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having covered product management, price strategy,
and supply chain management, we're going to move now
to the integrated marketing communications aspect of
creating value for the marketplace. keep in mind what we've been talking about
is the fact that an
organization or business puts together
a marketing mix - your product, price, place
(or we refer to it as supply chain management), and promotion
(we refer to it as integrated marketing communication)
so you put together a marketing mix that the customer
will perceive as valuable in exchange
for the price you set for your product. and what your job is to do
as a marketer is to do that to facilitate
that exchange, now
let's say that you have a great product
at a great price, and people know about it
but you haven't handled the logistics
very well anyhow and you have a stockout. in that case you can
only sell as much of a product as you have available to sell,
and you re limited by the weakest elemnt
of the marketing mix - at this point supply chain management, take another example
let's say you have a great product
available at a fair price for the perceived
value. it's available when and where people want it,
but guess what - they don't know about it because you've not had any
integrated marketing communication. in that case
you're only as strong in the marketplace as the weakest
element of the marketing mix. you can sell as much of
the product as people are aware of the product that you have available
for sale. so, we're going to focus now a little bit
on this last aspect of market value creation called
promotion or integrated marketing communication.
what do we mean by
integrated marketing communication? well basically what we're going to do
is to select and use
different marketing communications tools
whether that be advertising, public relations
sales promotion, personal selling,
social media to create
one consistent message across
multiple channels so whether you're using
television, or print, or electronic
or face to face, whatever channel it is that you're using
you want your message to be consistent so people have a strong position
recognition with your product. you don't want to confuse them about
what your key points of differentiation
are. so, this will help to ensure maximum
impact on your current customers
and also potential customers based
on what you're hoping to achieve through your communication objectives.
I mean, are you wanting people to change their
attitude about your brand; are you wanting people to
you know just simply recognize the name of your brand
what is your communication objective.
so, very simply out, we want to make sure
is that all communication from the marketing organization
presents a consistent, valuable message
to the target market. and we call that IMC
or integrated marketing communications.
let's back up a little bit
and recognize that communication is communication
whether it be marketing communication or in
any particular mode. so, basically, what happens
in communication is you have sender who has the ideas,
and in this case, the sender would be the
marketer or the marketing department within the organization.
Through market sensing, they understand the consumer, consumer behavior,
how people go about buying, and using products, they understand the marketing environment,
they've also interpreted the market and so they know how we should be
positioning or differentiating
our product in the marketplace. they know
the characteristics of the customer that we're trying to reach
that customer being on the other end
as the receiver of the communication
message. okay so back to the sender we have all this
background information which then we
generally communicate to someone
within the marketing organization
that will encode a message,
okay; so maybe the message
is instead of telling all about your hamburgers
and what goes on them, you want to focus on the amount
meat in the hamburgers that you're selling. so your whole campaign
might be based upon where's the beef
or something like that. so, basically, what happens is generally
the promotion or creative people of an advertising message will take
all what you know about your business in the marketplace
and encode that into a message
that they will then send or transmit
via various
mediums; whether that be
you know print or electronic advertising mediums;
it might be through public relations or personal selling.
in any event, they translate that to the recipient
who then translates their meaning;
what that means to them. and, hopefully
in this communication process, there's some
feedback - one form of feedback would be
if the receiver goes and purchases the sender's product
but feedback is generally a little bit slower than that
and we'll l find that feedback and personal selling
when you're sitting there one-on-one with someone is much more rapid than
feedback in advertising.
so that's something to consider as well.
something that's not noted on this communication model
in that the receiver has a certain set of
experiences they've gone through in their life
and the marketer has a certain set of experiences
that they encode with their product.
hopefully in the middle, there some overlap between
the experiences of that product and the experiences that receiver.
and that's where marketing communication
is the most beneficial. also sometimes there's noise that
interferes with this process zipping and zapping and dvring of
television commercials - you know
fog or poor weather conditions or traffic
interferes with outdoor campaigns
that are trying to communicate to potential customers.
but, all in all the communication process
that applies to other forms of communication
applies to marketing communication as well.