Integrated marketing communications test notes
Chapter 1
IMC is a strategic marketing process specifically designed to ensure that all messaging and
communication strategies are unified across all channels and centred around the customer
The IMC process emphasizes identifying and assessing customer prospects, tailoring messaging to
customers and prospects that are both serviceable and profitable, and evaluating the success of
these efforts to minimize waste and transform marketing from an expense into a profit-centre.
IMC objectives
Companies have a variety of general objectives for their marketing communication programs:
Informing customers to about their products, services, and terms of sale;
Persuading customers to choose certain products and brands, shop in particular stores, go
to certain websites, attend events, and other specific behaviours; and
Inducing action (eg: purchase behaviour) from customers that is more immediate than
delayed in nature.
Marketing and the marketing concept
Marketing (Kotler 1980): human activity directed at satisfying needs and wants through exchange
processes.
The idea of the marketing concept is to adapt the company’s offering to the needs and wants of the
customer.
Communications and marketing communications
Communications: the process where individuals share meaning and establish a commonness of
thought.
Marketing Communications: the collection of all elements of a firm’s marketing mix that
facilitate exchange by establishing shared meaning with the firm’s customers.
o Marketing Communications -> B2B, B2C, non-profits
o Marketing Mix: specific collection of certain levels of elements of a brand’s 4Ps –
product, price, place and promotion.
Elements of promotional mix
Advertising
Public relations
Sales promotion
Online/Social media marketing
Personal selling
Direct marketing
Branding
Brand: A name, term, sign, symbol, or design intended to identify the goods and services of one
seller or groups of sellers and differentiate them from those of competition.
Brand equity: The goodwill that an established brand has built up over its existence.
IMC and Synergy
The payoff from IMC is that brand managers achieve synergy. The integration of multiple
communication tools and media yield more positive communication results than the tools used
individually
Five key features of IMC
1. Start with the customer or prospect
Media-neutral approach-> Identify Marcom program goals -. Determine best way to locate
marketing budget
Learn the media preferences and lifestyles of your customers/prospects so you know the best
contexts in which to reach with your brand message. Recognise and adapt to the fact that
consumers are increasingly control of their media choices for acquiring information about
brands
Consumers in control
Reduced dependence on mass media
2. Use any form of relevant contact or touch point (e.g Hershey foods)
Touch points and 360-deree branding: touch point and contact is any message medium that is
capable of reaching target customers and presenting and presenting the brand in a favourable
light
Not all touch points are equally engaging
3. Speak with a single voice
Achieve synergy
Brand positioning statement must:
o Present a clear idea of the brand in its target market mind
o Consistently deliver the same unified message across all media channels on all
occasions
4. Build relationships
Cost more to acquire a new customer that to keep one
Loyalty programs promote long-term relationships between customers and brands that lead to
customer retention
Experimental marketing programs can create brand experiences that make positive and lasting
impressions on customers
5. Affect behaviour
Don’t lose focus on the ultimate objective: affect behaviour
IMC must be more than just influence brand awareness or enhance consumer attitudes- the
objective is to move people to action
Making brand-level marcom decisions and achieving desired outcomes
Chapter 2
A firm based perspective on brand equity
The firm-based viewpoint of brand equity is focuses on outcomes extending from efforts to enhance
a brand’s value to its various stakeholders
Enhancing brand equity
Three general ways to enhance brand equity:
All brand to speak for itself
o Quality
o Sustainability
o Desirability
Create message drive associations: appealing messages
o Repeated claims about the features a brand possess
Leveraging current meaning or associations
o Positive associations that are already contained in the world of people, places and
things.
