MKTG 304 FINAL REVIEW
CHAPTER 15: MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS
Promotion – communication by marketers that informs, persuades, reminds, and
connects with potential buyers of a product. Data and data analytics help determin
how marketers distribute funding among their promotional mix tactics.
Promotional Mix - A combination of promotion tools used to
reach the target market and fulfill the organization’s overall
objectives. The promotional mix includes:
Advertising
Public Relations
Personal Selling
Sales Promotion
Direct Marketing (includes social media)
The Role of Promotion
Informative Promotion
Persuasive Promotion - simulate a purchase or an action
Reminder Promotion - keep the product and brand name in the public’s mind
Connection Promotion
Advertising
Advertising - impersonal, one-way mass communication about a product or organization that is paid for by a marketer
Major Public Relations Tools
Sales Promotion
Short-term incentive to motivate consumers to do something (purchase a product, visit a store, etc.) immediately. Typically, it involves lowering the price or adding value.
Common Forms of Consumer Sales Promotions
Common Consumer Sales Promotion Objectives:
Direct Marketing
■ Allows the organization to communicate directly
with customers and offer targeted promotions
■ Direct mail, emails, text messaging, social media,
telemarketing
– Technology provides more ways to directly
communicate with consumers
The Internet and the Promotional Mix
Integrated Marketing Communications
The AIDA Model
Factors Affecting the Choice of Promotional Tools
Nature of the product
Stage in Product’s Life Cycle
Target market characteristics
Type of buying decision
Promotion funds
Push or pull strategy
Type of Buying Decision & Nature of the Product
Target Market Characteristics
In general, a target market characterized by widely scattered potential customers, highly informed buyers, and brand-loyal repeat purchasers requires a promotional mix with more advertising and sales promotion and less personnel selling.
Chapter 16 and 18: Advertising & Sales Promotions
The Effects of Advertising on Consumers
Institutional advertising: a form of advertising designed to enhance a company’s image rather than promote a particular product
Advocacy advertising: a form of advertising in which an organization expresses
its views on controversial issues
Product advertising: a form of advertising that touts the benefit of a specific good or service
Identity Product Benefits:
Advertising Appeals:
Normally requires market research to determine how your specific target market will respond to different types of appeals
Appeal must make a positive impression on the target market, while being unique, distinguishable from competitor's messages, and believable
Common Advertising Appeals:
Unique Selling Proposition:
Executing the Mesage: The Way That An Ad Portrays Its Message
Media Decisions in Advertising
Medium: the channel used to convey a message to a target market
Media planning: the series of decisions advertisers make
regarding the selection and use of media, allowing the
marketer to optimally and cost-effectively communicate the
message to the target audience
Sales Promotion:
Contests and sweepstakes:
Designed to create interest in a brand, not effective tools for generation long-term sales. Offering several smaller prizes instead of one huge prize with increase effectiveness
Contests - Promotions in which participants use some skill or availability to compete for prizes
Sweepstakes - Promotions that depend on chance, with free participation
Sampling - A promotional program that allows the consumer the opportunity to try a product or service for free
Sampling is often the most successful sales promotion tactic
Chapter 18: Social Media & Marketing
• Social Media - any tool or service that uses the Internet
to facilitate conversations.
• Whereas traditional marketing media offer a mass media method of interacting with consumers, SM offer more one-to-one ways to meet consumers.
The Listening System
Social Media Metrics
Social Media Tools
CHAPTER 19: Pricing Concepts
What is Price?
Pricing Goals
Common Pricing Goals:
Profit-Oriented Pricing Objectives:
Sales-Oriented Pricing Objectives:
Status Quo Pricing Objectives: requires little planning, passive policy. Suboptimal because it ignores value of product to customer
Pricing Strategies:
Better to test at higher prices than lower them if sales are low
Penetration Pricing Low Price to Reach the Masses
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Pricing:
Demand Influences on Pricing Decisions
Demand Influences on Price: Elasticity
Price Elasticity - Consumers responsiveness or sensitivity to changes in price.
Inelastic Demand - An increase or decrease in price will not significantly affect demand. Consumers are NOT price sensitive.
Elastic Demand - Consumers buy more or less of a product when the price changes. Consumers are price-sensitive.
Factors that Affect Elasticity of Demand
Availability of substitutes - more subs (easy to switch) makes demand more elastic and vice versa.
Price relative to purchasing power - if a price/price change is so low that it is an inconsequential part of one’s budget, demand will be inelastic and consumers will not be sensitive to $ changes
Product durability - if the cost of a new product increases, people might elect to repair the product making people sensitive to $ (elastic)
Product Consideration in Pricing:
Perishability - Discounting the products as they approach being no longer fit for sale
Products are perishable if the demand for them is confined to a specific time period (seasonal products)
Stage in the Product Life Cycle
Distinctiveness - Marketers can charge higher prices if they can successfully distinguish their products from those of their competitors
Branding and brand equity are used to make products distinctive
Perceived Quality & Value
Prestige Pricing
Environmental influences on pricing: The Internet
Promotional Influences: Tactics for fine-tuning the base price (base price - general price level at which the company expects to sell goods/services)
Discounts, Allowances, Rebates
Discounts are used to encourage customers to do what they would not ordinarily do.
Quantity Discounts: Discounts for buying in quantity
Cash Discounts: Discounts for payment of a bill in cash
Functional Discounts (Trade Discount): Discounts
for performing functions, such as in-store display
Seasonal Discounts: Discounts for buying out of season
Special Pricing Tactics:
Even/Odd Pricing - Prices are set at one or a few cents below a round number in
order to create the perception that the price is low (getting a good deal) or pricing
evenly at the dollar to give a perception of high quality.
