 2007 Thomson South-Western Sales Promotion Overview and the Role of Trade Promotions Chapter Seventeen.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
BA230-Marketing Communications
Advertisements

Copyright © 2012 Pearson Canada Inc. CHAPTER 13 Sales Promotion 13-1.
Chapter 28 Promotion and Place Name 12 SAM.
Promotion and Promotional Mix
UNIT C The Business of Fashion
Chapter 15 Sales Promotions.
Section 26.2 Setting Prices
Objective 5.02 The Price Strategy.
Management Development Institute of Singapore University of Wales.
Sales Promotion Management, Marketing- Oriented Public Relations, and Sponsorships Chapter Sixteen.
2.05d Determine Discounts and Allowances that can be used to adjust base prices.
Trade Promotions Chapter 10 with Duane Weaver. Trade Promotions Defined The expenditures or incentives used by manufacturers and other members of the.
Sales Promotion Chapters 18, 19
4550: Promotion Strategy II Professor Campbell 2/24/05.
Sales and Trade Promotions
Irwin/McGraw-Hill Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-1.
Chapter 17: Trade-Oriented Sales Promotions Chapter 17: Trade-Oriented Sales Promotions.
Definition Salesperson
©2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc.8-1 Chapter 8 Sales Promotion.
The Economics of Supply and Demand Pricing Strategies Chapter 9 Lesson 2 Pricing Strategies Chapter 9 Lesson 2.
Professor Chip Besio Cox School of Business Southern Methodist University.
 2007 Thomson South-Western Marcom Objective Setting and Budgeting Chapter Six.
Retail Promotion Mix Sales Promotion Advertising Personal Publicity
The Marketing Mix Price
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Eighth Edition © 2010 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning All rights reserved.
Retail Travel Services (TM 334) Lecture 4 OPERATIONS
©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 26 Pricing Strategies.
Sales Promotion and Point of Purchase
Chapter 12 Promotion Through the Marketing Channel.
Chapter 12 Promotion Through the Marketing Channel.
Copyright © 2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 19 Pricing Strategies.
Trade-Oriented Sales Promotion Chapter Seventeen.
Marketing. Marketing Activities Buying – Obtaining a product to be resold; involves finding suppliers that can provide the right products in the right.
Chapter 30 product planning Section 30.1 Product Development
Chapter 11 Pricing Issues in Channel Management.
Trade and Consumer Promotion Retailing MKTG 6211 Professor Edward Fox Cox School of Business/SMU.
13-1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education Canada CHAPTER 13 Sales Promotion.
4.5 Promotion 4.6 Place Chapter 28. Promotion  The use of advertising, sales promotion, personal selling, direct mail, trade fairs, sponsorship and public.
Chapter 12 Promotion Through the Marketing Channel.
Chapter 17: The Promotional Mix. Promotion in Marketing Promotion is persuasive communication. Product promotion is a promotional method used by businesses.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Eighth Edition © 2010 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning All rights reserved.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 18–1 What Is Personal Selling? Personal Selling –Paid personal communication that informs customers.
Developing Integrated Marketing Communications
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Marketing Management, 8e Chapter Eleven Pricing Strategy Key Words / Outline.
Trade Promotions Chapter Overview 10-1 Discussion Slide 10 Nature of trade promotions Types of trade promotions Objectives of trade promotions Concerns.
Copyright ©2005 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Introduction to Marketing.
Price Strategy & Management
> > > > Promotion and Pricing Strategies Chapter 14.
Sports and Entertainment Marketing I Explain the basic concepts of marketing.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 11-1 Psychological Pricing Appeals to tendencies in consumer behaviour.  Prestige Pricing  Odd-Even Pricing.
Section 30.1 Product Development Chapter 30 product planning Section 30.2 Sustaining Product Sales.
Marketing & Sales – 3rd Hour
12-1. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 12 Promotions.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Principles of Business, 8e C H A P T E R 10 SLIDE Marketing Basics Develop Effective.
1 PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING I OCMT Ch. 3& 4 ADVERTISING AND SALES PROMOTION.
Chapter 14 Consumer Sales Promotion & Packaging Key Points:  How do sales promotions add value to a brand offering?  What are consumer sales promotions.
Sales Promotion Management Session 9 9 nd September 2010.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved Sales Promotion Activities or materials that are direct inducements to customers or salespersons Objectives.
Sports and Entertainment Marketing 2.01 Explain the concept of marketing.
Retail Pricing. Strategies EDLP vs HIGH/LOW Everyday Low Pricing (EDLP) Prices are set between regular non-sale price and deep discount sale prices May.
Chapter 2 IMC Role in Marketing. Chapter 2 : IMC Role in Marketing Chapter Objectives To understand the marketing process and the role of advertising.
Planning Consumer Promotions
Sales Promotion and the Role of Trade Promotions
Chapter 12 Promotion Through the Marketing Channel.
Sales Promotion.
Chapter 10: Adjustments to the list of quoted prices
Chapter 11 Pricing Issues in Channel Management.
Sales Promotion Overview and the Role of Trade Promotions
Presentation transcript:

 2007 Thomson South-Western Sales Promotion Overview and the Role of Trade Promotions Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Seventeen Objectives Understand the nature and purpose of sales promotions. Know the factors that account for the increased investment in promotions, especially those that are trade-oriented. Recognize the tasks that promotions can and cannot accomplish.