Benefits result from enhancing brand equity
Increased consumer loyalty
Long-term growth and profitability for the brand
Maintain brand differentiation from competitive offerings
Insulate brand from price competition
A customer-based perspective on brand loyalty
A brand possesses equity to the extent that people are familiar with the brand and have stored in
memory favourable, strong and unique brand associations
Brand recognition: reflects a relatively superficial level of awareness
Brand recall: deeper form of brand awareness
Brands and their management
Brand concept and brand concept management
Brand concept: the specific meaning that the brand managers create and communicate to the
target market
o this is accomplished by appeals to functional, symbolic and experimental needs
Brand concept management: the analysis, planning, implementation and control of a brand
concept throughout the life of the brand
How brand concepts can be developed
functional needs (solving problems): products that attempt to fulfil the consumer’s
consumption-related problems
Symbolic needs (associating the brand with symbolic objects): directed at the consumers’
desire for self-enhancement, role position, group membership, and belongingness
Experimental needs (sensory pleasures, personal experience): products that provide sensory
pleasure, variety, and/or cognitive stimulation
Five personality dimensions that describe most brands:
sincerity
o down to earth
o wholesome
o honest
o cheerful
excitement
o daring
o spirited
o imaginative
o up-to-date
competence
o reliable
o intelligent
o successful
sophistication
o upper class
o charming
o luxury
ruggedness
o tough
o outdoorsy
Co-branding and ingredient branding
Co-branding: a partnership between two brands
Ingredient branding: inclusion of one brand within the other
Models of brand equity
Chapter 3
Marcom and brand adoption
Product adoption
o The introduction and acceptance of new ideas, including new brands
o Essential to long-term market success
Marketing communications
o Facilitate successful new product introductions
o Reduce the product failure rate (potentially 35-45%)
Brand characteristics that facilitate adoption
Relative advantage
o This represents the degree to which consumers perceive a new brand as being better
than existing alternatives with respect to specific attributes or benefits.
Compatibility
o The degree to which an innovation is perceived to fit into a person’s way of doing things
Complexity
o An innovation’s degree of perceived difficulty
Trialability
o The extent to which an innovation can be used on a limited basis prior to making a full-
blown commitment
Observability
o The degree to which the positive effects of new-product usage can be observed by
users and others
Brand naming
Brand: A company’s unique designation or trademark, which distinguishes its offering from the other
product category entries.
Power of brand naming
Effects of brand naming
o Speed of brand awareness
o Overall brand image
o Brand equity formulation
What constitutes as a good brand name
Distinguishes the brand from competitive offerings
Facilitates consumer learning by describing the brand and its attributes (“Healthy Choice,”
“Diehard)
o Associations and memory cues
Brand Name Suggestiveness.
Made up brand names
Sound symbolism
Achieves compatibility with a brand’s desired image and with its product design or packaging
Is memorable and easy to pronounce and spell
Is suitable for global use
Brand naming process
1. Specify objectives for the brand
2. Create candidate brand names
3. Evaluate candidate names
4. Choose a brand name
5. Register a trademark
The role of logos
Logo
o Is a graphic design element related to a brand name
o Not all brand names are associated with a distinct logo
Good logo designs
o Are natural—neither too simple nor too complex
o Are readily recognized
o Convey same meaning to all target market members
o Evoke positive feelings
o Are suited for periodic updating
Update logos
o To be more attuned with the times
o V- visibility
o I- information
o E- Emotional appeal
o W- Workability
Chapter 5
All marketing communications should be:
Directed to a particular target market,
Clearly positioned
Created to achieve a specific objective
Undertake to accomplish the objective within budget constraint
The market segmentation process and targeting audiences can be considered the starting points for
all marcom decisions
Major steps in the market segmentation process
Market segmentation
o Identify bases (e.g., behaviour, demographics) to segment the market
o Develop profiles of resulting segments
Market targeting
o Develop measures of segment attractiveness
o Select the target segment(s)
Market positioning
o Develop positioning for each target segment
o Develop marketing mix for each target segment
Measurable consumer characteristics
Behaviour segmentation
Psychographics
Demographics
Geodemographics
Behaviour segmentation issues
Behaviour segmentation
o Describe how people behave with respect to a particular product category or class of
related products
o Assume that the best predictor of the future behaviour is past behaviour
Online Behavioural targeting
o Tracks the online site-selection behaviour of users so as to enable advertisers to serve
targeted ads
Privacy concerns
o Technological advances increase the ability to serve consumers at the risk of invading
their privacy
Online ad process
Psychographic segmentation
Psychographics: Describe aspects of consumers’ psychological make-ups and lifestyles as they
relate to buying behaviour in a particular product category
o Attitudes
o Values
o Motivations
Types of psychographic profiles
Customised psychographic profiles
o Are typically customized to the client’s specific product category
o Contain questionnaire items related to the unique characteristics of the product
category
General purpose of psychographic profiles
o Can be purchased as “off-the-shelf” psychographic data from services that develop
psychographic profiles of people independently of any particular product or service
8 VALS Psychographic Segments
Innovators
o Successful, sophisticated, take charge people with high self-esteem
Thinkers
o Motivated by ideals.
