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How to Establish a Promotional Mix
Copyright © 1999-2008 Edward Lowe Foundation.
www.edwardlowe.org All rights reserved.
How To Establish A Promotional Mix
You drive sales by promoting the benefits of your company's
goods or services to pools of potential buyers. The ways
you promote your organization will largely determine
whether you successfully plant the right messages in the
minds of your target audience. This module explains how you
can establish a promotional mix best suited to your
company's needs and resources.
What You Should Know Before Getting
Started
Understanding the Main
Communication Channels
Why You Need a Promotional Mix
Establishing Your Promotional
Mix
-
Determine Your Target Market
-
Determine Your Objectives
-
Design Your Message
-
Select Your Promotional Channels
-
Determine Your Budget
-
Determine Your Promotional Mix
-
Measure the Results and Adjust
Checklist
Resources
What To Expect
Even a superior product doesn't sell itself. Your customers
need information about your product or service before they
buy it. The ways you communicate features and benefits to
your potential customers is called a promotional mix. This
Business Builder will explain how you can maximize your
company's promotional mix for best results.
What You Should Know Before
Getting Started [top]
When you promote your business, you're engaging in
persuasive communication: You want to convince others to
buy from you. You must select the right promotional
strategy to:
-
Capture the attention of the right group of potential
customers in a credible yet catchy way.
-
Educate them about your products or services.
-
Influence them to buy from you.
A promotional mix is an allocation of resources among five
primary elements:
-
Advertising
-
Public relations or publicity
-
Sales promotion
-
Direct marketing
-
Personal selling
How you integrate these elements depends on what you're
promoting, the biases and preferences of the potential
customers you're courting, general market conditions and
your promotional budget.
The communications process will succeed if:
-
You Deliver A Clear, Compelling Message. You may
have several important or beneficial product features,
but if you don't emphasize what's most important to your
target market or you overwhelm prospects with too much
data, they might reject your message. Example: If the
target-market customer cares most about saving money,
your message should emphasize how this will happen.
-
You Choose The Most Appropriate Promotion Method.
To convey your message effectively, you must understand
the best way to reach your target market. If your key
customers are manufacturers and you supply specialized
equipment, communicating through an advertisement in a
general interest consumer magazine will waste time and
money.
Understanding The Main
Communication Channels [top]
-
Advertising. Advertising is any paid form of media
communication. This includes print ads in magazines,
trade journals and newspapers, radio and TV
announcements, Web-based visibility-building, and
billboards. Advertising is a nonpersonal promotional
activity because the seller has no direct contact with
the potential customer during the communication process.
-
Sales Promotions. In-store demonstrations,
displays, contests and price incentives (50% off,
buy-one-get-one-free) are sales promotion techniques.
-
Public Relations. These activities promote a
positive image, generate publicity and foster goodwill
with the intent of increasing sales. Generating favorable
media coverage, hosting special events and sponsoring
charitable campaigns are examples of public relations.
-
Direct Marketing. A form of advertising aimed
directly at target customers (usually in their homes or
offices) that asks the receiver to take action, such as
ordering a product, clipping a coupon, phoning a
toll-free number or visiting a store. Catalogs, coupon
mailers and letters are common forms of direct marketing.
-
Personal Selling. Face-to-face communication
between buyer and seller.
Why You Need A Promotional Mix
[top]
If you deliver your message in many different ways, you
increase your odds of reaching your target market. Hundreds
of messages a day bombard your target market, but only a
select few penetrate their consciousnesses. Of those, an
even smaller percentage eventually lead them to act.
You may want to communicate a range of messages to
different markets. If you have a product, such as spot
remover, that's used by general consumers but that auto
mechanics apply in a more specialized way, you should
communicate different messages to each market via different
media and methods. You might air a TV commercial to reach
consumers and place an ad in an auto magazine to reach
mechanics.
Without the proper promotional mix, you may squander your
limited resources by taking a scattershot approach.
Promotion must advance your overall marketing plan and
reinforce the dialogue you want to establish with the
segments of the marketplace you covet most.
Beware: In their rush to expand, some fast-growth
entrepreneurs fail to coordinate their marketing strategies
with their specific promotional efforts. A common trap: You
invest heavily on advertising or sales promotion, but you
overlook quality control for your product or price it
improperly.
