Title: Promotional Planning BA 315 C 10-13 Session
1Promotional PlanningBA 315 C 10-13Session
- Lindell Phillip Chew
- University of Missouri- St. Louis, College of
Business Administration
2DEFINITION
- Promotion is a persuasive communications mix. It
is a deliberate - attempt to communicate information which
presents a company and its - products to prospective customers in a manner
persuasive enough to - induce the kind of acceptance, reaction, or
response desired. - THIS IS A CONTROLLED AND INTEGRATED PROGRAM
OF COMMUNICATION METHODS AND MATERIALS.
3- THE PROMOTIONAL (COMMUNICATIONS) PLANNING
PROCESS LPC1_at_UMSL.EDU
4FUNCTIONS
- The basic purpose of promotion is to present a
business and its products and services to
prospective customers, to communicate the - need/want satisfying attributes of those
products/services, to facilitate sales, and to
contribute positively to the long ran performance
of the business. - HOW TO SELL PRESENT CUSTOMERS ADD1T1ONAL UNITS.
- GET NON CUSTOMERS TO BECOME CUSTOMERS.
5FIRST REVIEW YOUR MARKETING PLAN ITS OBJECTIVE
AND THEN PURSUE THE STEPS of the PROMOTIONAL
(COMMUNICATIONS) PLANNING PROCESS
6Our corporate objective is to increase earnings
per share from 6.71 per share to 7.71 per share
- OUR MARKETING OBJECTIVE IS TO INCREASE MARKET
SHARE FROM 23 TO 25, ALSO IN ONE YEAR
7STEPS SITUATIONAL ANALYSISESTABLISHING
PROM0TIONAL OBJECTIVES JUSTIFICATONS DETERMIN
ING BUDGET PLANNING, MANAGING, BLENDING
THE COMMUNICATIONS EVALUATION MEASURING
EFFECTIVENESS FOLLOW ON AND FUTURE
PLANNING
8STEPS SITUATIONAL ANALYSISMARKET TARGETS
DEFINITION Current Market Additional or
Potential Customer FranchisesCOMPETITION
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS Internal (policies,
profit inhibitors, financial and personnel
resources) External (legal/ethical,
business/economic conditions,cultural/social)
9STEPS SITUATIONAL ANALYSISCRITICAL
QUESTIONS Are you familiar with the strengths
weaknesses of various promotional efforts? Is
outside technical/financial assistance available
to enhance promotional efforts?
10TYPES OF PROMOTION
11TYPES OF PROMOTION (EXPLICIT TOOLS)
- ADVERTISING
- PERSONAL SELLING
- SALES PROMOTION
- PUBLIC RELATIONS / PUBLICITY
12The Marketing Communications Mix
Advertising
Personal Selling
13TYPES OF PROMOTION (EXPLICIT TOOLS)
- PLEASE NOTE THAT RESELLER SUPPORT OBJECTIVES AND
PROGRAMS MAY ALSO BE ADDED - PURPOSE TO..
- IMPROVE
- SUPPLEMENT
- CONTROL
- PERFORMANCE
14TYPES OF PROMOTION (EXPLICIT TOOLS)
- ADVERTISING paid, nonpersonal communication
regarding goods, services, organizations, people,
places, and ideas that is transmitted through
various media by business firms, government and
other nonprofit organizations, and individuals
who are identified in the advertising message as
the sponsor.
15TYPES OF PROMOTION (EXPLICIT TOOLS)
- PERSONAL SELLING
- involves oral communication with one or more
prospective buyers by paid representatives for
the purpose of making sales.
16TYPES OF PROMOTION (EXPLICIT TOOLS)
- SALES PROMOTION
- Involvespaid.marketing communication activities
- (other than advertising, publicity, or personal
selling) that are intended to stimulate consumer
purchases and dealer effectiveness.
17TYPES OF PROMOTION (EXPLICIT TOOLS)
- PUBLIC RELATIONS / PUBLICITY
- . Publicity is nonpersonal public relations that
is transmitted Public relations includes any
communication to foster a favorable image for
goods, services, organizations, people, places,
and ideas. It may be personal or nonpersonal,
paid or nonpaid, and sponsor controlled or not
controlled through media but not paid for by an
identified sponsor.
18TYPES OF PROMOTION (EXPLICIT TOOLS)NOW LETS
PURSUE THE OTHER STEPS
19Elements in the Communication Process
SENDER (source)
20 Decide on Explicit Communications Mix
Advertising Public, Pervasive, Expressive,
Impersonal
Sales Promotion Communication, Incentive,
Invitation
Public Relations Publicity Credibility,
Surprise, Dramatization
Personal Selling Personal Confrontation,
Cultivation, Response
Direct Marketing Nonpublic, Customized,
Up-to-Date, Interactive
21Factors in Developing Promotion Mix Strategies
22Push Versus Pull Strategy
Producer
Push Strategy
Producer
Pull Strategy
23PROMOTION PLANNING STEP OBJECTIVE
SETTING
- The objectives of promotion may be categorized as
stimulating demand and enhancing company image. - The sequential short-term, intermediate, and
long-term promotion goals for a firm to pursue. - Primary demand is an objective when seeking
consumer interest for a product category. - Selective demand is a later objective that seeks
consumer interest for a particular brand of a
product.
