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8. E-MARKETING. ECONSULTANCY INTERVIEW Read the Econsultancy Interview on pp of Chapter 8 and visit the Guess.com to answer the following questions:

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Presentation on theme: "8. E-MARKETING. ECONSULTANCY INTERVIEW Read the Econsultancy Interview on pp of Chapter 8 and visit the Guess.com to answer the following questions:"— Presentation transcript:

1 8. E-MARKETING

2 ECONSULTANCY INTERVIEW Read the Econsultancy Interview on pp. 415-416 of Chapter 8 and visit the Guess.com to answer the following questions:  Do you see the branding or the store when you first visit the Guess.com?  How do they choose online partners?

3 LEARNING OUTCOMES Assess the need for separate e-business and e-marketing strategies Create an outline e-marketing plan intended to implement the e- marketing strategy Distinguish between marketing communication characteristics of traditional and new media.

4 MANAGEMENT ISSUES How do we integrate traditional marketing approaches with e- marketing? How can we use electronic communications to differentiate our products and services? How do we redefine our marketing and communications mixes to incorporate new media?

5 E-MARKETING What is marketing? Marketing is the management process responsible for identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer requirements profitability. http://www.cim.co.uk/resources/understandingmarket/definitionmkting.aspx http://www.cim.co.uk/resources/understandingmarket/definitionmkting.aspx http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing What is e-marketing?  The application of marketing principles and techniques to achieve marketing goals via e-communication technology. http://www.quirk.biz/resources/88/What-is-eMarketing-and-how-is-it-better-than-traditional-marketing http://www.quirk.biz/resources/88/What-is-eMarketing-and-how-is-it-better-than-traditional-marketing

6 E-MARKETING Which e-marketing tools can assist and how? Identifying customer needs  Anticipating demand for digital services  Satisfying customer needs  Profitably 

7 Figure 8.1 The operational and management processes of e-marketing Source: Econsultancy (2008)

8 Figure 8.1 The operational and management processes of e-marketing (Continued) Source: Econsultancy (2008)

9 Figure 8.2 The e-marketing plan in the context of other plans

10 Figure 8.3 SOSTAC™ – a generic framework for e-marketing planning E-Marketing Plan

11 SOSTAC The last slide mentioned 5S, which is translated from Japanese http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5S_%28methodology%29 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5S_%28methodology%29  Sorting  Straighten  Sweeping (Systematic Cleaning)  Standardizing  Sustaining

12 Figure 8.4 Usage of detailed e-marketing plans in e-commerce organizations Source: Econsultancy (2008)

13 Figure 8.5 Inputs to the e-marketing plan from situation analysis Situation Analysis

14 Situation Analysis—SWOT Analysis Figure 8.6

15 Situation Analysis--Example SWOT Analysis

16 Situation Analysis- Customer demand analysis for the car market Figure 8.7

17 SITUATION ANALYSIS Competitor Analysis The suggested aspects to be analyzed are list on p. 426 in the text. A common approach is benchmark testing of various aspects between the company and its competitors.

18 SITUATION ANALYSIS BENCHMARKING Financial performance – current profitability of e- channel activities Marketplace performance – market share and sales trends and significantly the proportion of sales achieved through the Internet. Business and revenue models – do these differ from other marketplace players? Marketing communications techniques – is the customer value proposition of the site clear? Does the site support all stages of the buying decision from customers who are unfamiliar with the company through to existing customers? Are special promotions used on a monthly or periodic basis? Beyond the competitor’s site, how do they make use of intermediary sites to promote and deliver their services?

19 Services offered – what is offered beyond brochureware? Is online purchase possible, what is the level of online customer support and how much technical information is available? Implementation of services – these are the practical features of site design such as aesthetics, ease of use, personalization, navigation and speed. The 7Ps-product, price, package, promote, place, positioning, people Situation Analysis Benchmarking

20 Figure 8.8 Benchmark comparison of corporate websites Source: Bowen Craggs & Co (www.bowencraggs.com) Situation Analysis Benchmarking

21 Intermediary Analysis  Who are the intermediaries of the business?  Why this analysis is important? Internal Marketing Audit  Business effectiveness  Marketing effectiveness  Internet effectiveness Situation Analysis Benchmarking

