Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySuzan Dennis Modified over 9 years ago
1
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Promotion
2
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-2 Introduction Marketing communications tell customers about the benefits and values that a company, product, or service offers
3
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Marketing Communication Marketing Communications Mix The specific mix of Advertising, Personal Selling, Sales Promotion, Direct Marketing and Public Relations a company uses to pursue its marketing objectives. Telling target customers that the right Product is available in the right Place at the right Price.
4
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-4 Marketing Communication Programs- IMC Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) is becoming more popular because of the challenges of communicating across national borders “We have an integrated marketing model that involves all elements of the marketing mix from digital to sports marketing, from event marketing to advertising to entertainment, all sitting at the table driving ideas.” -Trevor Edwards, VP for global brand and category management at Nike
5
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall The concept under which a company carefully integrates and coordinates its many communications channels to deliver a clear, consistent, and compelling message about the organization and its products. – Recognize all the contact points: better communication consistency and greater sales impact Integrated Marketing Communications
6
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-6 Global Advertising Advertising is any sponsored, paid message that is communicated in a non-personal way Global advertising is the use of the same advertising appeals, messages, art, copy, photographs, stories, and video segments for worldwide suitability A global company that has the ability to successfully transform a domestic campaign into a worldwide one, or to create a new global campaign from the ground up.
7
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Global Advertising and Product Cultures Products such as coffee and beer have emerged as true global products – Starbucks and the coffee culture – Irish pubs in the U.S. – German-style beer halls in Japan
8
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-8 Worldwide Market Segments “Eighteen-year olds in Paris have more in common with 18-year- olds in New York than with their own parents. They buy the same products, go to the same movies, listen to the same music, sip the same colas. Global advertising merely works on that premise.” - William Roedy, Director, MTV Europe
9
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Top 25 Global Marketers, Ad Spending, 2009
10
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Noise Global Advertising Content: The Traditional Communication Process Source/ Sender Receiver Encoding Message channel Decoding Feedback
11
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-11 Standardization vs. Adaptation Four difficulties that compromise an organization’s communication efforts – The message may not get through to the intended recipient. Appropriate media channel – The message may reach the target audience but may not be understood or may even be misunderstood. Encoding and sophistication – The message may reach the target audience and may be understood but still may not induce the recipient to take the action desired by the sender. Cultural knowledge – The effectiveness of the message can be impaired by noise.
12
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Eurodata: One Television Year In The World 2010 Worlwide TV Yearbook
13
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-13 Standardization vs. Adaptation Primary Issue – Must the specific advertising message and media strategy be changed from region to region or country to country? Standardization: people everywhere want the same products for the same reasons. Adaptation: consumers must be reached by advertising tailored to their respective countries
14
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-14 Standardization vs. Adaptation “We have been in Sweden for 60 years and in China for only 4 or 5 so our feeling is that retailing is local. It is important to take advantage of local humor, and the things on people’s minds.” Nils Larsson, IKEA
15
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-15 Standardization vs. Adaptation “I can think of very few truly global ads that work. Brands are often at different stages around the world, and that means there are different advertising jobs to do.” Michael Conrad, Chief Creative Officer, Leo Burnett Worldwide
16
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-16 Pattern Advertising A middle ground between 100% standardization and 100% adaptation A basic pan-regional or global communication concept for which copy, artwork, or other elements can be adapted as required for individual countries
17
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-17 Pattern Advertising Similar: Layout Dominant visuals on left Brand signature and slogan Contrasting: Photos Body copy is localized, not simply translated
18
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-18 Advertising Appeal Rational approach – Depend on logic and speak to the consumer’s intellect; based on the consumer’s need for information Emotional approach – Tugs at the heartstrings or uses humor
19
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-19 Advertising Appeal Selling proposition – The promise or claim that captures the reason for buying the product or the benefit that ownership confers – Since products are at differing stages of the product life cycle in different national markets and because of cultural, social and economic differences, the most effective appeal or selling proposition may vary.
