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Slide 8.1 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Chapter 8 Digital.

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Presentation on theme: "Slide 8.1 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Chapter 8 Digital."— Presentation transcript:

1 Slide 8.1 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Chapter 8 Digital marketing

2 Slide 8.2 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Learning outcomes Assess the need for separate digital business and digital marketing strategies Create an outline digital marketing plan intended to implement the digital marketing strategy Distinguish between marketing communication characteristics of traditional and new media

3 Slide 8.3 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Management issues How do we integrate traditional marketing approaches with digital marketing? How can we use electronic communications to differentiate our products and services? How do we redefine our marketing and communications mixes to incorporate new media?

4 Slide 8.4 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Digital marketing The definition of marketing by the Chartered Institute of Marketing (http://www.cim.co.uk/) is: Marketing is the management process responsible for identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer requirements profitability. Which e-marketing tools can assist? –Web, e-mail, databases, wireless and digital television

5 Slide 8.5 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.1 The operational and management processes of digital marketing Source: E-consultancy (2008). Operational processes of digital marketing

6 Slide 8.6 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.1 The operational and management processes of digital marketing (Continued) Source: E-consultancy (2008). Management processes of digital marketing

7 Slide 8.7 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.2 The digital marketing plan in the context of other plans Hierarchy of plans

8 Slide 8.8 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.6 Content Marketing Matrix Source: Smart Insights (2012). Content Marketing

9 Slide 8.9 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.7 SOSTAC ® – a generic framework for digital marketing planning Source: PR Smith’s SOSTAC ® Planning Model (1990). Digital Marketing Plan

10 Slide 8.10 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.8 Inputs to the digital marketing plan from situation analysis Situation Analysis

11 Slide 8.11 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.9 Example SWOT analysis SWOT analysis

12 Slide 8.12 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.9 Example SWOT analysis (Continued) SWOT analysis – con't

13 Slide 8.13 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Demand analysis What percentage of customer businesses have access to the Internet? What percentage of members of the buying decision in these businesses have access to the Internet? What percentage of customers are prepared to purchase your particular product online? What percentage of customers with access to the Internet are not prepared to purchase online, but are influenced by web- based information to buy products offline? What is the popularity of different online customer engagement devices such as Web 2.0 features such as blogs, online communities and RSS feeds? What are the barriers to adoption amongst customers of different channels and services and how can we encourage adoption?

14 Slide 8.14 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.10 Customer demand analysis for the car market Demand analysis – con't

15 Slide 8.15 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Competitor analysis Review of digital business services offered by existing and new competitors and adoption by customers. Benchmarking of competitors' online services and strategy is a key part of planning activity.

16 Slide 8.16 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Review of internal capabilities From core proposition through branding to online value proposition Different aspects of the customer life cycle Qualitative to quantitative In-sector and out-of-sector Financial to non-financial measures From user experience to expert evaluation Perspectives of competitor benchmarking

17 Slide 8.17 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.11 Benchmark comparison of corporate websites Source: Bowen Craggs & Co (www.bowencraggs.com). Benchmark comparison: an example

18 Slide 8.18 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.3 The relationship objectives, strategies and performance indicators for a B2B company (in order of priority) Objective setting

19 Slide 8.19 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.3 The relationship objectives, strategies and performance indicators for a B2B company (in order of priority) (Continued) Objective setting

20 Slide 8.20 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.12 Assessment of the future online promotion contribution and online revenue for a B2B company, for Product A, Europe Objective setting - ORC

21 Slide 8.21 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.4 Example Internet marketing objectives within the balanced scorecard framework for a transactional e-commerce site Objective setting - Metrics

22 Slide 8.22 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Goal setting Business effectiveness. Contribution of site to revenue (see objective setting), profitability and any indications of the corporate mission for the site. The costs of producing and updating the site will also be reviewed, that is cost-benefit analysis. Marketing effectiveness. These measures may include: –leads; sales; retention; market share; brand enhancement and loyalty. Customer service –These measures will be assessed for each of the different product lines delivered through the web site. The way in which the elements of the marketing mix are utilised will also be reviewed.

23 Slide 8.23 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Goal setting – con't Internet effectiveness. These are specific measures that are used to assess the way in which the web site is used, and the characteristics of the audience –Such measures include specialist terms such as hits and page impressions that are collected from the log file, and also more typical techniques such as focus groups and questionnaires to existing customers. From a marketing point of view, how clear the value proposition of the site is for the customer should be noted.

24 Slide 8.24 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.5 Summary of typical focus for main types of e-commerce-related strategic initiatives Strategy

25 Slide 8.25 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.5 Summary of typical focus for main types of e-commerce-related strategic initiatives (Continued) Strategy – con't

26 Slide 8.26 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.5 Summary of typical focus for main types of e-commerce-related strategic initiatives (Continued) Strategy – con't

27 Slide 8.27 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 de Kare-Silver ES Test 1.Product characteristics. Does the product need to be physically tried, or touched before it is bought? 2. Familiarity and confidence. Considers the degree the consumer recognises and trusts the product and brand. 3.Consumer attributes. These shape the buyer’s behaviour – are they amenable to online purchases in terms of access to the technology skills available and do they no longer wish to shop for a product in a traditional retail environment?

