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Chapter 14 Promotion and Pricing Strategies Learning Goals Discuss how integrated marketing communications relates to a firm’s overall promotion strategy. Explain promotional mix and outline the objectives of promotion. Summarize the different types of advertising and advertising media. Outline the roles of sales promotion, personal selling, and public relations. Describe pushing and pulling promotional strategies. Discuss the major ethical issues involved in promotion. Outline the different types of pricing strategies. Discuss how firms set prices in the marketplace, and  describe the four alter- native pricing strategies. Discuss consumer  perceptions of price. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Promotion   The function of informing, persuading, and influencing a purchase decision. Integrated marketing communications (IMC)   Coordination of all promotional activities — media advertising, direct mail, personal selling, sales promotion, and public relations —t o produce a unified customer-focused message. INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS •  Must take a broad view and plan for all form of customer contact. •  Create unified personality and message for the good, service, or brand. •  Elements include personal selling, advertising, sales promotion,  publicity, and public relations.
THE PROMOTIONAL MIX Promotional mix  Combination of personal and nonpersonal selling techniques designed to achieve promotional objectives. Personal selling  Interpersonal promotional process involving a seller’ s  face-to-face presentation to a prospective buyer. •  Nonpersonal selling  Advertising, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations.
Objectives of Promotional Strategy
Promotional Planning •  Product placement  Marketers pay placement fees to have their products showcased in various media, ranging from newspapers and magazines to television and movies. •  Guerilla marketing  Innovative, low-cost marketing efforts designed to get consumers ’  attention in unusual ways.
ADVERTISING Advertising  Paid nonpersonal communication delivered through various media and designed to inform, persuade, or remind members of a particular audience. Types of Advertising •  Product advertising, institutional advertising, cause advertising Advertising and the Product Life Cycle •  Informative advertising  Build initial demand for a product.  •  Persuasive advertising   Improve the competitive status of a product. •  Reminder-oriented advertising  Maintain awareness of the importance  and usefulness of a product.
Advertising Media •  All media offer advantages and disadvantages
SALES PROMOTION Sales promotion  Nonpersonal marketing  activities other than advertising,  personal selling, and public relations  that stimulate consumer purchasing  and dealer effectiveness.
Consumer-Oriented Promotions Premiums, Coupons, Rebates, Samples •  Two of every five promotion dollars are spent on  premiums , items given free or at reduced price with the purchase of another product. •  Coupons  attract new customers but focus on price rather than brand loyalty. •  Rebates  increase purchase rates, promote multiple purchases, and reward product users. •  Three of every four consumers who receive a  sample  will try it. Games, Contest, and Sweepstakes •  Often used to introduce new goods and attract new customers. •  Subject to legal restrictions. Specialty Advertising •  Gift of useful merchandise carrying the name, logo, or slogan  of an organization.
Trade-Oriented Promotions •  Sales promotion geared to marketing intermediaries rather than to consumers.  •   Encourage retailers in several ways:  •  To stock new products. •  To continue carrying existing ones. •  To promote both new and existing products effectively to consumers.  •  Point-of-purchase (POP) advertising  Displays or demonstrations that promote products when and where consumers buy them, such as in retail stores. •  Promote goods and services at  trade shows .
PERSONAL SELLING •  A person-to-person promotional presentation to a potential buyer. •  Usually used under four conditions: •  Customers are relatively few in number and geographically concentrated.  •  The product is technically complex, involves trade-ins, and requires special handling.  •  The product carries a relatively high price.  •  It moves through direct-distribution channels. •  Example: Selling to the government or military.
Sales Tasks •  All involve assisting customers in some way.  Order Processing •  Identifying customer needs, pointing out merchandise to  meet them, and processing the order. Creative Selling •  Promoting a good or service whose benefits are not readily  apparent or whose purchase decision requires a close  analysis of alternatives. Missionary Selling •  Representative promotes goodwill for a company or  provides technical or operational assistance to the customer.  Telemarketing •  Personal selling conducted by telephone; regulated by the  Federal Trade Commission ’s  1996 Telemarketing Sales Rule.
The Sales Process
Public Relations Public relations  Public organization ’s  communications and relationships with its various audience. •  Helps a firm establish awareness of goods and services and builds a positive image of them. Publicity Publicity  Stimulation of demand for a good, service, place, idea, person, or organization by disseminating news or obtaining favorable unpaid media presentations. •  Good publicity can promote a firm ’s  positive image •  Negative publicity can cause problems.