Establishing Your Promotional
Mix [top]
Establishing the promotional mix that's right for your
company involves seven steps:
-
Determine Your Target Market
The segment of people that needs, or would benefit
from, your product or service is your target market.
Understanding these individuals' attitudes and
behaviors will help you design the best message and
select the right means to reach them.
Example: If you own an upscale jewelry store,
you know from your sales history or marketing research
that your target market is consumers earning more than
$75,000 per year. Any print advertising should thus
appear in publications in which readership income
exceeds $75,000.
-
Determine Your Objectives
You must determine the response you want to elicit from
your target market, such as motivating them to click on
your Web ad or sign up for a free trial of your
product.
Some entrepreneurs fail to define their objectives
precisely. While you obviously want to increase sales,
you need to decide the best way to build a relationship
with shoppers. If you engage them effectively, then
sales should inevitably follow.
Example: To introduce new customers to your
product, a direct-marketing technique, such as a
direct-mail letter with a money-saving offer to
first-time customers, might work. Or you can try a
sales promotion, such as two-for-the-price-of-one. If
your target market has a misconception about your
product (say, that it's more expensive or less
effective than rival products), you can correct the
perception by providing comparisons or testimonials.
The following exercise can help you define your
specific goals.
Check the objectives that apply to your current
business situation:
_____ I need to introduce a new product to a new
market.
_____ I have a product that's under attack by
competitor's products, and I need to retain my current
customer base.
_____ I need to correct false impressions or counter
false claims made about my product.
_____ I need to create greater brand awareness of my
product.
_____ I need to communicate new features to increase
consumption by present customers.
_____ I need to generate more "buzz" or word-of-mouth
business.
_____ I need to build a new image and reposition my
product.
_____ I need to persuade retailers to stock my product
or make larger orders.
-
Design Your Message
The design of your communication incorporates two main
factors: content and format.
Content. The content is the words and images you
use to appeal to your target market. You must give your
potential customers reasons they should respond to your
message. Think of the most important benefit a user of
your product receives. That should lead you to the
central theme of your message's content.
Benefits fulfill a human want or need. Examples: The
desire to enhance status, save money and time, or
increase safety or security.
In choosing your promotional mix, you must communicate
how your product produces a positive emotion or
satisfies a particular need. In the case of the jewelry
store mentioned earlier, the message can appeal to the
target market's desire to gain status, a likely
motivator that drives jewelry shoppers. Or your message
can communicate the desire to be loved: "If you love
her, then you will buy her this elegant ring to prove
it."
Format. Each element of the promotional mix has
its own format requirements. Web advertising relies on
graphics, clarity and color, while personal selling may
involve structured presentations, handouts and
diagnostic tests to engage potential customers.
To determine the best format to deliver your content,
consider the technical aspects of presenting your
message. If you prefer to demonstrate a product to sell
it, you should probably include a broadcast medium in
your advertising. That in turn will lead to decisions
about sound effects, camera angles, lighting, and so
on. Format for print advertising depends on how long or
big a headline should look, how to integrate graphics
and what types of photos reinforce your message.
-
Select Your Promotional Channels
Entrepreneurs who miss revenue goals often explain the
disappointing results by saying, "We were
out-marketed." That usually indicates a failure to plan
and implement the right promotional mix.
By choosing the best methods to convey your message and
extracting the most value from your financial and
creative resources you can devise an integrated
marketing communications program that reinforces your
company's distinct character in your customers' minds.
Weigh the pros and cons of each of the five promotional
methods:
Method 1: Advertising
In one sense, advertising is old-fashioned. It has a
long, storied history as a device to sell products. But
the way we write and deliver ads today barely resembles
the classic print, radio and TV pitches of the past.
Advertising is any paid form of nonpersonal
communication about a company, product, service or idea
by an identified sponsor. That means you must buy space
or time for an advertised message, although in rare
cases you can use public service announcements for
which the media covers the cost.
Advertising involves mass media, from TV and radio to
the Internet, magazines, newspapers and billboards. Its
impersonal nature usually leaves little room for
gathering instant feedback from receivers. That's why
you must study how your target audience will respond to
your message before you send it.
Advertising can help you:
-
Introduce your target market to new products, new
product features and new applications.
