ADVERTISING AND SALES PROMOTION Final Ass.
ADVERTISING AND SALES PROMOTION Final Ass.
ADVERTISING AND SALES PROMOTION Final Ass.
INTRODUCTION
Adverting is only one element of the promotion mix, but it often
considered prominent in the overall marketing mix design. Its high visibility
and pervasiveness made it as an important social and encomia topic in Indian
society.
Promotion may be defined as “the co-ordination of all seller initiated
efforts to set up channels of information and persuasion to facilitate the scale of
a good or service.” Promotion is most often intended to be a supporting
component in a marketing mix. Promotion decision must be integrated and co-
ordinated with the rest of the marketing mix, particularly product/brand
decisions, so that it may effectively support an entire marketing mix strategy.
The promotion mix consists of four basic elements. They are:-
1. Advertising
2. Personal Selling
3. Sales Promotion, and
4. Publicity
When customers were finally attracted to the store and satisfied with the
service at least once, they were still subjected to competitive influences;
therefore, the merchant’s signs and advertisements reminded customers of the
continuing availability of his services. Sometimes traders would talk to present
and former customers in the streets, or join social organizations in order to
have continuing contacts with present and potential customers.
As the markets grew larger and the number of customers increased, the
importance of attracting them also grew. Increasing reliance was placed on
advertising methods of informing about the availability of the products. These
advertising methods were more economical in reaching large numbers of
consumers. While these advertising methods were useful for informing and
reminding and reminding, they could not do the whole promotional job. They
were used only to reach each consumer personally. The merchant still used
personal persuasion once the customers were attracted to his store.
The invention of hand press increased the potentialities of advertising. By
Shakespeare’s times, posters had made their appearance, and assumed the
function of fostering demand for existing products. Another important event was
the emergence of the pamphlet as an advertising medium. The early examples of
these pamphlets disclose their sponsorship by companies want to generate
goodwill for their activities. The low cost of posters and handbills encouraged a
number of publishers to experiment with other methods.
DEFINITION OF ADVERTISISNG
The word advertising originates from a Latin word advertise, which
means to turn to. The dictionary meaning of the term is “to give public notice
or to announce publicly”.
Importance of Advertising
Generally, advertising is a relatively low-cost method of conveying
selling messages to numerous prospective customers. It can secure leads for
salesmen and middlemen by convincing readers to request more information
and by identifying
outlets handling the product. It can force middlemen to stock the product by
building consumer interest. It can help train dealers salesmen in product uses
and applications. It can build dealer and consumer confidence in the company
and its products by building familiarity.
Advertising is to stimulate market demand.
While sometimes advertising alone may succeed in achieving buyer
acceptance, preference, or even demand for the product, it is seldom solely
relied upon. Advertising is efficiently used with at least one other sales method,
such as personal selling or point-of-purchase display, to directly move
customers to buying action.
Advertising has become increasingly important to business enterprises –
both large and small. Outlay on advertising certainly is the voucher. Non-
business enterprises have also recognized the importance of advertising. The
attempt by army recruitment is bases on a substantial advertising campaign,
stressing the advantages of a military career. The health department
popularizes family planning through advertising Labour organizations have
also used advertising to make their viewpoints known to the public at large.
Advertising assumes real economic importance too.
C. Institutional Advertising
D. Product Advertising
A. Pioneering Advertising
B. Competitive Advertising
C. Retentive Advertising
i. Pioneering Advertising:
This type of advertising is used in the introductory stages in the life cycle
of a product. It is concerned with developing a “primary” demand. It conveys
information about, and selling a product category rather than a specific brand.
For example, the initial advertisement for black – and – white television and
colour television. Such advertisements appeal to the consumer’s emotions and
rational motives.
3. Functional Classification
Advertising may be classified according to the functions which it is
intended to fulfill.
(i) Advertising may be used to stimulate either the primary demand or the
selective demand.
(ii)It may promote either the brand or the firm selling that brand.
(iii) It may try to cause indirect action or direct action.
B. Industrial Advertising
Industrial executives have little confidence in advertising. They rely on
this form of promotion merely out of fear that their competitors may benefit if
they stop their advertising efforts. The task of the industrial advertiser is
complicated by the multiple buying influence characteristics like, the derived
demand, etc. The objectives vary according to the firm and the situation. They
are:
v To inform,
v To bring in orders,
v To induce inquiries,
v To get the advertiser’s name on the buyer’s list of sources,
v To provide support for the salesman,
To reduce selling costs,
v To help get items in the news column of a publication,
v To establish recognition for the firm or its product,
v To motivate distributors,
v To recognition for the firm or its products,
v To motivate distributors, to create or change a company’s image,
v To create or change a buyer’s attitude, and
The basic appeals tend to increase the rupee profits of the buyer or help
in achieving his non-monetary objectives. Trade journals are the media most
generally used followed by catalogues, direct mail communication, exhibits,
and general management publications. Advertising agencies are much less
useful in industrial advertising.
