 2007 Thomson South-Western Marcom Objective Setting and Budgeting Chapter Six.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Definition The Marketing Communications Mix
Advertisements

©2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 14Copyright ©2008 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved 1 Learning Outcomes: Chapter 14 Integrated Marketing Communications.
© 2003 Prentice Hall, Inc14-1 Market Communication.
Principles of Marketing
Designing Advertising Programs (14) MAR 331. Designing Advertising (14) Select advertising objectives. Develop an advertising budget. Develop message.
Marketing Management (MKT 261)
Chapter Seven Marketing, Advertising, and IMC Planning
Chapter 8: Overview of Advertising Management. Advertising Functions A. Informing B. Persuading C. Reminding D. Adding Value E. Assisting Other Company.
Advertising Planning and Strategy
Budgeting Getting it Right Chapter 6. Decisions Objectives Budget  Control tool, planning, accountability Advertising Budget Media Selection Media Strategy.
1 Objectives, Budgeting, and Advertising Management Chapters Six and Nine.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 1 Lecturer – Shahed Rahman Integrated Marketing Communications.
Retail Marketing Mix and Planning Charles Blankson, Ph.D.
Media Planning and Buying Chapter 15 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
 2007 Thomson South-Western Planning for and Analyzing Advertising Media Chapter Thirteen.
Objective Setting and Budgeting
Chapter 7.  To recognize the importance and value of setting objectives for advertising and promotion.  To know the differences between sales and communication.
 2007 Thomson South-Western Marcom Objective Setting and Budgeting Chapter Six.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Advertising, Sales Promotion, Public Relations, Direct Marketing, Personal Selling,
1)Competition Analysis The purpose of Five-Forces Analysis The five forces are environmental forces that impact on a company’s ability to compete in.
Chapter 3: PROMOTION and IMC PLANNING and STRATEGY 3.1.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 Chapter 16: Promotional Planning for Competitive Advantage Prepared by Amit Shah, Frostburg State University Designed by Eric Brengle, B-books, Ltd.
 2007 Thomson South-Western Marcom Objective Setting and Budgeting Chapter Six.
 2007 Thomson South-Western Overview of Integrated Marketing Communications Chapter One.
© iStockphoto.com/ktsimage Lamb, Hair, McDaniel Chapter 19 Pricing Concepts © Cengage Learning All Rights Reserved.
Ch. 7: Objectives and Budgeting for Promotional Programs n Why should we establish objectives for promotional programs?
Marketing, Advertising and IMC Planning Chapter 07 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1  2007 Thomson South-Western Marcom’s Challenges: Enhancing Brand Equity, Influencing Behavior, and Being Accountable Chapter Two.
Integrated Marketing Communications The Process of Planning a Synergistic Approach to Promotions and Communications.
Integrated Marketing Communications Chapter 17 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Establishing Objectives and Budgeting for the Promotional Program 7 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All right reversed 7 Establishing Objectives and Budgeting for the Promotional Program.
 2007 Thomson South-Western Sales Promotion Overview and the Role of Trade Promotions Chapter Seventeen.
ADVERTISING PLANNING Where it fits in, theories and appeals.
C HAPTER 7 Marketing and Advertising Planning: Top-Down, Bottom-up, and IMC.
Chapter 28: Effective Marketing. Purposes of Marketing Anticipating customers’ wants (Market research) Satisfying customers’ wants in a way that delights.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All right reversed 7 Establishing Objectives and Budgeting for the Promotional Program.
Promotional Strategy Chapter Six: “Establishing Objectives and Budgeting for the Promotional Program”
Managing Mass Communications. What is Sales Promotion? Sales promotion consists of a collection of incentive tools, mostly short term, designed to stimulate.
CHAPTER 1 CONSUMERS The Engine That Runs the Economy
Objectives for the IMC Plan. Value of Objectives Communications Planning and Decision Making Measurement and Evaluation of Results Planning and Decision.
©2003 Prentice Hall, IncMarketing: Real People, Real Choices 3rd edition 14-0 Chapter 14 Conversing with the Customer: Promotional Strategy, Interactive.
Retailing Management 8e© The McGraw-Hill Companies, All rights reserved CHAPTER 2CHAPTER 1CHAPTER 15 Retail Communication Mix CHAPTER 15.
Promotion in Marketing Use communication to influence the awareness, feelings, beliefs and behavior of prospective customers Use communication to influence.
Copyright ©2005 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Introduction to Marketing.
Promotion -- Marketing Communication Chapter 15 Marketing Communication.
Boundless Lecture Slides Free to share, print, make copies and changes. Get yours at Available on the Boundless Teaching Platform.
Chapter 15 - slide 1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter Fifteen Advertising and Public Relations.
Overview of Advertising Management
Advertising’s Role in Marketing
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 16–1 What Is Integrated Marketing Communications? Integrated Marketing Communications –Coordination.
Chapter 17 MR2100. Advertising is... Advertising is one key element of the promotional mix. Advertising is defined as any direct paid form of mass communication.
Marketing planning Special Topic in Marketing Chapter (1) – Lecture (2) Dr. Inas A. Hamid.
ADVERTISING: Establishing Objectives. Value of Objectives  Focus and Coordination  They help to orient everyone involved toward one, common goal. 
Overview of Advertising Management
Course Name: Principles of Marketing Code: MRK 152 Chapter: Nine Advertising and Public Relations.
Chapter 18 Consumer Behavior and Pricing Strategy
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All right reversed 7 Establishing Objectives and Budgeting for the Promotional Program.
The Fundamental Promotion - Objective & Budgeting Objectives are goals that the various promotion elements aspire to achieve individually or collectively.
Scheme of Work WeekTopic 1 Introduction: The Marketing & Marketing Mix; 7 P’s 2 The fundamental Promotion: Segmentation, Targeting, Positioning; Promotion.
Integrated Marketing Communication Strategy Definition The Marketing Communications Mix  The specific mix of advertising, personal selling, sales.
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
The Promotional Strategy and Marketing Communication
Marcom Objective Setting and Budgeting
Review Week Two.
Objective Setting and Budgeting
Chapter 15: Integrated Marketing Communication Strategy
Presentation transcript:

