Promotion Mix
Promotion Mix
Promotion is the communications part of marketing. It is the way we tell the world our product.
Promotion provides consumers with information and knowledge in an informative and
persuasive manner. This, we hope, will sooner or later result in sales of our services or
products. The information and knowledge can be communicated using one or more of the five
promotional techniques - advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, merchandising, and
public relations. Taken together, these techniques are referred to as the promotional mix.
Goals of Promotion
The ultimate purpose of promotion is to modify behavior through communication. This requires
helping customers at the various buying process stages so they eventually purchase or
repurchase a particular service. Promotion achieves this by informing, persuading, and
reminding - the three principal goals of promotion. Promotions usually fit into one of these
categories; they are either informative, persuasive, or reminders.
Informative promotions work best with new services or products (early product-life-cycle
stages) and with customers in early buying process stages (need awareness and information
search). These types of promotions tend to communicate data or ideas about the key features
of services.
Persuasive promotions are harder. They are aimed at getting customers to select one
particular company or brand over those of competitors, and to actually make the purchase.
Advertisements that compare one companys services to another, and most sales promotions,
fit into this category. Persuasive promotions work best in intermediate/late stages of product
life cycle (growth and maturity) and the buying process (evaluation of alternatives and
purchase).
Reminder promotions are used to push customers memories about advertising they may
have seen, and to stimulate repurchases. They are most effective in the late product-life-cycle
(maturity and decline) and buying process stages (postpurchase evaluation).
Advertising
Personal selling
Sales promotion
Merchandising
Public relations (PR)
Advertising
Advertising is any paid form of nonpersonal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods, or
services by an identified sponsor. The three key words in this definition are paid,
nonpersonal and identified sponsor. Paid - hospitality and travel organizations always have
to pay for advertising, either in money or in some form of barter (e.g., free meals from a
restaurant in exchange for a radio ad). Nonpersonal - neither the sponsors nor their
representatives are physically present to give the message to customers. Identified sponsor the paying organization is clearly identified in the advertisement.
The media advertising is mainly two types as printed media advertising (newspapers,
magazines, brochures, direct mail and billboards), and broadcast media advertising (radio and
television). Direct mail which is used extensively by tour operators, is postal communication by
an identified sponsor. And this promotional tool is classified as direct marketing.
Because tourism is an intangible product, a great deal of promotion includes the production of
printed communications such as brochures or sales leaflets. The design, organization and
printing of tourism brochures is one of the most important promotion functions. Printed
communications are often costly. In fact, the printing and distribution costs of brochures
comprise the largest part of most marketing budgets within the tourism industry.
Advertising is used to achieve a whole range of objectives which may include changing
attitudes or building image as well as achieving sales. However, advertising messages do not
always have to be aimed directly at creating a sale. Sometimes its the sponsors goal simply to
convey a positive idea or a favorable image of the organization (often called institutional
advertising). (Sponsorship is the material or financial support of a specific activity which does
not form part of the sponsor companys normal business) For example, IBM has sponsored
ads during the Atlanta 96 Olympics.
Advertising is often described as above-the-line promotion (where the media space is paid by
the company) with all other forms of promotion (where space is not paid) being termed belowthe-line.
Personal Selling
Personal selling involves oral conversations. These are, either by telephone or face-to-face,
between salespersons and prospective customers. This sort selling may be used by a nonprofit-making museum as well as by a conference manager of a large hotel. Perosnal selling is
very important in the sense that it has the ability to close a sale.
Sales Promotion
Sales promotions are approaches where customers are given a short term incentive
(encouragement) to make an immediate purchase. Sales promotion campaigns add value to
the product because the incentives does not normally accompany the product. Like
advertising, the sponsor is clearly identified and the communication is nonpersonal. Examples
include discount coupons, contests (trial), samples and premiums (prize, bonus). Free wine or
free accommodation offers are frequently used in sales promotion campaigns for hotel
restaurants which need to increase demand at certain periods.
Merchandising (point-of-purchase advertising)
Merchandising, or point-of-purchase advertising includes materials used in-house to stimulate
sales. These include menus, wine lists, signs, posters, displays, and other point-of-sale
promotional items (in-room materials). It is a common practice to categorize merchandising as
a sales promotion technique, because it does not include media advertising, personal selling,
or public relations. In this course, merchandising is separated form other sales promotion
techniques because of its uniqueness and its importance to the industry. Merchandising is
important as a means of creating impulse purchase or remind the consumer of what is on offer.
Public Relations (PR)
Public relations includes all the activities that a hospitality and travel organization engages in to
maintain or improve its relationship with other organizations and individuals. In other words,
public relations try to provide commercially significant news about the product or service in a
published medium, or obtaining favorable presentation in a medium that is not paid by the
sponsor. Publicity is one public relations technique that involves nonpaid communication of
information about an organizations services.
There is a distinct tendency in certain parts of the hospitality and travel industry for most
competitive organizations to use the same lead element in promotional mixes. Fast-food
chains focus on heavy television advertising, hotels and airlines focus on frequent-traveler
award programs, and cruise lines put a heavy emphasis on personal selling to travel agents. It
is difficult and extremely risky for one competitor to break from the pack in this respect.
Promotional budget available
Obviously the funds available for promotion have a direct impact on choosing promotional mix
elements. Smaller organizations with more limited budgets usually have to place greater
emphasis on lower-cost promotions, including publicity and sales promotions.
Larger
organizations can better afford to use media advertising and personal selling.