Transcript Product
KINE 4430 - 2009
Marketing Class # 3
*PLACE – Distribution Strategy
*Social Marketing
* Sponsorship
Reviewing the Outputs
The outputs of the marketing plan process
Marketing Objectives & Strategy
Marketing Mix Elements
Product
Pricing
Place
Promotion
- Product types
- Product tangibility
- Product lifecycle
- New product development
- Price Elasticity (Sensitivity)
- Pricing strategies
(lifecycle/product type)
- Pricing policies
- Types of distribution
- Distribution strategies
(consumer & business)
- Types of promotion
- Promotional strategies
(consumer & business)
Analytic Tools:
• Research
• Balance & Gaps Assessment
• Measurement, Monitoring & Evaluation
Business Location Decision
•
Two major factors:
1. What your customer believes is the “best
location”
2. Your distribution channel—the method or
way in which a producer makes a product or
service available to the consumer
Distribution Channels
PRODUCER
Producer
Distributors
Retailers
Consumer
Segment
#1
Consumer
Segment
#2
Dealers
Business
Segment
#1
Business
Segment
#2
Distribution Strategy
• Your distribution strategy will depend on a
number of factors, such as:
Target Customer needs
Type of business
Product/service characteristics
Transportation costs
Competition
The “Best” Location
•A location filter or checklist will help you zero in on the “perfect” location
•Use a scale of 1 to 10 to rate the relative importance of each item on this
list. When you finish scoring, go back and note the high numbers
anything above 5.
___Local/municipal licensing
___Neighbourhood mix
___Competition
___Security, safety
___Labour pool
___Services
___Costs
___Ownership
___Property owner/landlord
___Past tenants
___Space
___Accessibility
___Professional advice
___Parking
___History of the property
___Physical visibility
___Life-cycle stage of the area
___Image
___Hours of operation
___Utilities
___Local zoning by-laws
___Taxes
___Approvals
___Transportation
___ Your target customers
Is Home the “Best” Place?
Potential
Advantages
Low risk of expensive mistakes
Opportunity to use household
resources
Low overhead
Gradual start-up and growth
No commuting time or expense
Tax advantages (with
deductions allowed for part of
the house)
Relatively inexpensive way to
test a market
Reduced child-care costs
Increased quality time with
family
Potential
Disadvantages
Isolation and lack of contact
with colleagues
Increased family stress
Need for self-discipline
Local by-laws and regulations
Less established or refined
image
Conflict with neighbours
Parking problems
Before You Sign Checklist
Escape clause
Option to renew
Right to transfer
Cost-of-living
Percentage lease
Floating rent sale
Start-up buffer
Improvement
Restrictive covenants
Maintenance
CAUSE OR SOCIAL MARKETING
Strengthens business relationships - customers & general public
Addresses social issues of concern to target market
Increases sales
Builds a Brand image
Lessons for Socially Responsible Companies
• What you sell is important: both the mission and the product
should be socially responsible
• Be proud to be in business: profit not a dirty word
• Make a solid commitment to change: business is natural
outgrowth of social entrepreneur’s values
• Focus on two bottom lines:
viable company + social mission
• Forget the hype: socially
responsible companies lead by doing
good deeds, not by promoting them
Source: Thea Singer, “Can Business Still Save the World?”
