Title: Integrated Marketing Communications
1Integrated Marketing Communications
- John T. Drea
- Associate Professor of Marketing
- Western Illinois University
2Marketing Communication
- The process of sending and receiving
communication concerning marketing between buyers
and sellers - A two-way process.
- Promotion focuses on communication from sellers
to buyers, while marketing communication is a
more encompassing term.
3Push and Pull Strategies
- Push targeting channel members to get them to
carry a product. - attempt is to push the product through the
channel - usually involves trade promotions and personal
selling
4Push and Pull Strategies
- Pull targeting final consumers to get them to
demand a product, so channel members will need to
carry the product. - attempt is to use consumer demand to pull the
product through the channel. - advertising and consumer-directed sales promotion
(especially couponing) are common means of
implementing a pull strategy.
5Push and Pull Strategies
- In reality, most companies use a combination of
push and pull in their promotional strategies. - A product like Nicoderm gum is promoted through
push (samples to physicians, sales calls on
physicians) and pull (ads to final consumers)
6AIDA Model of Promotion
Attention
AIDA is a linear process You must capture
attention before you can develop interest,
interest must be developed before desire, etc.
Interest
Desire
Use the appropriate promotional tools Dont try
to do it all with one ad!
Action
7AIDA Model of Promotion
- AIDA - Attention, Interest, Desire, Action
- A linear, sequential process based on a
tripartite approach to attitude, in which we
believe that cognition precedes affect, which
precedes behavior. - AIDA is best applied to a promotional objective,
not to a single advertisement.
8AIDA Model of Promotion
- Step 1 Attention
- The first step is to create awareness, then
develop basic cognitive beliefs about the
product/service. - Advertising, public relations, or personal
selling can all be used to accomplish this. - What are the beliefs target market members should
have about your product? Is their existing
knowledge accurate?
9AIDA Model of Promotion
- Step 2 Interest
- The second step is to create positive feelings
toward the product/service through first
developing a liking for the brand, then
preference. - Advertising is effective at developing liking,
weaker at developing preference (selling and
public relations can play greater roles). - What like your product? What prefer your
product?
10AIDA Model of Promotion
- Step 3 Desire
- This is the formation of a purchase intention a
conviction by the consumer that is the brand they
should buy. - The issue here is to more someone from a
preference to an intention. - Increase value in the buyers eyes
- Sales promotion and personal selling are
particularly useful here.
11AIDA Model of Promotion
- Step 4 Action
- Purchase intention is not a purchase.
- Need to stimulate the buyer to take action.
- Possibilities Time sensitive offer, emphasis on
positive or negative reinforcement. - You must get buyers to perceive that there is
more value to action than inaction (ratio of
benefits to costs)
12Message and Media Strategies
- Message Strategy
- What is it you want the buyer to think/feel/do?
- Be specific How many people are expected to do
what? - Media Strategy
- What combination of media will you use to
accomplish the message strategy? - Be specific times, locations, good fit between
audiences and target market.
13Evaluating Media
- Newspapers
- Popular for local advertising
- Good reach
- Some selectivity
- Good for detail
- Not time based
- Poorer reproductions (than magazines)
- Clutter
14Evaluating Media
- Television
- Most powerful for images, memorable
- Selective but fragmented
- Time-based
- Expensive to produce and to air
- Can be time consuming to produce and schedule.
15Evaluating Media
- Radio
- Less selective but fragmented
- Inexpensive - low cost per thousand exposures
- Difficult for detailed products or those which
need to be seen. - Excellent for triggering images created by other
media. - May not have full attention of listener.
- Good for an interrupt to another destination.
16Evaluating Media
- Outdoor
- Low cost per exposure
- Good reproductions
- Poor at detailed messages
- Excellent for some direct, action-oriented
messages - Time-bound
- Excellent for triggering images created by other
media.
17Evaluating Media
- Point-of-Purchase (POP)
- Excellent for triggering action, especially for
impulse purchases. - Can lead to clutter.
- Works best when you can differentiate your offer
from others.
18Evaluating Media
- Magazines
- Can be broad or very selective.
- Excellent quality of reproductions.
- Higher cost per exposure (than newspapers)
- Fragmented
- Longer lead times
19Choosing Within a Medium
- Reach
- the number of target consumers exposed to an ad
at least once (usually during a four week period) - If there are 100,000 in the target market, and
60,000 see our ad at least once, our reach is
60,000. - Reach does not measure recall.
20Choosing Within a Medium
- Frequency
- The average number of times an individual is
exposed to a message (usually during a four week
period) - Avg. Freq. Total Exposures/Reach
- Question If 40,000 saw our ad three times and
20,000 saw our ad five times, whats our
frequency? - (40,000 x 3) (20,000 x 5)/60,000 3.67
21Choosing Within a Medium
- Gross Rating Points
- Reach x Frequency Gross Rating Points
- 60,000 x 3.67 220,000
- Cost per Thousand (CPM)
- the price of a single ad/the audience size
- If an ad cost 50,000 and was viewed by 24
million, whats the CPM? - 50,000/24,000,000 2.08 per thousand
22Consumer-Oriented Sales Promotions
- Coupons
- Rebates
- Samples
- Price-Offs (e.g.., price marked is 1 less than
SRP) - Bonus Packs (e.g., 25 more free!)
- Continuity Plans (buy 10 gallons, get next one
free!) - Contests and Sweepstakes
- The key is attracting people who would not have
bought without the promotion!
23Trade-Oriented Sales Promotions
- Buying Allowance cash for a certain quantity
purchased - Free Goods additional free product contingent
upon purchase of a minimum quantity - Promotion Allowance a payment contingent upon
the re-seller performing certain promotional
tasks - Count-Recount a payment for each item moved out
of inventory during a time period - Slotting Allowance a payment for a preferred
shelf space
24Trade-Oriented Sales Promotions (cont.)
- Cooperative Advertising Long-term contract in
which a manufacturer agrees to reimburse a
retailer for some expenses for promoting the
manufacturers products during a contract period - Push Money payment direct from the mfg. to the
retail sales representative for each product sold - Sales Contests Incentives for achieving sales
targets. Everyone must believe they can win! - Dealer Loaders A free item when purchasing a
minimum quantity (e.g., a rack, a display unit)
25Public Relations
- Four types of publicity
- News publicity
- Feature articles
- Product publicity
- Emergency publicity
- The power of public relations comes from its
believability through the news media.
26Thoughts on Smart Media Decisions...
- Use inexpensive media for cheap cognitive replays
of expensive messages - Retailers Use coop ad dollars whenever possible
- Ads burn-out faster when there is little learning
to be achieved. - Attention is the precursor to all in advertising.
27Thoughts on Smart Media Decisions...
- Use ad agencies
- Your ads must standout from others
- Be clear and know what you are trying to achieve
- Direct vs. indirect
- Communicate in advance what the campaign is
supposed to accomplish, and how its success will
be assessed.