-
Persuade your audience to choose your product over a
competitor's or to perceive your product in a new
way, perhaps by launching an "image" appeal.
-
Remind your target market of your product's features,
benefits and availability.
Advantages Of Advertising
-
Credibility. By investing in a public
presentation of your company and its products, you
can enhance customers' perceptions of legitimacy,
permanence and quality that they associate with your
enterprise.
-
Timing. You can repeat a message at strategic
intervals. Repeating your message increases the
likelihood that your target customer will see the
message at a time where he is open to hearing it. The
right timing can maximize your awareness-building
efforts.
-
Drama. The best advertising puts a human face
on a company and its products. It can convey a sense
of adventure, challenge people to test their
assumptions about your business or entertain or
enlighten your audience. It can introduce consumers
to images and symbols that differentiate your company
from others.
-
Branding. Effective advertising enables you to
create and nurture brand equity, a vital but
intangible source of goodwill that flows from a
favorable image associated with a brand name. Once
your company establishes a distinctive trademark in
the public eye, you have a competitive advantage.
Disadvantages Of Advertising
-
Cost. Marketers often argue that advertising
offers a cost-effective way to reach large groups,
and it's true that the cost per contact can prove
lower than with other promotional methods.
Nevertheless, many entrepreneurs lack the finances to
invest heavily in advertising. Producing and placing
professional advertisements is prohibitively
expensive for many emerging-growth companies.
-
Follow Through. While attention-grabbing
advertising can attract interest, even the most
innovative campaigns can become stale over time. And
entrepreneurs may grow to rely too much on
advertising at the expense of more personal, direct
appeals to niche audiences.
-
Lack Of Feedback. Measuring the success of
advertising can prove impossible. Some of the best TV
commercials from a stylistic standpoint may not
increase sales for the advertiser.
-
Consumer Indifference. As people get pelted
with promotional messages throughout the day, they
become better at screening out ads. Information
overload and clutter can lead your target audience to
turn away from your best efforts to engage them.
Advertising On The Web
Online advertising is soaring as more people log onto
the Internet. Over a billion people worldwide are
projected to use the Web by 2005, according to Computer Industry Almanac. Online ad
revenue after a tough year for dot-coms was still over
$4 billion in 2001 ["Where the Online Ad News is Good,"
by Jane Black, Business Week Online (January 17,
2002)].
Creating a Web site for your business can help you
educate consumers, solicit feedback and provide online
service. But don't expect your Web presence to build
your company's exposure.
To advertise effectively on the Internet, you may need
to pay high-traffic sites or Internet publications to
list your URL or link to your home page.
The most common forms of Web advertising include:
-
Banner Ads usually appear at the top or bottom
of a Web page as rectangular "virtual billboards"
that link to your home page. At their best, they draw
a browser's eye with sharp, lively graphics. You
typically buy banner ads on an average CPM basis
(cost per one thousand page views or ads shown), with
rates ranging from $1 CPM to reach broad audiences to
$50 CPM for more targeted sites. You can also pay for
ads that flash onto the screen when triggered by a
keyword search. You'll need to factor in the
"click-through rate," or the number of people who
click on your ad divided by the number of page views
shown, when weighing the cost-effectiveness of banner
ads. The industry average is about 0.5%, but it
varies considerably based on the type of business
you're promoting.
-
Paid Listings. Portal sites, such as America
Online, Yahoo and Lycos, tend to attract the widest
net of Web users. If you're building a
sports-memorabilia business, you may want to pay for
a listing under the "Sports" category of a major
portal. This may cost a flat fee or a percentage of
sales generated from the ad. To stake out a
longer-term position on the Web, you can pay to
sponsor a page on a Web site or e-mail newsletter
that targets your customer base.
-
Pay-per-click Links. Some search engines and
general Web sites sell online advertising on a
per-click basis. Example: See Overture.com (click on "Marketing") or
ValueClick.
-
Pay-per-sale Advertising. A low-risk, low-cost
way to experiment with Web-based advertising is to
enlist affiliates who provide a link to your
company's site. If you make a sale thanks to a
customer coming through that link, your affiliate
earns a commission of, say, 5% to 15% of the total
purchase. You only pay for the advertising when you
rack up a sale. Unless you're tech-savvy (in which
case you can buy software to run your own program),
farm out this advertising to a service bureau that
charges an initial set-up fee and then a chunk of the
commission you pay your affiliates.
