Strategic Communication 2331 Exam 1
The challenge of IMC is maximizing positive impact while maintaining control as well as.....
minimizing negative impacts that are outside of your control (crisis communication!!)
What is the role of packaging in branding?
Impacts brand position in costumer's mind- often the first exposure to a product; it sets expectations
Salient attributes
Important to consumes and are the basis for making a purchase decision. EX: Apple stresses that their devices are easy to use- people like easy things
Positioning by product attributes and benefits
Sets the brand apart from competitors on the basis of specific characteristics of benefits offered
Differentiated marketing
Involves marketing in a number of segments, developing separate marketing strategies for each.
Buying situation segments
1. Behavior/ Involvement 2. Outlet Type 3. Usage 4. Awareness/knowledge 5. Benefits
What are the arguments of those who believe promotion equals power?
-Changes consumers tastes -Lowers sensitivity to price -Builds brand loyalty RESULTS IN>>>> -High profits -Less competition -Higher prices -Fewer choices -Promotes materialism
What are the basic types of contact/touch points?
-Company created -Intrinsic -Unexpected -Consumer initiated
Focus group disadvantages
-Dealing with self appointed group leaders that monopolize conversations -NOT generalizable -Interpretation of results can be subjective and be given too much weight
Once you have identified your target markets...
-Determine your desired brand position -Build and define the brand -Develop brand cues -Determine which channels thru which to promote/ communicate
Public Relations
-Evaluates public opinions -Identifies policies and procedures of an individual or organization with public interest Goal: establish and maintain a positive corporate image
Focus group advantages
-Excellent for exploratory research - gives sense of what connections to begin making -You are able to get data quickly -Cost effective and may obtain in depth feedback
What are the different methods of qualitative strat comm research?
-Field observations -focus groups -case studies -ethnographies -in depth interviews
Reasons why it's becoming so difficult to target audiences:
-Increased consumer purchasing power -Increased competition and clutter -Brand "parity" -Growth of technology -Decline in mass communication = mass advertising -Avoids duplication and takes advantage of synergy
Case Studies
-Particularistic: Focuses on a particular event, program, or phenomenon -Descriptive: final product of the case study is detailed description of the event -Heuristic: new interpretations, new insights, etc Inductive: principles and generalizations emerge from the data seeking to discover new relationships
Criticism of advertising with regard to sterotyping
-Portrayal of women to reflect their changing role in society -Portrayal of women as sex objects -Ethnic stereotyping/representation -Sexual orientation -Gender stereotyping
What are the arguments of those who believe promotion equals information?
-Provides useful information -Increases price sensitivity -Increase competition RESULTS IN>>>> -Pressure for high quality -Pressure for lower prices -Forces inefficient firms out -Creates economic demand
What are the different methods of quantitative research?
-Survey research/ field tests -experiments/ lab methods -secondary/ data mining
Double Transaction
-The media "sells" content to audiences who "pay" with their attention/viewership. -The media then sells access to "audiences" to advertisers.
Developing Brand Cues
1. Brand names: -benefits (Slim-Fast) -association (Subaru: Outback) -distinctiveness (Monster.com) -simplicity (Tide, Olay) 2. Brand Symbols: -logo -trademark -consistency with brand image is KEY
Functions of Promotion
1. Builds awareness of products or brands 2. Creates a brand image - leads to brand equity 3. Provides information concerning the brand 4. Persuades (formation, strengthening, change) 5. Provides incentives to act 6. Provides brand reminders 7. Reinforces past purchases and brand experiences
What is successful branding?
1. Creating a strong psychological dimension, i.e. the brand "personality" 2. Creating a strong linkage between brand personality and physiological traits through strategic communication
Attributes of Brand elements
1. Desire memorability 2. Create a meaningfulness 3. Maintain an aesthetic appeal 4. Its transferability to all aspects of your business/ endeavors 5. Adaptability/ flexibility over time
What are the key attributes of brand cues/elements?