Inc., April 30, 2001, pp58-71; and MEC website, www.mec.ca
Environmentalism
• Environmentalism:
– An organized movement of concerned citizens and
government agencies
– To protect and improve people’s
living environment
• Environmental sustainability:
– Management approach
– Develop strategies that both
sustain the environment and
produce Company ‘s profits
Socially Responsible Marketing
• Enlightened marketing:
– A marketing philosophy that holds
– A company’s marketing should support the
– Best long-run performance of the
marketing system
• Five principles:
–
–
–
–
–
Consumer-oriented marketing
Innovative marketing
Value marketing
Sense-of-mission marketing
Societal marketing
Ethical Issues Associated with Marketing
• Marketing research:
– Invalid or unreliable research studies
– Invasion of consumer privacy, not
respecting confidentiality
– Disguising sales as research
– Failure to secure voluntary and informed
participation
– Competitive intelligence gathering
• Segmentation/target marketing:
– Redlining: discriminating against poor
or disadvantaged consumers
– Targeting inappropriate products to
vulnerable audiences
Ethical Issues Associated with Marketing
• Positioning:
– Making socially undesirable products more desirable
– Positioning on questionable benefits
• Product:
– Marketing unsafe products
– Product testing: on animals or insufficient
testing
– Marketing socially controversial products
• Packaging and labeling:
– Actual versus apparent size
– Misleading or inadequate information
– Excessive or environmentally-unfriendly
packaging
Ethical Issues Associated with Marketing
• Pricing:
–
–
–
–
Collusion with competitors
Negative option billing
Prejudice in negotiated prices
Price discrimination
• Advertising:
– Sex role stereotyping
– Dehumanizing images and
portraying people as
products
– Bait-and-switch advertising
Seller’s Versus Consumers’ Rights
Sellers’ rights:
– To introduce products of
different styles and sizes,
provided they are not
hazardous
– To set its own prices,
provided no discrimination
occurs
– To spend to promote the
product
– To use any product message,
provided it is not misleading
– To use buying incentives
Consumers’ rights:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
To choose
To be informed
To safety
To be heard
To redress
To consumer education
To participate in marketplace
decision making
– To have access to basic
services
– To a sustainable environment
Canadian Marketing Association Code of Ethics
• Topics covered:
– Application and governing legislation
– Accuracy of representation
– Disclosure, comparisons, guarantees, and warranties
– Fulfillment practices
– Media-specific standards of
practice
– Product safety
– Marketing to children
– Protection of the environment
– Protection of personal privacy
– Enforcement procedures
Table 4.4
SPONSORSHIP MEDIUM
1ST AMPLIFY the Message
2nd AIM the Message
-marketers zero in on a “captured” TM
-minimizes inefficiencies of communication process
EFFECTIVE SPONSORSHIP
Serves 4 constituent groups
Business interest of Sponsoring Company
Best interests of Event & Participants
Positive impact on Sponsor’s direct
customers (dealers & retailers)
Benefit to Consumers who buy those products.
BUSINESS STRATEGIES & Sponsorship
1. Communicating
Sponsors communicate using sport as the communication medium
2. Targeting
Sponsorship effective for targeting clusters of consumers
3. Differentiating
“Image Enhancement” “Value Added” “Product Differentiation”
Gives Brand a unique & memorable attribute so it’s different from competitors
Villain Products – cigarette & alcohol use image enhancement
ADVANTAGES of SPONSORSHIP
1. CREATES IDENTITY
2. INCREASES SALES
3. PROMOTES business- to-business contacts
4. CONSTITUENT benefits
5. BUSINESS customers
“Interacting with consumers on an Emotional level”
Exposes people to product in environment encompassing their
lifestyle or aspiring lifestyle
OLYMPIC GAMES
SPONSORSHIP
•
•
•
•
One of world’s oldest & most respected Brands
Represents the best in amateur sport
Encourages global co-operation, peace & harmony
Captures spirit & enthusiasm of virtually every
nation
• Most recognized symbol (90% consumer
awareness)
Corporate Interests in the
Olympic Rings
•
•
•
•
•
•
Signature property
Community engagement
Employee engagement
Product/ service showcase
Media relations
Customer hospitality
Opportunities with Canadianhosted Games
As an emotional touch point, the Olympics
creates a unique set of circumstances for
companies to engage Canadians directly.
Vancouver Olympics 2010
Challenge is creating & sustaining high level of awareness
from the outset
Responsibilities of VANOC
To plan, organize, finance & stage the
2010 Winter Games
To protect the Olympic Brand in Canada
Has custodianship of Olympic & Paralympic Brands
The Olympic and Paralympic
Marks Act
Specifically protects Olympic Brand in
Canada (obligation to IOC)
Enables VANOC to protect exclusive rights
granted to its marketing partners
Ensures Canada is aligned with
International Community in granting special
protection for Olympic/Paralympic brand
THE EXCHANGE
• Official sponsors, licensees & government
partners significantly invest to ensure
successful staging of 2010 Winter Games
and funding to Canadian athletes
• Exclusive right to access marks, images, &
stories that make Olympic & Paralympic
Brand a sought after marketing tool
Ambush Marketing
Form of marketing used by certain
commercial bodies to capitalize on
“Goodwill of Olympic Movement” (+ the
Games & Athletes) without making the
financial investment required to secure
official sponsorship rights.
Protecting the Olympic Brand in
Canada
•
•
•
•
VANOC’s Infringement Assessment
Infringement of brand?
Misleading business association?
6 factors – factually accurate use, relevant use,
commercially neutral, undue prominence, use of
Olympic or Paralympic visuals, unauthorized
association