* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download KotlerMM_ch19
Ad blocking wikipedia , lookup
Market penetration wikipedia , lookup
Food marketing wikipedia , lookup
Bayesian inference in marketing wikipedia , lookup
Neuromarketing wikipedia , lookup
Customer experience wikipedia , lookup
Social media marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketplace Fairness Act wikipedia , lookup
Music industry wikipedia , lookup
Target audience wikipedia , lookup
Product planning wikipedia , lookup
Marketing research wikipedia , lookup
Customer relationship management wikipedia , lookup
Sports marketing wikipedia , lookup
Affiliate marketing wikipedia , lookup
Customer engagement wikipedia , lookup
Ambush marketing wikipedia , lookup
Youth marketing wikipedia , lookup
Target market wikipedia , lookup
Marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
Guerrilla marketing wikipedia , lookup
Digital marketing wikipedia , lookup
Viral marketing wikipedia , lookup
Multicultural marketing wikipedia , lookup
Green marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing channel wikipedia , lookup
Marketing strategy wikipedia , lookup
Marketing plan wikipedia , lookup
Global marketing wikipedia , lookup
Integrated marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
Sensory branding wikipedia , lookup
Street marketing wikipedia , lookup
Advertising campaign wikipedia , lookup
Multi-level marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing mix modeling wikipedia , lookup
1 19 Managing Personal Communications Chapter Questions      How can companies use integrated direct marketing for competitive advantage? How can companies do effective e-marketing? What decisions do companies face in designing a sales force? How do companies manage a sales force efficiently? How can salespeople improve selling, negotiating, and relationship marketing skills? 19-2 Direct Marketing Use of consumer-direct channels to reach and deliver goods and services to customers without using market middlemen. 19-3 The Rebirth of Direct Marketing Interactive dialogue & direct interface between producers and customers The Relationship Paradigm (Relationship Marketing or Customer Relationship Management) 19-4 Accommodating the Relationship Paradigm Marketing is an organizational function and a set of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its shareholders (AMA – September 2004) 19-5 The development of Information Technology has eased the growth of direct marketing (and the relationship marketing) 19-6 The Future of the Internet Revolutionary for certain industries and incremental for others. Conversational Marketing “Markets are conversations” E.g., MySpace (used by Warner Bros) Facebook (Coca-cola has a Sprite page & “Sprite Sips” game). 19-8 Creating horizontal communication 19-9 Direct Marketing Channels Catalogs  Direct mail  Telemarketing  Web sites  Email marketing  Mobile devices  Interactive TV  19-10 Buy a book and it is auto-delivered wirelessly in less than one minute. 19-11 Public Issues in Direct Marketing     Irritation Unfairness Deception/fraud Invasion of privacy 19-12 Constructing A Direct-Mail Campaign Establish objectives Select target prospects Develop offer elements Test elements Execute Measure success 19-13 RFM Formula for Selecting Prospects Recency  Frequency  Monetary value  19-14 Elements of the Offer Strategy      Product Offer Medium Distribution method Creative strategy 19-15 Components of the Mailing Outside envelope  Sales letter  Circular  Reply form  Reply envelope  19-16 Types of Telemarketing Telesales  Telecoverage  Teleprospecting  Customer service and technical support  19-17 Other Media for Direct Response Television • Direct Response Advertising • At home shopping channels • Videotext Kiosks 19-18 Designing an Attractive Web Site        Context Content Community Customization Communication Connection Commerce 19-19 Ease of Use and Attractiveness  Ease of Use  Downloads quickly  First page is easy to understand  Easy to navigate  Attractiveness  Clean looking  Not overly crammed with content  Readable fonts  Good use of color and sound 19-20 Increasing Visits and Site Stickiness       Deep information with links Changing news of interest Changing offers Contests and sweepstakes Humor and jokes Games 19-21 Online Ads         Banner ads Microsites Sponsorships Interstitials Search-related ads Content-targeted advertising Alliances Affiliate programs 19-22 e-Marketing Guidelines Give the customer a reason to respond  Personalize the content of your emails  Offer something the customer could not get via direct mail  Make it easy for customers to unsubscribe  19-23 IMC Perspective The eBay ad shows how firms use traditional mass media advertising to drive website traffic. 15-24 These materials have been reproduced with the permission of eBay Inc. COPYRIGHT ©EBAY INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Figure 19.2 Designing a Sales Force Sales force objectives Sales force strategy Sales force structure Sales force size Compensation 19-25 Types of Sales Representatives • Deliverer • Order taker • Missionary • Technician • Demand creator • Solution vendor 19-26 Sales Tasks Prospecting  Targeting  Communicating  Selling  Servicing  Information gathering  Allocating  19-27 Figure 19.3 Managing the Sales Force Recruiting, selecting Training Supervising Motivating Evaluating 19-28 Workload Approach to Determining Sales Force Size      Customers are grouped into size classes Desirable call frequencies are established Number of accounts in each size class multiplied by call frequency Average number of calls possible per year established Number of reps equal to total annual calls required divided by number possible 19-29 Components of Sales Force Compensation Fixed amount  Variable amount  Expense allowances  Benefits  19-30 What Motivates Sales Reps? Most Rewarding  Pay  Promotion  Personal growth  Sense of accomplishment Least Rewarding     Liking Respect Security Recognition 19-31 Principles of Personal Selling   Be an active order getter Identifying customers’ latent needs and come up with sound product solution 19-32 Figure 19.4 Steps in Effective Selling Prospecting/ Qualifying Preapproach Approach Presentation Overcoming objections Closing Follow-up 19-33 Relationship Marketing Perspective • Personal Selling & Negotiation : not necessarily always transaction-oriented •That is, not just immediate sales, but to build long-term supplier-customer relationship. 19-34