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Marketing Strategy & Implementation in Internet Marketing

The document discusses internet marketing strategies and their implementation. It defines internet marketing and outlines its five key components. It then describes the seven stages of developing an internet marketing strategy, from setting corporate strategy to evaluating results. These stages include framing market opportunities, formulating marketing strategies, designing customer experiences and interfaces, and crafting marketing programs. The document also discusses strategies for companies operating purely online versus those with both online and physical presences, and how segmentation, targeting, and positioning differ between the two. Finally, it outlines how marketing programs can be designed using frameworks like the Marketspace Matrix to move customers through different relationship phases.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views

Marketing Strategy & Implementation in Internet Marketing

The document discusses internet marketing strategies and their implementation. It defines internet marketing and outlines its five key components. It then describes the seven stages of developing an internet marketing strategy, from setting corporate strategy to evaluating results. These stages include framing market opportunities, formulating marketing strategies, designing customer experiences and interfaces, and crafting marketing programs. The document also discusses strategies for companies operating purely online versus those with both online and physical presences, and how segmentation, targeting, and positioning differ between the two. Finally, it outlines how marketing programs can be designed using frameworks like the Marketspace Matrix to move customers through different relationship phases.

Uploaded by

minale desta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Marketing Strategy &

Implementation in Internet
Marketing
What is Internet Marketing?
The previous definition can be divided into five
components:
1. A Process;
2. Building and Maintaining Customer
Relationships;
3. Online;
4. Exchange; and
5. Satisfaction of Goals of Both Parties.
Seven Stages of Internet
Marketing
1. Setting Corporate and Business-Unit Strategy

2. Framing the Market Opportunity

3. Formulating the Market Strategy

4. Designing the Customer Experience

5. Designing the Marketing Program

6. Crafting the Customer Interface

7. Evaluating the Results of the Marketing Program


Stage One: Setting Corporate
and Business-Unit Strategy
 Corporate strategy addresses the
interrelationship between the various
business units in a firm, including decisions
about which units should be kept, sold, or
augmented.
 Business-unit strategy focuses on how a
particular unit in the company attacks a
market to gain competitive advantage.
Stage Two: Framing the
Market Opportunity
 Analysis of market opportunities
 Initial first pass of the business concept
 Go/no-go decisions about whether to add a
new business unit or develop a new product
line within existing business unit.
 Six-step methodology to evaluate
attractiveness of opportunity
Stage Two: Framing the
Market Opportunity
 Six-step methodology to evaluate attractiveness of
opportunity:
1. Seeding the opportunity
2. Specifying unmet or undeserved customer needs
3. Identifying target segment
4. Declaring the company’s resource-based
opportunity for advantage
5. Assessing opportunity attractiveness
6. Making final go/no-go decision.
Stage Three: Formulating the
Market Strategy
 The marketing strategy goals, resources, and
sequencing of actions must be tightly aligned
with the business-unit strategy.
What is Marketing Strategy?
 Marketing strategy has three components:
1. Segmentation, or identifying relevant market
segments with specific needs
2. Targeting, or choosing an attractive segment
consistent with a firm’s resources and goals; and
3. Positioning, or strategically communicating the
product’s benefits to the target segment.
Egghead.com Example
 Initially an offline software retailer, it changed its business
strategy completely in 1998 by moving its entire business
online.
 Unique assets include:
 Currently being the largest retail auction site on the Internet
 A strong brand name
 Strong wholesale relationship with United Stationers
 Business center that provides specialty services
 How does Egghead.com compete?
 Targets small and medium businesses, and government and
education segments.
 Positions itself on three variables: value, selection and customer
service.
Internet Marketing Scenarios
Pure-Play Scenario Brick-and-Mortar Scenario
 Firms such as Yahoo!, eBay  Firms such as The Gap with
and Egghead.com both offline retail stores and an
 Highly likely that both online online store
and offline marketing levers
(e.g. customer e-mails and
 Since offline stores preceded
print ads) are going to be online store, Gap online must
used to build a customer optimize its online marketing
relationship. strategy within the context of
 Processes of segmentation, Gap’s broader strategy – i.e.
targeting and positioning its offline positioning, image,
remain largely the same as and asset base.
for offline business.
Internet Marketing Strategy:
Pure Play Firms
 Bases for Segmentation
 Demographic, geographic, psychographic,
cognitive and behavioral.
 Effective segmentation is meaningful, actionable
and financially attractive.

