Transcript Chap008
Chapter 8
Integrated Marketing Communications:
Advertising, Sales Promotion, Public
Relations, and Direct Marketing
Key Terms
Advertising, Sales Promotion, Public Relations, Direct Marketing,
Personal Selling, Integrated Marketing Communications,
Awareness, Comprehension, Conviction, Ordering, Percent of
Sales, Per-Unit expenditure, All You Can Afford, Competitive
Parity, The Research and Task Approaches, Encoding, Decoding,
Reach, Average Frequency, Push and Pull Strategies, Trade
Promotions, Consumer Promotions, Frequency Marketing
Programs
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Strategic Goals Of Marketing
Communication
Create awareness
Build positive images
Identify prospects
Build channel relationships
Retain customers
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Promotional Mix
Concept refers to the combination and types of
nonpersonal and personal communication the
organization puts forth during a specified period
Nonpersonal forms
Advertising
Sales promotion
Public relations
Direct marketing
Personal forms
Personal selling
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Promotional Mix
Advertising – Paid form of nonpersonal
communications transmitted through a mass medium
to target audience
Sales promotion – Activity or material offering a direct
inducement for purchasing a product
Public relations – Nonpersonal form of communication
seeking to influence attitudes, feelings, and opinions
Publicity
Direct marketing – Direct forms of communication with
customers
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Promotional Mix
Personal selling – Face-to-face communication
with potential buyers to inform and persuade
Firms should take into account three basic factors
when devising its promotion mix:
The role of promotion in the overall marketing mix
The nature of the product
The nature of the market
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Integrated Marketing Approach
Goal is to develop marketing communications
programs that coordinate and integrate all elements of
the promotion mix to present a consistent message
Seeks to manage all sources of brand or company
contacts with existing and potential customers
Potential buyers go through a process of
Awareness of the product
Comprehension of what it can do and important features
Conviction that it has value for them
Ordering on the part of a sufficient number of potential
buyers
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Integrated Marketing Approach
How Various Promotion Tools Might Contribute to the Purchase of
a Hypothetical Product
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Some Differences between Traditional Marketing
Communication Efforts and Integrated Marketing
Communications
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Advertising: Planning and Strategy
Objectives
Generalist viewpoint – Concerned with sales, profits, and
return on investment
Middle viewpoint – Sees advertising as a competitive
weapon
Specialist viewpoint – Concerned with the effects of
specific ads or campaigns
In the long run and often in the short run, advertising is
justified on the basis of the revenue it produces
Approach that aids intelligent decision making is needed
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Developing Advertising Objectives:
Nine Questions
Does the advertising aim at immediate sales?
Does the advertising aim at near-term sales?
Does the advertising aim at building a long-range
consumer franchise?
Does the advertising aim at helping increase sales?
Does the advertising aim at some specific step that
leads to a sale?
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Developing Advertising Objectives:
Nine Questions
How important are supplementary benefits of
advertising?
Should the advertising impart information needed to
consummate sales and build customer satisfaction?
Should advertising build confidence and goodwill for the
corporation?
What kind of images does the company wish to build?
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Advertising Decisions
Key decisions to be made include
Determining the size of the advertising budget
Allocation of the advertising budget
Important to remember that brand equity and consumer
preference for brands drive market share
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The Expenditure Question
Percent of sales – A percentage figure is taken and
applied to either past or future sales
Per-unit expenditure – A fixed monetary amount is
spent on advertising for each unit of the product
expected to be sold
All you can afford – Advertising budget is established
as a predetermined share of profits or financial
resources
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The Expenditure Question
Competitive parity – Advertising budgets are based on
those of competitors or other members of the industry
Research approach – Advertising budget is argued for
and presented on the basis of research findings
Task approach – Initially formulates the advertising
goals and defines the tasks to accomplish these goals
Management determines how much it will cost to
accomplish each task and adds up the total
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Preparing the Advertising Campaign:
The Eight-M Formula
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The Allocation Question: Message
Strategy
To be effective, the advertising message should meet
two general criteria
It should take into account the basic principles of
communication
It should be predicated upon a good theory of consumer
motivation and behavior
The basic communication process involves three
elements
Sender or source of the communication
Communication or message
Receiver or audience
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The Allocation Question: Message
Strategy
Encoding – Translating the product idea or marketing
message into an effective ad
Decoding – Perceiving content of the message to be
the same as the intended content
A relationship between advertising and consumer
behavior exists
End goal of an advertisement and its associated
campaign is to move the buyer to a decision to
purchase the advertised brand
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The Allocation Question: Media Mix
Cost per thousand – Generally refers to the dollar cost
of reaching 1,000 prospects
“Positive effects” theory – States that the more the
viewers are involved in a television program, the
stronger they will respond to commercials
Reach – Number of different targeted audience
members exposed at least once to the advertiser’s
message within predetermined time frame
Average frequency – Number of times, on average,
people are exposed to an ad within a given time
period
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The Allocation Question: Media Mix
The marketer’s dilemma is to develop a media
schedule that both
Exposes a sufficient number of targeted customers
(reach) to the firm’s product
Exposes them enough times (average frequency) to the
product to produce the desired effect
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Procedures for Evaluating Advertising Programs and
Some Services Using the Procedures
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Sales Promotions
Push marketing strategies – Involve aiming
promotional efforts at distributors, retailers, and sales
personnel to gain their cooperation in ordering,
stocking, and accelerating the sales of a product
Pull marketing strategies – Involve aiming promotional
efforts directly at customers to encourage them to ask
the retailer for the product
Trade sales promotions – Aimed at distributors and
retailers of products
Consumer promotions – Fulfill several distinct
objectives for the manufacturer
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Sales Promotions
Example of Sales Promotion Activities
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Sales Promotions
Push versus Pull Strategies in Marketing Communications
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Sales Promotions
Some Commonly Used Forms of Consumer Promotions
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Sales Promotions
Sales promotions can often
Involve competitive retaliation
Devalue image of promoted brand in consumer’s eyes
Not used as sole promotional tool due to its inability to
Always generate long-term buyer commitment to a brand
Change, except temporarily, declining sales of a product
Convince buyers to purchase an unacceptable product
Make up for a lack of advertising or sales support
Frequency marketing programs – Consumers are
rewarded or purchases of products or services over a
sustained period of time
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Some Objectives of Sales Promotion
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Public Relations
News release or press release – Announcement
regarding changes in organization or the product line
News conference – Meeting held for representatives
of the media to announce major news events
Sponsorship – Providing support for and associating
organization’s name with events, programs, people
Public service announcements – Many nonprofit
organizations rely on the media to donate time for
advertising for contributions and donors
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Direct Marketing
Online
Direct Mail
Catalogs
Direct Response Advertising
Personal Selling
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