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![]() Introduction
to Business MGT 211
VU
Lesson
31
PROMOTION
The
ultimate goal of a promotion is to
increase sales. Other goals
include communicating
information,
positioning a product, adding
value, and controlling sales
volume. In deciding on
the
appropriate promotional mix,
marketers must consider the
good or service being
offered,
characteristics
of the target audience and
the buyer's decision
process, and the
promotional
mix
budget.
Advertising
strategies often depend on
the product life cycle
stage. In the introductory
stage,
informative
advertising helps to build
awareness. As a product passes
through the growth
and
maturity
stages, persuasive advertising,
comparative advertising, and
reminder advertising
are
often
used. Advertising media
include the Internet,
newspapers, television, direct
mail, radio,
magazines,
and outdoor advertising, as
well as other channels such
as Yellow Pages,
special
events,
and door-to-door selling.
The combination of media
that a company chooses is
called
its
media mix. Personal selling
tasks include order
processing, creative selling
(activities that
help
persuade buyers), and
missionary selling (activities
that promote firms and
products
rather
than simply close sales).
The personal selling process
consists of six steps:
prospecting
and
qualifying (identifying potential
customers with the authority
to buy), approaching (the
first
moments
of contact), presenting and
demonstrating (presenting the
promotional message
that
explains
the product), handling
objections, closing (asking
for the sale), and
following up
(processing
the order and ensuring
after-sale service).
Coupons
provide savings off the
regular price of a product.
Point-of-purchase (POP)
displays
are
intended to grab attention
and help customers find
products in stores.
Purchasing
incentives
include samples (which let
customers try products
without buying them)
and
premiums
(rewards for buying
products). At trade shows,
sellers rent booths to
display
products
to customers who already
have an interesting in buying.
Contests are intended
to
increase
sales by stimulating buyers'
interest in products.
Many
firms began exploring the
possibilities of international sales
when domestic sales
flattened
out in the mid-twentieth
century. Because advertising is
the best tool for
stimulating
product
awareness on a country-by-country basis,
it has played a key role in
the growth of
international
marketing. Whereas some
firms prefer a decentralized
approach (separate
marketing
management for different
countries), others have
adopted a global
perspective
(coordinating
marketing programs directed at
one worldwide audience).
Because the global
perspective
requires products designed
for multinational markets,
companies such as
Coca-
Cola,
McDonald's, and many others
have developed global
brands. In promoting
these
products,
global advertising must
overcome such challenges as
product variations,
language
differences,
cultural receptiveness, and
image differences.
Small
business can advertise
effective and economically on
the Internet. They can
also
engage
in personal selling activities in
local, national, and
international markets.
Because
coupons
and contests are more
expensive and harder to
manage, small business
owners are
likely
to rely more heavily on
premiums and special
sales.
The
Importance of Promotion ----
Of the
four ingredients in the
marketing mix--product,
price,
distribution, and promotion --
promotion is perhaps the one
most often associated
with
marketing.
Although there are no
guarantees of success, promotion
has a profound impact
on
a
product's performance in the
marketplace.
Promotion
--- is persuasive
communication that motivates
people to buy whatever
an
organization
is selling -- goods, services, or
ideas. Promotion may take
the form of
advertising,
personal selling, publicity,
public relations, or sales
promotion. A company's
123
![]() Introduction
to Business MGT 211
VU
promotional
strategy defines the
direction and scope of the
promotional activities that
will be
implemented
to meet marketing
objectives.
Information
and Exchange
Values
A
business uses promotional
methods to communicate information
about itself and
its
products
to consumers and industrial
buyers. From an information
standpoint, promotions
seek
to accomplish four things
with potential
customers:
i.
Make
them aware of
products.
ii.
Make
them knowledgeable about
products. Potential customers
need to
know
where the item can be
found, how much it will
cost, and how to
use
it.
iii.
Persuade
them to like products
iv.
Persuade
them to purchase products.
Persuading motivates people
to
satisfy
their wants in a particular
way. Persuasive advertising
lets them
know
how your product will
benefit them.
Promotional
Objectives ---
Promotions experts recognize
that not all objectives
are sales
objectives.
Some communications objectives
use an indirect approach to make an
audience
aware
of a new product or change a
company's negative image. In
addition to increasing
sales,
promotion can have four
other objectives.
i.
Communicating
Information--Information
can advise customers
about
a
product's existence or about
its features.
ii.
Positioning
Products--process of
establishing an identifiable
product
image
in the minds of consumers.
They can base their
strategies on
several
positioning strategies: on specific
product features or
attributes,
on
the services that accompany
the product, on the
product's image, on
price,
or on category leadership.
iii.
Adding
Value--Value-conscious
customers gain when the
promotional
mix
is shifted so that it communicates
value-added benefits in
its
products.
iv.
Controlling
Sales Volume--Increasing
promotional activities in
slow
periods
can help firms in seasonal
businesses to achieve more
stable
sales
volume throughout the
year.
Promotional
Strategies
i.
A
push
strategy is a promotional
approach designed to
motivate
wholesalers
and retailers to push a
producer's products to end
users.
ii.
A
pull
strategy is a promotional
approach that stimulates
consumer
demand,
which then exerts pressure
on wholesalers and retailers
to
carry
a product. Many firms use
combinations of these two
very
different
strategies.
Promotional
Mix --- Marketers use four
types of promotional tools:
advertising, personal
selling,
sales promotions, and publicity and
public relations. Market-related
factors influence
the
promotion mix. The
best combination of promotional
tools will depend on many
factors,
such
as
i.
The
nature of the product
ii.
The
Target Audience
124
![]() Introduction
to Business MGT 211
VU
iii.
Promotion
and the Buyer Decision
Process. This is the
five-step process
outlined
in Chapter 10. Marketers
match promotion efforts with
different
stages
of the buying decision
process.
iv.
The
Promotional Mix Budget. The
combined costs of personal
selling,
advertising,
sales promotion, and public
relations must fall within
the
budgeted
amount and be balanced to
have the desired effects
on
attitudes
and purchasing
decisions.
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