Title: ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT SALES PROMOTION
1ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUTSALES PROMOTION
- BY
- Reshma Gala Jae-Yeon Joo
- Shawn Kline Amol Chopra
- MKTG-652
- Marketing Information Management Research
- Drexel University
2What is Sales Promotion?
- Sales Promotion consists of a diverse collection
of incentive tools, mostly short-term, designed
to stimulate quicker or greater purchase of
particular products or services by consumers or
traders.
3Purpose of Sales Promotion
- Yield faster, more measurable results in sales
- Stimulate consumer trial
- Attract new triers or brand switchers
- Reward loyal customers
- Increase repurchase rate of occasional users
- Enhance Brand Image (E.g.. Toro Snow Blowers)
4Two major categories of Sales Promotion
- Consumer Sales Promotion
- Directed to consumers of goods and service
- Trade Sales Promotion
- Directed to distributors and retailers
5Consumer Sales Promotion
- Objectives
- Obtaining trial and repurchase
- Increasing consumption of an established brand
- Defending current customers
- Enhancing advertising and marketing efforts
6Consumer Sales Promotion
- Sampling
- Give some quantity of product for no charge to
induce trial - Excellent way of inducing a trial of both new
brand and already established products - Could be costly
- Door-to-door sampling, sampling through the
mails, in-store sampling, on-package sampling,
demonstrating/sampling the products at a retailer
store
7Consumer Sales Promotion
- Coupons
- A certificate that entitles consumers to an
immediate price reduction when product bought - Most widely used and effective promotion
- Used for both new product trial and established
product - Costly only about 2 redeemed by consumers
- Distributed through media deliveries in
newspapers and magazines, direct mail, in or on
packages, in stores, and at point-of-purchase
8Consumer Sales Promotion
- Premiums
- An offer of an extra item of merchandise or
service either free or at a low price. An
incentive for purchase - High impulse value
- Consumers most preferred types of promotion
- With pack premium
- Free in-the-mail premium
- Self liquidating premium
9Consumer Sales Promotion
- Contests and Sweepstakes
- Contests consumers compete for prizes or money.
Winners are determined by judging entries against
some predetermined criteria. A purchase
incentive(requires proof of purchase) - Sweepstakes winners are determined purely by
chance. No need for proof of purchase - Both are effective ways of getting consumers
become involved with the brand by making the
promotion product relevant
10Consumer Sales Promotion
- Refunds and Rebates
- Offers to return some portion of product purchase
price with proof of purchase - Good in a way to get the information about
consumers who bought the products from mail-in
forms - Allow marketers to achieve a price reduction for
much less than in a direct price deal
11Consumer Sales Promotion
- Price Pack(price-off deal)
- Offers to consumers of savings off the regular
price of products, flagged on the label or
packaging - Reduced-price pack buy one get one free
- Banded pack two related products banded together
- Used by retailers as well to reduce its
inventories
12Consumer Sales Promotion
- Frequent Buyer Programs
- Promotions for loyal consumers
- Frequent flyer program
- Product Warranties
- Tie-in Promotions
- Cross Promotions
- Point of Purchase Display and Demonstrations
13Trade Sales Promotion
- Objectives
- Obtaining distribution and support for new
products - Maintaining trade support for established brands
- Encouraging retailers to display and promote
established brands - Building retail inventories
14Trade Sale Promotion
- Allowance
- Discount of deal offered to the retailer or
wholesaler to encourage them to stock, promote,
or display a manufacturers products - Buying allowances price reduction on merchandise
ordered during a fixed period - Promotional allowances performing certain
promotional or merchandising activities in
support of their products - Slotting allowances special allowance for
agreeing to handle new products
15Trade Sales Promotion
- Trade shows and Conventions
- Exhibitions or forum where manufacturers display
their products to current as well as prospective
buyers - Major opportunity to display and demonstrate
products, interact with customers, identify new
prospects, gather consumer and competitive
information and even write new orders - Big portion of annual promotion budget
16Trade Sales Promotion
- Sales Contests
- Aims at inducing the sales force or dealers to
increase their sales results over a stated
period, with prizes going to those who succeed - Sales Training program
- Provides sales training assistance to retail
sales people - Complex products like computer industries
17Trade Sales Promotion
- Free goods
- Offers of extra cases of merchandise to
intermediaries who buy a certain quantity or who
feature a certain flavor or size - Manufacturers might offer push money or free
specialty advertising items to retailers that
carry the companys name
18Major Decisions in Sales Promotion
- Establish Objectives
- Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Developing the Program
- Pretesting, Implementing and Controlling the
Program - Evaluate Results