24PROMOTION PLANNING STEP BUDGETING
- USE OBJECTIVE TASK
- Under the objective-and-task method, a firm sets
promotion goals, determines the activities needed
to satisfy them, and then establishes the proper
budget. Most large companies use some form of
objective-and-task technique. - During promotional budgeting, a firm should
keep the concept of the marginal return in mind.
This is the amount of sales each increment of
promotion spending will generate. It is usually
highest for - new products.
25 Step 5. Establish the Budget
Affordable
Of Sales
Competitive Parity
Objective Task
26PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONS
27PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- Media are selected on the basis of these
criteria - Advertising media costs.
- Reach
- Frequency.
- Gross Rating Points
- Waste
- Message permanence.
- Persuasive impact
- Clutter
- Lead time
-
28PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- Advertising media costs
- Outlays for media time and space.
- Total costs are computed first.
- Per-reader or viewer costs are computed second.
29PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- Reachthe number of viewers, readers, or
listeners in an audience. - . For TV and radio, reach is the total number of
people who are exposed to an ad. - . For print media, reach has two components
circulation (the number of copies sold or
distributed) and passalong rate (the number of
times each copy is read by another reader).
30PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- Wastethe part of an audience not in a firms
target market. - Narrowcasting, which presents messages to limited
and well-defined audiences, can reduce audience
waste.
31PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- Frequencyhow often a medium can be used.
- Repetition, repetition, repetition
- James Smith 1890s
32PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- GROSS RATING POINTS (GRPS)
- GRPS REACH X FREQUENCY
33PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- Message permanencethe number of exposures one ad
generates and how long it remains available to
the audience. - Persuasive impactthe ability of a medium to
stimulate consumers.
34PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- Clutterthe number of ads found in a single
program, issue, etc. of a medium. - Lead timethe period required by a medium for
placing an ad.
35PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- In recent years, there have been many media
innovations, such as online computer services,
regional editions, special one-sponsor issues,
specialized Yellow Pages, TV ads in supermarkets,
infomercials, etc.
36PROMOTION PLANNING STEP PLANNING,
MANAGING, BLENDING THE COMMUNICATIONSSELECTING
MEDIA
- As of 2004, the typical U.S. consumer will have
access to 44 local radio stations, 200 TV
channels, 2,400 Internet radio stations, 18,000
magazine titles, and 20 million Internet sites.
37PROMOTION PLANNING STEP THE
PROMOTION MIX
- The promotion mix is a firms overall and
specific communication program, including its use
of advertising, public relations (publicity),
personal selling, and/or sales promotion. - With an integrated marketing communications
program, each type of promotion has a distinct
function and complements the other types.
38PROMOTION PLANNING STEP THE
PROMOTION MIX
- The promotion mix is a firms overall and
specific communication program, - A promotion mix varies by type of company, the
product life cycle, access to media, and channel
member support.
39PROMOTION PLANNING STEP THE
PROMOTION MIX
- ADVERTISING
- PERSONAL SELLING
- SALES PROMOTION
- PUBLIC RELATIONS / PUBLICITY
- RESELLER SUPPORT PROGRAMS
40CONSIDERING COOPERATIVE EFFORTS
- With cooperative advertising, two or more firms
share some advertising costs. - 1. A vertical cooperative ad is an advertising
agreement between firms at different levels of
the distribution channel. - 2. A horizontal cooperative ad is an advertising
agreement among independent firms at the same
stage. - 3. Good agreements clearly state each partys
costs, functions, and responsibilities the ads
covered and the basis for termination.We will
apply SCHNUCKS to both.
41PROMOTION PLANNING STEP BUDGET
- A budget delineates expenditures by explicit tool
and medium - Considerations in budgeting may include
alternative media costs, the number of placements
needed, cost increases of media, the status of
the economy, channel member tasks, production
costs, and budget allocation for domestic versus
international ads.
42PROMOTION PLANNING STEPEVALUATION
MEASURING EFFECTIVENESS
- EVALUATING
- SUCCESS OR FAILURE
- COMMUNICATION (PROMOTIONAL) success or failure
depends on how well the company achieves
promotion objectives, which may range from
creating awareness to expanding sales. Example R
x F GRPs
43PROMOTION PLANNING STEPFOLLOW ON
FUTURE PLANNING
44Summarize Promotional PlanningSession
45Summarize STEPS SITUATIONAL
ANALYSISESTABLISHING PROM0TIONAL OBJECTIVES
JUSTIFICATONS
46Summarize STEPS DETERMINING
BUDGET PLANNING, MANAGING, BLENDING
THE COMMUNICATIONS
47Summarize STEPS EVALUATION MEASURING
EFFECTIVENESS FOLLOW ON AND FUTURE
PLANNING
48Next Steps
- OPPORTUNITY IS NOW HERE!
- JUST DO IT!!!!!!
- LPC1_at_umsl.edu
49(No Transcript)
50Promotional PlanningSession
- Lindell Phillip Chew
- University of Missouri- St. Louis, College of
Business Administration