-
"opt-in" E-mail Advertising allows you to send
your ad to list members who've agreed to accept
e-mail promotions from businesses such as yours.
Response rates range from 1% to 15%, depending on the
mailing list and the appeal of your offer, according
to Larry Chase, publisher of "Web Digest for
Marketers." Because you'll collect 80% of e-mail
responses within 48 hours, you can test ad campaigns
quickly. And with rates of 15 cents to 35 cents per
name, this approach can save money compared to direct
mail (with its postage, printing and handling costs).
Beware: "Opt-in" lists are far superior to
"opt-out" lists to which recipients get added
involuntarily and from which they must unsubscribe
to discontinue receiving your e-mail ads.
Method 2: Public Relations
With effective public relations, you can increase sales
through favorable, nonpaid media coverage and enhance
your company's image. Public relations builds goodwill
toward your business by raising your company's profile
in the public eye.
Publicity is free advertising. You can generate
publicity through press releases, special events,
sponsorships, newsletters and community activities.
The most common form of publicity is press coverage. It
fits into the promotional mix only when there's
newsworthy information about your company such as:
-
You've developed a breakthrough technology or service
that no one else offers.
-
You've won a prestigious award or industry prize
that's widely recognizable.
-
You've made a major investment in your community,
whether in ramping up hiring (especially if you're
aggressively courting people with disabilities,
senior citizens or implementing welfare-to-work
programs), purchasing land to build your new
headquarters or donating goods to charities.
-
You've acquired another company.
-
You're hiring new executives or announcing the
addition of new board members.
When publicity is not appropriate and your specific
objective is to improve your company's image with the
public, then consider sponsoring a charitable event. If
your specific goal is to increase sales through better
customer service and relations, produce a newsletter on
a regular basis that provides your customers with
useful information.
Advantages Of Public Relations
-
Believability. Most people perceive publicity
as more credible and believable than a paid
advertisement. When you run an ad, you can make any
product claim you want. Consumers know this and often
react with skepticism. But reporters don't have to
feature you in their publications or on their
programs and speak positively about your business.
You don't control the message when you don't pay for
it.
-
Employee Morale. Your staff may work together
to promote your company's charitable activities or
host special events and celebrations for the
community. The resulting publicity can boost their
pride and enthusiasm for their jobs.
-
Educating Visitors To Your Web Site. Before
the Internet, companies would issue press releases
about news designed to interest newspaper reporters.
Today, you can compose press releases and display
them on your company's Web site. While this may not
reach as many people as having a reporter integrate
your press release into a news story, you can still
reap competitive value. Web researchers may read your
company's press pages to get updates on your product
releases, expansion plans or personnel moves.
Disadvantages Of Public Relations
-
Cost. While arranging publicity generally
costs less than advertising, it can prove
surprisingly expensive. You may need to hire a public
relations firm to develop campaigns, write press
releases and follow up with journalists. Even if you
bring these tasks in-house, the cost of developing
publicity items and staging events can stretch your
budget and divert workers from their primary
responsibilities.
-
Lack Of Control. While you can invite the
media to preview your new product or tour your new
facility, there's no guarantee that a glowing article
will result. Or information might be improperly
reported or key details omitted. What's worse,
publicity can backfire if it downplays the positives
and harps on negatives.
-
Failure To Hit Target. You can do everything
right in generating the kind of favorable publicity
you seek. But the message may not reach your desired
audience. A newscast can run your segment at a time
when fewer viewers are watching, or a newspaper can
mention your company in a short article buried in a
back section that's often discarded.
Method 3: Sales Promotions
Sales promotions are marketing activities that provide
extra value or incentives to your sales force,
distributors or consumers.
Consumer-oriented sales promotion targets individual
customers. It engages and motivates potential buyers.
Examples include free samples, coupons, contests,
rebates, premiums, point-of-sale displays and other
incentives intended to stimulate immediate sales. For
retailers, visual merchandising is especially
important. Attractive window and interior displays and
eye-catching exterior signs can lure shoppers and
reinforce the unique theme or character of your store.
