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Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
Lesson
36
OTHER
COMMUNICATION TOOLS
Introduction
With
advertising and promotions done,
this lecture discusses the
remaining tools of
communication.
All these tools have fit
with different situations,
both in isolation and in
complement
with each other.
PUBLIC
RELATIONS, EVENT MARKETING,
AND SPONSORSHIPS1
Public
relations
Public
relations (PR) can be cashed in
through favorable coverage to your
brand in relevant
magazines,
newspapers, and may also be on television
shows. You can talk about
your success
story,
go for an interview by one of the seniors
in your company, or publicize a good
social
deed
done for no tangible commercial
gains. It is a good strategy and well
pursued goal to bring
to
your brand good publicity and
positive attention.
As
and when you get more into
advertising, your relationship
with the media should
strengthen,
who
generally are willing to
help their clients gain
importance, limelight, and
promotion.
Capitalizing
on public relations should be
the goal of every brand
manager, who serves as
the
key
connections between their companies and
the media that offer public
relations
opportunities.
PR
for Negative situations
Not
all PR is positive; you have
to undertake efforts, at times, to
counter negative
situations.
The
bird flu crisis of 2006 is a case in
point. Companies in the branded chicken
business
educated
their customers about all
vital facts relating the
crisis. It was done both
through
advertising
and PR exercises that complemented
the advertising part.
The
fundamental principle in managing
the crisis is to go about in a
planned way. You
should
develop
if and then relationships (contingency
plans) and be honest and straight
forward in
communication
with your target market.
Straight forwardness is the
key to making PR in
negative
situations effective.
Event
marketing
Event
marketing and sponsorships are other
ways of creating goodwill. You
have to be well
connected
in the market not to miss an
opportunity. When known for
undertaking such
promotions,
many organizations will contact
you to stage something to
that effect. The
examples
are:
·
Award
ceremonies on TV
·
Sponsorships of TV
regular programs like
cooking.
·
Sports
events
The
positive side of such things
is they are economical and cost
less than regular TV or
high-
end
print advertising. Brand
managers should not get subdued by
the glamour of the
event
itself.
The most important question
here is to decide whether or not
such efforts are going
to
reach
your target market? The
answer lies in planning
activities from reaching the
target market
standpoint.
Direct
Marketing
This
mode of marketing owes to well structured
communications in the form of catalogs.
This
has
been and is quite popular in
the Western markets. Lack of
time to go shopping coupled
with
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Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
good
reputation of direct selling brands
are two factors that
have made this mode a
trustworthy
way
of buying consumer goods.
But,
technological advances of the
recent years have given the
concept an impetus. We
now
have
what you may call
"new marketing"2.
What really has given
the concept strength is
its
ability
to allow businesses develop a
long-term relationship with
their customers
through
credible
communication.
Businesses
have realized that lifetime
value of a buyer is huge as compared to
one purchase.
Getting
a new buyer is much more
costly and that provides the
businesses the logical
reason not
to
lose that buyer and the
"relationship". It is an opportunity to
maintain "relationship".
Thanks
to
technology that provides
means through internet to
stay in contact with your
customers and
maintain
the data bank for
different kinds of research
models.
Foundations
of one-to-one relationship
1.
Companies must maintain records for
each customer that show
not only all
relevant
classification
data as name, address and demographics,
but also responses to
previous
communications.
2.
All info pertaining to previous
purchases should be maintained
relating at what
price
and
in response to what offer or
communications it took place. A good data
base allows
managers
to analyze it right down to
the individual level in
terms of buying
behavior.
This
means that companies can now
target individuals or groups of
individuals
accurately.
3.
The firms can also measure
the effects of a communication
campaign accurately
with
the
ability to improve the
database and the methods of
interpretation on a continuous
basis.
Think of company XYZ maintaining
the data and contacting
their customers on a
regular
basis.
