Title: School of International Business
1School of International Business BA (HONS)
Business Studies with Specialisms MKT301 LECTURER
Edel Griffin OFFICE International Business
Centre Tel 028 7137 5126 Email
e.griffin_at_ulster.ac.uk
2School of International Business BA (HONS)
Business Studies with Specialisms MKT301 LECTURE
8 Promotion
3- Lecture Outline
- Role of Promotion
- Communications Process
- Promotion and the Product Adoption Process
- Aims of Promotion Communication
- Promotional Mix
- Push vs Pull Policy
- Developing an Advertising Campaign
4The Four Ps - Promotion
5Role of Promotion
- The role of promotion in a company is to
communicate with individuals, groups or
organisations to directly or indirectly
facilitate exchanges by informing and persuading
one or more of the audiences to accept the
companys products. - Marketers try to communicate with selected
audiences about their company and its goods,
services and ideas in order to facilitate
exchanges.
6Role of Promotion
- Promotion can play a comprehensive communications
role. - Some promotional activities can be directed
towards helping a company justify its existence
and maintain positive, healthy relationships
between itself and various groups in the
marketing environment.
7Role of Promotion
- Although a company can direct a single type of
communication, such as an advertisement, towards
numerous audiences, marketers often design a
communication precisely for a specific target
market. - Effective promotional activities are based on
information from the marketing environment, often
obtained from an organisations marketing
information system. - The degree to which marketers can effectively use
promotion to maintain positive relationships
depends largely on the quantity and quality of
information an organisation takes in.
8The Communications Process
9The Communications Process
- Communication can be viewed as the transmission
of information - Both the sender and the receiver of the
information must share an understanding of the
symbols used to transmit information, usually
pictures or words.
10The Communications Process
- When a source chooses an inappropriate medium of
transmission, several problems may arise. - A coded message may reach some receivers, but
not the right ones. - A coded message may reach the intended receivers
in an incomplete form because the intensity of
the transmission is weak.
11Promotion and the Product Adoption Process
- One long run purpose of promotion is to
influence and encourage buyers to accept or adopt
goods, services and ideas. - The ultimate effectiveness of promotion is
determined by the degree to which it affects
product adoption among potential buyers or
increases the frequency of current buyers
purchases.
12Promotion and the Product Adoption Process
- To establish realistic expectations about what
promotion can do, product adoption should not be
viewed as a one-step process.
13Product Adoption Process
- The product adoption process, a series of stages
in the acceptance of a product, is commonly
divided into the following five stages
14Effective promotional tools for reaching
consumers in various stages of the product
adoption process
15Product Adopter Categories
- Depending on the length of time it takes them to
adopt a new product, people can be divided into
five major adopter categories - ?
16Product Adopter Categories
- Innovators are the first to adopt a new product
they enjoy trying new products and tend to be
venturesome. - Early adopters choose new products carefully and
are viewed as the people to check with by those
in the remaining adopter categories. - People in the early majority adopt just prior to
the average person they are deliberate and
cautious in trying new products. - Late majority people, who are quite sceptical
about new products, eventually adopt them because
of economic necessity or social pressure. - Laggards, the last to adopt a new product, are
oriented towards the past.
17Product Adoption Process
18Aims of Promotion Communication
- There are five basic promotion communication
aims, known as the five communication effects - Category needthe consumers perception of his
or her need for a product in a certain category - Brand awarenessthe consumers ability to
identify a manufacturers or retailers brand in
sufficient detail to distinguish it from other
brands
19Aims of Promotion Communication
- Brand attitudea consumers particular impression
of a brand, formed by emotions and logic or
cognitive beliefs - Brand purchase intentionthe consumers decision
and efforts to purchase the particular product - Purchase facilitationcircumstances that make it
possible for the consumer to purchase the
product availability, location, price and
familiarity of vendor
20The Promotional Mix
- Several types of promotional methods can be used
to communicate with individuals, groups and
organisations. - The specific combination of ingredients an
organisation uses to promote a product is the
promotional mix.
21Possible Ingredients of Promotional Mix
22Promotional mix ingredients
- Advertising is a paid form of non-personal
communication about an organisation and its
products that is transmitted to a target audience
through a mass medium such as television, radio,
newspapers, magazines, direct mail, public
transport, outdoor displays, catalogues or the
Internet.
23Personal Selling
- Personal selling involves informing customers
and persuading them to purchase products through
personal communication in an exchange situation. - The cost of reaching one person through personal
selling is considerably more than through
advertising, but personal selling efforts often
have a greater impact on customers. - Personal selling provides immediate feedback,
which allows marketers to adjust their message to
improve communication and to determine and
respond to customers needs for information.
