Title: Chapter 1 Introduction to Internet Marketing
1Chapter 1Introduction to Internet Marketing
2Learning objectives
- Evaluate the relevance of the Internet to the
modern marketing concept - distinguish between Internet marketing,
e-marketing, e-commerce and e-business - identify the key differences between Internet
marketing and traditional marketing - assess how the Internet can be used in different
marketing functions
3Questions for marketers
- How significant is the Internet as a marketing
tool? - How does Internet marketing relate to
e-marketing, e-commerce and e-business? - What are the key benefits of Internet marketing?
- What differences does the Internet introduce in
relation to existing marketing communications
models?
4The impact of the Internet
- Andy Grove, Chairman of Intel, one of the early
adopters of e-commerce, has made a meteorological
analogy with the Internet. He says - Is the Internet a typhoon force, a ten times
force, or is it a bit of wind? Or is it a force
that fundamentally alters our business? (Grove,
1996)
5The impact of the Internet
Organisation Sector Online contribution Overall turnover
Cisco B2B Networking hardware 90 19bn
Easyjet B2C Air travel 85 264m
Dell B2B, B2C Computers 48 25bn
Lands End Clothing B2C Clothing 11 1.3bn
Book Club Associates B2C Books 10 100m
Electrocomponents B2B Electronics 7 761m Group
Dominos Pizza B2C Food 3.4 76m
Tesco B2C Grocery 1.4 18.4bn
Thomas Cook B2C Travel lt1 1.8bn
6The Internets impact on you?
- How many of you have purchased something on the
Internet in the last 6 months? - How many times have you used the Internet as an
information source, before buying offline?
7Demand Internet access
Figure 2.13 Global variation in number of PCs per
hundred population and percent Internet access in
2000 Source ITU (www.itu.int)
8How does the Internet contribute to marketing?
- The definition of marketing by the Chartered
Institute of Marketing (http//www.cim.co.uk/)
is - Marketing is the management process responsible
for identifying, anticipating and satisfying
customer requirements profitability - Give examples of how the Internet (web and
e-mail) contributes to marketing
9What is e-marketing?
- E-marketing is
- Applying
- Internet and other digital technology
- (web, e-mail, wireless, iTV, databases)
- to
- acquire and retain customers
- (through a multi-channel buying process
- and customer lifecycle)
- by
- Improving customer knowledge, targeting,
- service delivery and satisfaction
10Example youve been tangoed
11E-business and e-commerce
- Define e-commerce
-
- What is the relationship between e-commerce and
e-business? -
12E-business and e-commerce
Figure 1.2 The distinction between buy-side and
sell-side e-commerce
13Relationship between e-commerce and e-business
Figure 1.3 Three alternative de?nitions of the
relationship between e-commerce and e-business
14Internet marketing contexts
Figure 1.4 Summary of transaction alternatives
between businesses and consumers
15Internet applications
Figure 1.5 Market and product strategic grid
16Example - Guinness
17Drivers
- Cost/efficiency drivers
- Increase speed of dispatch
- Reduce sales cost
- Reduce operating costs
- Competitiveness drivers
- Customer demand
- Range and quality of services offered
- Avoid losing market share
- Exploit new markets
18Example rswww.com
19Technology - addressing
- Common gTLDs are
- .com represents an international or American
company such as http//www.travelagency.com - .co.uk represents a company based in the UK such
as http//www.thomascook.co.uk/. - .ac.uk a UK based University (e.g.
http//www.derby.ac.uk) - .org.uk or .org are not for profit organisations
(e.g. www.greenpeace.org) - .net a network provider such as
www.freeserve.net.
20How it works - components
Figure 1.9 Infrastructure components of the
Internet
21How it works client/server
Figure 1.10 Information exchange between a web
browser and a web server
22How it works - HTML
Figure 1.11 Home page index.html for The B2B
Company in a web browser showing HTML source in
text editor
23Internet, intranet and extranet
Figure 1.12 The relationship between access to
intranets, extranets and the Internet
24Interactivity and intelligence
Figure 1.13 Summary of communication models for
(a) traditional media, (b) new media
25Individualisation
Figure 1.14 Summary of degree of
individualisation for (a) traditional media
(same message), (b) new media (unique messages
and more information exchange between customers)
26Integration
Figure 1.15 Channel requiring integration as part
of integrated e-marketing strategy
27Mixed-mode buying
- Figure 1.16 The role of mixed-mode buying in
Internet marketing
28Conversion marketing
Figure 1.17 A model of the Internet marketing
conversion process
29Conversion marketing - example
Figure 1.18 An example of the conversion process