o Mature, satisfied, comfortable and reflective people who want value order, knowledge
and responsibility
Believers
o Motivated by ideals
o Conservative, conventional people with concrete beliefs based on traditional,
established codes, family, religion, community and the nation
Achievers
o Motivated by desire of achievement
o Goal orientated lifestyles and a deep commitment to career and family
Strivers
o Trendy and fun loving, motivated by achievement out of concern about the opinions
and approval of others
Experiencers
o Motivated by self-expression, young, enthusiastic, and impulsive consumers; quickly
become enthusiastic about new possibilities, but are equally quick to cool
Makers
o Motivated by self-expression; express themselves and experience the world by working
on it, and have enough skills and energy to carry out their projects successfully
Survivors
o Live narrowly-focused lives with few resources with which to cope, often believe the
world is changing too quickly, are comfortable with the familiar, and are primarily
concerned with safety and security
Demographic Segmentation
Major demographic aspects
o Age structure of the population
o Change in the household composition
o Ethnic population development
Demographic trends
World population growth’
Changing age structure
African Americans
Are of an average age that is considerably younger than that for Caucasians
Are geographically-concentrated, with three-fourths of all African-Americans living in 16 states
Tend to purchase prestige and name-brand products in greater proportion than do Caucasians
Have spending power that totals nearly $1.1 trillion annually
Geodemographic Segmentation
Geodemographics
o Consumers who reside within geographic clusters such as zip codes or neighborhoods
and also share demographic and lifestyle similarities
Typical clusters (PRIZM NE)
o PRIZM – Potential Rating Index by ZIP Markets, NE – new evolution of Nielson Claritas’s
original segmentation system
Small pond
Country Clusters
Suburban pioneers
City roots
Market targeting
The 5 Criteria for effective segmentation
1. Measurable
2. Substantial
3. Accessible
4. Differentiable
5. Actionable
Positioning
A brand’s position represents the key feature, benefit, or image that it stands for in the target
audience’s collective mind. Brand communicators and the marketing team in general must decide on
a brand positioning statement, which is the central idea that encapsulates a brand’s meaning and
distinctiveness vis-à-vis competitive brands in the product category.
Benefit positioning
Appealing to consumer needs
Functional needs:
o Positioning communicates that the brand’s benefits are capable of solving consumers’
consumption-related problems
Symbolic needs:
o Positioning attempts to associate brand ownership with a desired group, role, or self-
image
Experimental needs:
o Positioning promotes brand’s extraordinary sensory value, or rich potential for cognitive
stimulation
Attribute positioning
Product related
Non-product related
Chapter 6
General communication objectives
1. Build category wants
2. Create brand awareness
3. Enhance brand attitudes
4. Influence brand purchase intention
5. Facilitate purchase
Communication and communication process
Communications: the process of establishing a commonness or oneness of thought between a
sender (e.g., an advertiser) and a receiver (e.g., a consumer).
Encoding: the process of putting thought into symbolic form (e.g., words, sentence structure,
symbols, non-verbal cues).