24Publicity
- Publicity is non-personal communication in news
story form about an organisation and/or its
products that is transmitted through a mass
medium at no charge. - Although both advertising and publicity are
transmitted through mass communication, the
sponsor does not pay the media costs for
publicity and is not identified. - Nevertheless, publicity should never be viewed
as free communication.
25Sales Promotion
- Sales promotion is an activity or material that
acts as a direct inducement by offering added
value to or incentive for the product to
resellers, salespeople or consumers. - Sales promotion appears to be growing in use
more than advertising. - Marketers frequently rely on sales promotion to
improve the effectiveness of other promotional
mix ingredients, especially advertising and
personal selling. - Marketers design sales promotion to produce
immediate, short run sales increases.
26Sponsorship
- Sponsorship is the financial or material support
of an event, activity, person, organisation or
product by an unrelated organisation or donor. - Funds are made available to the recipient of the
sponsorship in return for prominent public
recognition of the benefactors generosity and
display of the sponsors name, products and
brands.
27Direct Mail
- Direct mail is a method of communication used to
entice prospective customers or charitable donors
to invest directly in products, services or
worthy causes. - It can be used as a pre-sell technique prior to
a sales call, to generate orders, qualify
prospects for a sales call, follow up a sale,
announce special or localised sales and raise
funds for charities and not-for-profit
organisations.
28The Internet
- The Interneta network of computer networks
stretching across the world, linking computers of
different typeshas been identified by marketers
as an opportunity for providing existing and
potential customers with company, product and
brand information. - As a promotional mix ingredient, the Internet
provides a tool that can be quickly up-dated or
modified and that can produce material aimed at
very tightly defined target groups or even
individual consumers.
29Direct Marketing
- Currently experiencing a surge in popularity,
direct marketing now encompasses all the
communications tools that enable a marketer to
deal directly with targeted customers direct
mail, telemarketing, direct response television
advertising, door-to-door/personal selling and
the Internet.
30Selecting Promotional Mix Ingredients
- Marketers vary the compositions of promotional
mixes for many reasons. - An organisations promotional mix (or mixes) is
not an unchanging part of the marketing mix. - The specific promotional mix ingredients used
and the intensity with which they are used depend
on a variety of factors.
31Selection Promotional Mix Ingredients
- Promotional resources, objectives and policies
- The quality of an organisations promotional
resources affects the number and relative
intensity of promotional methods that can be
included in the promotional mix.
32Selecting Promotional Mix Ingredients
- An organisations promotional objectives and
policies also influence the types of promotion
used. - If a companys objective is to create mass
awareness - What type or types of promotion should it use?
- If a company hopes to educate consumers about the
features of durable goods - What type or types of promotion should it use?
33Characteristics of the Target Market
- The size, geographic distribution and
socio-economic characteristics of an
organisations target market also help dictate
the ingredients to be included in a products
promotional mix.
34Characteristics of the product
- Generally, promotional mixes for industrial
products concentrate on personal selling, whereas
advertising plays a major role in promoting
consumer goods. - Marketers of seasonal products may have to
emphasise advertising, and possibly sales
promotion, because off-season sales will not
support an extensive year round salesforce.
35Characteristics of the product
- The price of a product also influences the
composition of the promotional mix. - High priced products call for more personal
selling because consumers associate greater risk
with the purchase of such products. - Low priced convenience items, retailers use
advertising rather than personal selling.
36Characteristics of the product
- The stage of the product life cycle affects
marketers decisions regarding the promotional
mix. -
- introduction stage, a good deal of advertising
may be necessary to make potential users aware of
a new product. - Growth and maturity stages, heavy emphasis on
advertising for consumer non-durables,
business-to-business products often require a
concentration of personal selling and some sales
promotion efforts during these stages. - Decline stage, decrease advertising and use
personal selling and sales promotion more
frequently.
37Cost Availability of Promotional Methods
- The cost and availability of promotional methods
are major factors to analyse when developing a
promotional mix. - National advertising and sales promotion efforts
require large expenditures however, if they
reach extremely large numbers of people, the cost
per individual may be quite small. - Although there are numerous media vehicles, a
company may find that no available advertising
medium effectively reaches a certain market.
38Push policy versus pull policy
- One element that marketers should consider when
they plan a promotional mix is whether to use a
push policy or a pull policy. - With a push policy, a producer promotes the
product only to the next institution down the
marketing channel.