PROMOTIONAL STRATEGY Pushing and Pulling Strategies •  Pushing strategy  Relies on personal selling to market an item to wholesalers and retailers in a company ’s  distribution channels.  •  Companies promote the product to members of the marketing channel, not to end users.  •  Pulling strategy  Promote a product by generating consumer demand for it, primarily through advertising and sales promotion appeals.  •  Potential buyers will request that their suppliers —r etailers or local distributors —c arry the product, thereby pulling it through the distribution channel.  •  Most marketing situations require combinations of pushing and pulling strategies, although the primary emphasis can vary.
ETHICS IN PROMOTION Puffery and Deception •  Puffery  Exaggeration about the benefits or superiority of a product.  •  Deception  Deliberately making promises that are untrue, such as guaranteed weight loss in five days, get-rich-quick schemes for would-be entrepreneurs, or promised return on investments. Promotion to Children and Teens •  Children and teens have enormous purchasing power but cannot analyze advertising messages.  Promotion in Public Schools and on College Campuses •  Schools earn income from in-school advertising, but it is generating  backlash.
PRICING OBJECTIVES IN THE MARKETING MIX Price  Exchange value of a good or service.
PRICING STRATEGIES •  Pricing is influenced by people in different areas of a company. Price Determination in Practice Cost-based pricing  Adding a percentage (markup) to the base cost of a product to cover overhead costs and generate profits. •  Actual markup used varies by such factors as brand image and type of store. •  Example: Typical clothing markup by retailers is double the wholesaler price. Breakeven Analysis Breakeven analysis  Pricing technique used to determine the  minimum sales volume a product must generate at a certain  price level to cover all costs.
Alternative Pricing Strategies Skimming Pricing •  Setting an intentionally high price relative to the prices of competing products. Penetration Pricing •  Setting a low price as a major marketing weapon. Everyday Low Pricing and Discount Pricing •  ELP  Maintaining continuous low prices rather than relying on short-term price-cutting tactics such as cents-off coupons, rebates, and special sales. •  Discount pricing   Attracting customers by dropping prices for a set period of time. Competitive Pricing •  Reducing the emphasis on price competition by matching other  firms’  p rices.
CONSUMER PERCEPTIONS OF PRICE Price-Quality Relationships •  Consumers’ perceptions of quality closely tied to price. •  High price = prestige and higher quality. •  Low price = less prestige and lower quality. Odd Pricing •  Setting prices in uneven amounts or amounts that sound less than they really are. •  Example: $1.99 or $299. •  Also used as a signal a product is on sale.

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  • 1. Chapter 14 Promotion and Pricing Strategies Learning Goals Discuss how integrated marketing communications relates to a firm’s overall promotion strategy. Explain promotional mix and outline the objectives of promotion. Summarize the different types of advertising and advertising media. Outline the roles of sales promotion, personal selling, and public relations. Describe pushing and pulling promotional strategies. Discuss the major ethical issues involved in promotion. Outline the different types of pricing strategies. Discuss how firms set prices in the marketplace, and describe the four alter- native pricing strategies. Discuss consumer perceptions of price. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
  • 2. Promotion The function of informing, persuading, and influencing a purchase decision. Integrated marketing communications (IMC) Coordination of all promotional activities — media advertising, direct mail, personal selling, sales promotion, and public relations —t o produce a unified customer-focused message. INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS •  Must take a broad view and plan for all form of customer contact. •  Create unified personality and message for the good, service, or brand. •  Elements include personal selling, advertising, sales promotion, publicity, and public relations.
  • 3. THE PROMOTIONAL MIX Promotional mix Combination of personal and nonpersonal selling techniques designed to achieve promotional objectives. Personal selling Interpersonal promotional process involving a seller’ s face-to-face presentation to a prospective buyer. •  Nonpersonal selling Advertising, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations.
  • 5. Promotional Planning •  Product placement Marketers pay placement fees to have their products showcased in various media, ranging from newspapers and magazines to television and movies. • Guerilla marketing Innovative, low-cost marketing efforts designed to get consumers ’ attention in unusual ways.
  • 6. ADVERTISING Advertising Paid nonpersonal communication delivered through various media and designed to inform, persuade, or remind members of a particular audience. Types of Advertising • Product advertising, institutional advertising, cause advertising Advertising and the Product Life Cycle •  Informative advertising Build initial demand for a product. •  Persuasive advertising Improve the competitive status of a product. •  Reminder-oriented advertising Maintain awareness of the importance and usefulness of a product.
  • 7. Advertising Media •  All media offer advantages and disadvantages
  • 8. SALES PROMOTION Sales promotion Nonpersonal marketing activities other than advertising, personal selling, and public relations that stimulate consumer purchasing and dealer effectiveness.
