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Advertising Management

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Title: Advertising Management


1
Advertising Management
  • Message Decision
  • Generation
  • Evaluation Selection
  • Execution
  • Objectives setting
  • Communication
  • Sales
  • Budget Decisions
  • Affordable approach
  • of sales
  • Competitive parity
  • Objectives tasks
  • Advertising
  • Evaluation
  • Communicationimpact
  • Sales impact
  • Media Decision
  • Reach, frequencyimpact
  • Major media types
  • Specific media vehicles
  • Media timing

2
Advertising
  • Objectives
  • Consumer awareness - thinking vs. feeling
    products and central vs. peripheral routes to
    memory awareness needed for high involvement
    attitude needed for low involvement
  • Positive reinforcement after purchase
  • Exposure oriented objectives - reach and
    frequency

3
The Purpose of Advertising
  • To inform
  • To persuade
  • To remind

4
To Inform
  • Tell the market about a new product
  • Suggest new uses for a product
  • Inform the market of a price change
  • Explain how the product works
  • Describe available services
  • Correct false impressions
  • Reduce buyers fears
  • Build company image

5
To Persuade
  • Build brand preference
  • Encourage switching to your brand
  • Change buyers perception of product attributes
  • Persuade buyers to purchase now
  • Persuade buyers to receive a sales call

6
To Remind
  • Remind buyers that the product may be needed in
    the near future
  • Remind buyers where to buy it
  • Keep it in the buyers mind during off seasons
  • Maintain its top-of-mind awareness

7
Media Options - Direct Marketing
  • Purpose To reach a highly targeted group
    within a specific geography as
    cost-efficiently as possible.
  • Strengths
  • Targetability Specific groups by location,
    product usage, interests
  • Cost Controlling costs generally very low
  • Timing No outside media deadlines
  • Versatility Personalized conveyed detailed
    message
  • Reach All households
  • Measurement Response rate is easily measured
  • Environment Tangible saves consumer time

8
Media Definitions
  • Reach the number of different persons or
    households exposed to a particular media schedule
    at least once during a specified time period.
  • Frequency the number of times within the
    specified time period that an average person or
    household is exposed to the message.

9
Media Definitions
  • Gross Rating Points (GRP) the reach multiplied
    by the average frequency.
  • Cost Per Thousand the calculated cost it takes
    to reach one thousand people in the target
    audience from that media vehicle.

10
Media Definitions
  • Flighting calls for advertising for some period,
    followed by a hiatus with no advertising, and
    then followed by a second flight.Pulsing a
    continuos advertising at low weight levels
    reinforced periodically by waves of heavier
    activity. Pulsing draws upon the strength of
    continuous advertising and flights to create a
    compromise scheduling strategy.

11
Advertising Tests
  • An advertising testing program may include tests
    to assess
  • copy
  • media placement
  • budgeting
  • At the pre-introductory product testing stage,
    advertising testing will focus on copy tests.

12
Copy Tests Objectives
  • Does the copy achieve the objectives set out in
    the copy strategy?
  • Assess recall of ad(s)
  • Assess communication
  • Assess effect of ad(s) on attitudes toward the
    brand and the advertisement.
  • Assess impact on purchase intention.

13
Media Options - Direct Marketing
  • Purpose To reach a highly targeted group
    within a specific geography as
    cost-efficiently as possible.
  • Strengths
  • Targetability Specific groups by location,
    product usage, interests
  • Cost Controlling costs generally very low
  • Timing No outside media deadlines
  • Versatility Personalized conveyed detailed
    message
  • Reach All households
  • Measurement Response rate is easily measured
  • Environment Tangible saves consumer time

14
Direct Marketing (contd.)
  • Weaknesses
  • Consumer Avoidance Almost half of all mail
    gets thrown away unopened
  • Image Referred to as junk mail
  • Timing Bulk mail takes 3-10 days to be
    delivered
  • Cost Mailing costs continue to rise
  • Reach Difficult to get new customers.