Decoding: the process of transforming message symbols back into thought.
Semiotics and meaning transfers
Semiotics: the study of meaning and meaning producing events
Meaning is a constructive process that is determined as much by the communication as by the
receivers of the message
Meaning: Our internal responses (thoughts, feelings) when presented with a sign, stimulus, or
object.
Sign: (in general at this point) represents something to someone in a given context. (I’ll have a
Coke”)
Socialization: process by which people learn cultural values, form beliefs, and become familiar
with “physical cues” representing these values and beliefs.
Signals, signs and symbols
Signal: the product is a cause or effect of something else (e.g., SUVs the result of large families)
Sign: the product and referent belong to the same cultural context (e.g., SUVs part of upper
middle class, children, suburbs)
Symbol: the product and object have no prior relationship, yet are now associated with one
another (e.g., Ford trucks and “tough guy” image/ads)
Figurative language
Simile: a comparison using like or as
Metaphor: Direct comparison
Allegory: Extended metaphor
o Equates objects in a narrative with meanings lying outside narrative
o Personification
o Moral conflict
o Examples: Old Joe, Cavemen, Dinky, Mr. Clean
Implementing positioning: behaviour foundations of marketing communications
The Consumer Processing Model (CPM): behaviour is seen as rational, highly cognitive, systematic
and reasoned
Stage 1: Being exposed to information
Stage 2: Paying attention
Stage 3: Comprehending attended information: create
meaning out of stimuli and symbols
Stage 4: Agreeing with comprehended information
Stage 5: Retaining accepted information in memory
Stage 6: Retrieving information from memory
Stage 7: Deciding from alternatives
Stage 8: Acting on the basis of the decision
The Hedonic, Experiential Model (HEM): consumer behaviour is driven by emotions, pursuit of fun,
fantasies and feelings
The HEM model probably better explains how consumers process information when they are
carefree and happy and confronted with positive outcomes.
The HEM viewpoint recognizes that people often consume products for the sheer fun of it or in the
pursuit of amusement, fantasies, or sensory stimulation.
Chapter 8
Setting marcom objectives
Achieving management consensus
Guiding subsequent marcom decisions
Providing standards
Why setting Marcom (advertising) objectives is important
Expression of management consensus
Guides the budgeting, message, and
media aspects of advertising strategy
Provide standards against with
results can be measured
Marcom Objectives
Who
What (most difficult objective)
Where
When
How often
The Hierarchy of marcom effects
Advancing consumers unawareness to awareness
Creating an expectation
Encouraging trial purchases
Forming beliefs and attitudes
Reinforcing beliefs and attitudes
Accomplishing Brand loyalty
Setting good marcom (advertising) objectives
Include a precise statement of who, what, and when
Be quantitative and measurable
Specify the amount of change
Be realistic
Be internally consistent
Be clear and put it in writing
Should marcom objectives be stated in terms of sales?
Communication (indirect) Objectives
o Attempt to increase the target audience’s brand awareness, enhance their attitudes
toward the brand, shift their preferences from the competitors’ brand and so on.
Sales (Direct) objectives
Practical budget methods
Percent-of-Sales Budgeting
Objective-and-Task Method
Competitive Parity Method (match competitors’ method)
Affordability Method
Integrated information response model?
Levels of involvement?
Chapter 9
B2C: companies that market their brands to final consumers undertake most advertising
B2B: companies that market to other companies rather than directly to consumers
The magnitude of advertising
Advertising expenditures in the United States were estimated to have exceeded $294 billion in
[Link] amounts to nearly $1,000 in advertising for each of the approximately 300 million men,
women, and children living in the United States. Ad spending in the United States has for many years
averaged approximately 2.2 percent of the country’s gross domestic product
Historical percentage breakdown: overall promotion dollar
Trade sales promotion: 50.0%
Consumer sales promotion: 25.0%
Media advertising: 25.0%
Five basic functions performed by advertising
1. Informing
o Publicize the brand
2. Influencing (Persuading)
o Primary demand: creating a demand for the entire product category
o Secondary demand: the demand for a company’s brand
3. Reminding and Increasing Salience
o Enriching the memory trace for a brand such that the brand comes to mind
o in relevant choice situations
4. Adding Value
o Innovating
o Improving quality
o Altering consumer perception
5. Assisting Other Company Efforts
o Assist sales representatives
Implementing Advertising strategy
o Strategy implementation deals with the
tactical, day-to-day activities that must
be performed to carry out an advertising
campaign.
