The document provides an overview of various elements of promotion mix including advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, and public relations. It discusses objectives and strategies for each element as well as how they can be used together effectively. Key points covered include the AIDA model of promotion, types of advertising approaches and executions, and factors to consider when determining the appropriate promotion mix.
6. Push–and–Pull Strategies
Nature of the Product
Stage in the Product
Life Cycle
Target Market Characteristics
Type of Buying Decision
Available Funds
$ $ $
7. Identify the target audience
Determine objectives
Design communication (Message strategy
and creative strategy)
Select channels
Establish budget
Decide on media mix
Measure results
8. Promotion objectives should:
be measurable, concrete
be based on sound research, with a
well-defined target audience
be realistic
reinforce the overall marketing plan and
relate to specific marketing objectives
9. • Arbitrary Allocation
• All - You - Can - Afford
• Competitive Parity
• Percent of Sales
• Market Share
• Objective and Task
11. Determine the campaign objectives.
Make creative decisions. Make media decisions.
Evaluate the campaign.
12. Advertising Strategy
- Setting objectives
- Formulating budgets
- Creating ad messages
- Selecting ad media and vehicles
Strategy Implementation
Assessing Ad
Effectiveness
13. Informing
advertising makes consumers aware of new
brands, educates them about a brand’s
distinct features and benefits, and facilitates
the creation of positive brand images.
Influencing
Effective advertising influences prospective
customers to try advertised products and
service. Advertising influences primary
demand – creating demand for entire product
category.
14. Reminding and increasing salience
Advertising keeps a company’s brand fresh in
the consumer’s memory. When a need arises
that is related to the advertised product,
past advertising impact makes it possible for
the advertiser’s brand to come to the
consumer’s mind as a purchase candidate.
15. Adding value
Advertising adds value to brands by
influencing perceptions. Effective
advertising causes brands to be viewed as
more elegant, more stylish, more prestigious,
of higher quality and so on.
16. What is an effective advertising?
An effective advertising satisfies the following
consideration
- it must extend from sound marketing strategy
- Effective advertising must take the consumer’s
view.
“consumers don’t want to be bombarded with
ads – they want to be inspired by ideas that will
change their lives. Ads create transactions.
Ideas create transformations. Ads reflect our
culture, ideas imagine our future”
17. - Advertising must find a unique way to break
through the clutter.
- Good advertising should never promise
more than it can deliver.
- Good advertising prevents the creative idea
from overwhelming the strategy.
18. Most memorable advertisements make their
selling points in an entertaining, creative
fashion.
Creative ads share two features such as
originality and appropriateness.
20. Specify the key fact from the customer’s
viewpoint
State the primary problem, or advertising
issue, from brand management's perspective.
State the advertising objective
Implement the creative message strategy
Establish mandatory requirements
21. The key fact in an advertising strategy is a
single minded statement from the
consumer’s point of view that identifies why
consumers are or are not purchasing the
product, service or brand or are not giving it
proper consideration.
22. Extending from the key fact, this step states
the problem from the brand management’s
point of view. The primary problem may be
an image problem, a product perception
issue, or a competitive weakness.
23. This is a straightforward statement about
what effect the advertising is intended to
have on the target market.
24. Creative message strategy represents the
guts of the overall advertising strategy. The
creative platform for a brand is summarized
in a single statement called a value
proposition or positioning statement.
Implementing creative strategy requires;
- Defining the target market
- Identifying the primary competition
- Choosing the positioning statement
- Offering reasons why.
26. Making a superiority claim based on a unique
product attribute that represents a meaningful,
distinctive consumer benefit.
The translation of the unique product feature into a
relevant consumer benefit provides the USP.
The USP approach is best suited for a company with
a brand that possess a relatively lasting competitive
advantage.
USP style is the optimum creative technique,
because it gives the consumer a clearly
differentiated reason for selecting the advertiser’s
brand over competitive offerings
27. Brand image style involves psychosocial,
rather than physical differentiation.
Attempts to develop an image or identity for
a brand by associating the brand with
symbols.
This style is important for brand that
competes in product categories where there
is little physical differentiation and all
brands are relatively homogeneous.
28. Resonance advertising does not focus on
product claims or band images but rather
seeks to present circumstances or situations
that find counterparts in the real or imagined
experiences of the target audience.
29. Emotional advertising is the third form of
symbolically or experientially oriented
advertising.
30. The advertiser makes no attempt to
differentiate its brand from competitive
offerings or to claim superiority.
This strategy is most appropriate for a brand
that dominates a product category.
31. This approach is most often used by
advertisers in product or service categories
where there are few, if any, functional
differences among competitive brands.
