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A Typology of Methods for Setting Promotion Budgets And The Great New Debate! Ted Mitchell.

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Presentation on theme: "A Typology of Methods for Setting Promotion Budgets And The Great New Debate! Ted Mitchell."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Typology of Methods for Setting Promotion Budgets And The Great New Debate! Ted Mitchell

2 Three Major Approaches Cost-Based Methods – (AKA Forecasted Sales Methods) Competitive-Based Methods – (AKA Market Share methods) Customer-Based Methods – (AKA Demand-Based Methods)

3 3 Layers of Promotion Budget 1) Head Office Strategic Task of Allocating Corporate Budget to SBUs/Markets 2) SBU Strategic Tasks of – a) Choosing the Budget for the Period – b) Making Incremental Changes 3) SBU Tactical Tasks of Allocating SBU Budget between the Push and the Pull, choosing among the media, etc

4 Two Types of Budget Problems 1) Head Office Strategic Task of Allocating Corporate Budget to SBUs/Markets 2) SBU Strategic Tasks of – a) Choosing the Budget for the Period – b) Making Incremental Changes 3) SBU Tactical Tasks of Allocating SBU Budget between the Push and the Pull, choosing among the media, etc

5 Two Types of Budget Problems 1) SBU Strategic Tasks of – a) Choosing the Budget for the Period – b) Making Incremental Changes 2) Allocating Budget at the Business Level and the Corporate level

6 Two Business Level or SBU Type Applications 1) Setting the total promotion budget for a planning period or for a specific project or task 2) Making Incremental Changes to an existing budget for improving performance

7 SBU Strategic Layer Total Budget for a period or project Incremental Change Cost-Based 1) Affordable 2) Percentage of Sales 3) Profit Return (MROI) 1) Revenue Return Plus Breakeven Competitive- Based 1) Competitive Parity 2) Relative Mix Customer- Based 1) Objective-Task 2)Optimal Demand 1) Elasticity of Promotion Plus Breakeven 2) Elasticity of MROI

8 Budget Allocation Problems Strategic and Tactical levels Using ‘Return on Investment’ as the metric for giving more to one and less to another SBU A versus SBU B Brand A versus Brand B Push Plan A versus Pull Plan B Direct mail plan A versus Direct mail plan B The Winner is the one with the Highest Return on Investment

9 Strategic and Tactical Problems of Budget Allocation Using ‘Return on Investment’ First constraint is The budget limit or cut-off “We have a maximum budget of $490,000” Second Constraint is The investment opportunities are lumpy and finite “We have to choose between Plan A and B”

10 The NO Problem Decision Allocating Budget Between Programs or Plans Direct Mail 1 Direct mail 2Incremental Sales, Q 5,4678,0003,000 Profit per sale, $75 $75 Gross profit, G $410,000$600,000$225,000 Promotion cost, T $290,000$490,000$200,000 Net profit, Z $120,000$110,000$25,000 MROI = Z/T 41.4%22.4%12.5% ROI cutoff of 20%

11 The NO Problem Decision Allocating Budget Between Programs or Plans Direct Mail 1 Direct mail 2Incremental Sales, Q 5,4678,0003,000 Profit per sale, $75 $75 Gross profit, G $410,000$600,000$225,000 Promotion cost, T $290,000$490,000$200,000 Net profit, Z $120,000$110,000$25,000 MROI = Z/T 41.4%22.4%12.5% ROI cutoff of 20%

12 SBU Problem of Allocating Budget Between Programs or Plans Direct Mail 1 Direct mail 2Incremental Sales, Q 5,0008,0003,000 Profit per sale, $75 $75 Gross profit, G $375,000$600,000$225,000 Promotion cost, T $290,000$490,000$200,000 Net profit, Z $85,000$110,000$25,000 MROI = Z/T 29.3%22.4%12.5% ROI cutoff of 20%

13 SBU Problem of Allocating Budget Between Programs or Plans Direct Mail 1 Direct mail 2Incremental Sales, Q 5,0008,0003,000 Profit per sale, $75 $75 Gross profit, G $375,000$600,000$225,000 Promotion cost, T $290,000$490,000$200,000 Net profit, Z $85,000$110,000$25,000 MROI = Z/T 29.3%22.4%12.5% ROI cutoff of 20%

14 SBU Problem of Allocating Budget Between Programs or Plans Direct Mail 1 Direct mail 2Incremental Sales, Q 5,0008,0003,000 Profit per sale, $75 $75 Gross profit, G $375,000$600,000$225,000 Promotion cost, T $290,000$490,000$200,000 Net profit, Z $85,000$110,000$25,000 MROI = Z/T 29.3%22.4%12.5% ROI cutoff of 20%

15 A 12% return on the additional $200,000 is below the cut-off of 20% Use the $200,000 in the bank and make an ROI of 20% which is $40,0000 Add it to the less profitable Direct mail and your profit goes to $120,000 for Direct #1

16 Direct Mail 1 plus bank Direct mail 2Incremental Sales, Q 5,0008,000+3,000 Profit per sale, $75 $75 Gross profit, G $375,000$600,000+$225,000 Promotion cost, T $290,000$490,000$200,000 Bank Investment $200,000$0-$200,000 Bank profit $40,0000-$40,000 Net profit, Z $125,000$110,000 MROI = Z/T24.5%22.4%

17 BUT!!!!! Doesn’t the Increase in Sales, Revenues, Market Share, Gross Profits count for anything

18 Direct Mail 1 plus bank Direct mail 2Incremental Sales, Q 5,0008,000+3,000 Profit per sale, $75 $75 Gross profit, G $375,000$600,000+$225,000 Promotion cost, T $290,000$490,000$200,000 Bank Investment $200,000$0-$200,000 Bank profit $40,0000-$40,000 Net profit, Z $125,000$110,000 MROI = Z/T24.5%22.4%

19 Welcome to the Debate! The Most Important Debate in The History of Marketing!


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