22 Table 8.3 The relationship of objectives, strategies and performance indicators for a B2B company (in order of priority)

23 Table 8.3 The relationship of objectives, strategies and performance indicators for a B2B company (in order of priority) (Continued)

24 Table 8.4 Example Internet marketing objectives within the balanced scorecard framework for a transactional e-commerce site

25 Figure 8.9 Future online promotion contribution and online revenue for a B2B company Objective Setting

26 EXAMPLES OF SMART E-MARKETING OBJECTIVES Start-ups – acquiring a specific number of new customers or to sell advertising space to generate a specified revenue that will hopefully exceed investment in site creation and promotion! Established mobile phone operator – increase customer retention by reducing churn from 25% to 20% Established media company – increase online revenue, target of 20% online contribution to revenue by offering new online services and media sales

27 EXAMPLES OF SMART E-MARKETING OBJECTIVES Established business-to-business engineering company – increase overall revenue by 5%, through targeting sales in new international markets Reduce costs of routine customer service by 10% to enable focus on delivery of specialized customer service

28 Table 8.5 Summary of typical focus for main types of e-commerce-related strategic initiatives Strategy Setting

29 Table 8.5 Strategy Setting

30 Table 8.5 Summary of typical focus for main types of e-commerce-related strategic initiatives (Continued) Strategy Setting

31 STRATEGY SETTING DE KARE SILVERS ES TEST The author suggests that the likelihood of a customer buying online is affected by 1.Product characteristics. Does the product need to be physically tried, or touched before it is bought? 2.Familiarity and confidence. Does the consumer recognizes and trusts the product and brand? 3.Consumer attributes. These shape the buyer’s behaviour – are they amenable to online purchases in terms of access to the technology skills available and do they no longer wish to shop for a product in a traditional retail environment ?

32 Table 8.6 Product scores in de Kare-Silver (2000), electronic shopping potential test Strategy Setting

33 STRATEGY SETTING Marketing and Product Positioning  the aggregate perception the market has of a particular company, product or service in relation to their perceptions of the competitors. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positioning_%28marketing%29 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positioning_%28marketing%29  Ch 5, Fig. 5.19 on p.301 presents options to gain certain market positions  Digital products may be offered on the web to enhance the value of existing products

34 Figure 8.11 Strategy Setting --target marketing strategy development

35 STRATEGY SETTING Target Market Strategies  Evaluation and selection of appropriate segments and the development of appropriate offers  It involves 4 stages as displayed in Fig. 8.11 on p. 437  Various options for a digital marketing campaign are summarized in table 8.7 on p. 438 displayed on the next slide

36 Table 8.7 A range of targeting and segmentation approaches for a digital campaign

37 STRATEGY SETTING Target Market Strategies—Online Campaign Should we target the campaign based on one variable or multiple variables? Depending on what variables are used, the response rate changes as displayed on the next slide.

38 Figure 8.12 The extent to which different types of segmentation variables tend to be predictive of response

39 STRATEGY SETTING 5 questions should be asked when setting the strategy 1.Who are our customers? 2.How are their needs changing? 3.Which do we target? 4.How can we add value? 5.How do we become first choice?

40 STRATEGY SETTING Online value proposition A clear differentiation of the proposition from competitors based on product features or service quality http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perceptual_mapping http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perceptual_mapping Target market segment(s) that the proposition will appeal to How the proposition will be communicated to site visitors and in all marketing communications. Developing a tag line can help this

41 STRATEGY SETTING Online value proposition How the proposition is delivered across different parts of the buying process How the proposition will be delivered and supported by resources – is the proposition genuine? Will resources be internal or external?

