Marketing Strategies
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Transcript Marketing Strategies
Marketing Strategies
What is a strategy?
The method selected to carry out
a carefully devised plan of action
TO ACHIEVE A SPECIFIC GOAL
Marketing Plan
Consists of the company’s marketing
goals and the marketing mix formula
for achieving them
Examples of goals
To introduce a new product or
service
To gain interest in a cause
To promote an idea
Specific ways that they will meet
these goals are called TACTICS
Marketing Strategy
Outlines how the company will carry
out the marketing plan
2 main kinds:
1. Brand Strategy
2. Distribution Strategy
Brand Strategies
Primary goal is to communicate the
value of a product or service (P/S) to
the consumer
VALUE: the difference between the
perceived cost of the product and
the perceived satisfaction gained
from the product
Value Equation
TOTAL BENEFITS – TOTAL COSTS
If the cost outweighs the benefits,
the consumer won’t buy it.
Brand strategies develop and
communicate the benefits of the
brand, minimize the costs, and
encourage the consumer to set up a
positive value equation
EXAMPLE: TRIP TO
BARBADOS
Brand Strategy cont..
Marketers strive to either:
1. add benefits to the product (new
flavours, green-friendly) or
2.reduce the costs (lower prices, more
convenient distribution)
Activity – G/S
BMW X5
Toys ‘R Us
Cell Phone
Costco
MacLean’s
Magazine
Theatre ticket
GQ Magazine
iPod
Distribution Strategy
Focuses on the best way to
deliver a P/S to the target market.
3 ways:
Push
Pull
Combination
Push
Consumers buy P/S every day
that haven’t been on their minds.
Generic products, non-branded
products or unknown brands
Bought because a bargain, a gift
or on impulse
Push
Push Strategy: sells the product
to retailers, importers or
wholesales, and not to end use
consumers
Push Reasoning
If the product is out there where
consumers can see it, they will
buy it
Companies rely on the retailer to
display the product and sell it to
the customers who come into the
store.
Push strategy requires the
marketer to focus all of the
promotional activities on the
distributor
Need buying incentives:
promotional discounts, prizes, display
fixtures, product-knowledge seminars
Example
How many of you have candles in
your home?
What brand?
Candle-lite Candles
Glade Candles
Concord Candles
Scentsations
Candles
Yankee Candles
Canadian Candles
Waxman Candles
Upper Canada
Candles
Colonial Candles
Doozy Candles
Party-lite Candles
Pull Strategy
What people usually think of when
they think of marketing
Attempts to increase consumer
demand directly, rather than rely
on retailers to sell the product
Pull
Manufacturers try to convince
consumers that they need their
product, and that they should look
for it by name when they go
shopping.
Pull
Requires major advertising and
promotional effort.
Many believe this strategy is the
most important or most useful
marketing strategy.
Combination
The pull strategy is difficult to use
alone
Requires distribution partners
(usually retailers) to fulfill the
demand created by the
manufacturer.
The push strategy needs no
partnership with the consumer
Combination
The pull strategy needs to
combine with the push strategy to
optimize effectiveness
Homework
Prepare an inventory of several
different items in one room of your
home. Which of these items was
purchased because of a
marketer’s pull strategy? Which
items are in the room because of a
push strategy?