MKTG1203 Notes PDF
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This document provides an overview of marketing concepts, including marketing activity, institutions, processes, and core aspects, such as consumer needs, exchange, and product, price, place, and promotion decisions. It also explores concepts like company capabilities, competitors, and macroenvironmental factors, along with details on marketing research and data collection.
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**Overview** - Marketing activity, set of institutions & processes involved in creating, capturing, communicating, delivering & exchanging offerings (g/s & ideas) w/ value for customers, clients, partners & society - ![](media/image2.png)Behaviour labeling can improve sales e.g.,...
**Overview** - Marketing activity, set of institutions & processes involved in creating, capturing, communicating, delivering & exchanging offerings (g/s & ideas) w/ value for customers, clients, partners & society - ![](media/image2.png)Behaviour labeling can improve sales e.g., Flink & Gorillas - Value relationship of benefits to costs - Firms can improve value by increasing benefits, reducing costs or both - Not always about discounts - Can't assume customer is buying due to price -- market research necessary - Firms assess market position & decide on marketing strategy - Based on this, marketing plan is created - Marketing plan written document composed of any analysis of current marketing situation, opportunities & threats for firm, marketing objectives & strategy specified in terms of 4Ps, action programs & project or pro forma income & other financial statements Core aspects - Consumer needs & wants -- good marketers seek out potential customers who have both a) an interest in the offering & b) ability to buy - Exchange trade of things of value btwn buyer & seller so each is better off as a result - Decisions about product, price, place & promotion - Product -- create value - Developing variety of offerings (g/s & ideas) to satisfy consumer needs - Price -- capturing value - Money, time, energy - Place -- delivering value proposition - Supply chain management -- describes all activities getting product to customer when customer wants it - Promotion -- communicating value - Informs, persuades & reminds potential buyers about a product, service or idea to influence opinions or elicit response - Can be performed by individuals & organizations - Impacts various stakeholders - ![](media/image4.png)Helps create value - Firms become more value driven by sharing info, balancing benefits w costs, & building relationships w/ customers (social media) - Relational orientation method of building relationships w/ customers based on philosophy that buyers & sellers should develop a long term relationship - Customer relationship management (CRM) busines philosophy & set of strategies, programs & systems focused on identifying & building loyalty among firm's most valued customers Importance - Pervasive across channel members - Supply chain group of firms making/delivering given set of g/s - Marketing channel set of institutions transferring ownership of, & moving good from, point of production to point of consumption; consists of all institutions & marketing activities in marketing process - Effective management of supply chain relationships often has marked impact on firms' ability to satisfy consumers, resulting in profitability for all parties e.g., Levi Strauss & Co. uses an auto inventory replenishment system to ensure adequate stock - Expands firms' global presence - Example: Levi Strauss & Co. helps retailers manage their inventory so they don't run out of stock - Different cultures, different expectations e.g., Krispy Kreme ad - Enriches society - CSR: greener products, healthier food options, safer products, reduced carbon footprint - Can be entrepreneurial - Entrepreneurs organize, operate & assume risk of business venture aiming to satisfy unfilled need - Examples: Ben & Jerry's (Ben Cohen & Jerry Greenfield), Grill'd (Simon Crowe) **Analyzing Market Environment** Framework ![](media/image6.png)Company capabilities Competitors - Especially hypercompetition e.g., Apple & Samsung - Example: Uber, Grab, Gojek Corporate partners - Example: Qantas & Emirates partnership allows less investment for more market share, avoid price war Macroenvironmental factors - Aspects of external environment affecting company's business - Culture set of values, guiding beliefs, understandings & ways of doing things shared by members of a society; on visible artefact lvl & underlying value - Example: KFC ads USA vs Indonesia - 23% of AU born overseas - Asians compromise larges immigrant group - Ethnicity - Example: L'Oreal - Country & regional - Demographics - Provide easy to understand snapshot of typical consumer in specific target market - Marketers use data about customers to target offers - Generational cohorts - Gen Z -- digital nativves - Gen Y -- emphasis on work life balance, being a good parent more key than marriage - Gen X -- spending power (marry/house later in life), less shopping interest + cynics - Baby boomers -- individualistic, leisure time key, independent, eco security + frivolity, youth obsession - Income e.g., Qantas vs Jetstar - Education -- studies show higher lvl of edu = higher income - Marketers can combine edu lvl w/ data like income to obtain fairly accurate predictions of purchase behaviour - Gender -- male/female roles have blurred - Modern market campaigns reflect shift - Challenge for marketers -- appeal to specific groups w/out stereotyping - Use variables other than binary gender to segment consumers e.g, toys by age, brand, type - Social issues - Equality - Transparency - Health & wellness - Increase public health awareness - Green consumers - Energy saving HH appliances - Phosphate-free cleaning products & mercury-free batteries - Hybrid vehicles - Recycled material for packaging - Eco-friendly clothing - Lack of time - Mobile payment - Tech - Means greater data storage/communication, improved inventory- needs planning & improved value of g/s for firms - Means newer channels of access/communication, ease of decision-making & enhanced customer experience for consumers - Eco situations - Inflation persistent increase in g/s price, causing purchasing power of dollar to decline - Fluctuations in value of foreign currency can influence consumer spending - Interest rates cost of borrowing money - Political/legal environment - Comprises political parties, govt organizations & legislation - Includes ACCC, RBA, ATO **Segmentation, targeting & positioning** ![](media/image8.png) - Market people/organizations w/ similar needs/wants/resources that have the ability & willingness to buy - Market segment subgroup of people/organizations w/in a market who share comparable characteristics that cause them to have similar needs - Reasons to segment market - Helps marketers define customer needs & wants more precisely - Performs marketing activities more accurately & better allocate resources - Performance can be better evaluated when objectives are more precise - Helps w/ new product development - Allows business to grow - Creating clarity around who to serve + deciding how we want consumers to see us in market Step 1: establish overall strategy (segmentation) - Articulate vision/objectives of marketing strategy - Derived from mission & current state - Consistent w/ SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities & threats) Step 2: segmentation methods (segmentation) - Geographic -- continent, region, country, state e.g., Coke 'Open Happiness' AU summer ad - Demographic -- age, gender, income e.g., Coke 'Pixel' & 'Dream' flavored beverages target Gen Z - Includes language spoken e.g., Uber Eats Quebec ad 'ce soir, je mange' - Firmographic -- for B2B: company size, num of employees - Similar to demographics but applies to firms not individuals - 80% of all commerce, & thus marketing, occurs btwn businesses - ![](media/image10.png)Example: Linkedin presents analytics to marketers that allow them to segment the market by num of followers, num of updates etc - Psychographic -- lifestyle, self-concept, self-values - Example: Airbnb markets experiences we aspire to, not accommodation -- focus on consumers' interests (travel) & lifestyle (adventurous) - Behavioural -- purchase, usage, consumption - Example: Telsim try to differentiate consumers by GB used/mth Step 3: evaluate segment attractiveness (targeting) - Identifiable - Segments must be distinct from each other - Substantial - Segment size must be large enough to support profits & have suitable buying power - If too small, insignificant - If too big, insufficient resources - Profitable - Must have potential to be profitable - Just because a firm can find a substantial market doesn't mean it's a good market - Reachable - Consumer knows product exists - Consumer understands what product can do - Recognize how you deliver product to consumer - Responsive - Positive reaction to firm's offering - Movement toward firm's g/s - Acceptance of firm's value proposition Step 4: select target market - Undifferentiated/mass marketing whole marketing w/ 1 offer; ignore segments - Consumers have common needs & wants - Characterized by commodity products - Differentiated targeting several diff markets segments; separate offers for each e.g., Nike - Concentrated choose 1/few segments/niches - Micromarketing or 1-1 - Local cities, neighborhoods, specific stores - Individual 1 person ![](media/image12.png)Step 5: developing positioning strategy - Establishes image/identity of brand/product so consumers perceive it a certain way - Makes it easy for consumers to recall brand/product - Perceptual map displays in 2 dimensions position of products & brands in consumer's mind - ![](media/image14.png)Steps 1. Determine consumers' perceptions & evaluations of competitors 2. Identify market's ideal points & size 3. Identify competitors' positions 4. Determine consumer preferences 5. Select position 6. Monitor positioning strategy - Value proposition components: target market, offering name/brand, product/service category or concept, unique point of difference/benefits **Consumer behaviour** - Mothersbaugh et al 2020: study of individuals, groups, organizations & process they use to select/purchase products to satisfy their needs Need recognition - Functional needs vs psych needs ![](media/image16.png)Info search - Factors affecting consumers' search processes - Perceived value (benefits vs costs) - Locus of control -- internal = more search activities, external = fate, external factors - Linked to risk - Actual/perceived risk -- performance, financial, social, psych, & physio Alternative evaluation - ![](media/image18.png)Attribute sets - Evaluative criteria set of important attributes for a particular soln (product/service) - Determinant attributes product features important to buyer - Features where competing brands/stores perceived to differ - Consumer decision rules - Compensatory decision rule trade 1 product characteristic against another - Non-compensatory decision rule make choice on basis of 1 characteristic regardless of others - Multi-attribute model Purchase & consumption - Increase conversion rate by reducing real/virtual abandoned carts, ensuring merchandise in stock, & reducing actual waiting time Postpurchase - Customer satisfaction state indicating products & services supplied by a company meet/surpass customer expectation - Customer dissatisfaction if too high expectation, right expectation but lack of knowledge of how to use product, right expectation but underperformed products/services - Postpurchase dissonance occurs when consumer questions appropriateness of purchase - Esp likely for products pricey, infrequently purchased, don't work as intended or associated w/ high risk - Warranties/guarantees help minimize - Customer loyalty only buy certain brands & shop at certain stores, including no other firms in their evoked set - Combo of purchasing behaviour & attitude (liking brand) - Negative word of mouth may occur if consumers spread neg info about product/service/store to others ![](media/image20.png)Involvement & consumer buying decisions - Types of buying decisions - Extended problem solving - Limited problem solving - Impulse buying - Habitual decision-making ![](media/image22.png)Factors influencing consumer decision process - Psych factors - Motives driving force causing person to take action to satisfy specific needs - Attitudes person's enduring evaluation of their feelings about, & behavioural tendencies to, object/idea - Learned, long-lasting, develop over time - Comprised of cognitive, affective & behavioural components - Perception process by which consumers select, organize & interpret info to form meaningful picture of world - Learning change in person's thought process/behaviour arising from experience - Lifestyle way consumers spend time/money to achieve certain goals - Component of psychographics - Social factors - Family - Reference groups i.e. celebs - Culture - Visible artifacts -- behaviours, dress, symbols, physical settings, ceremonies - Underlying values -- thought processes, beliefs, assumptions - Situational factors tend to override psych & social when it comes to purchasing - Shopping situation -- atmosphere - Temporal states - Purchasing situation **Marketing research** ![](media/image24.png) Importance - To better understand consumer needs/wants -- spot business opportunities - Lower business risk -- avoid marketing failures & boost success in market - Assists segmentation, targeting & positioning - Make decision-making easier - Outsell competitors - Create relevant promotional material Process - Data collection + recording + analyzing + interpreting = decision-making - Managers consider several factors before conducting market research - Will it be useful? Will it provide new insight? Is senior management committed to project? Does project represent value for money? How big/small should project be? Step 1: defining objectives & research needs ![](media/image26.png) Step 2: designing research - Primary vs secondary data - Qualitative methods vs quantitative methods Step 3: data collection process - Marketing research often begins w/ review of secondary data - Inexpensive/free - Obtained via census data, trade associations, journals, reports - Internal sources can also provide this data - Marketers use data-mining techniques to determine what items people buy at same time for dual promotion - Syndicated external secondary data can be purchased from commercial research companies (Ipsos, AC Nielsen, IBIS World) - Scanner data is another form of quantitative data, collected via use of scanner systems - Panel data is info collected from a group of consumers over time - Primary data collection - Qualitative - Used to understand phenomenon of interest via broad responses - Provides initial info that helps researcher more clearly formulate research objective - Methods - Observation - Social media -- brand communities effective way to spot issues around brands & foster customer relationships - In depth interviews -- although relatively expensive, can reveal info that would be hard to obtain via other methods - Focus groups - Quantitative - Consists of structured responses which can be statistically tested to confirm insights/hypotheses generated via qualitative research or secondary data - Methods - ![](media/image28.png)Survey -- systematic means of collecting info, usually via questionnaire - Experiments -- w/ groups, eye tracking - Scanner - Panel +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | *Primary vs | | | | | secondary data* | | | | +=================+=================+=================+=================+ | **Type** | **Examples** | **Advantages** | **Disadvantages | | | | | ** | +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | **Secondary |.Census data |.Saves time in |.May not be | | research** | | collecting data | precisely | | |.Sales invoices | -- readily | relevant to | | | | available | info needs | | |.Internet info | | | | | |.Free/inexpensi |.Info may not | | |.Books | ve | be timely | | | | (minus | | | |.Journal | syndicated |.Sources may | | | articles | data) | not be original | | | | | & therefore | | |.Syndicated | | usefulness | | | data | | issue | | | | | | | | | |.Methods for | | | | | collecting data | | | | | may be | | | | | inappropriate | | | | | | | | | | Data sources | | | | | may be biased | +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | **Primary |.Observed |.Specific to |.Costly | | research** | consumer | immediate data | | | | behaviour | needs & topic |.Time consuming | | | | at hand | | | |.Focus group | |.Requires more | | | interviews |.Offers | sophisticated | | | | behavioural | training/experi | | |.Surveys | insight | ence | | | | generally not | to design study | | |.Experiments | available from | & collect data | | | | secondary | | | | | research | | +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+ Step 4: analyzing data & developing insights - Converting data into info to explain, predict & evaluate a particular situation Step 5: action plan & implementation - Typical marketing plan - Exec summary - Body - Conclusions - Limitations - Supplements (tables, figures, appendices) Emerging tech & ethics - Firms voluntarily notify their customers that any info provided to them will be confidential & not sold on to other companies - Consumers must give consent before firms can collect their data or use it for marketing purposes - Law yet to catch up w/ advances in social media, neuromarketing & facial recognition software ![](media/image30.png)**Product & branding decisions: developing new product** Product - 3 components: - Augmented product enhanced w/ added features e.g., warranty - Types of g/s - Convenience e.g., bread - Shopping e.g., clothes - Specialty e.g., supercars - Unsought e.g., hand warmers Product mix & product line decision - Product mix complete set of all g/s offered by firm - Product lines group of associated items consumers tend to think of as being part of a group - Product breadth num of product lines offered by firm - Product depth num of products w/in product line - Companies sometimes must change product breadth &/or depth to realign w/ firm's resources, address changing market conditions or meet internal priorities Branding - Activity of connecting product w/ particular name, symbol or feature/idea to make more people recognize & want to buy it - Brand names, URLs, logos & symbols, characters, slogans, jingles/sounds - ![](media/image32.png)Branding valuable for customers & firms - Facilitates purchasing - Establishes loyalty - Protects from competition - Are assets - Affects market value - Determinants of equity of brand from marketer's perspective - Brand awareness measures how many consumers in a market are familiar w/ a brand & what it stands for, as well as whether they have an opinion on it - Perceived value relationship btwn product's benefits & cost - Brand associations reflect mental links consumers make btwn brand & key product attributes; can involve a logo, slogan or commonly famous person - Provides depth feeling/affection to relationship btwn consumers & brand - Often result from firm's advertising - Brand loyalty occurs when a consumer buys same brand's product repeatedly over time, rather than using multiple suppliers w/in same category - Consumers often less sensitive to price - Marketing costs lower - Firms insulated from competition Brand strategies - Brand ownership - Manufacturer/national brands owned & managed by manufacturers e.g., Kellogg's cereal - Retailer/store brands products developed by retailers (premium/generic) e.g., Woolworths brand couscous +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | **Advantages of manufacturer | **Advantages of priv brand** | | brand** | | +===================================+===================================+ |.Heavy advertising to consumer by |.Retailer can earn higher profits | | manufacturers helps develop | on own brand + less pressure to | | stronger consumer loyalties e.g., | mark price down to meet | | Unilever | competition due to exclusivity | | | | |.Well-known manufacturers' brands |.Priv brand ties customers to | | can attract new customers & | retailer e.g., person who wants | | enhance the dealer's prestige | Jeans West jeans must go to Jeans | | | West store | |.Many manufacturers offer rapid | | | delivery, enabling dealer to | | | carry less stock | | | | | |.If dealer happens to sell | | | manufacturer's brand of poor | | | quality, customer may simply | | | switch brands but remain loyal to | | | dealer | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ - Individual brands using diff brand names for diff products - Companies use these when their products vary in use or performance - Family brands marketing several diff products under same brand name - Brand extension use of same brand name in a diff product line - Increases product breadth - Line extension use of same brand name w/in