 Target Market
 Segment size and growth
 Segment structural attractiveness
 Company objectives and resources
Internet Marketing Strategy:
Pure Play Firms
 Positioning
 Features/ services
 Benefits
 Specific usage occasions
 User category
 Against another product
 Product-class
 Hybrid

 Positioning Plan
1. Identify actual product positioning.
2. Determine ideal product positioning.
3. Develop alternative strategies for achieving ideal.
4. Select and implement the most promising alternative.
5. Compare new actual position with ideal.
Internet Marketing Strategy:
Brick-and-Mortar Firms
 Segmentation for BAMs moving online
 No change
 Market expansion
 Market reclassification
 Reclassified expansion

 Targeting for BAMs moving online


 Blanket targeting
 Beachhead targeting
 Bleed-over targeting
 “Be different” targeting
Internet Marketing Strategy:
Brick-and-Mortar Firms
 Positioning for BAMs moving online
 Blanket positioning
 Beachhead positioning
 Bleed-over positioning
 “Be different” positioning
Marketing Strategy in the New
Economy Firm
 The Internet has and will continue to affect
marketing strategy in four broad ways:
1. Finer gradations of segmentation
2. Faster cycle time of marketing strategy decisions
3. Increased accountability of marketing efforts
4. Increased integration of marketing strategy with
business strategy and operations
Stage Four: Designing the
Customer Experience
 Customer experience should correlate with
the firm’s positioning and marketing strategy.
 Customer experience constitutes a bridge
between high-level marketing (step three) and
marketing program tactics (step five).
Stage Five: Designing the
Marketing Program
 Entails designing a particular combination of
marketing actions (termed levers) to move
target customers from awareness to
commitment.
 Framework used is the Marketspace Matrix.
Stage Five: Designing the
Marketing Program
To understand the Marketspace Matrix, the four stages
of the customer relationship and the six associated
classes of levers that can be employed must be
defined first.

 Four Stages of Customer Relationship:


1. Awareness
2. Exploration
3. Commitment
4. Dissolution
Stage Five: Designing the
Marketing Program
 Six Classes of Variables in the Internet Marketing
Mix:
1. Product
2. Pricing
3. Communication
4. Community
5. Distribution
6. Branding
Stage Five: Designing the
Marketing Program
Two more important concepts, Individualization
(customization) and Interactivity, need to be
explored to fully understand the profound
implications the Internet brings to business.
1. Individualization
 The Internet enables the firm to engage in customer-
specific actions – a broadcast to an audience of one.
 Equally important, the customer can control the degree of
customization by taking action to set the level of
customization desired.
Stage Five: Designing the
Marketing Program
2. Interactivity
 Defined as the extent to which a two-way
communication flow occurs between the firm and
customers.
 The Internet enables a level of customer dialogue
that has not previously been experienced in the
history of business.
 Products and services can be designed in real
time by the customer, maximizing both
interactivity and customization.
Stage Five: Designing the
Marketing Program
The Marketspace Matrix
 The Marketspace Matrix is a framework
illustrating the levers that the Internet
marketer may choose to use at each stage of
the customer relationship.
The Internet’s 2is
 The 2is allow firms to choose levers that can
move customers through the relationship
phases faster and more effectively than ever
possible.
 The 2is affect each category of levers
differently, but the end results remain
consistent across all levers.
 Product, Pricing, Communications,
Community and Distribution.
The Marketplace Matrix

RelationshipStages
Relationship Stages
Awareness Exploration
Awareness Exploration Commitment
Commitment Dissolution
Dissolution
Product
Product
Categories Price
Categories Price
ofLevers
of Levers Communication
Communication
Distribution
Distribution
Community
Community
Two Integral Components of
Implementation
Objectives
 Deliver the promised

customer experience
Build the
 Turnstrategic intent / infrastructure to
concepts into results deliver on the brand
promise