Chapter Seventeen Objectives Appreciate the objectives of trade- oriented promotions and the factors critical to building a successful trade promotion program. Comprehend the various forms of trade allowances and the reasons for their usage.

Chapter Seventeen Objectives Be aware of forward buying and diverting and how they are created by manufacturers’ use of off-invoice allowances. Appreciate the role of everyday low pricing (EDLP) and pay-for-performance programs as means of reducing forward buying and diverting.

Chapter Seventeen Objectives Recognize the concept and practice known as efficient consumer response (ECR). Appreciate the practice of category management. Understand nine empirical generalizations about promotions.

Introduction to Sales Promotion What Exactly is Sales Promotion? Any incentive used by manufacturers to induce the trade and/or consumers to buy a brand and encourage sales force to aggressively sell it.

Introduction to Sales Promotion What Exactly is Sales Promotion? The incentive is additional to the basic benefits provided by the brand and temporarily changes its perceived price or value

Introduction to Sales Promotion Promotion Targets All three groups – the sales force, retailers and consumers – are targets of sales promotional efforts

Increased Budgetary Allocations to Promotions Advertising spending as a percentage of total marketing communications expenditures has declined in recent years. Promotional spending, however, has steadily increased.

Factors Accounting for the Shift Pull Strategy Using Consumer advertising to pull product through the channel of distribution Push Strategy Using Consumer advertising to push product through the channel of distribution

Illustration of “Old” and “New” Accounting Procedures

Sales Promotions – Can: Stimulate sales force Invigorate mature brand sales Facilitate introduction of new products Increase merchandising space Neutralize competitive ads Obtain trail purchases Hold current users Increase product usage Preempt competition Reinforce advertising

Sales Promotions - Can’t: Compensate for lack of training and advertising Give a long-term reason for repeat purchases of the brand Permanently stop an established brand’s declining sales or basic non-acceptance

The Role of Trade Promotion Introduce new or revised products Increase distribution of new packages or sizes Build retail inventories Maintain/Increase manufacturer’s shelf space Obtain displays outside shelf locations Reduce excess inventory Achieve product features in retailer’s ads Counter competitive activity Sell as much as possible to final consumers

Trade Promotion Key Ingredients to Success Financial incentive Correct timing Minimize retailer’s effort/cost Quick results Improve retailer performance

Trade Allowances Used by manufacturers to reward wholesalers and retailers for performing activities in support of the manufacturer’s brand

Trade Allowances By using trade allowances, manufacturers hope to: Increase purchases of the manufacturer’s brand by wholesalers and/or retailers. Augment consumers’ purchases of the manufacturers’ brand from retailers. Expectation that retailers will pass along their savings to consumers.

Major Forms of Trade Allowances Most frequently used form Deals offered periodically to trade that permit wholesalers and retailers to deduct a fixed amount from the invoice Retailers do not necessarily pass along to consumers the discounts Off-invoice allowances Bill-back allowances Slotting allowances

Major Forms of Trade Allowances Retailers receive allowances for featuring the manufacturer’s brand in advertisements or for providing special displays Slotting allowances Bill-back allowances Off-invoice allowances

Major Forms of Trade Allowances The fees manufacturers pay retailers for access to the slot, or location Typically paid by a manufacturer to get its new brand accepted by retailers Off-Invoice allowances Bill-back allowances Slotting allowances

Exit fees If a brand does not meet a stipulated sales amount, the chain will issue a deslotting charge, or exit fee to cover handling costs for removing the item from the distribution center.

Forward Buying and Diverting Retailers purchase enough products on deal to carry them over until the manufacturer’s next regularly scheduled deal Retailers’ savings from forward buying often are not passed on to consumers Leads to increased distribution costs Manufacturers experience reduced margins due to price discounts Forward BuyingDiverting

Forward Buying and Diverting Occurs when a manufacturer restricts a deal to a limited geographical area Retailers buy large quantities at the deal price and then resell the excess quantities in other geographical areas Product quality potentially suffers due to delays and serious problem could result from product tampering Forward BuyingDiverting

Efforts to Rectify Trade Promotion Problems Efficient Consumer Response (ECR) Category Management Everyday Low Pricing (EDLP) Pay-for-Performance Programs Account-Specific Marketing

Generalizations About Promotions 1. Temporary retail price reductions substantially increase sales 2. The greater the frequency of deals, the lower the height of the deal spike 3. The frequency of deals changes the consumer’s reference price 4. Retailers pass-through less than 100% of trade deals 5. Higher market share brands are less deal elastic

Generalizations About Promotions 7. Feature advertising and displays operate synergistically to influence sales of discounted brands 6. Advertised promotions can result in increased store traffic 8. Promotions in one product category affect sales of complementary and competitive products 9. The effects of promoting higher-and lower-quality brands are asymmetric