same product line - Increases product depth - Cobranding practice of marketing 2/+ brands together on same package/promotion - Brand licensing contractual agreement btwn firms, whereby 1 firm allows another to use its brand name, logo, symbols, &/or characters in exchange for a negotiated fee - Brand repositioning/rebranding strategy where marketers change brand focus to target new markets or realign brand's core emphasis w/ changing market preferences - Firms must evolve & innovate to meet needs of market - Markets are dynamic - Consumer needs are ever-changing - No lack of alt/substitute products - ![](media/image34.png)Ansoff Matrix (product/market expansion grid) - Reasons for innovation: changing customer needs, market saturation, managing risk through diversity, fashion cycles, improving business relationships - Diffusion of innovation - Not all innovations are successful -- some may result in brand dilution - ![](media/image36.png)Product life cycle *Stages in Product Life Cycle* -------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------- **Marketing mix elements** **Intro** **Growth** **Maturity** **Decline** Product Limited model num; frequent product mods Expanded model num; frequent product mods Large model num Elimination of unprofitable models/brands Distribution Limited; intense effort/high margins to attract retailers Expanded dealer num; intense effort to establish long-term relationship Large dealer num, margins decline, intense effort to retain dealers Unprofitable outlets phased out Promotion Develop product awareness/stimulate primary demand; intense personal selling to distributors; samples/coupons Stimulate selective demand & advertise brand aggressively Stimulate selective demand; advertise brand aggressively; promote heavily to retain dealers/customers Phase out all promotion Price High to recover development cost Fall -- competitive pressure Continue to fall Low & stable, small rises possible if competition negligible **Pricing concepts (for establishing value)** ![](media/image38.png)Price - Overall sacrifice consumer is willing to make to acquire some benefits of a specific product - Includes money paid to seller plus time, mental energy, travel costs, taxes & shipping costs - Price-quality relationship: most inexperienced consumers use price as quality indicator - Price becomes crucial when consumers have little knowledge of products/brands - Price important to marketing managers - One of most important factors in purchase decisions - Key to revenue & profit - Consumers want a high value product w/ fair price Macro influences on pricing - Internet - Websites allow consumers to compare g/s prices online - Economic factors - Luxury goods now owned by more working professionals Company objectives - Profit-oriented - Target profit pricing - Maximize profits - Target return pricing - Sales-oriented - Focuses on increasing sales - Is more concerned w/ overall market share - Doesn't always imply setting low prices - Competitor-oriented - Competitive parity - Status quo pricing - Value not component - Customer-oriented - Focus on customer expectations by matching prices to them - Customer demand elasticity if customers demand is elastic, you'll lose many even w/ only small price increases Costs of production - Variable costs vary w/ production volume - Fixed costs unaffected by production volume - Total cost sum of variable & fixed costs Break-even analysis - Profit = total revenue -- total cost - 0 = total revenue -- total cost - 0 = (price \* unit) -- (fixed cost + \[variable cost \* unit\]) - Break-even point (units) = fixed costs/contributions per unit - Break-even point (units) = fixed costs/(price -- variable cost) - Example: fixed costs are \$150k, variable are \$20/room rented at hotel. If rooms rent for \$50/night, how many rooms must hotel rent in 1yr to breakeven? - 150000/(50-20) = 5000 Markup vs profit margin - Markup % amt by which cost of product is increased to arrive at selling price - If COGS = \$50 & markup = 50%, price = \$75 - \$50 + (50% x \$50) - Profit margin selling price minus cost of goods sold - If COGS = \$50, & price = \$75, markup = 33.33% - (\$75 - \$50)/\$75 Considerations for setting pricing strategies - Profit & sales orientation: cost-based pricing - Competition orientation: competitor-based pricing - Customer orientation: value-based pricing Cost-based pricing - Cost-based pricing methods start w/ cost - All costs calculated on per-unit basis - Cost-based pricing assumes costs don't vary for diff lvls of production - Price = cost + markup% - Example: fixed costs to produce item are \$150k, estimated num of units to be produced is 30k, variable cost \$5/unit. If desired markup 20%, how much is product? - 300000 \* 1.2 = 360000, 360000/30000 = \$12 Competition-based pricing - Set prices to signal how a product compares w/ competitors - Competitive price - Premium pricing ![](media/image40.png)Competition levels Value-based methods - Setting prices that focus on product's overall value - Consumer perceptions shaped - Improvement value method - Cost of ownership method consumers may be more willing to spend initially if, over lifetime, product will eventually cost less to own e.g., solar panels New product pricing strategies - Market penetration