1. Desire memorability 2. Create a meaningfulness 3. Maintain an aesthetic appeal 4. Its transferability to all aspects of your business/ endeavors 5. Adaptability/ flexibility over time
Selecting a target market involves two steps
1. Determining how many segments to enter 2. Determining which segments offer the most potential
Functions of a Brand
1. Differentiates a product from its competitors 2. Makes a promise to consumers 3. Serves as the driving, unifying force directing all functional areas, including IMC
Advantages of digital marketing
1. Engage - interactive brand experience 2. Track - travel between channels, evaluating media investments 3. Target - demos, behavior, attitudes 4. Share - content easier 5. Customize - based on consumer needs 6. Save $$$ - impressions, engagements, leads and sales 7. Collect - Consumer data via online surveys or forms 8. Brand -- progressive
Five Types of Brand Personalities
1. Excitement 2. Competence 3. Sophistication 4. Ruggedness 5. Peacefulness
What are the different steps in the target marketing process?
1. Identify markets with unfulfilled needs 2. Determine market segmentation 3. Select market to target 4. Position through marketing strategies
What are the main types of strat comm research and their focus?
1. Market/brand information 2. Consumer insight research 3. Media research 4. Message development 5. Evaluation
Customer characteristics segments
1. Psychographic 2. Demographic 3. Socioeconomic 4. Geographic
What are the basic elements of an IMC plan?
1. Review of marketing plan 2. Analysis of promotional program situation 3. Analysis of communication process 4. Budget determination 5. Develop IMC program 6. Integrate and implement marketing communications strategies 7. Monitor, evaluate, and control IMC program
Three strategies for selecting a target market
1. Undifferentiated marketing 2. Differentiated marketing 3. Concentrated marketing
80-20 Rule
20 percent of buyers account for 80 percent of sales volume
Positioning by cultural symbols
A meaningful symbol that the brand is easily identifiable and differentiated from its competitors. -Audience begins to associate the product with a specific culture EX: Swiss Chocolate, Tony the Tiger
What is the definition of a brand?
A name, a term, a symbol, or any other unique element of a product that identifies one seller's product distinct from those of other sellers.
Positive Stereotypes
A positive assumption made about someone based on their looks, race, social group, economic stability or gender. EX: "Moms can do everything"
What is the role of advertising when developing a brand?
A promotional strategy that integrates the tangible, intangible, and brand elements for audiences. EX: Honda commercial
What is the definition of IMC?
A strategic business process used to plan, develop, execute and evaluate coordinated, measurable, persuasive brand communication programs with consumers, customers, prospects employees and other relevant external and internal audiences
Experiments/ Laboratory Methods
Controlled and you can isolate factors/variables factors/variables -Disadvantage: a lack of realism and testing bias -Random assignment
Post-Test
Ad effectiveness measures that are taken after the ad has appeared in the marketplace
What are the arguments from advocates and marketers about advertising and children?
Advocates argue that children: 1. Lack the knowledge and skills to evaluate advertising claims 2. They cannot differentiate between programs and commercials Marketers argue children: 1. Must learn through socialization- ads are a part of life 2. Must acquire skills needed to function in the marketplace
Advertising
Any paid form on non-personal communication about an organization, product, service, or idea by an identified person. - Brands build equity and value
Internal Analysis
Assesses relevant areas involving the product/service offering and the firm itself. -Analysis may indicate that the firm is not capable of planning , implementing, and managing certain areas of the IMC plan
Advantages of laboratory tests
Controlled and you can isolate factors and variables
Customer-initiated and intrinsic messages fall in between......