 2007 Thomson South-Western Marcom Objective Setting and Budgeting Chapter Six

2 Chapter Six Objectives Understand the process of marcom objective setting and the requirements for good objectives. Describe the hierarchy-of-effects model and its relevance for setting marcom objectives. Understand the role of sales as a marcom objective and the logic of vaguely right versus precisely wrong thinking.

3 Chapter Six Objectives Understand the nature and importance of marcom budgeting. Explain the relation between a brand’s share of market (SOM) and its share of voice (SOV). Explain the various rules of thumb, or heuristics, that guide practical budgeting.

4 Setting Marcom Objectives Goals that the various marcom elements aspire to individually or collectively achieve during a scope of time such as a business quarter or fiscal year.

5 Marcom Objectives Facilitate the successful introduction of new brands. Build sales of existing brands by increasing the frequency of use, the variety of use, or the quantity purchased. Inform the trade and consumers about brand improvements.

6 Marcom Objectives Create brand awareness Enhance a brand’s image Generate sales leads Persuade the trade to handle the manufacturer’s brands Stimulate point-of-purchase sales Increase customer loyalty

7 Marcom Objectives Improve corporate relations with special interest groups Offset bad publicity about a brand or generate good publicity Counter competitors’ communication efforts Provide customers with reasons for buying immediately instead of delaying a purchase

8 Setting Marcom Objectives Expression of management consensus Guides the budgeting, message, and media aspects of advertising strategy Provide standards against which results can be measured

9 Advancing Consumers From Unawareness to Awareness Advertising (mass media or otherwise) is generally the most effective and efficient method for quickly creating brand awareness. Creating an Expectation

10 Hierarchy of Effects Forming Beliefs and Attitudes Reinforcing Beliefs and Attitudes Accomplishing Brand Loyalty

11 Requirements for Setting Suitable Marcom Objectives Include a precise statement of who, what, and when Be quantitative and measurable Specify the amount of change Be realistic Be internally consistent Be clear and put it in writing

12 Should Marcom Objectives Be Stated in Terms of Sales? Presales Objectives: communication objectives that attempt to increase the target audience’s brand awareness, enhance their attitudes toward the brand, shift their preferences from the competitors’ brand and so on. Sales Objectives: means the marcom objective literally is to increase sales by a particular amount.

13 Should Marcom Objectives Be Stated in Terms of Sales? Traditional View (Thesis) Sales volume is the consequence of a host of factors in addition to marcom Effect of marcom efforts is delayed

14 Sales Volume as a Marcom Objective Heretical View (Antithesis) Marcom’s purpose is to generate sales Sales measures are “vaguely right”

15 The Logic of Vaguely Right Vs. Precisely Wrong Thinking Versus Measurement Accuracy Issue Vaguely Precisely Choice of Objective Issue Right Wrong

16 An Accountability Perspective (Synthesis) Chief executives and financial officers are demanding greater accountability from marcom programs. The measurement of effects of a program should not stop short of measuring the effect on sales.

17 Marcom Budgeting in Theory The best(optimal) level of any investment is the level that maximizes profits(MR=MC) Advertisers should continue to increase their advertising investment as long as it is profitable to do so MC = (Change in total cost) (Change in quantity) =  TC/Q MR = (Change in total Revenue) (Change in quantity) =  TR/Q

18 Sales-to-Advertising Response Function The relationship between money invested in advertising and the response, or output, of that investment in terms of revenue generated.

19 Practical Budgeting Methods Percent-of-Sales Budgeting Objective-and-Task Method Competitive Parity Method (match competitors’ method) Affordability Method

20 Percentage-of-Sales Budgeting A company sets a brand’s advertising budget by simply establishing the budget as a fixed percentage of past or anticipated sales volume Criticized as being illogical Sales=f(Advertising) (o) Advertising=f(Sales) (x)

21 Objective-and-Task Method The most sensible and defendable advertising budgeting method Specify what role they expect advertising to play for a brand and then set the budget accordingly

22 The Competitive Parity Method Sets the ad budget by basically following what competitors are doing SOM- the ratio of one brand’s revenue to total category revenue SOV-the ratio of a brand’s advertising expenditures to total category advertising expenditures

23 Encoding Variability Hypothesis Contends that people’s memory for information is enhanced when multiple pathways, or connections are created between the object to be remembered and the information about the object that is to be remembered.

24 Affordability Method Only the funds that remain after budgeting for everything else are spent on advertising Only the most unsophisticated and impoverished firms However, affordability and competitive considerations influence the budgeting decisions of all companies