? • What are the Objectives, Budget, & Tools? • Where Should the Promotion Be Run? • When Should the Promotion Be Run? 17-22 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX IDENTIFYING THE TARGET AUDIENCE Target Audience Behaviorial Targeting 17-23 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX SPECIFYING THE PROMOTION OBJECTIVES Hierarchy of Effects • Awareness • Trial • Interest • Adoption • Evaluation 17-24 IMC—DEVELOPING THE PROMOTIONAL MIX SETTING THE PROMOTION BUDGET Percentage of Sales Budgeting Competitive Parity Budgeting • Matching Competitors • Share of Market All-You-Can-Afford Budgeting Objective and Task Budgeting 17-25 U.S. promotion expenditures of the top 10 companies 17-26 USING MARKETING DASHBOARDS How Much Should You Spend on IMC? Promotion-to-Sales Ratio Total Promotion Expenditures ($) 100 Total Sales ($) Promotion-to-Sales Ratio (%) = 17-27 DEVELOPING AN IMC PROGRAM Selecting the Right Promotional Tools Designing the Promotion Scheduling the Promotion 17-28 EXECUTING AND ASSESSING THE PROMOTION PROGRAM IMC Audit Pretesting Posttesting 17-29 DIRECT MARKETING The Growth of Direct Marketing The Value of Direct Marketing • Direct Orders • Lead Generation • Traffic Generation Technological, Global and Ethical Issues in Direct Marketing 17-30 Business usage and response rates of popular forms of direct marketing 17-31 MAKING RESPONSIBLE DECISIONS What Information Should Be Private” Do-Not-Call Do Not Mail E-Privacy Directive Do Not Track 17-32