Marcom Implementation Decisions: A Concluding Mantra
Marcom Implementation Decisions: A Concluding Mantra
Marcom Implementation Decisions: A Concluding Mantra
Mixing Elements
A fundamental issue confronting all companies is deciding exactly how to allocate resources
among the various marketing communications tools. For BZB companies, the mixture typi-
cally emphasizes, in the following order of budgeting importance, direct mail, online market-
ing, trade shows, brand advertising, and telemarketing.29 For consumer goods marketers,
mixture decisions are, in many respects, more complicated because greater options are avail-
able. The issue boils down in large part to a decision of how much to allocate to advertising
and to sales promotions. (Note: In keeping with practitioner convention, the word promotion
hereafter will be used interchangeably with sales promotion.) The trend during the past two
decades has been toward greater expenditures on promotions and fewer on advertising.
Is there an optimum mixture of expenditures between advertising and promotion? There
is not, unfortunately, because the marketing commm'iications—mix decision constitutes an
ill—structured problem.au This means that for a given level of expenditure, there is no way of
determining the mathematical optimum allocation between advertising and promotion that
will maximize revenue or profit. Two major factors account for this inability to determine &
mathematically optimum mix. First, advertising and promotions are somewhat interchange-
able—both tools can accomplish some of the same objectives. Hence, it is impossible to know
exactly which tool or combination of tools is better in every situation. Second, advertising and
promotions produce a synergistic effect—their combined results are greater than what they
would achieve individually. This makes it difficult to determine the exact effects that different
combinations of advertising and sales promotion might generate.
Although it is impossible to determine a mathematically optimum mixture of advertising
and promotion expenditures, a satisfactory mixture can be formulated by considering the
differing purposes of each of these marcom tools. A key strategic consideration is whether
short- or long-term schemes are more important given a brand's life—cycle stage and in view
of competitive realities. An appropriate mixture for mature brands is likely to be different
from the mixture for brands recently introduced. New brands require larger investment in & ! l
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