28 Slide 8.28 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.6 Product scores in de Kare-Silver (2000), Electronic Shopping Potential Test de Kare-Silver ES Test – con't

29 Slide 8.29 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.14 Stages in target marketing strategy development Target market strategies

30 Slide 8.30 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Table 8.7 A range of targeting and segmentation approaches for a digital campaign Options for targeting customers

31 Slide 8.31 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Online value proposition A clear differentiation of the proposition from competitors based on product features or service quality. Target market segment(s) that the proposition will appeal to. How the proposition will be communicated to site visitors and in all marketing communications. Developing a tag line can help this. How the proposition is delivered across different parts of the buying process. How the proposition will be delivered and supported by resources – is the proposition genuine? Will resources be internal or external?

32 Slide 8.32 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Example OVPs ‘Compare. Buy. Save’. Kelkoo (www.kelkoo.com) ‘Earth’s biggest selection’. Amazon (www.amazon.com) ‘Search the largest inventory of cars and trucks on the Internet. More than 1.5 million listings, updated daily’ (www.autotrader.com) The Citibank site design (www.citibank.com) uses a range of techniques to illustrate its core proposition and OVP. The main messages are –Welcome to Citibank: The one-stop solution for all your financial needs –Look for a product or service; Learn about a financial product; Find a location.

33 Slide 8.33 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Characteristics of digital media communications Interactivity Intelligence Individualisation Integration Industry restructuring Independence of location

34 Slide 8.34 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.16 Summary of communication models for (a) traditional media, (b) new media Characteristics (con’t) - Interactivity

35 Slide 8.35 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.17 Summary of degree of individualisation for (a) traditional media (same message), (b) new media (unique messages and more information exchange between customers) Characteristics (con’t) - Individualisation

36 Slide 8.36 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.18 Channels requiring integration as part of integrated digital marketing strategy Characteristics (con’t) - Integration

37 Slide 8.37 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.19 Channel integration required for digital marketing and mixed-mode buying Characteristics (con’t) - Integration

38 Slide 8.38 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.20 The elements of the marketing mix Tactics – marketing mix

39 Slide 8.39 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Issues with varying the mix online Do we vary the mix online or replicate offline? Is the offer clear – brand proposition, online offer? Is online differentiation defined? Is online differentiation communicated? Key online mix variables –Product –Price –Place –Promotion –Service: People, Process, Physical evidence.

40 Slide 8.40 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.21 Zipf’s law, showing decrease in popularity of items within an ordered sequence Marketing mix – long-tail concept

41 Slide 8.41 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Online mix options - Product Options for product variability Core product Extended product Mass customisation Bundling

42 Slide 8.42 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Implications of the Internet –Increased price transparency and its implication on differantial pricing Offering different prices Price elasticity Examples: Reduce online prices (easyJet) Maintain price to avoid cannibalisation of offline sales (Dixon) –Downward pressure on price Commodisation (e.g. Automotive - DaimlerChrysler) Online mix options - Price

43 Slide 8.43 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Implications of the Internet –New pricing options (software, music): Dynamic pricing (Concert tickets) Aggregated buying –Alternative pricing structure or policies Payment per use Rental as a fixed cost Add-ons and extra services Guarantees Refund policies Order cancellation terms Online mix options – Price (con’t)

44 Slide 8.44 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.22 Price elasticity of demand for a relatively elastic product Online mix options – Price - Elasticity

45 Slide 8.45 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Figure 8.23 Price elasticity of demand for a relatively inelastic product Online mix options – Price - Elasticity

46 Slide 8.46 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Implications of the Internet –Place of purchase –New channel structures –Channel conflicts –Virtual Organisations Online mix options - Place

47 Slide 8.47 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Online mix options - Promotion Main elements of the promotional mix – Advertising – Selling – Sales promotion – Public relations – Sponsorship – Direct mail – Exhibitions – Merchandising – Packaging – Word-of-mouth Investment decisions for the promotions – Investment in promotion compared to site creation and maintenance – Investment in online promotion techniques in comparison to offline promotion – Investment in different online promotion techniques

48 Slide 8.48 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Service –People Automate – use web self-service, offer customer choice –Process Change process for service – contact strategies –Physical evidence Site design – differentiate or support brand Fulfilment quality. Online mix options People, Process, Physical Evidence

49 Slide 8.49 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Branding Leslie de Chernatony and Malcolm McDonald described ‘brand’ in their classic 1992 book, Creating Powerful Brands, as: ‘An identifiable product or service augmented in such a way that the buyer or user perceives relevant unique added values which match their needs most closely. Furthermore, its success results from being able to sustain these added values in the face of competition.’

50 Slide 8.50 Chaffey, Digital Business and E-commerce Management Powerpoints on the Web, 6 th edition © Marketing Insights Limited 2015 Branding from an alternative perspective Brand equity: The assets linked to a brand's name and symbol that add to service. Table 8.9 Traditional measures of brand equity and online measures of brand equity


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