Trade-oriented sales promotion targets intermediaries,
such as wholesalers, distributors and retailers. You
can use promotional and merchandising allowances, price
deals, sales contests and trade shows to persuade the
trade to stock and promote your company's products.
Sales promotions tend to lose their luster after a few
weeks or months. They're typically woven into a
promotional mix to:
-
Encourage customers to use the product more
frequently and to attract users of a competing brand.
-
Transform potential customers into actual customers.
-
Encourage retailers to carry more inventory.
When weighing whether to use a sales promotion, ask
yourself two questions:
"Will this promotion reach my targeted customers?" and
"Will it make a lasting impression on them, or will it
be tossed away and forgotten?"
Sales promotions must complement your overall strategic
planning. For instance, avoid offering a coupon unless
it fits in with your larger plan to lure consumers to
switch brands.
Experimentation helps you determine the most effective
sales promotion tools. Pre-testing is vital to avoid
costly mistakes. Example: Before producing and
distributing 50,000 product samples with coupons on a
consumer's first purchase at 100 regional grocery
stores, run a test. Go to five of the stores and
distribute samples. Determine how many coupons you
actually get back, and then decide whether to expand to
the full sales promotion.
Advantages Of Sales Promotions
-
Build Relationships. Trade-oriented promotions
give marketing intermediaries a financial incentive
to support your company's products. By offering
discounts to retailers in exchange for prominent
shelf space or end-of-the-aisle displays, for
instance, you can strengthen relationships with key
players who can help stimulate sales.
-
Stir Excitement. Many consumers love contests
and sweepstakes. You can turn a drab purchase into a
more lively event by promising cash prizes to lucky
winners. At its best, a sales promotion adds alluring
incentives for buyer action.
-
Gauge Price Sensitivity. Using coupons or
rebates can help you measure to what extent your
shoppers base their buying decisions on price. You
can also collect their addresses and other consumer
profile data that can prove valuable in subsequent
marketing campaigns.
Disadvantages Of Sales Promotions
-
Risk Of Misfire. Many fast-growth
entrepreneurs rush to try some form of sales
promotion, only to declare such efforts a waste. But
problems often result from poor planning. You must
first identify and develop specific strategies to
boost sales before you target customers and choose
sales promotion tools, rather than plunging into
sales promotions without laying the groundwork first.
-
Risk Of Dependency. Business owners can grow
to rely on sales promotion and dwell on short-term
marketing ploys, at the expense of more coordinated
long-range plans. Realize that sales gains from
promotions often sputter after an initial spike and
you can sacrifice long-term brand equity in the
pursuit of short-term goals.
-
Risk Of Trivializing Your Brand. Giving out
coupons or samples can undermine the image of
exclusivity or prestige that you wish to associate
with your product or company. Price-conscious
consumers may also withhold purchases in the absence
of sales promotions.
Method 4: Direct Marketing
Direct marketing enables you to communicate with your
customers in a more personalized way than advertising,
such as greeting them with a letter or telephoning them
directly. Telemarketing, direct mail, catalogs and
coupon mailers are all examples of direct-marketing
techniques.
Successful direct marketing depends on whether you can
acquire and maintain a database of your target market.
Some marketers find this alone justifies the cost of
advertising in a national consumer publication instead.
Consider using direct marketing in your promotional mix
if:
-
Your Primary Means Of Distributing Your Product Is
Through The Mail Or Directly To Customers. With
the growth of the Internet, many companies don't use
retail outlets at all. Others supplement their retail
efforts by selling through the Web, the mail or
telephone. Companies that distribute products through
the mail must assemble and maintain databases and
mailing lists. Direct mail is a particularly
cost-effective communication vehicle for them.
-
You Are Selling Products With Many Benefits.
Your product may have multiple benefits to the user,
but space limitations in an advertisement may prevent
you from mentioning all but the most prominent ones.
A direct-mail letter lets you communicate all
your benefits. It's also a good way to announce sales
promotions or special discounts.
-
Your Advertising Efforts Fail To Reach Your Target
Market. As the upscale jewelry store owner, you
may feel that the ad you placed in a high-end
magazine isn't increasing your business. You can try
buying a list by ZIP code in an exclusive residential
area. This assures you that you're concentrating on
your actual target market.