20
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-20 Copy and Copywriters Copy is written or spoken communication elements Copywriters are language specialists who develop headlines, subheads, and body copy
21
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-21 Copywriting Decisions Prepare new copy for foreign markets in host country’s language Translate the original copy into target language Leave some or all copy elements in home country language
22
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-22 Advertising Copy Mistakes Advertising slogans: In Asia, Pepsi’s “Come Alive” was interpreted as asking to bring ancestors back from the dead In China, Citicorp’s “Citi Never Sleeps” was taken to mean that Citibank had a sleeping disorder, like insomnia McDonald’s does not use multiple 4’s in advertising prices in China; “four” sounds like the word “death”
23
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-23 Cultural Considerations Images of male/female intimacy are in bad taste in Japan; illegal in Saudi Arabia Wedding rings are worn on the right hand in Spain, Denmark, Holland, Germany European men kiss the hands of married women only, not single women In Germany, France and Japan, a man enters a door before a woman; no ladies first!
24
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Symbols Considerations in use of color, and animals In China, light and bright colors are chosen by young people, and plainer and deeper colors by elder people. Purple is a noble color in Japan, but in Myanmar and in some Latin American countries it represents death. The color of mourning is black in Japan, blue in Iran, white in China. A US company used a large deer as a sign of masculinity in Brazil. The word “deer” turned out to be a Brazilian “street name” for a homosexual. To an Indian, the owl is a symbol of bad luck.
25
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Food Marketing In Greece, Heinz ads shows ketchup pouring over pasta, eggs and cuts of meat. In Japan, they instruct Japanese homemakers on using ketchup as an ingredient in Western-style food such as omelettes, sausages, and pasta. Americans like a sweet ketchup, but Europeans prefer a spicier, more piquant variety. In Sweden, the made-in-America theme is so muted in ads that Swedes think it is German because of the name. Since American themes still work well in Germany, ads feature strong American image.
26
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-26 Country-Specific Regulations : Arab Countries Advertisements of horoscope or fortune-telling books, publications, or magazines are prohibited. Women may only appear in those commercials that relate to family affairs, their appearance must be in a decent manner that ensures their famine dignity. Women must wear long, suitable dresses which fully covers the body except face and palms. Brevity is a virtue in ads
27
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Public Relations Building good relations with the company’s various publics by obtaining favorable publicity, building up a good corporate image, and handling or preventing unfavorable rumors, stories, and events. Often has a higher level of credibility than company’s own advertisements.
28
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-28 Public Relations Tools – News releases – Press conferences – Articles in trade, professional journals – TV and radio talk show appearances – Special events – Social media – Corporate Web sites
29
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Negative Publicity Affecting Global Marketers
30
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall 13-30 The Growing Role of Public Relations in Global Marketing PR’s role is growing in the post global recession – Build consensus and understanding – Create harmony and trust – Articulate and influence public opinion – Anticipate conflicts and resolve disputes Smartphones, broadband Internet, social media, satellite links allow PR pros to stay in touch with media anywhere, anytime
31
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Sales Promotion Sales promotion refers to any paid consumer or trade communication program of limited duration that adds tangible value to a product or brand Sales promotions are short-term incentives to encourage the purchase or sale of a product or service 14-31
32
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Sampling The average cost-per-sample for a promotional programs can range from 10 cents to 50 cents; 2 million to 3 million samples are distributed in a typical sampling program. Cost is one of the major disadvantages associated with sampling; another problem is that it is sometimes difficult for marketing managers to assess the contribution a sampling program makes to return on investment. 14-32 Sampling – Provides consumer with opportunity to try product at no cost – May be distributed in stores, in the mail, through print media, at events, or door-to-door Wine tasting in South Africa
33
Copyright 2013, Pearson Education Inc., Publishing as Prentice-Hall Couponing Couponing accounts for 70% of consumer promotion spending in the U.S. In the European Union, couponing is widely used in the United Kingdom and Belgium. Although Asian consumers have a reputation for thriftiness, some are reluctant to use coupons because doing so might bring shame upon them or their families 14-33 Couponing – Printed certificates entitle the bearer to a price reduction or some other special consideration for purchasing a particular product –The goal is to reward loyal users and stimulate product trial by nonusers
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.