Company-created and unexpected messages in terms of impact as well as the ability of the marketer to control
Brand positioning: Competition Focus
Compares benefit product offers to the competition
Ethnographic research
Complete immersion with a great deal of people watching -Researchers begin to live the lives of the people who are being studied -
Main types of pre-tests
Concept testing, theater tests, rough tests, on air tests, readability tests
Explicit racism
Conscious and openly shared attitude -Clearly plays off racist stereotypes -Not common in contemporary advertising
Focus groups
Controlled group discussion. Optimal size is 6-12 people. -The key is asking questions- knowing what to ask- moderator has rough script but best used only as rough guide.
What are the many different ways that customers can be segmented?
Customers be segmented by characteristics and by buying situation
Socioeconomic segmentation
Dividing the market on the basis of income, education, and occupation
Positioning by competitor
Differentiating a product from a competitor's product EX: When Chevy mentions Honda and Toyota to show how much better they are than them
By which channels do we promote brands?
Direct and indirect
Examples of direct marketing
Direct mail, catalogs, telemarketing, email
Behavioristic segmentation
Dividing consumers into groups according to their usage, loyalties, and buying responses to a product -80/20 Rule -Often combined with psychographic and demographic segmentation to create consumer profiles
Psychographic segmentation
Dividing the market on the basis of personality, values, and lifestyles. -Create categories or profiles of customers so can align brand marketing strategies *Psychographic prism
Demographic segmentation
Dividing the market on variables like age, sex, family, size, race, education, income, and social class. EX: Dove (sex) and BMW (income)
Positioning by Price/Quality
Done where cost comes secondary to quality EX: Premium brands like BMW use this. But brands like Kohl's also use to show that they have good values for the right price
What is the definition of contact/ touch points between brands and consumers?
Each and every opportunity a consumer has to see or hear about a company and/or its brand or have an encounter or experience with it.
Agenda Setting Theory
Editors set the agenda by deciding which stories are newsworthy and which ones are not. -Influences which stories the audience sees.
Direct response advertising
Encourages the consumer to purchase directly from the manufacturer
What is product/brand positioning?
Fitting the brand to one or more segments of the broad market in such a way as to set it apart form competition in the mind of stakeholders
Concentrated marketing
Focus on one segment and capture most of it. EX: Rolls-Royce focuses exclusively on the high-income segment
Evaluation
Focus on persuasion outcomes
Promotional Program situational analysis (page 34)
Focus on the factors that influence or that are relevant to the development of a promotional strategy. Includes both internal and external analysis.
Field observation advantages
Helps to define a basic research problem -get a sense of how people react to message or product
Advantages of Publicity
High credibility and low cost
Market segments
Identifiable groups of customers sharing similar needs, wants, or other characteristics that make them likely to respond in similar fashion to a marketing program
IMC
Integrated Marketing Communication
Customer-initiated touch points
Interactions that occur whenever a customer or prospect contacts a company. -The manner in which companies handle these interactions has a major impact on their ability to attract and retain customers
Intrinsic touch points
Interactions that occur with a company or brand during the process of buying or using the product or service such as discussions with retail sales personnel or customer service representatives.
What trends are driving companies to adopt IMC?
It is becoming increasing difficult to target audiences and communicate effectively.
Disadvantage of field tests
Lack of control, take more time and money, atypical events can occur and affect results
Disadvantages of laboratory tests
Lack of realism- testing bias. Lacks a natural viewing environment
Brand positioning: Consumer Focus
Linking the product with the benefits the consumer will derive
Sales promotion
Marketing activities that provide extra value or incentives to the sales force, the distributors, or the ultimate consumer and can simulate immediate sales EX: coupons
Geographic segmentation
Markets are divided into different geographic units because consumers have different buying habits depending on where they live. EX: Midwest, east coast, south, west coast
Framing, Agenda Setting, and Priming theories are all examples that.....
Media has power.
Priming Theory
Media images stimulate related thoughts in the minds of audience members. Can desensitize audience to negative things like stereotypes, violence. -Influences how the audience reacts to stories.