15
Media Options - NEWSPAPER
  • Purpose A mass media used to reach adults
    35 with a complex, detailed message or to
    advertise product.
  • Strengths
  • Reach Large mass audience
  • Delivery Form Tangible
  • Prestige Traditional medium with wide
    acceptance somewhat targetable credible
    readers tend to have higher income education
    levels
  • Versatility Ad size and timing
  • Message Illustrations detailed message
  • Targetability Sections zone editions

16
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17
Media Options - RADIO
  • Purpose To reach a narrow target with
    frequency to build awareness.
  • Strengths
  • Frequency Top of the mind awareness low unit
    cost
  • Demographically Selective Combine age/sex and
    listening preferences to better target
  • Emotional One on one relationship
  • Timing Flexible message 24-hour air time
  • Cost Negotiable efficient low cost

18
RADIO (Contd..)
  • Weaknesses
  • Reach Cannot reach broad demographics
  • Clutter Mat be too many advertisers
  • Senses No visual

19
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20
Media Options - CABLE
  • Purpose Reach narrow target groups with
    single exposure in chosen geography. Able to
    build frequency.
  • Strengths
  • Growing Medium Increased subscribers
  • Frequency Top-of-the-mind awareness
  • Senses Includes both visual and audio
  • Cost Low local medium
  • Versatility Tie-in opportunities
  • Geographically Selective Customized to market
    area
  • Demographically Selective Target specific
    consumer groups

21
CABLE (Contd.)
  • Weaknesses
  • Reach Fragmented rural areas not wired
  • Clutter More commercial air time
  • Measurement Limited research

22
Mass Media - Outdoor Billboard
  • Purpose A mass reach medium designed to reach
    Adults 18 with a reminder or directional
    message.
  • Strengths
  • Cost Low
  • Reach Large mass audiences
  • Environment Size demands attention
    24-hours, 7 days a week
  • Frequency Highly visible
  • Versatility Target specific geography
    variety of messages

23
Billboards (Contd.)
  • Weaknesses
  • Environment Negative image no message detail
  • Availability Limited
  • Impact Minimal viewing low recall
  • Targetability Not efficient for small, narrow
    target audiences

24
Other Media Considerations
  • Yellow Pages
  • Evidence people look here
  • Costs for display ads may be quite high
  • Reduced reliance due to other information search
    tools (e.g., Internet)

25
Other Media Considerations
  • Telemarketing
  • Set outbound call objectives ahead of time
  • Motivate staff through direct incentives
  • Consider training staff on handling rejections

26
Other Media Considerations
  • Event Marketing
  • Helps build relationships
  • Examples
  • Sponsoring local sports teams
  • Running seminars on financial planning
  • No sales at time of event leads only.

27
Costs Television
  • Late News Spot (30 second spot)
  • - Large market 2,000 - 3,500
  • - Medium market 600 - 1,000
  • - Small market 200 - 400

28
Radio
  • Morning drive time (30 second spot)
  • - Large market 1,000 - 2,000
  • - Medium market 400 - 800
  • - Small market 50 - 200

29
Out-of-Home/Billboards
14 x 48 painted bulletin - Large market 8,000
- 12,000 per month - Medium market 1,500 -
3,000 per month - Small market 800 - 1,500
per month
30
Newspaper
Space is reserved on a column inch basis -
Large market 300 - 700 - Medium market 60 -
90 - Small market 10 - 50
31
Yellow Pages
32
Promotion
  • Designed to achieve an active response over a
    short period of time.
  • Has been increasing relative to advertising 57
    in 1981 in 1994 72 of A/P.
  • Trade and consumer promotion target different
    players.
  • Promotions can be offensive (trial) or defensive
    (Stove Top).
  • Promotion used to bridge trial gap.
  • Objectives Buy more, buy now, loyality, capture
    switchers, get nonuser trial, awareness and build
    image.

33
Promotion
  • Tracking - Pre-post anlysis with control
  • Trend analysis
  • Redemption rates
  • Payback analysis
  • Modeling - PROMOTER Basline volume vs. actual
    sales on promotion

34
Promotion
  • When do brands spend a lot.
  • Standard product
  • Many end users
  • Purchase amount is small
  • sales made through channels
  • Premium price
  • High contribution margin
  • Small market share

35
Promotion
  • Types of Promotions
  • Product based - bonus pack, sampling, onpack,
    inpack
  • Price based - sale, coupons, refunds, rebates,
    frquency, terms
  • Premiums
  • Displays
  • Games

