Title: Marketing Communications in Interactive Environments
1Marketing Communications in Interactive
Environments
- On and Offline Synergies in Marketing
Communications
Kalyan Raman Loughborough University,
Leicestershire, UK University of Michigan in
Flint New York University May 7, 2004
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3Emergence of Integrated Marketing Communications
(IMC)
- Practice of advertising
- shift in budgets from advertising to promotion
- proliferation of media
- fragmentation of audience
- Pedagogy of advertising
- textbooks in 1990s incorporate IMC in their
titles or sub-titles - leading Universities offer new courses and
degrees in IMC - http//www.medill.nwu.edu/imc/
4The Broader Relevance of IMC
- Integral Component of Marketing Program
- Customer Relationship Management
- Building Relationships
- Accountability
- Supply Chain Management
- Communications between supply chain
participants - essential to avoid Bullwhip Effect
5Media Landscape
Salesperson
Addressable
Tele-marketing
Direct
Ancillary
Mass
One-way Message
Two-way Time Lag
Two-way Instant
6All Media Not Alike
- Primary Media
- Attains main objectives
- high reach, build awareness
- Assumed to be more effective (than ancillary
media)
- Ancillary Media
- Supporting Role
- PR, Event sponsorships
- Packaging
- Internet
- Assumed to be less effective
7Multi-media Communications
8Cross-media Synergy
9Examples of cross-media synergy
- Dodge Minivan Monsters
- Burger King Homer Simpson
- Revlon Bond Girl
- Camry Steve Young
- J B Christmas
-
- TV ad Movie characters
- TV ad TV character
- TV ad movie celebrity
- TV ad sports celebrity
- Outdoor ad events
10Cross-media Synergy
11Simple
12Complex
13More business leaders should be thinking about
their businesses as complex dynamic systems that
require innovative tools and techniques to
understand and manage." John Howes, Manager,
IT, General Motors Research
Complexity Science includes many
powerful modeling technologies of relevance
14Genesis
- Synergy is the trademark of a complex system
- Synergy in teaching research?
Combined effect exceeds the sum of the individual
effects
15Synergy in IMC?
- Synergy
- combined effect exceeds the sum of individual
effects - 2 2 5 phenomenon
- Adopting an IMC perspective
- Substantive?
- Or just a buzzword?
16Some Unresolved Issues
- How much should you spend?
- with and w/o synergy?
- How should you allocate budget to various media?
- in the presence of synergy?
- How should you change budget or its allocation?
- as synergy increases?
- Does it matter?
- Is there sales impact of IMC programs?
- Is there a profitability impact of IMC programs?
- How sensitive are profits to synergy?
17Unresolved Issues (Contd)
- How much should you spend?
- In an oligopoly?
- Under uncertainty
- How should you allocate budget to various media?
- in the presence of synergy?
- In an oligopoly
- Under uncertainty
18Structure of Marketing Communications Response
- Nonlinearity
- Dynamic
- Uncertainty
- Competition
- Complex
- Information Technology Driven
19Linearity
What do you get when you combine two linear
things?
More of the same
No surprises
20Nonlinearity
What do you get when you combine two nonlinear
things?
21Nonlinearity
22Structure of Marketing Communications Response
- Nonlinearity
- Dynamic
- Uncertainty
- Competition
- Complex
- Information Technology Driven
23Quantitative Analysis of Marketing Communications
Response
- Response Function
- How does the market respond to
- our actions?
- Goal
- Estimation
- Best values of model parameters
- Optimization
- Best actions
- Implementation
- Managerial Usage
24Modeling IMC
JMR, 2003 (with Prasad Naik)
25A Model of IMC
JMR, 2003
- Advertising Response Model
- Multimedia Model Additive (u, v)
- IMC Model Interactive (u, v)
26IMC Problem (Two Media)
JMR, 2003
Find optimal IMC strategy (u, v) to
subject to
27Multimedia Problem
Find to
where
subject to
28Empirical Analysis
- Dockers brand advertising
- sales history
- ad expenditure on TV and print
- We use Kalman Filter Estimation
- Why?
- Because OLS is inconsistent
29Actual versus Model forecast
30Theoretical Results
- As ad effectiveness (b1, b2) increases
- total budget increases
- allocation to the more effective medium increases
- As forgetting and discount rate (d, r) increases
- total budget decreases
- allocation to the more effective medium increases
- So extant findings hold in the presence of
synergy
31Theoretical Results (contd.)
- As synergy (b3) increases total budget increases
- allocation to the more effective medium decreases
32Multimedia Budgeting and Allocation
- Allocate budget proportional to the relative
effectiveness
Budget100
u1 70
u2 30
TV
Print
33Multimedia Budgeting and Allocation (contd.)
- If ad effectiveness improves (say, new campaign),
should you spend more or less on the new
campaign?
34Cross-Media Budgeting and Allocation Effects of
synergy
- Increase the total budget
- Allocate more than fair share to less effective
ancillary media
No Synergy
Synergy
Budget100
Budget100
3
7
70
30
70
30
TV
TV
Print
Print
35Why So?
- Because synergy enhances ad effectiveness
- It increases ad effectiveness as shown below
36Impact of Synergy onthe IMC Program
- Profitability
- Budget
- Allocation to Media
37Profit
Synergy
Elasticity 1.82 over (0.25, 0.34)
38Budget (u)
Synergy
Elasticity 3.35 over (0.20, 0.34)
39Budget (v)
Synergy
Elasticity 6.02 over (0.20, 0.34)
40Total Budget
Synergy
Elasticity 4.33 over (0.20, 0.34)
41Marketing Implications
- Overspending on advertising?
- Or
- Overstating the claim?
42Marketing Implications (contd.)
- Should advertisers spend money on an ineffective
activity? - Yes, if synergy effects are present
- pharmaceutical companies
- samples/literature detailing
- B2B advertising
- See McGraw Hill ad
- Our own study shows that
- Dockers print ads are not effective,
- but optimal print spending is not zero
- also, actual print spending is not zero ( 9)
43Synergy Between Advertising and Selling
44The Role of Advertising and Promotions in an
Oligopoly
- Firms spend on advertising to build brand
equity - Firms also on promotions that may erode brand
equity - Promotions are often thought to create a
Prisoners Dilemma for firms - But why dont they learn in repeated dynamic
interactions?
45THEM
Refuse
Testify
US
0, 3
2, 2
Testify (Promote)
3, 0
1, 1
Refuse (Do Not Promote)
46IMC Under Competition (with Prasad Naik Russ
Winer)
Competition
Duopoly In a Lanchester Framework in IMC
Marketing Science (Forthcoming in 2005)
Two promotional components
(Advertising and Sales Promotions)
Nash Equilibrium Framework
Firms act in their own interest
47Key Findings in Oligopoly
- Both advertising and promotions are needed to
compete - Large brands under-advertise and over-promote
- Small brands under-advertise and under-promote
- Advertising and promotions affect own and
competitors shares - Advertising and promotions interact with each
other
48Impact of Uncertainty
- Should managers act differently under response
uncertainty? - Many managers believe that they should determine
the budget and its allocation differently under
uncertainty - But is this true?
49IMC Under Market Response Uncertainty
Find closed-loop IMC strategy u(s) and v(s) to
subject to
Stochastic Hamiltonian Approach not
fruitful Stochastic Dynamic Programming more
productive
(Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman)
50Preliminary Results
- The deterministic solution is preserved when
uncertainty is homoscedastic - In other words, the previous marketing insights
are robust with respect to uncertainty - What about heteroscedastic uncertainty? (Error
variance not constant) - open issue
51Ongoing Research Related to IMC
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