19Major Decisions Establishing Objectives
- Objectives for Consumers
- Purchase larger size units
- Lead nonusers to trial
- Attract switchers from competing brands
- Objectives for the Sales Force
- Encourage support of new products
- Encouraging more prospecting
- Stimulate off-season sales
20Major Decisions Establishing Objectives
- Objectives for Retailers
- Carry new items in stock
- Carry a higher level of inventory
- Off-season buying
- Stock related items
- Offset competitive promotions
- Build brand loyalty
- Enter new retail outlets
21Major Decisions Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Consumer Promotion Tools
- Manufacturer Promotions
- Retailer Promotions
- Consumer-Franchise Building Promotions
- Non-Consumer-Franchise Building Promotions
22Major Decisions Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Manufacturer Promotions
- Rebates
- Gifts
- Special Trade-in Deals
- Retailer Promotions
- Price Cuts
- Feature Advertising
- Retailer Coupons
- Retailer Contests and Premiums
23Major Decisions Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Consumer-Franchise Building
- Reinforce consumers brand understanding
- Coupons
- Free samples
- Premiums (when related to product)
- Non-Consumer-Franchise Building
- Price-off packs
- Premiums (not related to product)
- Contests Sweepstakes
- Refunds
- Trade Allowances
24Major Decisions Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Consumers like promotions
- High Equity Brand Use Promotion
- Low Equity Brand Promos have no effect
- Utilitarian brand Use monetary promotion
- Indulgence brand Use non-monetary promotion
- Participation is dependent upon satisfaction with
retailers - Source Northwestern University Study as cited
in PRIMEDIA Business Magazine
25Major Decisions Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Trade Promotion Tools
- Higher portion of promotion allocation
- Rationale
- Persuade retailer/wholesaler to carry brand
- Persuade retailer/wholesaler to carry more units
- Encourage retailers to promote brand
- Stimulate retailers to push product
26Major Decisions Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Examples of Trade Promotion Tools
- Price-off
- Allowance (advertising/display)
- Free Goods
27Major Decisions Selecting the Appropriate Tools
- Sales Force/Major Business Promotion Tools
- Trade Shows Conventions
- Sales Contests
- Specialty Advertising
28Major Decisions Developing the Program
- Integration of various tools
- Factors
- Size of Incentive
- Conditions for Participation
- Duration
- Distribution
- Timing
- Total Sales-promotion Budget
29Major Decisions Pretesting, Implementation
Control
- Pretesting is important to ensure efficacy of
promotion tools - Implementation
- Lead time preparation prior to launch
- Sell-in time begins with promotional launch and
ends when 95 of merchandise is distributed to
consumers
30Tools used to evaluate Sales Promotion
- Sales data
- Consumer surveys
- Experiments
- Regression Analysis
- Choice and Purchase Timing Models
- Time Series Analysis
31Evaluation of Sales Promotion
- Brand switching
- Repeat purchasing
- Purchase acceleration
- Category expansion
32Experiments Sales Promotion
- Time Series Quasi-Experiments
- Sales are observed for some period of time, a
promotion is then introduced and sales are
observed both during and after the promotion - The observation could be on a panel of customers,
one or more cities or even one or more stores
33Experiments Sales Promotion
- Two-Group Pre-Post Experiments
- The experiment is conducted on 2 groups
- Groups are randomly assigned to experimental
units such as stores - The units have same characteristics, so that any
unusual event if occurs, will occur in both units - Sales promotion is done in these units and
results are measured
34Experiments Sales Promotion
- Experiments involving more than one variable
- Randomized Blocks Dividing the units into
different groups and then studying them - Latin Squares
- Full and Fractional Factorials
35Sales Promotion Regression Analysis
- Regression Analysis can be applied on the data
collected for analyzing Sales Promotion. - The dependent variables can be brand sales,
category sales or even market share - The independent could be various promotions like
features, deals, price, display, coupons and such
36Choice and Purchase Timing Models
- Choice Models
- focus on the individual consumer and modeling her
choice behavior - used to understand carry-over effects and
heterogeneity in deal response - focuses on which brand is purchased
- Purchase models
- used to analyze stockpiling behavior
- focuses on when a brand is purchased
- Combination used to understand sources of volume
37Sales Promotions Time Series Analysis
- Techniques designed to examine data that evolve
over time - Univariate time series analysis predict value
of sales as a function of previous sales - Transfer function analysis starts with
univariate time series and then adds independent
variables such as promotions - Intervention analysis similar to transfer
function analysis, but is particularly suited to
the analysis of promotions. - Promotions are viewed as short term pulses
intervening with the normal progression of
sales time series
38Examples
- Micromarketing An Individual Approach