Bundle Pricing - involves selling several products together at a single price in order to suggest a good deal
CHAPTER 15: MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS
Promotion – communication by marketers that informs, persuades, reminds, and
connects with potential buyers of a product. Data and data analytics help determin
how marketers distribute funding among their promotional mix tactics.
Promotional Mix - A combination of promotion tools used to
reach the target market and fulfill the organization’s overall
objectives. The promotional mix includes:
Advertising
Public Relations
Personal Selling
Sales Promotion
Direct Marketing (includes social media)
The Role of Promotion
Informative Promotion
Persuasive Promotion - simulate a purchase or an action
Reminder Promotion - keep the product and brand name in the public’s mind
Connection Promotion
Advertising
Advertising - impersonal, one-way mass communication about a product or organization that is paid for by a marketer
Major Public Relations Tools
Sales Promotion
Short-term incentive to motivate consumers to do something (purchase a product, visit a store, etc.) immediately. Typically, it involves lowering the price or adding value.
Common Forms of Consumer Sales Promotions
Common Consumer Sales Promotion Objectives:
Direct Marketing
■ Allows the organization to communicate directly
with customers and offer targeted promotions
■ Direct mail, emails, text messaging, social media,
telemarketing
– Technology provides more ways to directly
communicate with consumers
The Internet and the Promotional Mix
Integrated Marketing Communications
The AIDA Model
Factors Affecting the Choice of Promotional Tools
Nature of the product
Stage in Product’s Life Cycle
Target market characteristics
Type of buying decision
Promotion funds
Push or pull strategy
Type of Buying Decision & Nature of the Product
Target Market Characteristics
In general, a target market characterized by widely scattered potential customers, highly informed buyers, and brand-loyal repeat purchasers requires a promotional mix with more advertising and sales promotion and less personnel selling.
Chapter 16 and 18: Advertising & Sales Promotions
The Effects of Advertising on Consumers
Institutional advertising: a form of advertising designed to enhance a company’s image rather than promote a particular product
Advocacy advertising: a form of advertising in which an organization expresses
its views on controversial issues
Product advertising: a form of advertising that touts the benefit of a specific good or service
Identity Product Benefits:
Advertising Appeals:
Normally requires market research to determine how your specific target market will respond to different types of appeals
Appeal must make a positive impression on the target market, while being unique, distinguishable from competitor's messages, and believable
Common Advertising Appeals:
Unique Selling Proposition:
Executing the Mesage: The Way That An Ad Portrays Its Message
Media Decisions in Advertising
Medium: the channel used to convey a message to a target market
Media planning: the series of decisions advertisers make
regarding the selection and use of media, allowing the
marketer to optimally and cost-effectively communicate the
message to the target audience
Sales Promotion:
Contests and sweepstakes:
Designed to create interest in a brand, not effective tools for generation long-term sales. Offering several smaller prizes instead of one huge prize with increase effectiveness
Contests - Promotions in which participants use some skill or availability to compete for prizes
Sweepstakes - Promotions that depend on chance, with free participation
Sampling - A promotional program that allows the consumer the opportunity to try a product or service for free
Sampling is often the most successful sales promotion tactic
Chapter 18: Social Media & Marketing
• Social Media - any tool or service that uses the Internet
to facilitate conversations.
• Whereas traditional marketing media offer a mass media method of interacting with consumers, SM offer more one-to-one ways to meet consumers.
The Listening System
Social Media Metrics
Social Media Tools
CHAPTER 19: Pricing Concepts
What is Price?
Pricing Goals
Common Pricing Goals:
Profit-Oriented Pricing Objectives:
Sales-Oriented Pricing Objectives:
Status Quo Pricing Objectives: requires little planning, passive policy. Suboptimal because it ignores value of product to customer
Pricing Strategies:
Better to test at higher prices than lower them if sales are low
Penetration Pricing Low Price to Reach the Masses
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Pricing:
Demand Influences on Pricing Decisions
Demand Influences on Price: Elasticity
Price Elasticity - Consumers responsiveness or sensitivity to changes in price.
Inelastic Demand - An increase or decrease in price will not significantly affect demand. Consumers are NOT price sensitive.
Elastic Demand - Consumers buy more or less of a product when the price changes. Consumers are price-sensitive.
Factors that Affect Elasticity of Demand
Availability of substitutes - more subs (easy to switch) makes demand more elastic and vice versa.
Price relative to purchasing power - if a price/price change is so low that it is an inconsequential part of one’s budget, demand will be inelastic and consumers will not be sensitive to $ changes
Product durability - if the cost of a new product increases, people might elect to repair the product making people sensitive to $ (elastic)
Product Consideration in Pricing:
Perishability - Discounting the products as they approach being no longer fit for sale
Products are perishable if the demand for them is confined to a specific time period (seasonal products)
Stage in the Product Life Cycle
Distinctiveness - Marketers can charge higher prices if they can successfully distinguish their products from those of their competitors
Branding and brand equity are used to make products distinctive
Perceived Quality & Value
Prestige Pricing
Environmental influences on pricing: The Internet
Promotional Influences: Tactics for fine-tuning the base price (base price - general price level at which the company expects to sell goods/services)
Discounts, Allowances, Rebates
Discounts are used to encourage customers to do what they would not ordinarily do.
Quantity Discounts: Discounts for buying in quantity
Cash Discounts: Discounts for payment of a bill in cash
Functional Discounts (Trade Discount): Discounts
for performing functions, such as in-store display
Seasonal Discounts: Discounts for buying out of season
Special Pricing Tactics:
Even/Odd Pricing - Prices are set at one or a few cents below a round number in
order to create the perception that the price is low (getting a good deal) or pricing
evenly at the dollar to give a perception of high quality.
Bundle Pricing - involves selling several products together at a single price in order to suggest a good deal