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Integrated Marketing Communication Advertising Personal Selling Sales Promotion Public Relations Reference point: ◦ Armstrong et.al. Principles of Marketing Chapter 11 and 12 ◦ Digital and Direct Selling is taught as a separate component. Marketing Activities that are usually for a specific time, place or customer group. ◦ Encourages a direct response from consumers or marketing intermediaries (trade) by offering additional benefits – value-added incentives. Examples: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Sales incentive schemes; Competitions Loyalty programmes Product trials; Sampling retail displays Demonstrations Tie-ins with sponsorships/events and advertising campaigns E.g. Nelson’s first “splash” competition Traditional boundaries between advertising, personal selling, sales promotion and public relations are often very blurred due to the adoption of the IMC Concept ◦ E.g. Sports Sponsorship: Vodafone – the Warriors ◦ TV Adverts plus product sales plus audience competitions plus player events and public appearances ◦ http://www.vodafone.co.nz/about/sponsorship/wa rriors/ Useful alternative to advertising; overcome media clutter problem. Appeals to a slice of interest, motivated, high involvement consumers who are most likely to “take action” fast. Consumers are more price sensitive: sales promotion can address this by providing valueadded promotions and price discounts In other words... How do you break your product out from others? Very attractive to the trade. Helps to keep their foot traffic volumes up and creates interest in their stores. Usually paid for by the marketer so it’s a big win for retailers. “Smart Shoppers” respond well to sales promotion: rewards them for their brand support Means of optimising brand profitability where: ◦ A) There is a price discrimination between segments AND ◦ B) There is brand proliferation (increase) Sales promotion allows you to compete with cheaper brands and at the same time to defend market segments Does this sound like “stretching”? Why? Ideal for a firm whose strategy emphasises gaining and holding market share As in-store sales staffing levels have declined in favour of shopper self-service, sales promotion has become almost indispensable to induce consumer purchase behaviour Sales promotion effectiveness has grown as its methods have improved. It is now relatively easy to measure how successful a sales promotion campaign has been Like an addictive drug; it is the fastest growing element of modern promotion Competitive sales promotion poker is running almost out of control in some sectors e.g. Supermarket retailing Self-fulfilment; individual brands cannot be omitted from aggressive sales promotion: therefore how effective is it at promoting strong brand values and a clear marketing positioning? Does it destroy brand value? Can be difficult to forecast product demand; therefore increasing reliance on using sales promotion to balance inventories. Slow moving products can always be eliminated by running a sales promotion campaign Many brand marketers contend that unbridled use of sales promotion undermines long-term brand values and positions Consumer Expectations: consumers now take sales promotion for granted and thus tend to structure their purchases not around brand values so much as “what’s on special today?” Primarily non-personal: providing news or information that creates or maintains a favourable company or product image. Wide potential audience of stakeholders Share-of-mind concept: a favourable image and associations linked to widespread awareness translates into an increased chance of spurring brand behaviour Ideally should be newsworthy....’free advertising’ PR often has credibility where advertising does not Important in case of high-profile firms and brands having well defined stakeholder categories Well suited to the needs of small enterprises who lack promotion resources. Any motivated intelligent person can write up a media release. Veracity and credibility: carried by independent media, therefore have a ring of trust that is lacking in the case of ‘paid’ promotion Ability to reach many potential buyers if decision influencers whilst they are in a nonjudgemental mode, reading a media article. Dramatic impact is possible by careful campaign design e.g. Richard Branson’s Virgin empire. Very evident in NZ sports sponsorship (All Blacks Roadtrips) As often useful ‘general support’ component of the promotion mix. Gets public buy-in and awareness of what the firm is and what it stands for...brand perceptions Can involve high front end costs in the case of major campaign (not always though) Uneven quality of PR expertise: very easy to do it incredibly badly! Rising audience sophistication; ability to ‘see’ through a media article to the vested interest behind it e.g. Motoring magazines Best suited for general image and positioning of the firm Difficult in measuring effectiveness and results Integration with the rest of the marketing mix is not always easy and direct; often tend to be prompted by situational factors e.g. Opportunity for media coverage PR activities increasingly have to be innovative and impactive to achieve media support: ordinary media releases lose interest and get binned So... BE BALANCED & BE INNOVATIVE! Sensitivity to ‘getting the small details right’: these are things that audiences will quickly pick up on if they are handled poorly Be careful of linking PR events or campaigns to particular host personalities or celebrities; They can fall off the boil e.g. Achievements wane, suffer from personal problems, fall into illegal activities, generally become controversial. What are some examples that you can think of? Question: is it all bad for the companies involved? What do you want to get to do what? What’s the promotion opportunity? What’s the fundamental purpose of this campaign/ What environment is this campaign going into? Marketing objectives: positioning, target market, target audience, distribution channels, brand values, competitors.....we need information What are you trying to achieve? Inform? Remind? Persuade? Brand values? Call to action? New product? Special event? Attract new business? Relations with distributors? Benchmarking, target audience, time period What is it that you want to say? Reward-Experience Relationship: ◦ Experience: Outcome – During – Incidental ◦ Reward: Functional – Sensory – Social – Ego Desirability, exclusiveness, credibility, continuity How do we want to get your message across? Style, Tone, Words, Format etc What media do you want to use? (what media mix can you afford?) Cover – impact – time - frequency On a fixed budget, more of one means less of the other three Four common methods used to set the total budget for advertising: 1. 2. 3. 4. Affordable method Percentage‐of‐sales method Competitive‐parity method Objective‐and‐task method Cover: the number of media used Impact: media communications strength e.g. National TV versus community hall posters Time: duration of the campaign and when it runs (media schedule) Frequency: how often ad will run in the media schedule Branding Marketing Management IN MKT 671!