32. Television stars, movie actors, famous athletes and
even dead personalities are widely used to endorse
products.
33. Humor is an effective method for attracting
attention to advertisement
Humor enhances liking of both the
advertisement and the advertised brand
34. The appeal to fear is especially effective as a
means of enhancing motivation.
35. People feel guilty when they break rules,
violate their own standards or beliefs, or
behave irresponsibly. Appeals to guilt are
powerful because they motivate emotionally
mature individuals to undertake responsible
action leading to a reduction in the level of
guilt.
36. Products such as soft drinks, alcoholic
beverages, cosmetics, automobiles and many
others use sex appeals in hopes of drawing
attention to advertisements and making their
sales pitch.
37. Advertisers directly or indirectly compare their
products against competitive offerings, typically
claiming that the promoted item is superior in one
or several important purchase consideration.
39. Animation
Slice of life
Dramatization
Testimonial
Authoritative
Demonstration
Fantasy
Informative
40. In recent years, animation in advertising has
increased due to the greater sophistication
of computer graphics programs.
Animation was originally a last resort
technique for advertisers who did not have
money to do a live commercial.
41. In slice of life commercials, advertisers
attempt to provide solutions to the everyday
problems consumers or business face. These
advertisements normally show common
things people experience, especially
problems they encounter. Then, the good or
service is made available to solve the
problem.
42. A dramatization is similar to slice of life
executional framework. It uses the same
format of presenting a problem then a
solution. The difference lies in the intensity
and story format. Dramatization uses a
higher level of excitement and suspense to
tell the story. A dramatization story normally
builds to a crisis point.
43. This is successful in business to business and
service sectors. When a customer in an
advertisement tells about a positive
experience with a product, this is a
testimonial.
A testimonial ad for a service simulates word
of mouth recommendations and enhance
company credibility.
44. An advertiser seeks to convince viewers that
a given product is superior to other brand.
Ads employ a physician, dentist, engineer or
chemist to state product’s advantages over
other products.
45. Advertisement using the demonstration
executional framework show how a product
works. A demonstration is an effective way
to communicate the attributes of a product
to viewers.
46. Fantasy executions are designed to lift the
audience beyond the real world to a make
believe experience.
Perfume and cologne industry use fantasy
execution.
47. Public relations involve a variety of programs
designed to promote or protect a company’s
image or its individual products.
49. A key ingredient in marketing campaigns,
consists of a collection of incentive tools,
mostly short term, designed to stimulate
quicker or greater purchase of particular
products or services by consumers or the
trade.
50. Type of buyer Desired results Sales promotion examples
Loyal customers Reinforce behavior, • Loyalty marketing programs,
People who buy your increase consumption, such as frequent-buyer cards
product most or all change purchase timing or frequent-shopper clubs
of the time • Bonus packs that give loyal
consumers an incentive to
stock up or premiums offered
in return for proofs-of-purchase
Competitor’s Break loyalty, persuade •Sampling to introduce your
customers to switch to your brand product’s superior qualities
People who buy a compared to their brand
competitor’s product • Sweepstakes, contests, or
most or all of the time premiums that create interest
in the product
Brand switchers Persuade to buy your • Any promotion that lowers the
People who buy a brand more often price of the product, such as
variety of products coupons, price-off packages,
in the category and bonus packs
• Trade deals that help make the
product more readily available
than competing products
Price buyers Appeal with low prices • Coupons, price-off packages,
People who or supply added value refunds, or trade deals that
consistently buy the that makes price less reduce the price of brand to
least expensive brand important match that of the brand that
would have been purchased
55. Personal Selling is more important if...
The product has a high value.
It is a custom-made product.
There are few customers.
The product is technically complex.
Customers are geographically concentrated.
Advertising/Sales Promotion is more important if...
The product has a low value.
It is a standardized product.
There are many customers.
The product is simple to understand.
Customers are geographically dispersed.
56. Traditional Personal Selling
Sell products (goods and services)
Focus on closing sales
Limited sales planning
Spend most contact time telling
customers about product
Conduct “product-specific” needs
assessment
“Lone-wolf” approach to the account
Proposals and presentations based
on pricing and product features
Sales follow-up focused on product
delivery
Relationship Selling
Sell advice, assistance, and counsel
Focus on improving the customer’s bottom line
Considers sales planning as top priority
Spend most contact time attempting to build a
problem-solving environment with the customer
Conduct discovery in the full scope of the
customer’s operations
Team approach to the account
Proposals and presentations based on profit
impact and strategic benefits to the customer
Sales follow-up is long term, focused on
long-term relationship enhancement