Changing Behaviours: Harnessing the Power of Marketing to Move Communities David Thorp Director of Research and Professional Development.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Some basic definitions of marketing and the marketing concept
Advertisements

Introduction to Marketing
Introduction to Consumer Behaviour
Defining Marketing for the 21st century
Social Marketing Basics Nancy Hoddinott Manager, Social Marketing NS Health Promotion.
Training Institute of Public Administration Tirana, ALBANIA
Goal 1: Define marketing and the marketing process.
Strategic Planning and the Marketing Management Process
Chapter 1: An Overview of Marketing
Promotion Pertemuan 21 Matakuliah: J0114/Manajemen Pemasaran Tahun: 2008.
Nutrition 564: Marketing Objectives:  Review the history of marketing  Define terms  Describe the marketing process  Identify elements to be used in.
SOCIAL MARKETING GÜLŞAH KILIÇKAYA EMRE AYDINLIOĞLU DİBA TAŞDEMİR OYA MURATOĞLU 1.
The Art and Science of Marketing
PART 1.  Any form of nonpersonal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods, or services by an identified sponsor.  Advertising and promotion are integral.
Introduction to Behavior Change Communication
A presentation on THE SOCIAL MARKETING OF RURAL SANITATION
+ Social Marketing Early Theory & Praxis Lecture to accompany the Alan R. Andreasen Reading.
© 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 What is Marketing? n n Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging.
Cutlip & Center's Effective PUBLIC RELATIONS
This project is implemented through the CENTRAL EUROPE Programme co-financed by the ERDF. Manager Coordinating Brownfield Redevelopment Activities
Marketing: Managing Profitable Customer Relationships Chapter 1.
1-1 Strategic Planning and the Marketing Management Process Chapter 1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
Goal 1: Define marketing and the marketing process.
Copyright © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies All Rights ReservedMcGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 1 Strategic Planning and the Marketing Management Process.
Canadian Adaptation prepared by Don Hill, Langara College Lecture PowerPoint® slides to accompany 1Copyright © 2012 Nelson Education Limited.
Chapter 1: Marketing Planning: New Urgency, New Possibilities
1 Chapter 3 Advertising and the Marketing Process.
Bull associates Creating Compelling Customer Value Propositions.
Introduction to Marketing
Learning Goals Define marketing and the marketing process.
Slide 1.1 Principles of Marketing Marketing Now Marketing now Chapter 1.
1 Copyright © 2009 by Nelson Education, Ltd. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 1 An Overview of Marketing Canadian Adaptation prepared by Don Hill, Langara.
MKT 201 Principles of Marketing
Chapter Thirteen Marketing: Helping Buyers Buy Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Commercial Marketing.
Marketing -introduction Alena Klapalová
PLANNING WORKBOOK TUTORIAL MODULE 3 STEPS FOR DEVELOPING ROADWAY USER AWARENESS AND EDUCATION PROGRAMS FHWA Highway Safety Marketing, Communications, and.
Chapter 1 Copyright ©2010 by Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved 1 MKTG 1 CHAPTER An Overview of Marketing.
Chapter 10 Marketing.
Reaching New Heights... Integrating Marketing Chapter I Integrating Marketing in the Leisure Industry.
Business in Action 6e Bovée/Thill The Art and Science of Marketing Chapter 13.
Marketing. What is Marketing? In your own words, describe what marketing is.
1 Lamb, Hair, McDaniel CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Marketing © WINDSOR & WIEHAHN/STONE/GETTY IMAGES © iStockphoto.com/San Nguyen.
Copyright ©2009 by Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved 1 Designed by Eric Brengle B-books, Ltd. CHAPTER 1 An Overview of Marketing Prepared by Amit.
1 Social Marketing 101: More than Messages January 25, 2010.
Social Marketing Social Marketing is the use of commercial marketing techniques to help a target population acquire a beneficial health behavior. Becoming.
By: Ehsan Khodarahmi L4 What is social marketing? How does social marketing compare with and differ from commercial marketing, not-for profit marketing,
The P Process Strategic Design
The Role of Social Marketing Marisol Barrientos. Definition of Social Marketing…  “Social Marketing is the design, implantation, and control of programs.
1 Fit for the Future Selvin Brown MBE Programme Director, GCS Improvement Programme November 2015.
Dr.B.N.F. Warnakulasooriya1 Company orientations toward market Places Dr. B.N.F. Warnakulasooriya M.Sc. in Management Programme University of Sri Jayewardenepura.
Social Marketing Social Marketing’s Distinguishing Features Case Studies: Food Thermometer Education Evaluating a Social Marketing Intervention: Cardiff.
Strategic Planning Case Study Developed by TAG Healthcare Marketing April 2012.
Chapter 15 – MANAGING THE MARKETING FUNCTION Activity 15.1 (class answers) Q 1. Identify 2 advertisements you don’t like Q 2. Describe the elements of.
What’s Happening?. Marketing in Today’s World: Creating Customers for Life Chapter ONE.
Defining Marketing for 21 st century. What is Marketing? “ marketing is about identifying and meeting human and social needs with profit” “marketing includes.
11 Connecting for Social Good Using Social Marketing to Improve Oral Health Linda Orgain, MPH Health Communications Specialist, Division of Oral Health.
Marketing Management.  According to Phillip Kotler marketing management is the process of planning & executing the pricing, promotion & distribution.
1 MARKETING AND MARKETING MANAGEMENT Module 1. 2 Objectives Defining marketing and marketing management The scope of marketing Some fundamental marketing.
Marketing Concepts.
Marketing Creating and Capturing Customer Value
HEALTH IN POLICIES TRAINING
The role of marketing communications
Social Marketing Basics
Program Planning: Models and Theories
Chapter 6 HEALTHCARE MARKETING. Chapter 6 HEALTHCARE MARKETING.
An Overview of Marketing
Welcome to the World of Marketing: Create and Deliver Value
International Marketing
Presentation transcript:

Changing Behaviours: Harnessing the Power of Marketing to Move Communities David Thorp Director of Research and Professional Development

Changing Behaviours The Chartered Institute of Marketing A not-for-profit body established in 1911, we are the leading international professional marketing body, with members worldwide We exist to develop the marketing profession, maintain professional standards and improve the skills of marketing practitioners We encourage and promote leading edge thinking through our wide networks of practitioners, researchers and academics We do this via Membership, Professional Qualifications and providing Training, and a comprehensive CPD programme Anyone, at any level, with an interest in marketing can join us

Changing Behaviours The Social Marketing Group Formed in August 2009 To promote marketing excellence in this sector. To promote greater understanding of social marketing and its application as a force for social cohesion, change and delivering the public good. To inform members of changes in the marketing environment and their implications and promote high, professional marketing standards.

Changing Behaviours

So… is marketing powerful? Exhibit One

Changing Behaviours So… is marketing powerful? Exhibit Two

Changing Behaviours

“The enthusiasm of the Cameron Tories for community development and localism, and its convergence with the New Labour and Lib Dem ‘community empowerment’ agendas, suggests it is time to ask whether community development and community action, once a radical force in local politics, has been effectively depoliticised and incorporated as an arm of government” Red Pepper, May 7 th 2010

Changing Behaviours

Segmentation is… The process of splitting consumers, or potential consumers, in a market into different groups, or segments, within which consumers share a similar level of interest in the same or comparable set of needs satisfied by a distinct marketing proposition.

Changing Behaviours The trajectory of marketing… Commercial Move away from concepts of mass marketing to an increasing emphasis on individualism and the rejection of conformity Emphasis increasingly on products we want but don’t actually need Benefits increasingly perceptual Social Frequently has social conformity as its primary aim. Pushes against the trend to individuality in commercial marketing Emphasis is primarily on behaviours we need but don’t particularly want Benefits mainly tangible

Changing Behaviours So what is Social Marketing? 1.Social Marketing starts and ends with a focus on the person and what’s important for them 1.Social Marketing has roots in both best public and commercial sector practice 2.Social Marketing is an adaptable approach that can be used with large and small budgets

Changing Behaviours So what is Social Marketing? 4.Social Marketing does not compete but integrates with best marketing, promotion and communications practice 5.Social Marketing actively considers and is concerned with ethical issues and values 6.Social Marketing is more…much more…than advertising and communications 7.Social marketing challenges top-down paternalistic “we know what you need” approaches

Changing Behaviours Definitions of Social Marketing: “…the simultaneous adoption of marketing philosophy and adaptation of marketing techniques to further causes leading to changes in individual behaviours which ultimately in the view of the campaign’s originator will result in socially-beneficial outcomes” Dann, S “…the application of marketing concepts and techniques to exchanges that result in the achievement of socially- desirable aims; that is, objectives that benefit society as a whole” Donovan, R

Changing Behaviours Definitions of Social Marketing: “…an attempt to influence consumers for the greater good, and as such, always has an ethical aspect; specifically, social marketing seeks to induce customer change that is deemed to be inherently good, as opposed to change that is good merely because it increases profits or non-profit earnings” Gibbs, B “…the application of appropriate marketing tools and the systematic analysis, development, implementation, evaluation and integration of a set of comprehensive, scientifically- based, ethically-formulated and user-relevant programme components designed to ultimately influence behaviour change that benefits society” Kirby, S

Changing Behaviours Definitions of Social Marketing: exchange “…a programme planning process which promotes voluntary behaviour change based on building beneficial exchange relationships” with a target audience for the benefit of society” Schwartz, B “…a large-scale programme planning process designed to influence the voluntary behaviour of a specific audience segment to achieve a social rather than a financial objective, and based upon offering benefits the audience wants, reducing barriers the audiences faces, and/or using persuasion to influence the segment’s intention to act favourably” Smith, B

Changing Behaviours Key themes from the definitions Individual behaviours Exchanges Ethical Inherently good Systematic Scientifically-based Planning Process Voluntary Segment Persuasion

Changing Behaviours

Do you target a single message at a single segment in a market with many segments? Do you ignore the differences in the segments, and choose to aim a single message at all segments i.e. the whole market? Do you target a variety of different segments with a series of differentiated messages/offerings?

Changing Behaviours 10 Strategic Questions 1)What is the social (or health) issue I want to address? 2)What actions do I believe will address the problem? 3)Who is being asked to take that action? 4)What does the audience want in exchange for adopting this new behaviour? 5)Why will the audience believe that anything we offer is real and true? 6)What is the competition offering? Are we offering something the audience wants more?

Changing Behaviours 10 Strategic Questions 7) What is the best time and place to reach members of our audience so they are the most disposed to receiving the intervention? 8) How often and from whom does the intervention need to be received if it is to work? 9) How can I integrate a variety of interventions to act over time in a co-ordinated manner to influence the behaviour? 10) Do I have the resources to carry out this strategy alone?; if not, where can I find useful partners?

Changing Behaviours Diagram © National Social Marketing Centre

Thank You David Thorp Director of Research and Professional Development