Pharmaceutical Executive (Dec 2001) - Computing power of today's PC enables marketers
to conduct analysis that were unthinkable just a
few years ago, creating exciting new ways to
approach and track promotions
39Examples
- Evaluating Promotions in Shopping Environments
Decomposing Sales Response into Attraction,
Conversion, and Spending Effects Marketing
Science Vol.20, No.2, Spring 2001 - Proposes a framework that incorporates attraction
effects, conversion effects and spending effects
and examines the influence of sales promotions on
store performance - Price promotion
- have little impact on front traffic, but
positively effects store entry and likelihood
that a consumer will make a purchase - The effect on consumers spending in a store is
also significant, but varies in sign with the
promotion employed - Promotions with greater scope enhances store
entry, promotions with narrow scope seem to have
negative impact on store traffic
40Challenges for Sales Promotions
- Marketers are becoming too dependent on using
sales promotion to produce short-term or
immediate increases in sales - Companies are investing in sales promotion at the
expense of advertising and thus not building the
long-term value of the brand franchise - Brands are losing their perceived value from the
perspective of consumers when they are purchased
because of a promotional offer - Consumers focus more on the promotion than the
product. In fact, sometimes consumers are not at
all loyal to the product but are attracted to the
coupon, gift, or rebate
41Challenges for Sales Promotions
- Challenges with Trade Promotion
- Difficult to police retailers
- Forward buying
- Diverting
- No legal binding on retailers
- Difficulty in monitoring retailers (as regards to
advertisement regarding the deals)
42Challenges for Sales Promotions
- Coupons consumer delays purchases
- Deals reduce perceived product value and delay
in purchase - Premiums consumers buy for premium not for
product - Contests requires creative or analytical
thinking - Sweepstakes sales drop after sweepstakes
43Challenges for Sales Promotions
- Samples high cost for companies
- Continuity program high cost for companies
- Point-of-purchase display hard to get retailer
to allocate high-traffic space - Rebates easily copied steal sales from future
reduce perceived product value - Product placement little control over
presentation of product
44Examples
- Too Much Information Supermarket Business
February 15, 2000 - Only 15 of the manufacturers surveyed indicate
that retailers frequently share data with them. - Main reason for the lack of openness include
privacy issues, questions regarding the benefits
of such relationship, and the lack of structured
or established sharing program - Knowing who the retailers consumers are and what
theyre buying is only a small piece of puzzle.
Understanding who they are is the real challenge
45Examples
- Battery ads run low Price battle saps dollars
from category advertising budgets.
Advertising Age, May 6, 2002 - Example of Duracell, which cut ad-spending by 38
while increasing promotion, in response to steep
deals started in1999 by its rivals. But, at the
end of the fourth quarter they realized that
despite a 6 gain in unit volume, dollar sales
fell 3
46Examples
- Do We Care What Others Get ? A Behaviorist
Approach to Targeted Promotions Journal of
Marketing Research (Aug 2002) - Increase in use of targeted promotions- the
practice of offering different prices to
prospective and present customers - Consumer preference affected not just by prices
the consumers are offered, but also by prices
available to others - Amazon was target promoting, but it stopped doing
that as soon as customers started complaining
about charging different prices to different
customer.
47Current Trends in Sales Promotion
- Increase in share of sales promotion as part of
marketing budget - Did you know that a decade ago, the
advertising-to-sales-promotion ratio was 6040? - Today, in many consumer goods companies, sales
promotion accounts for 65 to 75 of the combined
budget!
48Current Trends in Sales PromotionSAMPLING
- Sampling 1.2 million industry
- Point-of-sweat sampling UNILEVER is getting
aerobics instructors at Ballys Fitness Clubs to
hand out Dove body wash, deos and face cloths to
perspiring students. - Point-of-thirst sampling Beverage companies
doling out cold drinks on hot days. Starbucks
recently had its chill patrol handing out
frozen Frappuccino samples and two-for-one
coupons on a hot summer afternoon in Manhattan.
49Current Trends in Sales Promotion SAMPLING
- Point-of-dirt sampling Stain remover and hand
cleansing companies snaring consumers at mall
food courts. - Point-of-relief sampling Dr. Scholls bestowing
blister treatment cushions to runners at the
Chicago Marathon. - Today, precision is needed to determine what,
where and how you deliver samples.
50Current Trends in Sales PromotionEXPERIENTIAL
MARKETING
- Sampling agencies reinventing themselves to
provide a brand experience. - Using interactive elements to communicate with
the market. - Ex Adidas used street theatre and discount
coupons to create a brand experience. - Ex Marks and Spencer used live models as
mannequins to display womens lingerie and had
store employees to hand out discount coupons to
passers-by.
