What factors should an organization consider while designing its promotion mix?

Product and service promotions create awareness, position products and services and persuade customers to buy. Although advertising is essential, it’s not the only consideration. Instead, an overall promotional mix also includes personal selling, sales promotions, public relations and direct marketing campaigns. Because there’s no set standard or method for creating an optimal mix, each business must consider the factors affecting the promotional mix and create its own custom promotional strategy.

Product-Oriented Factors

  1. The nature of a product or service and where it lies within the product life cycle determines how much information a customer may require before making a purchase decision. For example, customers most often require more information when evaluating a new product or a product such as a computer, a car or a home heating system that is inherently more complex. In these cases, advertising, in-store sales promotions and personal selling will figure more heavily in the promotional mix. In contrast, a promotional mix that includes general advertising and sales promotions is more appropriate for common, everyday items such as groceries and clothing.

Target Market And Direct Competition

  1. It’s critical for a business to know what direct competition is doing in order to create a promotional mix that differentiates its products from the competition. Product differentiation, also called positioning, focuses on creating distinctions about the attributes, price, quality or usage of a good or service as compared to the competition. Positioning can be accomplished using an above-the-line, below-the-line or combination promotional mix. An above-the-line promotional mix often includes public relations, television, radio and print advertising. A below-the-line promotional mix that focuses on direct marketing efforts such as direct mail campaigns can be effective for positioning products within a specific target audience.

Marketing Strategy

  1. A product's marketing strategy also affects the promotional mix. For example, the promotional mix for a push strategy will be different than the mix for a pull promotional strategy. A push promotional strategy takes the product to the customer in an effort to create demand. With this type of strategy, direct selling and trade promotions form the base of the promotional mix. A pull promotional strategy attempts to increase consumer demand for a product by drawing customers in. With this type of strategy, mass media advertising and product promotions that create product awareness most often form the base of the promotional mix.

Budget Allocations And Resource Availability

  1. Cost is a significant factor in determining the promotional mix. An annual marketing budget, the budget for an individual campaign and the cost of each promotional tool all play a role in determining whether and to what degree a promotional tool can be used. For example, the high cost of producing and running television advertising spots can be a limiting factor for some business budgets. Resource availability is another consideration. Although newspaper advertising may be an appropriate promotional tool, it can be an unavailable option in a small community or ineffective if the newspaper’s circulation rate is too low.

There is no perfect promotion mix. Everyone has to devise a mix depending upon the situation. It has to be tailor-made depending upon the characteristics of the situation.

1. Push and Pull Strategies:

The purpose of promotion is to motivate and persuade not only the ultimate consumers, but also to the intermediaries who are available involved in making available goods finally to consumers.

If the strategy adopted is to motivate and persuade the intermediaries’ to make effort to increase the sales the strategy is called push strategy. It of personal selling along with advertising and other trade promotional measures. The-manufacturer promotes goods to wholesalers, wholesalers in turn promote to the retailers and retailers persuading the consumers to buy.

On the other hand, if the customer demands particular goods from the retailer and the retailers want the same from the wholesalers and the wholesalers in turn asking the manufacturers to provide that kind of goods. Thus here it is the customer to wholesaler who is pulling the cord. The advertising by the manufacturer may persuade the consumer to ask for the goods to their retailers. Retailers in turn will ask the wholesalers and the wholesalers to manufacturer. The marketing manager will have to decide whether to use push or pull strategy.

What factors should an organization consider while designing its promotion mix?

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Customer-targeted marketing communications are pull type of communications. The objectives of pull marketing communication are to build awareness, attraction, and loyalty and to reduce search costs. When pull communications are successful, customers will seek out certain products or services and, in essence, by the interest they create, and pull the product through the channel.

On the other hand, push communications are directed at channel intermediaries. The objective is to motivate channel intermediaries to carry certain products to make available to customers. If successful, push communication strategies result into a wider range of availability, fewer stockouts, greater merchandising (shelf space), and a greater marketing effort. It would have been achieved with little or no push communication. However, to be more successful, a combination of the two is required.