Persuasion and Stereotyping
Needs to be conscious of what stereotypes you are offering and what less than ideal attitude are being reinforced. -Understanding that audiences use stereotypes because they provide us with cognitive short cuts
Negative Stereotypes
Negative expectations of people based on some demographic EX: race, gender, age
Advertising is the primary source of revenue for.....
Newspapers, magazines, television, and radio
The IMC approach gets beyond trying to design a message and a campaign that speaks to everyone and the focus is instead....
On identifying one or more lifestyle groups and building brand equity with them.
Direct marketing
Paid, personal communication directly with a consumer to generate a response and/ or a transaction - One of the fastest growing sectors of the U.S. economy -
Open-ended questions
Participant can offer a wide range of responses. EX: what comes to mind?
Laboratory tests
People are brought to a particular location where they are shown ads or commercials.
What are the two dimensions of a brand?
Physical and Phychological
Company created touch points
Planned marketing communication messages created by the company. -Advantage: under the control of the marketer - EX: ads, websites, social medias, news/press releases, packaging, brochures, collateral material, sale promotions, displays.
Positioning by who uses the product
Positioning a product by associating it with a particular group of users. EX: Skaters, snowboarders, etc
What are the different types of product/brand positioning strategies?
Positioning by... -Product attributes and benefits -Price/ Quality -Use or application -Product class/category -Who uses the product -Competitor -Cultural sysmbols
Positioning by product class or category
Promoting two or more products that lie in the same product class -Some brands need to compete against products of similar class. EX: Amtrak has positioned itself as a alternative to airplanes, citing cost savings, enjoyment, and other advantages. V8 juice promotes drinking both your fruits and vegetables.
What is the role of pricing in branding?
Price communicates brand. -Price must be consistent with perceptions of the brand -Higher prices communicates higher quality -Lower prices reflect bargain -A product positioned as high quality but with a low price will confuse customers -Must be unified with advertising and distribution
4 P's of Marketing
Price, Product, Place, Promotion
Marketers don't promote _________ they promote _________!
Products + Brands!
Indirect
Sell network of wholesalers and/ or retailers
Co-Branding
Promotional strategy that mutually strengthens brand image/positioning and expands access to target markets -Essentially just trying to reach the most amount of people possible EX: KFC and Taco Bell in the same building
In-Depth Interviews advantages
Provide a leavel of detail not offered through other methods. -Useful for reseaching sensitive issues
In-Depth Interviews
Provide detailed background about reasons why respondents give certain answers -Lengthy observations of non-verbal cues -Most sessions last serval hours and are long -Unique questions are designed for each participant
What are the promotional pull strategies?
Pull people into the stores. -Consumer to retailer to wholesaler to producer. -Goal: Create demand among consumers and encourage consumers to request the product from the retailer
Physiological/ involuntary measures
Pupil dilation, galvanic skin response, eye tracking, brain waves
What are promotional push strategies?
Push to the consumer. -Producer to wholesaler to retailer to consumer. -Goal: Push the product through the channels of distribution by selling and promoting it
Implicit racism
Racism that operates unconsciously and unintentionally -"Subtle" racism -EX: dove and intel ads
Field observation disadvantages
Reactivity is problem where researcher is identified. Heavily reliant on researcher's perceptions (possible bias)
Main types of post-tests
Recall tests, recognition tests, inquiry tests, tracking studies
Closed-ended questions
Researcher has provided a range of possible valid responses EX: How do you feel on a scale of 0 to 100?
In-Depth Interviews Disadvantages
Same as qualitative but interviewer bias can be especially strong here.
Secondary data/ Data mining
Searching for data on gov't websites, internet, etc. to find hidden patterns in quantitative data
Direct
Sell directly to consumers thru online, catalog, sales force, telemarketing, stores, etc.
Pre-tests
Tests conducted before an ad campaign is implemented
Field tests
Tests of an ad or commercial under natural viewing situations, complete with the realism of noise, distractions, and the comforts of home.
What is the "double transaction" when talking about media, advertising, and advertisements?