-
You Are Selling An Expensive Product Or
Service. When you're engaging in high-ticket
sales, you must expend more effort to convince
potential customers to buy. A direct-mail letter
gives you more opportunity to expand your appeal than
an advertisement with limited space.
-
Your Business Depends On Reorders And/or
Volume. Magazine publishers use telemarketing
because subscribers often put off renewing their
subscriptions. A sales rep's reminder call often
spurs a renewal sale.
Advantages Of Direct Marketing
-
Predictability. By staging initial tests and
measuring the results, you can roll out a
direct-marketing campaign to a wider universe of
potential customers with a strong likelihood that it
will succeed. You can mitigate your risk by strategic
sampling.
-
Effectiveness In Reaching The Right Target.
Through direct marketing, you can contact narrow
market segments and customize your message to appeal
to them.
-
Ease Of Measurement. Evaluating
direct-marketing campaigns is straightforward because
you can measure outcomes with quantifiable data, such
as number and size of orders, leads generated or
requests for more information.
Disadvantages Of Direct Marketing
-
Saturation. Many consumers are rebelling
against the onslaught of direct marketing. They're
more apt to discard direct mail, resent telemarketing
calls, turn away door-to-door salespeople and laugh
off TV infomercials.
-
Reliance On Obsolete Direct-mail Lists. In
this transient society, increasing numbers of people
relocate more frequently or use two addresses.
Despite advances in technology that update mailing
lists, it remains difficult to buy reliable lists
that reach the market segment you want. Incorrect
list selection can wipe out the appeal of a great
product, a great package or a great offer.
-
Heightened Need For Customer Service. If you
rely on direct-response ads, telemarketing or direct
mail to introduce your company to shoppers, you must
deliver an even higher level of personalized service
to win over prospective customers. This requires
additional investment in staffing and customer
service training and delivery that some entrepreneurs
overlook.
Method 5: Personal Selling
Personal selling brings humanness to selling. Sales
representatives do what advertisements do: inform,
persuade or remind. But they do it in person and can
thus give your company a distinct personality.
There are two types of salespeople, Order
Getters and Order Takers. Order
getters engage in creative selling by finding and
winning over customers. Order takers are more passive:
They wait for customers to find them.
The biggest factor in determining whether personal
selling should become part of your mix is whether
staffing a proactive sales force applies to your
business model. Personal selling is most often used by
companies that sell expensive, technical or highly
specialized products.
-
Determine Your Budget
A common method of establishing your promotional budget
is to estimate what your competitors spend and then
match it. You do this by monitoring their ads,
promotions and special events they sponsor. While this
lacks precision, it provides a ballpark estimate.
Once you gather data about your competitors'
promotional budgets, don't copy your rivals' spending
habits or promotional mix. Use your information as a
guide.
A more exact way to determine your budget is to
assemble a wish list of promotional methods you want to
use to meet your objectives. Imagine that money isn't
an issue. Then using actual rates for print and
broadcast advertisements and estimated costs for sales
promotion and publicity, determine each activity's
dollar cost. Then scale the list down until you have a
reasonable budget.
Television and national print advertising may prove too
expensive or inappropriate at this time. In any case,
consider testing a range of techniques rather than
investing your promotional dollars in one area. Why?
Because promotion requires experimentation. It may take
several months and dozens of tests to uncover the most
effective mix for your company. Expect to reevaluate
your budget and make adjustments as you go along.
Establishing an effective promotional mix cannot occur
if you allocate resources sporadically. For your
marketing message to produce results, promotional
activities must occur on a regular basis. Consumers
rarely take immediate action and may benefit from
repeated exposure to your message before they buy.
-
Determine Your Promotional Mix
Now that you have completed all of the preceding steps,
it's time to formulate your actual promotional mix. The
most common method for actually putting your mix on
paper is to express it as a percentage of your overall
promotional budget.