pricing (company objective: sales orientation) - Price skimming (company objective: profit orientation/target return, customer orientation) e.g., Tesla Pricing tactics aimed at consumers - Markdowns - Qty discounts - Seasonal discounts - Coupons - Rebates - Leasing - Price bundling - Leader pricing - Price lining **Supply chain, channel management & retail** Placement: supply chain management - Process of integrating suppliers, manufacturers, warehouses, stores & transportation systems into a seamless operation in which merchandise is a) produced & distributed in correct quantities, b) to correct locations, c) at correct time, while minimizing system-wide costs - Essential - Specialization & division of labor - Overcoming discrepancies - ![](media/image42.png)Contact efficiency - Marketing channels add value - Reduce num of transactions - More efficient & effective - Increase value for customers - Affects other aspects of marketing - Fulfilling delivery promises - Meeting customer expectations - Reliant on an efficient supply chain - Direct channel customer deals directly w/ manufacturer - Company owned stores e.g., IKEA - Websites/mobile apps e.g., IKEA - Sales force e.g., IBM - Strengths - Control over brand - Higher margins - Customer relationships - Indirect channel when 1/+ intermediaries work w/ manufacturers to provide g/s to consumers - Strengths -- retailer - Extended reach - Established customer base - Reduced marketing effort - Strengths -- wholesaler - Bulk sales - Network expansion - Focus on production - ![](media/image44.png)Managing marketing channel & supply chain - Vertical marketing systems - Administered vertical marketing system no common ownership or contractual relationship, but dominant channel members controls/holds BoP - Choosing retail partners - Considerations: channel structure, customer expectations, channel member characteristics - Market coverage & flexibility - Expertise, resources & reputation - ![](media/image46.png)Distribution intensity - Intense distribution -- many outlets - Exclusive distribution -- limited num of retailers w/ exclusive right - Selective distribution -- selling product @ many selected outlets in specific locations - Benefits of stores for consumers - Browsing - Touching & feeling - Personal service - Cash & credit payment - Entertainment & social interaction - Instant gratification - Risk reduction - Benefits of online & multichannel retailing - Deeper & broader selection - Personalization - Insights into consumers shopping behaviour - Increased customer satisfaction & loyalty - Expand market presence - Multichannel marketing selling online & in store e.g., Patagonia **Integrated marketing communications** - Company integration & coordination of communication channels to deliver clear, consistent & compelling msg about organization & products (Kotler, 2000) - "Promotion" - Encompasses variety of communication disciplines - Advertising - Personal selling - Sales promotion - Public relations - Direct marketing - Online/social media ![](media/image48.png)Communicating w/ consumers - Receivers decode msg differently - Senders adjust msg according to medium & receiver traits - Example: Old Spice repositioning w/ humor to appeal to younger consumers - Advertising has lag -- takes repetition to work AIDA model - Awareness -- senders must gain consumers' attention - Multichannel approach increases likelihood of msg reception - Aided recall or top-of-mind awareness - Interest -- consumers must be persuaded to investigate g/s further - FAQs - Ad must include attributes of interest to target - Desire -- after piquing interest, goal of subsequent IMC msg should be to move consumer from 'I like it' to 'I want it' - Reviews/references - Action -- ultimate goal of marketing - Purchasing just one type of action - Could also be download or provide info ICM types - Offline-active - Personal selling - Sales promotions (contests) - Direct marketing (telemarketing) - Offline-passive - Advertising - Sales promotions (coupons) - Public relations - Direct marketing (catalogues) - Online-active - Direct marketing (mobile marketing) - Online marketing (blogs, social media) - Online-passive - Direct marketing (email marketing) Advertising - Paid form of communication conveyed via medium (radio, TV) delivered via communication channel & designed to persuade - Most visible element of IMC - Effective at creating awareness & generating interest - Encourages consumer to take action ![](media/image50.png)Ad campaign steps Step 1: Identify target audience - Success of campaign depends on how well advertiser can identify target audience - Firms conduct research to identify target audience, set tone of ad, & select media to use Step 2: set advertising objectives - Advertising plan objectives of advertising campaign, how they'll be accomplished, & how firm can determine if successful - Focus of advertisements - Institutional advertisements - Product-focused advertisement - Public service advertisements - Pull strategies for consumers, push strategies for B2B - Informative, persuasive or reminder advertisements Step 3: determine advertising budget - Considerations - Role advertising plays in meeting overall promotional objectives - Expenditures vary over course of product life cycle - Nature