MM 5 - Advertising and Sales Promotion 1
MM 5 - Advertising and Sales Promotion 1
Lecture 1
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INTRODUCTION TO ADVERTISING
Advertising is a paid form of non-personal communication of information about goods, services, ideas or institutions using the
mass media of communication with the intention to sell or secure favorable consideration
Adverting is only one element of the promotion mix, but it often considered prominent in the overall marketing mix design. Its
high visibility and pervasiveness made it as an important social and encomia topic in Indian society.
Promotion may be defined as “the co-ordination of all seller initiated efforts to set up channels of information and persuasion
to facilitate the scale of a good or service.” Promotion is most often intended to be a supporting component in a marketing mix.
Promotion decision must be integrated and co-ordinated with the rest of the marketing mix, particularly product/brand
decisions, so that it may effectively support an entire marketing mix strategy. The promotion mix consists of the sales hexagon
They are:-
1. Advertising
2. Personal Selling
3. Sales Promotion, and
4. Publicity
5. Public Relations
6. Merchandising
1. Advertising is the dissemination of information by non-personal means through paid media where the source is the
sponsoring organization.
2. Personal selling is the dissemination of information by non-personal methods, like face-to-face, contacts between
audience and employees of the sponsoring organization. The source of information is the sponsoring organization.
3. Sales promotion is the dissemination of information through a wide variety of activities other than personal selling,
advertising and publicity which stimulate consumer purchasing and dealer effectiveness.
4. Publicity is the disseminating of information by personal or non-personal means and is not directly paid by the organization
and the organization is not the source.
5. Public Relations is created to create goodwill and build good image
6. Merchandising is planning for the right product or service at the right time, for the right market and price.
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Advertiser
Advertisement
What is Advertisement?
Advertisement is a mass communicating of information intended to persuade buyers to by products with a view to maximizing
a company‟s profits. The elements of advertising are:
(i) It is a mass communication reaching a large group of consumers.
(ii) It makes mass production possible.
(iii) It is non-personal communication, for it is not delivered by an actual person, nor is it addressed to a specific
person.
(iv) It is a commercial communication because it is used to help assure the advertiser of a long business life with
profitable sales.
(v) Advertising can be economical, for it reaches large groups of people. This keeps the cost per message low.
(vi) The communication is speedy, permitting an advertiser to speak to millions of buyers in a matter of a few hours.
(vii) Advertising is identified communication. The advertiser signs his name to his advertisement for the purpose of
publicizing his identity.
(iii) The content of the advertisement is within the control of the advertiser, not the medium.
(iv) Advertising without persuasion is ineffective. The advertisement that fails to influence anyone, either immediately
or in the future, is a waste of money.
(v) The function of advertising is to increase the profitable sales volume. That is, advertising expenses should not
increase disproportionately.
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Advertising includes the following forms of messages: The messages carried in-
Newspapers and magazines;
On radio and television broadcasts;
Circular of all kinds, (whether distributed by mail, by person, thorough tradesmen, or by inserts in packages);
Dealer help materials,
Window display and counter – display materials and efforts;
Store signs, motion pictures used for advertising,
Novelties bearing advertising messages and Signature of the advertiser,
Label stags and other literature accompanying the merchandise.
i. Pioneering Advertising:
This type of advertising is used in the introductory stages in the life cycle of a product. It is concerned with developing
a “primary” demand. It conveys information about, and selling a product category rather than a specific brand. For example,
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the initial advertisement for black – and – white television and colour television. Such advertisements appeal to the
consumer‟s emotions and rational motives.
3. Functional Classification
Advertising may be classified according to the functions which it is intended to fulfill.
(i) Advertising may be used to stimulate either the primary demand or the selective demand.
(ii) It may promote either the brand or the firm selling that brand.
(iii) It may try to cause indirect action or direct action.
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Institutional advertisements are at consumers or focus them upon other groups, such as voters, government
officials, suppliers, financial institutions, etc. If it is effective, the target groups will respond with goodwill towards, and
confidence in the sponsor. It is also a useful method or introducing sales persons and new product to consumers. It
does not attempt to sell a particular product; it benefits the organization as a whole.
It notifies the consumers that the company is a responsible business entity and is patriotic; that its
management takes ecologically responsible action, is an affair- motive-action employer, supports the socialistic
pattern of society or provides employment opportunities in the community.
A. Consumer Advertising
Most of the consumer goods producers engage in consumer product advertising. Marketers of
pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, scooters, detergents and soaps, cigarettes and alcoholic beverages are examples.
Baring a few, all these products are all package goods that the consumer will often buy during the year. There is a
heavy competition among the advertisers to establish an advantage for their particular brand.
B. Industrial Advertising
Industrial executives have little confidence in advertising. They rely on this form of promotion merely out of
fear that their competitors may benefit if they stop their advertising efforts. The task of the industrial advertiser is
complicated by the multiple buying influence characteristics like, the derived demand, etc. The objectives vary
according to the firm and the situation. They are:
To inform,
To bring in orders,
To induce inquiries,
To get the advertiser‟s name on the buyer‟s list of sources,
To provide support for the salesman,
To reduce selling costs,
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To help get items in the news column of a publication,
To establish recognition for the firm or its product,
To motivate distributors,
To recognition for the firm or its products,
To motivate distributors, to create or change a company‟s image,
To create or change a buyer‟s attitude, and
5. Trade Advertising
A. Retail Advertising
B. Wholesale Advertising
A. Retail Advertising
This may be defined as “covering all advertising by the stores that sell goods directly to the consuming
public. It includes, also advertising by establishments that sell services to the public, such as beauty shops, petrol
pumps and banks.”
Advertising agencies are rarely used. The store personnel are usually given this responsibility as an added
task to be performed, together with their normal functions. The result is that advertising is often relegated to a
secondary position in a retail store. One aspect of retail advertising is co-operative advertising. It refers to advertising
costs between retailers and manufacturers. From the retailer‟s point of view, co-operative advertising permits a store
to secure additional advertising that would not otherwise have been available.
B. Wholesale Advertising
Wholesalers are, generally, not advertising minded, either for themselves or for their suppliers. They would
benefit from adopting some of the image-making techniques used by retailers – the need for developing an overall
promotional strategy. They also need to make a greater use of supplier promotion materials and programmes in a
way advantageous to them.
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ACTIVITY 1 – SHOW AND TELL
Show or bring print advertisements showing advertisement as “persuasive” and advertisement as “informative”. Be
ready to discuss (tell) the class about your advertisements.
A. From a local print media, clip-out these advertisements, paste in a shot bond paper, and individually label them:
1. Advertisements classified according to source or origin
2. Advertisements classified according to objective
3. Advertisements classified according to audience targeted
B. From a local magazine issue, clip-out advertisements under the following stages in the advertising cycle:
1. Introductory advertising stage
2. Competitive advertising stage
3. Retentive advertising stage