Example 1: Our upscale jeweler's promotional mix
based on a budget of $5,000 might look something like
this:
|
50% Direct Mail: Direct-Mail Campaign
|
$2,500
|
|
40% Advertising: Print Ads in Local Lifestyle
Magazine
|
$2,000
|
|
10% Sales Promo: Coupon In Direct-Mail Letter
For Free Appraisal
|
$500
|
Example 2: The promotional mix of the maker of a
candy bar that fights tooth decay with the same budget
might look something like this:
|
25% Public Relations: Press Releases
|
$1,250
|
|
25% Advertising: Print Ads in Local Newspapers
and Dental Publications
|
$1,250
|
|
50% Sales Promotion: Product Samples, Coupons,
Contest
|
$2,500
|
Always integrate and coordinate the various tools you
use. For example, sales promotion can be integrated
with advertising by announcing a contest in a print
advertisement. Public relations efforts should try to
produce results at the same time advertisements are
scheduled to appear. Direct-mail letters should be sent
the same week a new sales promotion begins.
Exercise: Define Your Mix
Formulate a specific breakdown of your promotional mix.
-
My time frame for testing a promotional campaign:
_______.
-
My promotional budget: $________.
-
My promotional mix: [use format of above examples]
-
Measure The Results Of The Implemented Program And
Adjust As Needed
Increased sales will be the yardstick you use to
measure each promotional vehicle you employ.
Advertising is often the hardest to measure.
Exceptions: Allow print readers to clip a coupon or
send in an order form, or invite radio or TV audiences
to call an 800 toll-free number.
You will need to evaluate and change your promotional
mix not only to correct ineffective promotional
vehicles but also to adjust for growth.
After one year on the market, our candy-bar maker will
need to re-evaluate the mix:
|
Total Budget
|
$10,000
|
|
60% Advertising: Print Ads in National Consumer
and Dental Publications
|
$6,000
|
40% Sales Promotion: Product Samples, Coupons,
Point-of-Purchase Displays
Note: Public relations is now gone
from the mix because the novelty of the product
has worn off, and the product is no longer
newsworthy. Advertising represents a higher
percentage as this company moves to increase
its national exposure. This particular company
has found that advertising to dentists is
important because they recommend it to their
patients and that sales promotions have yielded
effective results.
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$4,000
|
|
Sample Promotional Mix
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Company:
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Pampered Pets Pet Sitting Service Employees go
into people's homes to feed pets, take them for
walks, change litter boxes
|
Target
Market:
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People who work long hours and don't have enough
time to take care of their pets
People who are going on vacation and don't want
to put their pets in a kennel and don't have
anyone who could stay at their house
Elderly people who are unable to care for their
pets but want to keep them
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Communication
Objectives:
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We need to:
introduce our service to the public
create awareness of our service
get people to use our service, not our
competitor's
get veterinarians to recommend our service
have at least one veterinarian agree to treat
our clients' pets on an emergency basis, a
feature that competitors don't offer
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Design Message
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Content:
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If you care about your pet's welfare when you
aren't home, then you will use our services/It's
so convenient and reasonably priced that you
can't afford not to use our services
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Format:
|
Fliers, brochure, ads in local newspapers and
Yellow Pages
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Promotional
Methods:
|
Advertising
Yellow Pages, local newspapers
Sales Promotions
Coupons that can be punched out 1 punch per day,
after 20 punches, get one day free or at
discounted rate
Public Relations
Not applicable at this time. As business grows,
we plan to offer to contribute part of customers'
payments to an animal shelter.
Direct Marketing
Fliers in mailboxes throughout local
neighborhoods, to veterinarians, apartment
complexes where elderly live, to pet shops. As
business grows, we will send a newsletter to
customers.
Personal Selling
To veterinarians, pet shop owners, travel agents,
apartment/condominium management to refer people
to our services. This only requires existing
personnel time, no added budget cost incurred
here.
|
|
Budget:
|
Five hundred brochures for display in pet shops
and veterinarian offices will cost $150. As
business grows, we will expand to two-color
pieces. Fliers can also be created inexpensively.
Two hundred fliers will cost $20 to copy on
colored paper (distribute in spring and summer).
