18.1b Notes States of Matter & Phase Changes Supplement to Chapter 18.
Chapter 18 Notes
description
Transcript of Chapter 18 Notes
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Integrated Marketing Communications and Direct Marketing
Chapter 18
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The Communication Process
• Requires Six Elements: a source, a message, a channel of communication, a receiver, and a process of
encoding and decoding.
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Promotional Mix
• Advertising: paid, nonpersonal communication
• Personal Selling: the two-way flow of communication between a buyer and seller
• Public Relations: a form of communication that seeks to influence the feelings and opinions of customers and stakeholders
• Sales Promotion: a short-term inducement of value offered to arouse interest in buying.
• Direct Marketing: uses direct communication with consumers to generate a response
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Promotional Mix
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Promotional Mix Considerations
• Promotional Mix Decisions are based on:1. The Target Audience
2. The Product Life Cycle
3. Product Characteristics
4. Stages in the Buying Decision
5. Channel Strategies
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Developing the Promotional Program
1. Who is the target audience?
2. What are (1) the promotional objectives, (2) the amount of money that can be budgeted, and (3) the kinds of promotion to use?
3. Where should the promotion be run?
4. When should the promotion be run?
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Identify the Target Audience
• The group of prospective buyers toward which a promotion program is directed. – What is your target market’s lifestyle
attitudes, and values?
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Specify Promotional Objectives
• Awareness: The consumer’s ability to recognize and remember the product or brand name.
• Interest: An increase in the consumer’s desire to learn about some of the features of the product or brand.
• Evaluation: The consumer’s appraisal of the product or brand on important attributes.
• Encouraging Trial: The consumer’s actual first purchase and use of the product or brand.
• Build Loyalty: the consumer’s repeated purchase and use of the product or brand.
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Setting Promotional Budget
• Percentage of Sales: funds are allocated to promotion as a percentage of past or anticipated sales.
• Competitive Parity: matching competitor’s absolute level of spending.
• All You Can Afford: money is allocated only after all other money is allocated.
• Objective and Task: the company determines objectives, outlines the tasks to accomplish, determines the promotional costs of performing tasks.
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Where and When?Evaluation
• Scheduling the Promotion:
• Evaluation: – Pretests and Postests
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Direct Marketing
• Forms: direct mail and catalogs, television, telemarketing, direct selling, direct response advertising, online
marketing. • Growth: Technology has helped Direct Marketing grow.
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The Value of Direct Marketing
• Direct Marketing Responses– Direct Orders: the result of offers that
contain all the information necessary for a prospective buyer to make a decision to purchase.
– Lead Generation: the result of an offer designed to generate interest in a product and request additional information.
– Traffic Generation: the result of an offer designed to motivate people to visit a business.
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Tech, Global, and Ethical Issues
• Technology: – Databases make it easer to target customers. – Optical Scanners make collecting data less
obtrusive.
• Global: – Direct Marketing systems are less developed in
other countries due to lack of communication channels and payment methods.
• Ethics: – privacy, annoyance, spam