36
Global Marketing
  • Moving from single country to dual country to
    regional to global increases complexity
  • Lots of opportunites to do dumb things
  • Clairol mMist Stick meant Manure Stick in
    Germany
  • Pepsis Come alive with the Pepsi generation
    was translatd into Pepsi brings your ancestors
    back from the grave in China
  • The Coca-Cola name in China was read as
    Ke-kou-ke-la meaning Bite the was tadpole
    later changed to Ko-kou-ko-le meaning happiness
    in the mouth.
  • In Italy Schweppes Tonic water was translated
    into Schweppes Toilet water

37
Phases of Global Marketing
  • Market extension (Intl is secondary)
  • PG, Poloroid, Whirlpool
  • Multi-domestic (Intl equal domestic)
  • Ford prior to 1996
  • Global (no difference Intl and domestic)
  • IBM, Coke, McDonalds
  • Global marketing forces companies to communicate
    and think globally.
  • Knowledge is centralized to some degree.
  • Less local autonomy
  • Global product teams
  • Global ad agency
  • High coordination across marekts
  • Systematically developing intermarket segments
  • Global cadre of managers cultural relativity

38
Global Segmentation
SES FORMATION (CLUSTERING OF FACTOR SCORES)
High Sweetness
C2
Segment 1
C1
A3
F2
7
Segment 4
E2
8
2
Segment 3
3
A3
A3
4
E1
5
Segment 2
C3
A3
A3
9
F1
Low Information Search
High Information Search
A2
A1
B1
D3
Segment 5
C1
F2
G2
G1
Low Sweetness
H3
39
Major Decisions in International Marketing
Deciding whether to go abroad
40
Internationalization Process
41
Challenges in Going Global
  • Shifting borders
  • Unstable governments
  • Foreign-exchange
  • Corruption
  • Technological pirating
  • Cultural differences

42
Five International Productand Promotion
Strategies
Dual adaptation
43
Five Models of EntryInto Foreign Markets
Indirect Exporting
Amount of commitment, risk, control, and profit
potential
44
Joint Venture
  • Licensing Sell rights to name brand.
  • Contract Manufacturing make item in host
    country manufacturer of product only.
  • Management Contracting hired as Mgmt.
    Consultant to host company
  • Joint Ownership truly partnering with a
    company in host country, to share expertise and
    mutual gains.

45
Marketing Organization
46
Five Product Levels
Core benefit
47
Product Mix
Width - number of different product lines
Length - total number of items within the lines
Depth - number of versions of each product
48
Product-Line Length
  • Line Stretching
  • Downmarket
  • Upmarket
  • Two-way
  • Line Filling
  • Line Modernization
  • Line Pruning

49
Two-Way Product-Line Stretch Marriott Hotels
50
An Overview ofBranding Decisions
51
Brand Strategies
New Brands
52
Good Brand Names
Distinctive
Lack Poor Foreign Language Meanings
Suggest Product Benefits
Suggest Product Qualities
Easy to Pronounce Recognize Remember
53
Why Package Crucial as a Marketing Tool
  • Self-service - usage eg. boil in bag
  • Company brand image - Leggs
  • Opportunity for innovation - Colgate pump
  • Point of sale impact - reaches the right people
    at the right time - Wine bottle

54
Labels
Promote
Describe
Identify
55
Categories of Service Mix
Tangible Good w/ Services
Major Service w/ Goods
Hybrid
56
Four Service Characteristics
Services
57
Overcoming Service Challenges
Services
58
Three Types of Marketingin Service Industries
59
Service-Quality Model
60
Determinants of Service Quality
  • Reliability
  • Assurance
  • Tangibles
  • Empathy
  • Responsiveness

61
Importance-Performance Analysis
14
62
ServiceExcellence
  • Strategic Concept
  • Top-Management Commitment
  • High Standards
  • Monitoring Systems
  • Satisfying Customer Complaints
  • Satisfying Both Employees Customers
  • Managing Productivity

63
Complaint Resolution
  • Excellent service recovery can increase loyalty
    (perfection not expected)
  • Hiring Criteria Training for Employees
  • Develop Guidelines for Fairness
  • Remove Complaint Barriers
  • Analyze Types Sources of Complaints