2. Product Features:

Use of a particular tool of promotion mix depends upon the type of goods to be marketed. For industrial products more of personal selling is required. For consumer products like HUL’s Axe, more of advertising is required. For highly image- oriented products like fashion garment the presence of designers or celebrities inside the store is required. For goods where not much difference is there in features and performance more of sales promotion is required.

Where the organisation is equally important, the public relations become more important. For seasonal products, off-season sale is very important, but advertising is required for sale round the year sale. This is why the retailers of full sleeve shirts and sweaters and suits organise sale in the month of January. For high-priced products, personal selling is important to mitigate risk. For low convenience goods marketers use advertising rather than personal selling. For products, where customers do not want to talk with the salesperson like Viagra, condom, hair colour (by a senior citizen) the advertising is more important.

3. Stage of the Product Life Cycle:

In different phases of a product life cycle, different tools of promotion mix become more effective. In the introductory stage to create awareness among the customers including business customers and distributors advertising has to be undertaken in a big way. Free samples may be distributed to the consumers and trade promotion may be undertaken to motivate distributors to stock the goods.

In the growth stage, the consumers have already heard of the product. Promotion has to be directed at specifying product benefits. Advertising increases whereas sales promotion declines. During the maturity stage, the emphasis will be on switching the customers from competitors and hence more of sales promotion is used. In the decline stage the firm will be more interested in harvesting revenue as much as possible. There will be a great decrease in expenditure on promotion.

4. Buyer Readiness:

If the customer is unaware of the product, advertising and public relations are more important, but when he is in the marketplace sales promotion and personal selling are more important to make a decision.

5. Type of Buyer:

Buyers can be of different types and promotion mix has to be devised accordingly. In case of Organisational or business buyers, ads published in specialised trade publications and personal selling are more important; whereas, consumers are swayed by glossy advertisements endorsed by some celebrities.

6. Type of Distribution:

For intensive distributable goods, more advertising is done and also the help of sales promotion is taken. For goods sold through selective distribution, the promotion mix would vary, and for exclusive distribution like Rado watch, high- quality furniture, it needs more of personal selling.

7. Objectives, Budget, Cost and Availability of Media:

Firm’s promotional objectives are the reflections of overall marketing objectives. If the objective is to make mass awareness, the firm may go in for advertising, sales promotion and public relation. Most of the food companies, like Nestle, HUL, PepsiCo not only go in for aggressive ad campaigning, but also distribute free samples and go in for public relations.

If the objective is to invite the customer to the store where demonstration can be shown, then a combination of small advertising (to inform), sales promotion (to attract) and personal selling (to persuade) is undertaken.

Apart from objectives the promotion mix would be determined on the basis of budget made available to marketing department. If it is small the firm it would concentrate on personal selling. If it is larger firm, then it can advertise through regional and national media like that of HUL in India.

Cost of promotional tools is important in determining promotion mix. To reach a larger audience advertising is used. Many a companies now a days do not buy ad slots in cricket tournaments as it has become a very costly affair. The small entrepreneurs make use of local directories, cable TV bands, radio, local newspapers, outdoor ads and other promotional methods.

Even if the budget is there and the cost is ok, the availability of media is equally important. No marketer of tobacco or alcohol products is permitted to advertise on TV channels in India.

Many ads are denied if they are against national dignity and interest and disrespect the motherland’s culture. In some of the countries ‘comparative advertising’ is not allowed.

What factors should an organization consider while designing the promotion mix?

10.3 Factors Influencing the Promotion Mix and Communication....
Budget Available. ... .
Stage in the Product Life Cycle. ... .
Type of Product and Type of Purchase Decision. ... .
Target Market Characteristics and Consumers' Readiness to Purchase. ... .
Consumers' Preferences for Various Media..

What must be considered when developing a promotional mix?

A promotional mix is an allocation of resources among five primary elements:.
Advertising..
Public relations or publicity..
Sales promotion..
Direct marketing..
Personal selling..

What factors are used to determine a firm's promotional mix?

Many factors, such as a firm's marketing budget, the type of product, regulations, target customers, and competitors, influence what composes the promotion mix.

What is the most important factor to consider when developing the promotional mix for a product?

Type of market or consumer characteristics determine the form of promotion mix. Education, location, income, personality characteristics, knowledge, bargaining capacity, profession, age, sex, etc., are the important factors that affect company's promotion strategy.