of market & product influence size of budget ![](media/image52.png)Step 4: convey the message - Unique selling proposition (USP) must be meaningful to consumer - Example: Nike "just do it" - Informational vs emotional appeals Step 5: evaluate & select media - Media planning process of evaluating & selecting media mix that will deliver clear, consistent, compelling msg to intended audience - Media mix combo of media used & frequency of advertising in each medium - Media buy actual purchase of airtime or print pages - Types - Mass media channels include national newspapers, magazines, radio & TV as means to reach large num of consumers - Niche media more focused, targeting unique demographics - Advertising schedule - Continuous schedule runs steadily throughout year - Suited to products consumed continually - Flighting schedule advertising implemented in spurts - Useful for seasonal products - Pulsing schedule combines both by maintaining base lvl of advertising but w/ bursts of increased activity ![](media/image54.png)Public relations - Relatively passive tactic - Importance has grown as cost of other media has increased - As consumers grow more skeptical about marketing, PR becomes more relevant Sales promotions - Can be aimed at end-user consumers or channel members - Are used in conjunction w/ other forms of IMC (advertising, personal selling, etc) - Can be used for both short & long-term objectives - Premium -- offers an item for free/bargain to reward some type of behaviour (e.g., magazine coupon on Coco pops box) Personal selling - 2-way flow of communication btwn buyer & seller aimed to influence buyer's purchase decision - More expensive than other forms of promotion but worth more than it costs - Sales personnel increase overall value of product/service offerings in a num of ways Direct marketing - Communicates directly w/ target consumers to generate response - Improvements in (& popularity of) technology have made it a growing element of IMC - Marketers have been able to build databases due to consumers' increased use of credit & debit cards, loyalty programs & online shopping **Digital marketing** - Use of internet or other digital communication to achieve marketing & business goals ![](media/image56.png)Differences btwn traditional & digital marketing Digital user types - Dominant digital people for whom digital tech is an integral part of life - Hybrid people who use digital tech only when they need to - Reluctant people who only use digital tech sparingly Digital consumer elements - Unprecedented access to info gives consumers luxury of choice + greater control w/in transaction - Demand relevant, personalized interaction Electronic word of mouth (eWOM) - Occurs outside control of firm - Can be pos -- allows consumers to engage w/ other consumers Empowered consumers - 'Active' consumers (bloggers, online communities) - Firm can't control all brand-consumer interactions Personalization - Recommendations based on products bought previously - Birthday specials - Reminders about past purchases - Info based on your recent views Digital media types - Social network e.g., Instagram - Media-sharing site e.g., YouTube - Thought-sharing sites e.g., Twitter - Mobile app e.g., price-check app Amazon Digital channels - Websites - Usually main digital channel - Good sites are interactive, engaging, have social resources - Search engines - Google often set as home pages - Search engine marketing (SEM) = paid search/sponsored - Search engine optimization (SEO) = title tag, meta description - Email - Powerful marketing tool - Often used as 'confirmation' for digital activity (buying goods, booking services) - Mobile tech - Biggest growth area in digital marketing - Apps, YouTube ads, etc - Social media - Group of Internet-based apps that build on ideological & tech foundations of Web 2.0, & that allow creation/exchange of user-generated content - Social media marketing building consumer relationships via valuable content & interactions 4E social media framework A blue circle with arrows pointing to the center Description automatically generated Excite - Offering must be relevant to targeted customer - Relevance can be achieved by providing personalized offers - To personalize offers, brands fall back on CRM insights or data gained from social media Educate - Constitutes method of developing sustainable competitive advantage - Communicate value proposition & benefits on offer - Address consumer's needs/goals via useful content around consumption Experience - Provide opportunity to sample g/s, show how it works & how it looks/feels - Simulate real experiences Engage - Intensity of an individual's participation in & connection w/ organization's offerings or organizational activities - Engagement leads to action, loyalty & commitment - Pos engaged consumers more profitable for firms Customer engagement - Listening & responding - Market research - Blogs - Review sites - Social media - Involving - Opinion leaders &/or bloggers - Asking consumer opinion on social media - Empowerment - Consumer-to-consumer interaction Customer data management - Data from social media can answer Qs - Who's talking about us; what're they saying? - Who're our most influential customers? - What type of materials do people like to engage