42 STRATEGY SETTING Example OVPs ‘Compare. Buy. Save’. Kelkoo (www.kelkoo.com) ‘Earth’s biggest selection’. Amazon (www.amazon.com) ‘Search the largest inventory of cars and trucks on the Internet. More than 1.5 million listings, updated daily’ (www.autotrader.com) The Citibank site design (www.citibank.com) uses a range of techniques to illustrate its core proposition and OVP. The main messages are  Welcome to Citibank: The one-stop solution for all your financial needs  Look for a product or service; Learn about a financial product; Find a location

43 Figure 8.13 Firebox (www.firebox.com) Use Web 2.0 for interactionwww.firebox.com

44 NEW MEDIA MARKETING 1.Interactivity 2.Intelligence 3.Individualization 4.Integration 5.Industry restructuring 6.Independent of location

45 Figure 8.14 Summary of communication models for (a) traditional media, (b) new media

46 Figure 8.15 Summary of degree of individualization for (a) traditional media (same message), (b) new media (unique messages and more information exchange between customers)

47 Figure 8.16 Channels requiring integration as part of integrated e-marketing strategy

48 Figure 8.17 Channel integration required for e-marketing and mixed-mode buying

49 TACTICS 1.Market tactics are traditional based on the elements of market mix (4 Ps and 7Ps) 2.Alternatives approaches include customer-driven tactics ad customer-relationship management

50 Figure 8.18 The elements of the marketing mix

51 TACTICS— ISSUES WITH THE MIX ONLINE Do we vary the mix online or replicate offline? Is the offer clear – brand proposition, online offer? Is online differentiation defined? Is online differentiation communicated? Key online mix variables  Product  Price  Place  Promotion  Service: People, Process, Physical evidence

52 Figure 8.19 Zipf’s law, showing decrease in popularity of items within an ordered sequence—Read Box 8.2 on p. 450

53 TACTICS— ONLINE MIX OPTIONS Product  Extend range  Narrow range—only some products online  Online-only products (banks)  Develop new brand (Egg, CanadianTire bank)  Migrate existing brand (HSBC)  Partner with online brand (Waterstones and Amazon)  More options—ref. p. 452

54 Price  Differential pricing:  Reduce online prices due to price transparency and competition (easyJet)  Maintain price to avoid cutting into offline sales (Dixon)  New pricing options (software, music):  Rental  Pay per use  Reverse auctions (B2B)  Dynamic pricing (Concert tickets) Tactics— Online mix options

55 Place = avoiding channel conflicts  How to avoid channel conflct?  Disintermediation – sell direct  Reintermediation – partner with new intermediaries  Countermediation:  Form new intermediaries  Partner with existing intermediaries  Distance from intermediaries (Abbey National) Tactics— Online mix options

56 Promotion  Promotion elements—Ref. p.462, Table 8.8  Selective use of new online tools for different stages of the buying process and customer lifecycle  Online only campaigns  Integrated campaigns – incorporating online tools into communications mix Tactics— Online mix options

57 Figure 8.22 Options for the online vs offline communications mix (a) online > offline, (b) similar online and offline, (c) offline > online

58 Typically important for service delivery http://marketingteacher.com/Lessons/lesson_marketing_mix.htm  People—interaction with customers  Automate – use web self-service, offer customer choice  Process  Change process for service – contact strategies  Physical evidence  Site design – differentiate or support brand  Fulfillment quality Tactics— Online mix options

59 BRANDING Leslie de Chernatony and Malcolm McDonald described ‘brand’ in their classic 1992 book, Creating Powerful Brands, as an identifiable product or service augmented in such a way that the buyer or user perceives relevant unique added values which match their needs most closely. Furthermore, its success results from being able to sustain these added values in the face of competition.

60 BRANDING AAKER – BRAND EQUITY Brand awareness Perceived quality Brand associations Brand loyalty How can these be enhanced online for the B2C Company?

61 Table 8.9 Traditional measures of brand equity and online measures of brand equity

62 BRANDING-IDENTITY 8 Principles for choosing a brand name  Short  Simple  Suggestive of the category  Unique  Illiterative  Speakable  Shocking  Personalized

63 Figure 8.23 Changes to brand perception and behaviour as a result of using the Internet for research Source: BrandNewWorld: AOL UK/Anne Molen (Cranfield School of Management)/Henley Centre, 2004

64 Figure 8.24 The influence of brand knowledge on purchase. Matrix for question ‘I will buy a product if …’ Source: BrandNewWorld: AOL UK/Anne Molen (Cranfield School of Management)/Henley Centre, 2004

65 ACTIONS AND CONTROL What activities should be conducted Questions to be asked Typical e-marketing plan framework—ref. pp. 469-470 Control can be achieved using both traditional marketing research and web analytics

66 Figure 8.25 Napster (www.napster.co.uk)


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