5. Trade Advertising
A. Retail Advertising
B. Wholesale Advertising A.
Retail Advertising
This may be defined as “covering all advertising by the stores that sell
goods directly to the consuming public. It includes, also advertising by
establishments that sell services to the public, such as beauty shops, petrol
pumps and banks.”
Advertising agencies are rarely used. The store personnel are usually
given this responsibility as an added task to be performed, together with their
normal functions. The result is that advertising is often relegated to a secondary
position in a retail store. One aspect of retail advertising is co-operative
advertising. It refers to advertising costs between retailers and manufacturers.
From the retailer’s point of view, co-operative advertising permits a store to
secure additional advertising that would not otherwise have been available.
B. Wholesale Advertising
Wholesalers are, generally, not advertising minded, either for themselves
or for their suppliers. They would benefit from adopting some of the image-
making techniques used by retailers – the need for developing an overall
promotional strategy. They also need to make a greater use of supplier
promotion materials and programmes in a way advantageous to them.
C. Local advertising
It is generally done by retailers rather than manufacturers. These
advertisements save the customer time and money by passing along specific
information about products, prices, location, and so on. Retailer advertisements
usually provide specific goods sales during weekends in various sectors.
1. Situation Analysis
It involves an analysis of all important factors operating in a particular
situation. This means that new research studies will be undertaken on company
history and experience.
AT&T, for example, developed a new strategy for its long-distance
telephone services – based on five year of research. The research encompassed
market segmentation studies, concept testing, and a field experiment. The field
experiment increased on testing a new advertising campaign called “Cost of
Visit”. An existing “Reach Out” campaign although successful, did not appear
to get through to a large group of people who had reasons to call but were
limiting their calls because of cost. Research based on annual surveys of 3,000
residential telephone users showed that most did not know the cost of a long-
distance call or that it was possible to make less expensive calls in off-peak
periods.
Five copy alternatives were subsequently developed and tested, from
which “Cost of Visit” was chosen. This campaign was credited with persuading
customers
to call during times that were both cheaper for them and more profitable for
AT&T and, overall, was more effective that the “Reach Out” campaign. One
estimate was that by switching 530 million in advertising from “Reach Out” to
“Cost of Visit”, an incremental gain in revenue of $22 million would result in
the first year and would top $100 million over five years.
This example highlights that a complete situation analysis will cover all
marketing components and involve finding answers to many questions about the
nature and extent of demand, competition, environmental factors, product,
costs, distribution, and the skills and financial resources of the from.
brand now has, what shares its competitors have, what share of a market is
possible, from which competitors the increased share of a market is possible?
The planner also has to be aware of the relative strengths and weaknesses of
the different competing companies and their objectives in the product category.
It is important to look at competition as a precursor to the planning process.
The Advertising Plan
As pointed out earlier, advertising plan and decision making focus on three
crucial areas; objectives and target selection, message strategy and tactics, and
media strategy and tactics. Let us elaborate on these points:
EXTERNAL FACTORS
The external factors in the planning framework are environmental, social
and legal considerations. To a considerable extent, these exist as constraints on
the development of an advertising plan and decision making. In developing
specific advertisement, there are certain legal constraints that must be
considered. Deceptive advertising is forbidden by law. What is deceptive is
often difficult, because different people can have different perceptions of the
same advertisements. Thus, an advertiser who attempts to provide specific,
relevant information must be well aware of what constitutes deception in a
legal and ethical sense and of other aspects of advertising regulation.
Even more difficult consideration for people involved in the advertising
effort is broad social and economic issues as stated below.
Ø Does advertising raise prices or inhibit competition?
Ø Is the use of sex or fear appeals is appropriate? Women and minority
groups are exploited in advertising by casting them in highly stereotyped
roles.
Ø Is it more irritating than entertaining?
Ø Is an intrusion into an already excessively polluted environment?
Ø Advertising directed at children.
Advertiser and the Advertising Agency interface
From a situation analysis point of view, the advertiser needs to know what
kinds of facilitating agencies exist and the nature of the services they provide.
From a planning point of view much local advertising is done without the
services of an advertising agency or a research supplier. On the other hand, a
national advertiser may have under contract many different agencies and
research suppliers, each serving one or more brands in a product line. Many
advertising decisions involve choosing facilitating agency alternatives.
What advertising agency should be chosen?
What media should be used?
What copy test supplier will be best for our particular situation?
Concerning the question of agency selection, characteristics such as the
quality of personnel, reputation, integrity, mutual understanding, interpersonal
compatibility and synergism were very important.
Advertising Industry
The advertising industry consists of three principal groups:
(a) Sponsors;
(b) Media ; and
(c) Advertising agencies or advertising departments.
Advertising agencies are of two basic types, viz., Independent; and
House.