Measuring advertising effectiveness
o Assessing effectiveness is a critical aspect
of advertising management—only by
evaluating results is it possible to
determine whether objectives are being
accomplished.
The role of advertising agencies: Message strategies
and decisions most often are the joint enterprise of the companies that advertise (the clients) and
their advertising agencies.
Alternative ways to perform advertising functions
o In-house operation
Necessities employing an advertising staff and absorbing the operation costs
Unprofitable unless a company does a large amount of continual advertising
o Purchase services as needed (a la carte)
Advantages
Use services only when they are needed
Availability of high-calibre creative talent
Potential cost efficiencies
Disadvantages
Specialists approach client problems in a stereotyped fashion
Lack of cost accountability
Financial instability of smaller boutiques
o Use full- service advertising agency
Advantages:
In-depth knowledge and skills
Obtaining negotiating muscle with the media
Coordinating advertising and marketing efforts
Disadvantages
Some control is lost
Larger clients are favoured over small clients
Occasionally inefficient in media buying
Use full- service advertising agency
Creative services
Media services
Research services
Account manager
Chapter 10
What makes effective advertising
Sound strategy
Consumer’s view
Persuasive
Doesn’t overwhelm
Deliver on promises
Break clutter
Creativity: the CAN elements
The CAN elements of creative ads
o Connectedness: addresses whether an advertisement reflects empathy with the target
audience’s basic needs and wants
o Appropriateness : an advertisement must provide information that is pertinent to the
advertised brand relative to other brands in the product category
o Novelty: unique, fresh and unexpected ads. They differ from consumer expectations of
a typical ad for a brand in a particular product category
Sticky messages: SUCCESS (getting messages to stick)
Common elements of sticky ads
o Simplicity
o Concreteness
o Emotionality
o Storytelling
o Credibility
o Unexpectedness
Advertising plan: Provides the framework for systematic execution of advertising strategies
(analogous to marketing plan: analysis, planning, implementation, control of marketing programs)
Advertising strategy: An advertising message that communicates the brand’s primary benefits or
how it can solve a consumer’s problem
5 steps of advertising strategy
Step 1: Specify the key fact
o A Single- minded statement from the customer’s point of view that identifies why
consumers are or are not purchasing the brand
Step 2: state the marketing problem
o State the problem from the marketer’s point of view
Step 3: state communication objective
o What effect the advertising is intended to have on the target market and how it should
persuade consumers
Step 4: implement the creative message strategy
o “creative platform”
Define the target market
Identify the primary competition
Choose the promise
Offer reasons why
Step 5: establish mandatory corporate/divisional requirements
o It reminds the advertiser to include the corporate slogan or logo, headlines, claim
substantiation, any other regulatory requirements, etc.
Cont.
Positioning
Message and medium
Nitty-gritty details
The MECCAS Model
Means End of Conceptualization of Components for Advertising Strategy
Identifying means-end chains: the method of laddering
Laddering is a research technique that has been developed to identify linkages between attributes
(A), consequences (C), and values (V).
Practical issues in identifying means- end chain
Provides a systematic procedure for linking the advertiser’s perspective, with the consumer’s
perspective.