51Current Trends in Sales PromotionBUZZ MARKETING
- Using sales promotion to create a buzz about the
brand. - Flashier promos, bigger budgets
- Ex Pepsi negotiating 35 million promo deal that
would award winner a ride on Russian Soyuz space
shuttle.
52Current Trends in Sales PromotionBUZZ MARKETING
- Uncle Ben offering consumers an interactive
round-the-world trip on simulated plane before
trying out recipes.
53Current Trends in Sales PromotionDISCOUNTING
- Discounting becoming popular tool post Sept.
11th. - Sharp drop in sales of full-price retailer,
cancellation of orders and bulging inventories. - Ex Ralph Lauren suits scaled down from 450 to
169.98 - Ex K2 inline skates selling for 65 at Sams
Club instead of 130
54Current Trends in Sales PromotionTARGETED
PROMOTIONS
- Proving different prices to prospective and
present customers. - Ex Amazon.com selling the same DVD movies for
different prices to different customers. - Ex Telephone companies offering lucrative
bonuses to potential switchers. - Internet provides ideal medium for targeted
promos to thrive.
55Current Trends in Sales Promotion IMC
- Emphasis on integrating marketing communications
tools to take advantage of combined effects. - Advertising, direct-mail, sales promotion, public
relations and personal selling. - To create a consistent brand image and long term
relationship with the consumer. - IMC is not an option, but a requirement.
56THANK YOU!
57References
- Battery ads run low Price battle saps dollar
from category advertising budget Advertising
Age, May 6, 2002 (Slide 45) - Too much information Super Market Business
February 15, 2000(Slide 44) - Evaluating promotions in shopping environments
Decomposing sales response into attraction,
conversion, and spending effects Marketing
Science, Vol. 20, and No.2. Spring 2001 ( Slide
39) - Do we care what others get? A behaviorist
approach to targeted promotions Journal of
Marketing Research (August 2002) (Slide 46, 54) - Micromarketing an individual approach
Pharmaceutical Executive (December 2001) (Slide
38)
58References
- http//www.campbell.edu/faculty/martine/cadv/files
/TP/TP_10.html (Slide 4-17, 40) - "Higher Learning," - PRIMEDIA Business Magazines
Media (Apr-02) - "Promotion-related research spending rose 1 in
2001," - - PRIMEDIA Business Magazines Media
(Apr-02) (Slide 24) - Fast Casual Dining Ahead Bob Sperber Brandweek,
NY Sept 2, 2002 Vol.43. Iss.31 pgs.16, 4
(Slides 48, 49) - Spending hits a wall Joanna Breitstein
Pharmaceutical Executive, Eugene Sept 2002
Vol.22, Iss.9 pgs 64, 4 (Slides 48, 49, 52) - Evaluation is key to road show success Robert
McLuhan Marketing, London Aug 22 pg.39, 1
(Slides 50, 51, 52)
59References
- When Free Samples Become Saviors
Point-of-Sweat, Point-of-Thirst Marketing Offers
Freebies When They Are Most Needed By Geoffrey
A. Fowler Wall Street Journal, New York, NY.
Aug 14, 2001 Eastern edition pg B.1 (Slide 48,
49) - Taking the Free Out of Free Samples Cosmetic
Makers Get Stingy With Makeup Giveaways How to
Get Them Anyway By Sarah Ellison Wall Street
Journal, New York, N.Y. Sept 25, 2002 Eastern
edition pg. D.1 (Slides 48, 49, 54) - As Sales Slow, Bargains Pile Up Full Price
Stores Scale Back, Discounters Ask, Anyone For
64 Inline Skates? By Erin White and Ann
Zimmerman Wall Street Journal, New York, N.Y.
Oct 8, 2001 Eastern Edition pg A.15 (Slide 53)
60References
- What do excellent service promoters do
differently? Kim Shyan Fam The service
Industries Journal, London Oct 2001 Vol. 21,
Iss.4 pg. 1, 16 pgs (Slide 55) - Pepsi wants a ride on Russian rocket Hillary
Chura Electronic Media, Chicago Sept 23, 2002
Vol. 21, Iss.38 pg.4 (Slide 51) - "Ad Specialties Are Profitable Additions,"
www.bfis.com (General) - "Premium advice IT's better to give to your
customers than receive," - Memphis Business
Journal (General) - Sales Promotion Concepts, Methods Strategies
by Robert C. Blattberg and Scott A. Neslin (Slide
32-37) - Marketing 5 Lamb, Harir, McDaniel,
South-Western College Publishing, page 570 576
(Slide 4-17) - Marketing Management by Kotler, 10th Edition
(Slide 18-23, 25-29, 30,31)