Chapter 17 Evans Berman
Chapter 17 Evans Berman
Chapter 17 Evans Berman
Joel R. Evans & Barry Berman Marketing, 10e: Marketing in the 21st Century
Chapter Objectives
To define promotion planning, show its importance, and demonstrate the value of integrated marketing communications To describe the general characteristics of advertising, public relations, personal selling, and sales promotion To explain the channel of communication and how it functions To examine the components of a promotion plan To discuss the global promotion considerations, and the legal environment and criticisms and defenses of promotion
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Word-of-Mouth Communication
Firms must identify and appeal to opinion leaders those who influence others decisions. Word-of-mouth communication is the process by which people express opinions and product-related experiences to others. Firms strive for sustained, positive word-of-mouth communication to enhance popularity and success.
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reach potential consumers. There is tactical consistency, whereby various promotion tools complement each other. There is interactivity with consumers, with messages better tailored to specific market segments. Every message positively influences the target audience. Promotion themes and differential advantages are understood by all employees who interface with the targeted audience. Advertising, public relations, sales, and sales promotion personnel cooperate with one another. Detailed data bases are maintained.
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Types of Promotion
Advertising Public Relations
PROMOTION MIX
Sales Promotion
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Personal Selling
Advertising
Advertising is paid, nonpersonal communication regarding goods, services, organizations, people, places, and ideas that is transmitted through various media by business firms, government and other nonprofit organizations, and individuals who are identified in the advertising message as the sponsor. The message is generally controlled by the sponsor.
Public Relations
Public relations includes any communication to foster a favorable image for goods, services, organizations, people, places, and ideas among their publics. It may be nonpersonal, personal, paid or non-paid, and sponsor controlled or not controlled.
Publicity is the form of public relations that entails nonpersonal communication passed on via various media but not paid for an identified sponsor.
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Personal Selling
Personal selling involves oral communication with one or more prospective buyers by paid representatives for the purpose of making sales.
Sales Promotion
Sales promotion involves paid marketing communication activities (other than advertising, publicity, or personal selling) intended to stimulate purchases and dealer effectiveness. Included are trade shows, premiums, incentives, giveaways, demonstrations, and other efforts.
Communication Factors
Source Encoding Message Medium Decoding Receiver Person, company Conversion to message Content & symbols
Personal or nonpersonal
Interpretation Message recipient Response/nonresponse Distractions preventing message delivery
Feedback
Noise
A Channel of Communication
* * * * * * * * *
Source
Encoding
Message
Medium
Decoding
Audience
Feedback
*
* *
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*
Noise
$40,000
Distributed promotion $10,000 $4,000
Massed promotion
Jan Feb Mar April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec
With a total promotion budget of $120,000, a hosiery manufacturer employs distributed promotion and spends $10,000 each month throughout the year. With the same budget, a toy maker uses massed promotions and spends $80,000 from November 1 through December 31 (the remaining $40,000 is spent over the other 10 months). In both cases, monthly promotion expenditures are linked to monthly sales.
Month
Promotion Objectives
Promotion objectives can be divided into two main categories: stimulating demand and enhancing company image. Product advertising Institutional advertising
Stimulating demand Enhancing company image
3.
Stimulate purchase and retain desires Develop positive attitudes and feelings
2.
1.
Provide information
1.
Provide information
Obtain consumer product recognition, then gain consumer knowledge of product attributes.
At the early stages of the model, when a good service is little known, primary demand should be sought. Primary demand is for a product category.
2.
Obtain favorable attitudes, then gain preference for the companys brand(s) over those of the competition. When preference is the goal, selective demand should be sought. This is demand for a particular brand.
3.
Obtain strong consumer preference, gain purchase of good or service, encourage continued purchases, and achieve brand loyalty.
Sometimes, organizations may try to sustain or revitalize interest in mature products and revert to a primary demand orientation.
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Incremental Method
A percentage is added to or subtracted from this years budget to determine next years.
Percentage-of-Sales Method
Promotion budget is tied to sales revenue.
Objective-and-Task Method
Firm sets promotion goals, determines the activities needed to satisfy them, and then establishes the proper budget.
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The market is small and concentrated, and organizational consumers are involved. The budget is limited or tailored to meet the needs of specific customers. Products are complex and expensive, and differential advantages are not obvious. Competitors stress it in their promotion mixes.
PROMOTION MIX
Promotion is the most heavily criticized area of marketing. Industry trade groups have campaigned to improve the overall image of promotion.
Chapter Summary
This chapter defines promotion planning, shows its importance, and demonstrates the value of integrated marketing communications. It describes the characteristics of advertising, public relations, personal selling, and sales promotion. It explains the channel of communication and how it functions. It examines the components of a promotion plan. It discusses global promotion considerations, the legal environment. and criticisms and defenses of promotion.
Copyright Atomic Dog Publishing, 2007