Corporate image and corporate issue advertising
Corporate image advertising
o Attempts to gain:
Name recognition
Product goodwill
Identification with meaningful social activities
Corporate issue advertising “
o Paid communication concerned with propagating ideas and explaining controversial
social issues of public importance
Chapter 11, 13, 15
The role of humour in advertising
Advertisers also turn to humor in the hopes of achieving various communication objectives— gaining
attention, guiding consumer comprehension of product claims, influencing attitudes, enhancing
recall, and, ultimately, creating customer action.
Positive effects
o Attracts attention
o Enhances liking of ad and brand
o Does not hurt comprehension
o Does not harm persuasion
o Does not harm source credibility
o Nature of product affects the appropriateness of using humor (e.g., feeling-oriented;
under low involvement
Negative effects
o Effective only when consumers’ evaluations of the advertised brand are already positive
o Effect of humor can differ due to differences in audience and geographical
characteristics
o Humorous message may be so distracting that receivers ignore the message content
Appeals to consumer fears
Use of fear: physical or impending problems
Appeals to fear can be effective as a means of enhancing motivation (yet ethical issues)
Can identify the negative consequences of:
o Not using the product
o Engaging in unsafe behavior (drinking and driving)
Can take forms of either
o social disapproval or physical danger
For fear appeals to be effective:
Appropriate level of threat given the involvement of the target market
Need a prominent solution (e.g., your brand or service) for the fear created
Celebrity endorsers
Endorser attributes: TEARS Model (credibility and attractiveness)
T: Trustworthiness
E: Expertise
A: Physical attractiveness
R: Respect
S: Similarity
The “No tears” approach (alignment with the brand)
Celebrity and audience matchup
Celebrity and brand matchup
Celebrity credibility
Celebrity attractiveness
Cost consideration
A working ease or difficulty factor
Endorsement saturation factor
Likelihood-of-getting-into-trouble-factor
Options for placing ads
Banner ads
o Banner ads are typically small, static ads placed in frequently visited websites. Banner
ads, staple of online advertising, are static ads – somewhat analogous to print ads
placed in magazines and newspapers – that appear on frequently visited websites.
o Currently, this format is second (to search engine advertising) in ad expenditure spent
on-line and is expected to grow. Yet, this growth is tempered by recent arguments that
brand managers would prefer greater engagement via social media rather than the
static ad banners. Click-through rates (CTRs) to banner ads are very low, averaging less
than 0.3 percent. Banner ads for B2B companies receive somewhat higher CTRs than do
those for B2C companies
Pop-ups:
o Appear in a separate window that materializes on the screen, seemingly out of
nowhere, while a selected Web page is loading. Pop-ups remain until they are manually
closed.
Online video ads
o audio-visual ads that range in length from 15 seconds to several minutes
Social media
o Share opinions and information, and create online communities of people who have
similar interests and wish to share their experiences with others.
o Advantages
o Disadvantages
Direct marketing
An interactive system of marketing which uses one or more advertising media to effect a measurable
response and/or transaction at any location.
Customer lifetime value
Net Present Value (NPV) of profit that a company stands to realize on the average new
customer during a given number of years.
Is valuing each present or prospective customer is viewed not as an address but as a long-term
asset
5 ways to enhance customer lifetime values
Increased the retention rate. The more customers a firm has and the longer they are retained,
the greater the lifetime value.
Increase the referral rate. Positive relations created with existing customers can influence
others to become customers through the positive word of mouth expressed by a company’s
satisfied users.
Enhance the average purchase volume per customer. Existing customers can be encouraged to
purchase more of a brand by augmenting their brand loyalty.
Cut direct costs. By altering the channel of distribution via direct marketing efforts, a firm may
be able to cut costs and hence increase profit margins.
Reducing marketing communication costs. Effective database marketing can lead to meaningful
reductions in marcom expenses because direct marketing often is more productive than mass
media advertising
Potpourri of alternative advertising media
Post-it notes
Stadium cup holders
Sides of garbage trucks
Restroom space
Labels on fruits and vegetables
Back covers of comic books (Levi 501 jeans)
Skywriting
Human body