Chapter 13 Advertising, Sales Promotion, and Public Relations.
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Transcript of Chapter 13 Advertising, Sales Promotion, and Public Relations.
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Chapter 13
Advertising, Sales Promotion, and Public Relations
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-2
Chapter Objectives
Understand advertising, the major types of advertising, and the criticisms of advertising
Describe the process of developing an advertising campaign and how marketers evaluate advertising
Explain sales promotion, and describe the different types of trade and consumer sales promotions activities
Explain the role of public relations (PR) and the steps in developing a PR campaign
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Real People, Real Choices: Decision Time at BzzAgent
How should the firm respond to the negative articles which questioned “disclosure” in word-of-mouth marketing campaigns?– Option 1: Take charge of the discussion– Option 2: Defend without being defensive– Option 3: Go quiet
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-4
Advertising: The Image of Marketing
Marketers spent $285 billion on advertising in the U.S. in 2006
Marketers are increasingly diverting more money into alternative media– Product and brand placements are growing
Advertising:– Nonpersonal communication an identified
sponsor pays for that uses mass media to persuade or inform an audience
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-5
Types of Advertising
Product advertising: Focuses on a specific good or service
Institutional advertising: Promotes the activities, personality, or point of view of an organization or company– Public service announcements (PSA) – Advocacy advertising
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-6
Types of Advertising
Retail and local advertising: Encourages customers to shop at a specific store or use a local service– Ad copy discusses store hours, locations,
sales, and featured products
Do-it-yourself advertising– “Generation C” phenomenon: consumer-
generated ad content on the Web
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-7
Who Creates Advertising?
Advertising campaign: A coordinated, comprehensive plan that carries out promotion objectives and results in a series of ads placed in media over a period of time– Limited-service agency – Full-service agency
• Account management• Creative services• Research and marketing services• Media planning
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-8
Ethical Issues in Advertising
Ethical criticisms of advertising:– Advertising is manipulative– Advertising is deceptive and untruthful– Advertising is offensive and in bad taste– Advertising creates and perpetuates
stereotypes– Advertising causes people to buy things
that they don’t really need
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-9
Steps in Developing an Advertising Campaign
Step 1: Identify the target audiences Step 2: Establish message and budget
objectives Step 3: Create the ads
– Creative strategy: The process that turns a concept into an advertisement
– Advertising appeal: The central idea of the ad
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Types of Advertising Appeals
Reasons why—the unique selling proposition (USP)
Comparative advertising
Demonstration Testimonial
Slice of life Lifestyle Fear appeals Sex appeals Humorous appeals Slogans, jingles,
and music
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Steps in Developing an Advertising Campaign
Step 4: Pretest what the ads will say– Pretesting:
Research method that seeks to minimize mistakes by getting consumer reactions to ad messages before they appear in the media
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-12
Steps in Developing an Advertising Campaign
Step 5: Choose the media type(s) and media schedule– Media planning:
The process of developing media objectives, strategies, and tactics
– Aperture:The best place and time to reach the target market
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Where To Say It: Traditional Media
Television Radio Newspapers Magazines Directories
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall13-14
Where To Say It: Internet Advertising
Banners Buttons Pop-up ads Search engine and directory listings E-mail
– Spamming– Permission marketing
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Where To Say It: Indirect Forms of Advertising
Directories Out-of-home media Place-based media Branded entertainment Advergaming
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Media Scheduling: When To Say It
Media schedule: – Specifies exact media to use and when to
use it Advertising exposure:
– Defines degree to which the target market will see an ad message in specific vehicles
Impressions: – Measures number of people exposed to a
message in one or more vehicles
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Media Scheduling: When To Say It
Reach: – Measures percentage of target market exposed to
media vehicle Frequency:
– Measures average number of times a person in the target group will be exposed to the message
Gross rating points (GRPs) – Reach multiplied by frequency
Cost per thousand (CPM): – The cost to deliver a message to 1,000 people
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Media Scheduling: How Often To Say It
Typical advertising patterns:– Continuous schedule:
Steady stream of advertising throughout year– Pulsing schedule:
Varies the amount of advertising based on when the product is likely to be demanded
– Flighting schedule: Advertising in short, intense bursts, alternated with periods in which no advertising is done
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Steps in Developing an Advertising Campaign
Step 6: Evaluate the advertising– Posttesting:
Research on consumers’ responses to advertising they have seen or heard• Unaided recall
• Aided recall
• Attitudinal measures
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Sales Promotion
Sales promotions:Programs designed to build interest in or encourage purchase of a product during a specified period of time– Deliver short-term sales results– Can target end consumers, channel partners,
and/or employees
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Sales Promotion DirectedToward the Trade
Allowances, discounts, and deals– Merchandising allowances– Case allowances
Co-op advertising Increasing industry visibility
– Trade shows– Promotional products– Point-of-purchase (POP)– Incentive programs
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Sales Promotion DirectedToward Consumers
Price-based consumer sales promotion– Coupons – Price deals, refunds, and rebates– Frequency (loyalty/continuity) programs – Special/bonus packs
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Sales Promotion DirectedToward Consumers
Attention-getting consumer promotions– Contests and sweepstakes
• Contests are based on skill• Sweepstakes are based on chance
– Premiums– Sampling
• The premiere technique for generating new product trial
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Public Relations
Public relations:Communication function that seeks to build good relationships with an organization’s publics– Publics include consumers, stockholders,
legislators, and other firm stakeholders– Basic rule of good PR, “Do something good,
then talk about it”
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Public Relations
Proactive PR activities stem from a firm’s marketing objectives– Publicity
Unpaid communication about an organization that gets media exposure
PR is critical when a firm’s image is at risk due to negative publicity– PR staff is responsible for preparing
a crisis management plan
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Objectives of Public Relations
Typical objectives include:– Introducing new products to manufacturers– Introducing new products to consumers– Influencing government legislation– Enhancing the image of a firm– Enhancing image of a city, region, or country– Calling attention to a firm’s involvement with
the community
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Planning a PR Campaign
Multistep process includes:– Situation analysis– A statement of objectives– Specification of publics, communicated
messages, and specific program elements – Timetable and budget– Discussion of program evaluation plan
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Public Relations Activities
Press releases (various forms)
Internal PR Investor relations Lobbying Speech writing
Corporate identity
Media relations Sponsorships Special events Advice and
counsel
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Real People, Real Choices: Decision Made at BzzAgent
Joe chose option 1– Implementation: BzzAgent took charge of the
discussion, refined their disclosure policy, enforced compliance, researched the relationship between disclosure and campaign performance, and issued press releases about revised policy
– Measuring success: The disclosure debate did not interfere with the company’s financing or client relationships
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Keeping It Real: Fast-Forward to Next Class Decision Time at Woodtronics
Meet Jeffrey Brechman, a principal of the Woodtronics firm
Woodtronics designs and builds trading room furniture, command centers, and network control centers
The decision to be made: Should Jeffrey sell the new or original product to the Jersey City client?
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