Bba333 Unit 6
Bba333 Unit 6
Bba333 Unit 6
Sales Promotion
Ingredients of
the Marketing
Public Relations
communication
mix
Personal Selling
Direct Marketing
Marketers should understand the
fundamnetal elements of effective
communications. Two models are useful:
a macromodel and a micromodel.
Hierarchy-of-Effects
Models
Cognitive Stage Awareness
Knowledge
Affective Stage
Liking
Preference
Conviction
Manage integrated
Measure results marketing
communications
Formulating the communication to
achieve the desired response will require
solving three problems:
Message Creative
Message Source
Strategy Strategy
In determining message, management
searches for appeals, themes, or ideas that will
tie into the brand positioning and help to
establish points-of-parity or points-of-
differences.
Creative strategy are how
marketers translate their message into
a specific communication.
Informational Transformational
Appeals Appeals
• An informational appeals elaborates on product or
service attributes or benefits.
Percentage-Of-Sales
Method
The method for decide on
the promotion budget
Competitive-Parity Method
Objective-And-Task Method
• Affordable Method
Set the promotion budget at what they think the
company can afford.
• Percentage-Of-Sales Method
Set promotion expenditures at a specified percentage of
sales (either current or anticipated) or of the sales price.
• Competitive-Parity Method
Set the promotion budget to achieve share-of-voice
parity with competitors.
• The objective-and-task method calls upon marketers
to develop promotion budgets by defining specific
objective, determining the tasks that must be
performed to achieve these objectives, and
estimating the cots of performing these tasks.
Develop a Message
Focus on
Customer Benefits Creative Concept
“Big Idea”
Visualization or Phrase Advertising Appeals
Combination of Both Meaningful
Believable
Distinctive
Communication Effects Sales Effects
Public Special
Service Events
Activities
Corporate Brochures,
Identity Written
Materials Audiovisual Materials
Materials
Press Relations Public Relations
Departments May
Product Publicity Perform Any of All
of the Following
Functions:
Public Affairs
Lobbying
Investor Relations
Development
The personal presentation by the
firm’s sales force for the purpose of
making sales and building strong
customer relationships.
Most effective tool for building buyers
preferences, convictions, and actions.
Personal interaction allows for
feedback and adjustments.
Relationship-oriented.
Pre-Sale Preparation
Prospecting:
The salesperson identifies qualified potential customers (called
prospects).
Pre-approach:
The salesperson learns as much as possible about a prospect
• before making a sales call.
Approach:
The salesperson meets the customer for the first time.
Presentation:
The salesperson tells the “product story” to the buyer,
highlighting customer benefits.
Handling Objections:
The salesperson seeks out, clarifies, and overcomes customer
objections to buying.
Closing:
The salesperson asks the customer for an order.
Follow-up:
The salesperson follows up after the sale to ensure customer
satisfaction and repeat business.