Objectives
Innovate / Renew  Maintain fit between
the customer
Marketspace evolution
experience
and the company’s
delivery system and
product offering

Source: Monitor Analysis


Why Does Implementation Matter?
Strategy
Appropriate Inappropriate

Success
Success Roulette
Roulette
 All
Allthat
thatcan
can be
bedone
done to
to  Good
Good execution
execution can
can
assure
assure success
successhas
has been
been mitigate poor strategy,
mitigate poor strategy,
done
done forcing
forcing management
management to to
Good
success
success
or
or
 Same
Same good
good execution
executioncan
can
hasten
hasten failure
failure

Implementation
Trouble
Trouble Failure
Failure
 Poor
Poorexecution
execution hampers
hampers  Difficult
Difficultto
todiagnose
diagnose --bad
bad
good strategy
good strategy -- strategy masked by poor
strategy masked by poor
Poor Management
Managementmay maynever
never execution
execution
become aware
become aware of of
 More
More difficult
difficultto
tofix
fix --two
two
strategic
strategic soundness
soundness things are wrong
things are wrong
because
because ofexecution
of execution
inadequacies
inadequacies

Source: Modified version of materials in The Marketing Edge by Thomas V. Bonoma. 1985. New York: The Free Press.
Guidelines for the
Marketspace Matrix
 No single best strategy
 Best strategies provide superior customer
support
 Levers should emphasize the functional,
symbolic and experiential aspects of
consumption experience.
Principles for Marketspace
Matrix Design
 Which lever should be used?
 Choose Levers to Effect a Change
 Determine Which Levers Have the Most Leverage
 Consider Barriers to Advancement
 Consider the Medium’s Effect on Desired Behavior
 Level of Involvement Matters
 Understand Consumer Learning Trends
 Credibility of the Channel Matters
 The Choice of Levers Must be Consistent with Positioning
Choice
 The Medium can be the Message – or the Product
 Matrix Design Must be Adaptive
How should Marketing Resources be
Allocated on a lever-by-Lever Basis?
 How should Marketing Resources be Allocated on a
lever-by-Lever Basis?
 Consider Correlation of Effect

 How do the Levers Interact?


 Beware of Segment Alienation
 Selected Levers Must be Integrated

 How should the Levers be Sequenced?


 There is no one silver bullet
 Sequencing of Levers matters.
Basic Product
Development Levers
Basic Product
 Packaging
 Attributes and Features
 Customer-Specified Attributes and Features
 Mass-Customized Product
Augmented Product
Development Levers
 Customer Service Programs
 Postsales support, customer care, & customer
relationship management.
 Loyalty Programs and Privileges
 Availability of Complementary Products
 Upgrades
 Enabling Community
 Additional Functionality
 Fulfillment Capabilities
How Products Enable
Customer Relationships
 Two primary techniques:
1. Deploying the product development levers that
are appropriate for the existing relationship and
2. Emphasizing the elements of the value
proposition that are most relevant at a given
stage of the relationship.
How Product Enable
Customer Relationships
Relationship Stage Lever(s)
AWARENESS Packaging

EXPLORATION/ Packaging Availability of complementary


EXPANSION Product Attributes & products
Features Customer-specified attributes
Fulfillment Capabilities and features
Customer Experience Mass Customization
Advanced Internet Functionality

COMMITMENT Upgrades LoyaltyPrograms


Customer-specified Customer Experience
attributes and features Enabling Community
Mass Customization Customer Relationship
Postsales Support Management
DISSOLUTION Customer Care
Basic Pricing Strategies
 Cost Plus
 Target Profit Growth
 Target-Return Pricing
 Prestige Pricing
 Price as a Sign of Quality
 Cyclical Promotional Pricing (Hi-Lo)
 Everyday Low Pricing
 Fairness in Pricing
 Promotional Low-Cost Pricing
Dynamic Pricing Strategies
 Dynamic Pricing is one of the most significant
contributions the Internet and the 2Is have
made to pricing strategy.
 The Internet has enhanced dynamic pricing in
two ways:
 Decreased Menu Costs
 Interactivity
Auction Types
 English Auctions
 Reverse-Price English Auction
 Dutch Auctions
 First Price Sealed-Bid Auctions
 Reverse First Price Sealed-Bid Auctions
 Group Buying
 Exchanges
Implementation Across the
Four Relationship Stages
Relationship Stage Pricing Levers
AWARENESS Promotions Price as a Sign of Quality
Bundling Hi-Lo Pricing
Frenzy Pricing Dynamic Pricing
Prestige Pricing Everyday Low Pricing