64
PLANNING, CREATING, AND DELIVERING SERVICES
Figure 1
CORPORATE OBJECIVES AND RESOURCES
RESOURCE ALLOCATION ANALYSIS
MARKET OPPORUNITY ANALYSIS
  • OPERATING ASSETS STATEMENT
  • What physical facilities
  • What equipment
  • What information and communications technology
  • What human resources (numbers and skills)
  • MARKET POSITIONING STATEMENT
  • What product(s)
  • With what distinguishing characteristics
  • To what target market segments
  • SERVICE OPERATIONS CONCEPT
  • Geographic Scope of Operation
  • Area(s) served
  • Single site versus multi-site
  • Facilities location
  • Telecommunications linkages
  • Scheduling
  • Hours/days/seasons of service
  • Continuous versus intermittent
  • If intermittent, what frequency
  • Facilities design and layout
  • Operating assets deployment
  • What task, Where, When
  • Leverage through intermediaries operating assets
  • Leverage through customers assets (partnerships
    and self-service)
  • Specific tasks assigned to front stage and
    backstage operations
  • SERVICE MARKETING CONCEPT
  • What customer benefits
  • Core product
  • Supplementary services
  • Service reliability levels
  • Accessibility (where and when)
  • At what cost
  • Money
  • Time
  • Mental effort
  • Physical effort

SERVICE DELIVERY PROCESS (See Figure 2)
65
SERVICE DELIVERY AND EVALUATION
Figure 2
SERVICE MARKETING CONCEPT
SERVICE OPERATIONS CONCEPT
  • SEVICE DELIVERY PROCESS
  • Sequencing of service delivery steps
  • what steps, in what order, where, when, and how
    quickly?
  • Extent of delegation
  • Should the firm take responsibility for all steps
    or delegate some to intermediaries?
  • Nature of contact between customers and provider
  • Customer comes to provider
  • Provider comes to customer
  • Arms length transactions
  • Nature of process
  • Customers served in batches
  • Customers served individually
  • Customers serve themselves (self-service)
  • Protocol for allocating limited capacity
  • reservations procedures
  • Queuing procedures
  • Imagery and atmosphere
  • Employee scripts and protocols
  • Variations in décor, lighting, and music
  • Performance Evaluation
  • By customers
  • By managers
  • By employees

66
Key Concepts in Services Positioning
  • Internal Company Analysis
  • Involvement of Functional Areas Especially
    Operations
  • Training in the Service Concept
  • More Segmentation Possible
  • Ex Amex
  • Temporal Separation and Physical Separation
  • Attributes
  • Experience Qualities
  • Credence Qualities Faith
  • Positioning, Choice Criteria and Preference
  • Communicating the Concept Symbols
  • Merrill Lynch Bullish
  • Allstate Good hands people
  • State Farm Like a good neighbor
  • Nationwide Is on your side
  • Prudential The rock
  • Fuzzy Positioning in Services Anti-Marketing

67
Asset Utilization and Yield Management
  • Service capacity is a function of resource
  • Human
  • Physical
  • Financial
  • Most services build a service delivery system
    with an inherent constraints on capacity
  • Disney - Wait times
  • Hotel - Number of rooms
  • Trains and airlines - Seats, schedules, vehicles,
    parts inventory, etc
  • FedEx - Planes, route drivers, etc
  • Service firms try to maximize Asset Revenue
    Generating Efficiency (ARGE)
  • ARGE Capacity Utilization X Actual
    Price/ Maximum Price
  • Or Total Revenue/ Maximum Revenue

68
Portfolio of Customers
  • Customers are not necessarily equally loyal,
    profitable or of equal status
  • Pacesetters, bread and butter, busywork
  • Understand price sensitivity and cost drivers
    (ABC)

69
Maximizing ARGE
  • Advance sales decisions
  • Divide capacity ahead of time and set targets
  • Groups and conventions
  • Allocate capacity over time by segment
  • Set ideal mix at different times of year
  • Set pricing guidelines and matrix
  • Rewarding the most valuable customers
  • Profit per customer changes over time ( increase
    purchases, reduce cost, referral, premium
    pricing)
  • Frequent users
  • Track usage
  • Be careful of perceptions of short-term advantage
    and ill-will

70
Relationship Marketing
71
Marketing Strategy - Growing Relationships
  • Customer value total revenue value of
    referrals and advertising - costs
  • On average it costs 5 times more to get a new
    customer than retain one
  • Ask which customers are the most valuable
  • Look at share of wallet not share of market

72
Marketing Strategy - Growing Relationships
  • Relationship marketing
  • Identify
  • Differentiate
  • Group
  • Relate

73
Identify Customers
  • Provide an incentive to customers to identify
    themselves and provide information
  • Define how you will use the information before
    launching the program
  • Train your contact people - make it easy to do
    and hard not to do
  • Collect information each time
  • Use information strategically to increase quality
    of the relationship (more loyalty, sales,
    referrals)