  • 9. Consumer-Oriented Promotions Premiums, Coupons, Rebates, Samples •  Two of every five promotion dollars are spent on premiums , items given free or at reduced price with the purchase of another product. •  Coupons attract new customers but focus on price rather than brand loyalty. •  Rebates increase purchase rates, promote multiple purchases, and reward product users. •  Three of every four consumers who receive a sample will try it. Games, Contest, and Sweepstakes •  Often used to introduce new goods and attract new customers. •  Subject to legal restrictions. Specialty Advertising •  Gift of useful merchandise carrying the name, logo, or slogan of an organization.
  • 10. Trade-Oriented Promotions •  Sales promotion geared to marketing intermediaries rather than to consumers. •  Encourage retailers in several ways: •  To stock new products. •  To continue carrying existing ones. • To promote both new and existing products effectively to consumers. •  Point-of-purchase (POP) advertising Displays or demonstrations that promote products when and where consumers buy them, such as in retail stores. •  Promote goods and services at trade shows .
  • 11. PERSONAL SELLING •  A person-to-person promotional presentation to a potential buyer. •  Usually used under four conditions: •  Customers are relatively few in number and geographically concentrated. •  The product is technically complex, involves trade-ins, and requires special handling. •  The product carries a relatively high price. • It moves through direct-distribution channels. •  Example: Selling to the government or military.
  • 12. Sales Tasks •  All involve assisting customers in some way. Order Processing •  Identifying customer needs, pointing out merchandise to meet them, and processing the order. Creative Selling •  Promoting a good or service whose benefits are not readily apparent or whose purchase decision requires a close analysis of alternatives. Missionary Selling •  Representative promotes goodwill for a company or provides technical or operational assistance to the customer. Telemarketing •  Personal selling conducted by telephone; regulated by the Federal Trade Commission ’s 1996 Telemarketing Sales Rule.
  • 14. Public Relations Public relations Public organization ’s communications and relationships with its various audience. •  Helps a firm establish awareness of goods and services and builds a positive image of them. Publicity Publicity Stimulation of demand for a good, service, place, idea, person, or organization by disseminating news or obtaining favorable unpaid media presentations. •  Good publicity can promote a firm ’s positive image •  Negative publicity can cause problems.
  • 15. PROMOTIONAL STRATEGY Pushing and Pulling Strategies •  Pushing strategy Relies on personal selling to market an item to wholesalers and retailers in a company ’s distribution channels. •  Companies promote the product to members of the marketing channel, not to end users. •  Pulling strategy Promote a product by generating consumer demand for it, primarily through advertising and sales promotion appeals. •  Potential buyers will request that their suppliers —r etailers or local distributors —c arry the product, thereby pulling it through the distribution channel. •  Most marketing situations require combinations of pushing and pulling strategies, although the primary emphasis can vary.
  • 16. ETHICS IN PROMOTION Puffery and Deception •  Puffery Exaggeration about the benefits or superiority of a product. •  Deception Deliberately making promises that are untrue, such as guaranteed weight loss in five days, get-rich-quick schemes for would-be entrepreneurs, or promised return on investments. Promotion to Children and Teens • Children and teens have enormous purchasing power but cannot analyze advertising messages. Promotion in Public Schools and on College Campuses • Schools earn income from in-school advertising, but it is generating backlash.
  • 17. PRICING OBJECTIVES IN THE MARKETING MIX Price Exchange value of a good or service.
  • 18. PRICING STRATEGIES • Pricing is influenced by people in different areas of a company. Price Determination in Practice Cost-based pricing Adding a percentage (markup) to the base cost of a product to cover overhead costs and generate profits. •  Actual markup used varies by such factors as brand image and type of store. •  Example: Typical clothing markup by retailers is double the wholesaler price. Breakeven Analysis Breakeven analysis Pricing technique used to determine the minimum sales volume a product must generate at a certain price level to cover all costs.
  • 19. Alternative Pricing Strategies Skimming Pricing •  Setting an intentionally high price relative to the prices of competing products. Penetration Pricing •  Setting a low price as a major marketing weapon. Everyday Low Pricing and Discount Pricing •  ELP Maintaining continuous low prices rather than relying on short-term price-cutting tactics such as cents-off coupons, rebates, and special sales. •  Discount pricing Attracting customers by dropping prices for a set period of time. Competitive Pricing •  Reducing the emphasis on price competition by matching other firms’ p rices.
  • 20. CONSUMER PERCEPTIONS OF PRICE Price-Quality Relationships •  Consumers’ perceptions of quality closely tied to price. •  High price = prestige and higher quality. •  Low price = less prestige and lower quality. Odd Pricing •  Setting prices in uneven amounts or amounts that sound less than they really are. •  Example: $1.99 or $299. •  Also used as a signal a product is on sale.