Yellow Pages ad will be limited to an
informational in-column listing, 1 inch for $300
for the year in the local book. This book is
sufficient. Small ads in the local newspaper will
cost $300 for two placements. Rolodex cards will
cost $160 for 500. Five hundred punch-out cards
will cost $27.
|
|
Total promotional budget: $977
|
|
|
|
Promotional Mix:
|
Advertising
|
61%
|
$596
|
|
|
Sales Promotions
|
3%
|
$29
|
|
|
|
Public Relations
|
0%
|
$0
|
|
|
|
Direct Marketing
|
36%
|
$352
|
|
|
|
Personal Selling
|
0%
|
$0
|
|
|
Measuring Results
|
|
It's now one year later and Pampered Pets is
evaluating its promotional mix:
|
|
Communication Objectives:
|
|
We successfully introduced our service to the
target markets and have a steady base of
customers. We have the support of several
veterinarians and were able to form an emergency
services agreement with two in the area. This
year, we will expand into certain areas of the
neighboring county while enlarging the current
customer base.
|
|
Promotions Channels:
|
|
Advertising:
|
|
Yellow Pages: Response is slow but steady.
We will renew as is ($350).
|
|
Local Newspapers: Steady advertising will
be put on hold as word-of-mouth referrals are
fairly strong. We will place two small ads before
the summer and Christmas holiday seasons ($425).
|
|
Sales Promotions:
|
|
Punch-out Cards: These have proven a
success. This year we will add a special discount
coupon to attract new customers and to thank
customers for their referrals (one free day for
every five referrals who become customers) to
replace last year's 21st day free program. ($55)
|
|
Public Relations:
|
|
When a pet we cared for died, a small donation
was sent to the local branch of the ASPCA. The
owners were touched and sent a thank-you note.
They also told their friends, which resulted in
more referrals. We will continue to do this and
also send cards when client's pets have surgery.
During the holidays, food and supplies were
donated to the ASPCA, and our picture was in the
newspaper, which generated more referrals for the
holiday season ($100).
|
|
Direct Marketing:
|
|
The fliers were successful, so we will continue
to use them and increase the number of mailings
from two to four. The Rolodex cards and letters
were successful; but because we ordered such a
large quantity last year, we don't need to order
more. We also have brochures left from last year,
so we don't need more. I plan to launch a
newsletter on our Web site in six months ($180).
|
|
Personal Selling:
|
|
Total Budget: $1,110
|
|
New Promotional Mix:
|
|
|
This Year
|
Last Year
|
|
Advertising
|
70%
|
61%
|
|
Sales Promotions
|
5%
|
3%
|
|
Public Relations
|
9%
|
0%
|
|
Direct Marketing
|
16%
|
36%
|
|
Personal Selling
|
0%
|
0%
|
Checklist [top]
Have you:
___ Identified your target market?
___ Determined your communication objectives?
___ Defined your communication objectives based on your
product or service?
___ Applied your objectives to your product or service?
___ Designed your message?
___ Used the most clear, compelling content?
___ Chosen an appropriate format to convey your message?
___ Selected the proper promotional methods to communicate
your message?
___ Established a budget?
___ Formulated your actual promotional mix?
___ Evaluated each promotional vehicle that you have
employed?
___ Measured your results and adjusted as needed?
Resources [top]
Books
The Internet Marketing Plan: The
Complete Guide to Instant Web Presence, 2nd ed. by
Kim M. Bayne. (Wiley, 2000).
Do-It-Yourself Advertising and
Promotion: How to Produce Great Ads, Brochures, Catalogs,
Direct Mail, Web Sites and More, 3rd edition, by
Fred E. Hahn and Kenneth G. Mangun. (Wiley, 2003). "And
more" includes trade shows and telemarketing.
Business to Business Direct Marketing:
Proven Direct Response Methods to Generate More Leads and
Sales, 2nd ed. by Robert W. Bly. (NTC Business,
1998).
Marketing Management: The Millennium
Edition by Philip Kotler. (Prentice Hall, 1999).
The 11 Immutable Laws of Internet
Branding by Al Ries and Laura Ries.
(HarperBusiness, 2000).
101 Ways to Promote Your Web Site:
Filled with Proven Internet Marketing Tips, Tools,
Techniques, and Resources to Increase Your Web Site
Traffic, 2nd ed. by Susan Sweeney. (Maximum Press,
2000).
Internet Sites
Wilson
Internet Web Marketing & E-Commerce
Topica
Web Digest
for Marketers
Associations
The
Direct Marketing Association
International Association of Business
Communicators
The Public
Relations Society of America
Publications
Target Marketing
Writer: Morey Stettner
All rights reserved. The text of this publication, or any
part thereof, may not be reproduced in any manner whatsoever
without written permission from the publisher.
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