39Push policy versus pull policy
- With a pull policy, a business promotes directly
to consumers in order to develop a strong
consumer demand for its products. - It does so through advertising, sales promotion,
direct mail, sponsorship and packaging that helps
manufacturers build and maintain market share. - The policy is intended to pull the goods down
through the channel by creating demand at the
consumer level. - A push policy can be combined with a pull policy
40Push policy versus pull policy
41Uses of Advertising
- Promoting Products Organisations
- Stimulating Primary Selective Demand
- Off-setting Competitors Advertising
- Making Sales Personnel More Effective
- Educating the Market
- Increasing the Uses of a Product
- Reminding Reinforcing Customers
- Reducing Sales Fluctuations.
42Developing an Advertising Campaign
- An advertising campaign is an attempt to reach a
particular target market by designing a series of
advertisements and placing them in various
advertising media. - The number of steps and the order in which they
are carried out may vary according to an
organisations resources, the nature of its
products, the types of target markets or
audiences to be reached and the advertising
agency selected.
43Developing Implementing an Advertising Campaign
44Identifying and analysing the advertising target
- The advertising target is the group of people at
which advertisements are aimed. - Advertisers analyse advertising targets to
establish an information base for a campaign - Generally, the more advertisers know about the
advertising target, the better able they are to
develop an effective advertising campaign.
45Defining the advertising objectives
- Because advertising objectives guide campaign
development, advertisers should define their
objectives carefully to ensure that the campaign
will accomplish what they want. - Advertising objectives should be stated clearly,
precisely and in measurable terms. - Advertising objectives are usually stated in
terms of either sales or communication. - Advertising objectives must be realistic.
46Creating the advertising platform
- An advertising platform consists of the basic
issues or selling points that an advertiser
wishes to include in the advertising campaign. - A marketers advertising platform should consist
of issues that are important to consumers. - Because the advertising platform is a base on
which to build the message, marketers should
analyse this step carefully.
47Determining the advertising budget
- The advertising budget is the total amount of
money that a marketer allocates for advertising
over a period of time. - Many factors affect a businesss decision about
how much to spend for advertising, including
geographic size of the market, distribution of
buyers within the market, type of product being
advertised and the companys sales volume
relative to that of competitors.
48Developing the media plan
- To derive the maximum results from media
expenditures, a marketer must develop an
effective media plan. - A media plan sets forth the exact media vehicles
to be used for advertising and the dates and
times when the advertisements will appear.
49Developing the media plan
- When selecting media, the planner must first
decide which kinds of media to use. - The major types of media are radio, television,
newspapers, magazines, direct mail, outdoor
displays, public transport, the Internet or a
combination of two or more of these. ( See
pg496/7/8) - After making the general media decision, the
planner selects specific sub-classes within each
medium.
50Developing the media plan
- Media planners take many factors into account
when devising a media plan. - They analyse the location and demographic
characteristics of people in the advertising
target because the various media appeal to
particular demographic groups in particular
locations. - They consider the size and type of audiences
that specific media reach.
51Creating the advertising message
- The basic content and form of an advertising
message are a function of several factors. - The products features, uses and benefits affect
the content of the message. - Demographic characteristics of people in the
advertising influence both the content and the
form. - The objectives and platform of an advertising
campaign also affect the content and form of its
messages.
52Creating the advertising message
- If a companys advertising objectives involve
large sales increases, the message demands hard
hitting, high impact language and symbols. - When campaign objectives aim at increasing brand
awareness, the message may use repetition of the
brand name and words and illustrations associated
with it. - The advertising platform is the foundation on
which campaign messages are built
53Creating the advertising message
- The choice of media also influences the content
and form of the message. - Effective outdoor displays and short broadcast
spot announcements require concise, simple
messages. - Magazine, newspaper and Internet advertisements
can include more detail and long explanations. - Since some publishers produce regional issues of
magazines and newspapers, advertisements and
editorial content can be tailored to a particular
geographic area of the advertising target.
54Executing the campaign
- The execution of an advertising campaign requires
an extensive amount of planning and
co-ordination. - Implementation requires detailed schedules to
ensure that various phases of the work are
completed on time. - Advertising management personnel must evaluate
the quality of work and take corrective action
when necessary. - In some instances, changes have to be made during
the campaign so that it meets campaign objectives
more effectively or responds to consumer research
feedback
55Evaluating the effectiveness of the advertising
- There are a variety of ways to test the
effectiveness of advertising - Measuring achievement of advertising objectives
- Gauging the effectiveness of copy, illustrations
or layouts - Assessing certain media
- Advertising can be evaluated before, during and
after the campaign.
56- Lecture Outline
- Role of Promotion
- Communications Process
- Promotion and the Product Adoption Process
- Aims of Promotion Communication
- Promotional Mix
- Push vs Pull Policy
- Developing an Advertising Campaign