The American media system works under a financial structure of promotion subsidizing free or at least cheap media
What is the relationship between brands and identity?
The brand experiences need to become connected to your self identity AND social identities. -Self/social expression through brands
Promotion
The coordination of all seller-initiated efforts to set up channels of information and persuasion in order to sell goods and services or promote an idea
Benefit segmentation
The grouping of consumers on the basis of the benefits they derive from products or services. EX: Watches are commonly bought for accuracy or stylish reasons but they are also commonly bought as gifts. The benefits the purchaser derives are different from those the user will obtain.
Brand equity
The intangible asset of added value or goodwill that results from the favorable image, impressions of differentiation. and/or the strength of consumer attachment of a company name, brand, or trademark. - Does NOT come from the products themseleves
Framing Theory
The media sets frame of reference for the news and information, -Influences how the audience interprets stories.
Market Segmentation
The process of dividing a market into distinct groups that (1) have common needs and (2) will respond similarly to marketing action.
What is the promotional mix?
The tools used to accomplish an organization's communications objective. Includes advertising, directing marketing, digital marketing, sales promotion, public relations, and personal selling.
What are the goals of IMC?
To generate short term financial returns and build long term brand value.
Unexpected touch points
Unanticipated references or information about a company or brand that a customer or prospect receives that is beyond the control of the organization -Word of mouth, blogs, news reports, Yelp, Tripadvisor
Positioning by use or application
Used to enter a market on the basis of a particular use or application and is an effective way to expand the usage of a product. EX: baking soda
Trade advertising
Used to motivate wholesalers and retailers to purchase products for resale
Digital marketing
Uses all digital media, including the Internet and mobile and interactive channels, to develop communication and exchanges with customers
Brand "Parity"
View of consumers that few tangible distinctions exist between competing brands in mature markets
Synergy among promotional tools:
Weaknesses of one tool offset by strengths of others
Psychological dimension of a brand
What the object means to you and how it connects to your lifestyle or self-expression
Physical dimension of a brand
What the object physical is and what it does
Disadvantages of Publicity
Won't build long term loyalty and can damage brand image
Advertisers may exert control over the media by......
biasing editorial content, limiting coverage of certain issues, or influencing program content.
IMC builds....
brand equity
What is key in today's competitive market?
brand equity
IMC develops....
brand identity and consistency
Media's dependence on advertising for revenue makes them vulnerable to.....
control by advertisers
Qualitative methods are more concerned with...
description and explanation compared to the focus on measurement and quantification that drives quantitative. - NOT GENERALIZABLE - Participants counts are small and not randomly selected - often used to supplement and in conjunction with quantitative research
Company planned touch points are the ___________ to control but are the __________ in terms of impact
easiest, lowest
Consumer Insight Research
focus on audience/consumer behavior, psychology, preferences
Market/Brand Information
focus on competitive marketplace; focus on competition, strategic situation
Media Research
focus on the promotional channel- audience, content, distribution
External Analysis
focuses on factors such as characteristics of the firm's customers, market segments, positioning strategies, and competitors EX: consumers have become more focused on health and nutrition, which has had a major impact on the soft-drink industry
Survey Research
gathering primary data by asking people questions about their knowledge, attitudes, preferences, and buying behavior. -Phone, face to face, internet
Unexpected messages are often the most ____________ but are the most ___________ to control
impactful, difficult
Undifferentiated marketing
involves ignoring segment differences and offering just one product or service to the entire market. -Saves money but does not allow opportunity to offer different versions to different markets EX: Coca-Cola only had one flavor for the longest time
Advertisers need the media.....
more than the media needs any one advertiser.
Publicity
non-personal communications regarding an organization, product, service, or idea not directly paid for or run under identified sponsorship
Message Development
testing message design and effectiveness, audience reactions, use of sources
Synergy
the power that results from the combination of two or more forces EX: combines the power of promotional tools into one.