74
Differentiate Customers
  • Differentiate value
  • Most profitable customers (highest Lifetime
    value)
  • Best growth opportunity (most unrealized future
    value)
  • Unprofitable
  • Differentiate by needs
  • Desired service level - define value
  • Preferred contact method

75
Group
  • Define buckets of similar customers to make
    tailoring actionable
  • Blue collar locals with kids
  • Auto only singles
  • Profile each segment and define key elements to
    enhancing the relationship more loyal, more
    share of wallet, more referrals, more positive
    word of mouth

76
Relate
  • Organize to cater to individual needs
  • Use your knowledge of the customer to alter the
    way you treat the customer
  • Improve convenience
  • Provide a benefit
  • Increase confidence and assurance

77
Relate to Loyalize
  • Implementation of Frequency Marketing
  • Promote the program with all customers
  • Define how you will use the information before
    launching the program
  • Train the people in your office you are at key
    contact points - make it easy to do and hard not
    to do

78
Relate
  • How to Relate
  • Have an objective
  • Only ask once
  • Use the customers mode of interaction
  • Lead with the customer not a sale
  • Positive reinforcement of desired behaviors -
    referrals
  • Make sure the customer gets perceived value

79
Customer Lifetime Value
80
PR TOOLS
  • Written materials ( brochures, newsletters,
    pamphlets, research reports, magazines)
  • Tangiblize (Brochure)
  • Need internal communication
  • Quality imagemakes a statement
  • Doesnt work as stand alone tactic should have a
    role in overall marketing program
  • Consistent with positioning
  • Copy test before use
  • Customer oriented, not firm oriented
  • Examples
  • State farm outlook

81
  • Public Relations
  • Evaluating publics and executing programs to
    influence them
  • Communications Tool
  • Influence attitudes, behavior change secondary
  • Process
  • Identify relevant publics
  • measure image and attitudes
  • establish goals
  • develop tactics
  • evaluate results

82
PR Tools (Continued)
  • Web
  • Convenient way to provide information
  • Updating cost significant
  • An opportunity for relationship marketing
  • Identity Media
  • visual treatment of the brand to establish
    identity
  • Arthur Andersen Mahogany Doors
  • Public Service Activities
  • Enlightened self interest
  • Gifts, grants, pro bono service, free facilities
  • Ex McKinnsey Award, University Chairs, MDA

83
PR Tools (Continued)
  • Speeches
  • Influence/Impress large potential customer
  • News releases
  • Events
  • Sponsorship (ex Conf. Board)
  • Convert into PR New releases
  • News
  • Press Releases
  • Hire publicist contacts
  • News worthiness
  • Atmospherics
  • Buildings, Equipment, etc. (FedEx, Time AOL
  • Opportunity to establish image and brand
    recognition

84
Price - Quality Strategies
85
Setting Pricing Policy
1. Selecting the pricing objective
86
Types of Costs
Fixed Costs (Overhead) Costs that dont vary
with sales or production levels. Executive
Salaries Rent
Variable Costs Costs that do vary directly with
the level of production. Raw materials
  • Total Costs
  • Sum of the Fixed and Variable Costs for a Given
  • Level of Production

87
The Three Cs Modelfor Price Setting
Costs
Competitors prices and prices of substitutes
Customers assessment of unique product features
88
Some important pricing definitions
  • Utility The attribute that makes it capable of
    want satisfaction
  • Value The worth in terms of other products
  • Price The monetary medium of exchange.
  • Value Example Caterpillar
  • Tractor is 100,000 vs. Market 90,000
  • 90,000 if equal
  • 7,000 extra durable
  • 6,000 reliability
  • 5,000 service
  • 2,000 warranty
  • 110,000 in benefits - 10,000 discount!

89
Promotional Pricing
  • Loss-leader pricing
  • Special-event pricing
  • Cash rebates
  • Low-interest financing
  • Longer payment terms
  • Warranties service contracts
  • Psychological discounting

90
Psychological Pricing
  • Most Attractive?
  • Better Value?
  • Psychological reason to price this way?

Assume Equal Quality
91
Discriminatory Pricing Variables
92
Price-Reaction Program for Meeting a Competitors
Price Cut
Has competitor cut his price?
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