EXPLORATION/ Promotions
EXPANSION JustifyPrices
Loyalty Programs

COMMITMENT Promotions Affiliates


TieredLoyalty Programs Profit-Enhancing
Wide Variety of Pricing Opportunities
Programs
DISSOLUTION Discontinue Pricing Adversely Affect Profit
Promotions Programs
Reconfigure Loyalty
Programs
How the Internet Affects
Communications
 Competition and Expectations
 Transformation of Communication
 The 2Is
 Interactive
 Individual
Importance of Integrated
Communication
 Goal of marketing and communication is to
convey relevant messages to the right
consumers at the right time.
 Synergy between messages is integrated
communications.
 Traditional and interactive marketing methods
are converging.
Communication Types –
Marketing Levers
 Marketing communications, which includes
all the points of contact that a firm has with
its customers, can be grouped into four
categories:
1. Mass offline
2. Personal offline
3. Mass online
4. Personal online
Communication Types –
The Marketing Levers
Mass-Offline Marketing Levers:
 Broadcast Media: television, radio, outdoor & public
relations
 Print Media: newspapers, magazines, yellow pages,
brochures, newsletters
 Point-of-Purchase Displays
Communication Types –
The Marketing Levers
Personal Offline Marketing Levers:
 Telemarketing
 Direct Mail
 Statement Stuffers
 Customer Service
Communication Types –
The Marketing Levers
Mass Online:
 Basic Online Tools: banners, interstitials, search
engines, point-of-purchase displays
 Applications of Basic Online Tools: partnerships and
affiliate programs, sponsorships, chat rooms, serial
marketing
Communication Types –
The Marketing Levers
Personal Online:
 Personalized Commercial Websites
 E-mail Marketing: viral marketing, loyalty programs,
customer service
Communication Process
1. Identifying the Target Audience
2. Determining the Communication Objective
3. Developing the Media Plan
4. Creating the Message
5. Executing the Campaign
6. Evaluating the Effectiveness of the
Campaign
Implementation Across the
Four Relationship Stages
Relationship Marketing Levers
Stage
AWARENESS Online levers: online billboards, search engines, e-mail, viral marketing
Offline levers: television, magazines, radio, yellow pages, billboards/
outdoor
EXPLORATION/ Online levers: online billboards, search engines, e-mail, viral marketing,
EXPANSION website, permission marketing, serial marketing
Offline levers: television, radio, newspapers, packaging

COMMITMENT Online levers: targeted email/ permission marketing, personalized pages