with? - Where does our material get shared? - Who are our competitors & their customers? - What do consumers like & dislike about our g/s? - Social media analytics, Google analytics ![](media/image58.png)Digital strategy Latest digital marketing - AI - Geofencing (location-based marketing) - AR - VR - Marketing automatic **Marketing ethics, sustainability & CSR** Ethical issues associated w/ marketing decisions - Advertisers ranked 2^nd^ lowest on ethics & honesty - To improve ranking, marketers must consider consequences of their products & advertisement - Business ethics moral/ethical dilemmas that may arise in business setting - May arise in HR, finance - Marketing ethics moral/ethical dilemmas specific to domain of marketing - Example: Red Bull gives you wings - Supermarkets' promotional label tactics -- Coles while stocks last, Woolies prices dropped, Aldi Super Savers fake discounts - CHOICE (independent watchdog) surveyed who thought discount Coles: 31% said yes, 36% no, 33% unsure - Coles & Aldi both wouldn't confirm if discount or not - Woolies stated price same for almost 5yr - Firm goals - Greed & short-term profit seeking -- serious long-term consequences - Creating long-term value -- long-term success - ![](media/image60.png)Top 10 most trusted brand - In 2024, Woolworths fell 194 places to be 5^th^ most distrusted brand - Coles 4^th^ most distrusted - Aldi 2^nd^ most trusted - Product issue -- covering up defects - Distribution issue -- counterfeit products - Promotion issue -- deceptive advertising - Pricing issue -- falsely advertising a sale price - Personal ethics has influence - Decisions often have conflicting outcomes where all options have pos & neg outcomes Consumer data collection - General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) -- people must explicitly consent to receive marketing emails, & allowing web cookie tracing on their devices - Consumer Data Right Privacy -- requires consent is express, informed, current, clear, specific, unbundled & time limited - Right to withdraw consent to disclosures & use of data Ethical workplace climate creation - Values -- establish, share, understand - Rules -- management commitment, code of conduct - Controls -- reward, punishment Australian Marketing Institute - Generally accepted code in marketing - Flows from general norms of conduct to specific values - Sub-areas w/in marketing have own code of ethics for dealing w/ specific issues Ethical decision-making framework ![A diagram of steps to process Description automatically generated](media/image62.png) Step 1: identify issues - Example: marketing research firm issues - Using results to mislead public - Data collection methods - Hiding real purpose of study Step 2: gather info & identify stakeholders - Identify all ethical issues & relevant legal info - Identify all relevant stakeholders & get their input on any identified ethical issues Step 3: brainstorm & evaluate alternatives - Halt market research project? Make responses anonymous? Institute training on AMA Code of Ethics for all researchers? Step 4: choose course of action - Weigh alternatives - Apply ethical decision-making metric - Publicity, moral mentor, admired observer, transparency, person in mirror, & golden rule tests - Take action Marketing greater purpose - Ethical, social & environmental performance - 3 pillars of John Elkington's triple bottom line to sustainable business - People, planet, & profit - Example: Google Grants, GoogleServe (encourages service), Google Matching (matches funds w/ nonprofits) ![](media/image64.png)Ethics & CSR - Actions taken voluntarily by a company to address ethical, social & environmental concerns of its business operations & concerns of its stakeholders - Example: Thankyou Group channels 100% of its profits into development work & projects globally - NAB disaster relief & support Integrating ethics into marketing strategy - Planning phase - Mission/vision statement sets overall ethical tone for planning - Mission statements can be used as means to guide firm's SWOT analysis - Example: Qantas 8 principles, includes treating people w/ respect, complying w/ laws/regulations - Implementation phase - Should the firm be targeting this market with this product? - Should the firm be relocating production to another country? - Should the firm be selling its product in this market in this manner? - Control phase - Check successful implementation - React to change Top admired companies & CSR programs - Apple -- more than 60% of paper used in packaging is from recycled wood fiber - Amazon Stakeholders of CSR A diagram of customer satisfaction Description automatically generated - Employees - Should be working in safe & fair environment - Wellbeing is important - Customers - Current trends in consumers' concerns: electronic privacy, healthy products - Goals of sincere CSR initiatives: increase awareness, better brand equity, sales (will follow in long run) - Marketplace - General Electric is CSR industry leader - Companies can reduce environmental impact by enhancing resource productivity - Society - Consumers & stakeholders have voice to ensure companies act responsibly -- boycott Example: Nike sustainability efforts - Reuse-a-shoe program - Let's move! Active Schools - Transforming manufacturing