FMCG
companies have started developing direct
marketing model via the
internet and
are
experimenting with millions on
their lists. Based on the
models, they can tailor
their
offers
more and more closely to the
individuals' known preferences. Direct
delivery
services
offered by restaurants and other food
chains in our market are
excellent
examples
of this phenomenon.
According
to one reference, direct sales
through catalogues and internet have
topped
US$500
billion3. Even chains of
stores have started selling
through this mode with
no
visible
dents into the sales through
their stores. There are well
known companies that
specialize
in sales through internet
B2C having databases so
huge that they can
rent
that
information to others for
research purposes making it a
line of business in
itself.
Since
use is increasing at a fast
pace, many advertisements in
the main media
contain
internet
addresses of companies' websites. It
offers new opportunities in a
global
market.
You can see anything in pictures
with pricing and a lot of
details.
Depending
on the value of purchase, companies
decide whether to deliver
free or on
charge.
The delivery, however, is
the responsibility of the
seller.
The
main question remains, with
such a wide access to the
net, how many people
want
to
be interactive? Can you see
such people on the action
stage of customer
response
effects?
They want to buy what
kinds of products and how
often? Many surf for
the
sake
of fun and do not buy. The
answer lies in whatever
evidence that we may have
and
can
assume the concept is going
to multiply. You, however, have to
plan your
campaigns
in a way which integrates
all the vehicles of
communication in line
with
your
goals and objectives.
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Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
4.
Communicate across the
organization and create internal
involvement
Unless
we let everyone in the
organization know what we
are trying to do with
the
brand
and its communication strategies, the
communication either
·
May not fully come to life,
or
·
May assume meanings
contrary to the brand's
promise
Think
for awhile operations people
not being on the same
wavelength as marketing
people
in case of sandwiches XYZ. Operations
are building the promise and
marketing
are
delivering it. They may
start working at cross-purposes only
because the promise
does
not match with what is
being claimed by the ad
copy. You have to interact
with all
the
touch points that brand
management may have within
the company. Education
all
across
the functional boundaries
about your communication
objectives in the light
of
your
brand's vision is a
must.
You
will see that you are
building a sense of ownership
among all relating the
brand
and
brand's communication. You will also get
support in areas, you may
have
overlooked
earlier, that will add to
the meaning of your
communication.
In
developing your brand-based
communication plans, you
have to think of every
stage
of
communication that a customer
may have with your
brand. Your strategies must
lay
specific
emphasis on all possible encounters
that the brand will have
with him/her. You
will
recall that your brand
communicates with the
customer before buying,
during the
sale,
and after the sale.
Summary
of communication
Communication
brings positioning to life; it
deals with four major
strategic elements of
brand
management.
1.
Corporate vision
2.
Brand vision
3.
Brand promise
4.
Brand positioning
We
have different tools of
communication at our hand.
Advertising and promotions are
the
most
widely used tools; both
must complement each other;
we must not forget the
pull and
push
properties.
While
dealing with advertising, we
have to follow a few
following fundamentals
the
understanding
of which is very
significant
1.
Copy
2.
Copy strategy, and
3.
Brand-based strategy
We
must understand the rules
that lay the foundation
for developing the right
copy in light
of
all strategic elements; the
product's basic character,
its values, the promises it
makes,
and
why they are deliverable.
Following the rules rightly,
we can bridge the gap
between
promise
and positioning the present and the
future.
We
must also understand the
philosophy of customer response
effects and then craft
our
communication
strategy in relation to different
effects employing different
tools; this will
give
us the right brand-based
strategy.
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Brand
Management (MKT624)
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Bibliography:
1.
Scot M. Davis: "Brand Asset
Management Driving Profitable
Growth through
Your
Brands"; Jossey-Bas, a Wiley
Imprint (154)
2.
Geoffrey Randall: "Branding A
Practical Guide to Planning
Your Strategy";
Kogan
Page (79)
3.
Scot M. Davis: "Brand Asset
Management Driving Profitable
Growth through
Your
Brands"; Jossey-Bas, a Wiley
Imprint (171)
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