Online/ Offline levers: loyalty programs, customer service
Offline levers: telemarketing, direct mail permission marketing with
personalized offers
DISSOLUTION Personalized pages
Termination
Is the Internet a
Distribution Channel?
 A distribution channel is the system of
organizations involved in the process of
making a product or service available for
consumption or use.
 Marketing channels therefore facilitate the
exchange of goods and services between
buyers and sellers.
How have the 2Is Revolutionized
Distribution Channels
The Internet:
 Is a substitute for other forms of
communication.
 Has radically changed buyer-seller
relationships.
 Has changed the customer shopping
experience.
 Has increased the power of consumers.
Objectives of Channel
Intermediaries
1. Efficiency: Distribution costs are reduced
only if the retailers can perform the required
functions more efficiently than the
manufacturers could in the direct channel.
2. Effectiveness: the ability of the channel to
perform functions that create value for
customers.
Disintermediation
 A strategy that involves the elimination of a
channel intermediary.
 Internet has become a driving force for
disintermediation
 Overall result is positive because channel
works more closely to create value for
customers.
Designing Channel Systems:
The Distribution Levers
 Intermediary Type
 Direct
 Traditional Retailers
 Virtual Shopping Malls
 Internet Exchange
Process: Designing
Distribution Channels
1. Identify and evaluate consumer preferences
by segment.
2. Design a customer-based channel system.
3. Modify channel strategy based on firm
objectives and constraints.
4. Select channel intermediaries or partners.
5. Develop a channel feedback system.
Distribution Levers and the Four Key
Stages of Customer Relationships
 Awareness
 Number of Intermediaries
 Number of Channels/ Intermediary Type
 Exploration/ Expansion
 Degree of Channel Integration
 Number of Channels/ Intermediary Type
 Commitment
 Degree of Channel Integration
 Intermediary Type
 Number of Channels
 Intermediary Functions and Responsibilities
 Dissolution
 Elimination of Channel Types
 Reduction in the Number of Intermediaries
 Reduction in Channel Integration
eBay’s Application of the Marketspace Matrix
eBay’s Application of the
Marketspace Matrix (1995-98)
 eBay provides a logical first example of
Marketspace Matrix in action.
 Since the product – an online auction service
– was completely new, its brand had little
value.
 Thus branding levers were inapplicable at the
start.
 Yet, eBay, even in its nascent phases,
developed levers in nearly every category.
eBay’s Application of the
Marketspace Matrix (1995-98)
 Awareness
 Novelty of internet based, dynamic, auction-based pricing system
 Benefits to both buyers and sellers
 Low cost
 Viral marketing and word-of-mouth
 Strong presence at trade shows
 Exploration/ Expansion
 Focus in one key area: website itself
 Easy-to-use search engine and easy-to-explore community converted visitors
to customers.
 With more converted customers, eBay fostered exploration and expansion by
the community equity that arose.
 Commitment
 Relied primarily upon the enabling community product lever to advance users
into the commitment phase.
eBay’s Application of the
Marketspace Matrix (1998-99)
 Once eBay had advanced a significant
number of users into the exploration/
expansion phase, the firm needed to focus on
sustaining commitment.
 As the firm’s needs changed, so did its
Marketspace Matrix.
eBay’s Application of the
Marketspace Matrix (1998-99)
Awareness
 Began first major advertising campaign in late 1998.
 Radio and print campaign with “You might just find it on eBay”
slogan
 Strategic alliances with AOL.com and the now defunct Go.com
 Sponsored auction of famous memorabilia for free media exposure
 Exploration/ Expansion
 Added new attributes and features
 Offered complementary services
 Improved existing services
 Enhanced community offerings
 Forums where veteran eBay users will answer questions of new
users
eBay’s Application of the
Marketspace Matrix (1998-99)
 Commitment
 Community enabling remains a constant product lever to
advance user to and sustain commitment.
 Loyalty program where seller can earn “Power Seller” status.
 Dissolution
 Needed to dissolve relationships with customers who
damaged the community.
 These were sellers who accepted bids and money and then
never delivered the goods as well as buyers who bid and
never paid.
 Relied on community and feedback forum to dissuade users
from dealing with these miscreants.
eBay’s Application of the
Marketspace Matrix (2000-present)
 Having nearly perfected its community and ability to retain
customers, eBay requires new buyers and sellers to continue its
history of growth.
 Pursued international strategy through building international
sites and acquiring competitors.
 To increase core business in the US, eBay has stepped up
efforts to win new users.
 Television campaign in late 2000.
 Promote ancillary services including a bill-paying service called
Billpoint which competes with PayPal, which allows anyone with
an email to receive a payment.
eBay’s Application of the
Marketspace Matrix (2000-present)
 Awareness
 Offering price promotions to sellers to encourage them to list
items for the first time – for free, provided they sign up for
and accept Billpoint.
 Television ad campaign.
 Exploration/ Expansion
 Expansion of product categories to include real estate and
cars.
 Added “buy it now” option.
 Augment offerings, e.g. deal to provide discounted UPS
shipping to all eBay users through Mail Boxes Etc.

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