Chapter 11 Advertising and Promotion Copyright ©2005 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. 0 Learning Objectives • Name the four basic components of the retailer’s promotion mix and discuss their relationship with other decisions. • Describe the differences between a retailer’s long-term and short-term promotional objectives. • List the six steps involved in developing a retailer’s advertising campaign. • Explain how retailers manage their sales promotion and publicity. 1 The Retail Promotion Mix LO 1 • Promotion is a means that retailers use to bring traffic into their stores, and it includes advertising, sales promotion, publicity, and personal selling. 2 The Retail Promotion Mix LO 1 • Types of Promotion • Promotion in the Supply Chain 3 Types of Promotion LO 1 • The four basic components of the retailer’s promotional mix: • Advertising is paid, nonpersonal communication through various media by business firms, nonprofit organizations, and individuals who are in some way identified in the advertising message and who hope to inform or persuade members of a particular audience; includes communication of products, services, institutions, and ideas. 4 Types of Promotion LO 1 • Sales Promotion involves the use of media and nonmedia marketing pressure applied for a predetermined, limited period of time as the level of consumer, retailer, or wholesaler in order to stimulate trial, increase consumer demand, or improve product availability. • Publicity is non-paid-for communications of information about the company or product, generally in some media form. 5 Types of Promotion LO 1 • Personal Selling involves a face-to-face interaction with the consumer with the goal of selling the consumer merchandise or service. 6 Types of Promotion LO 1 • Promotional decisions relate to and most be integrated with other management decisions, such as location, merchandise, credit, cash flow, building and fixtures, price, and customer service. • Primary Trading Area is the geographical area where the retailer can serve customers, in terms of convenience and accessibility, better than the competition. • Secondary Trading Area is the geographic area where the retailer can still be competitive despite a competitor having some locational advantage. 7 Promotion in the Supply Chain LO 1 • Major differences in the way retailers and manufacturers use promotion: • Product image versus availability. • Specific product benefits versus price. • Focused image versus cluttered ads. 8 Promotional Objectives LO 2 • Long-Term Objectives • Short-Term Objectives • Interdependence 9 Long-Term Objectives LO 2 • Institutional Advertising is a type of advertising in which the retailer attempts to gain long-term benefits by promoting and selling the store itself rather than the merchandise in the store. • Creating a positive store image. • Public service promotion. 10 Positive Store Image LO 2 Dee Lincoln, cofounder of Del Frisco’s Double Eagle Steakhouse, paid a record $80,000 for a 1,309-pound Main-Anjou Cross-breed at Denver’s National Western Stock Show to introduce her new store and to generate a positive store image. 11 Corporate Citizenship LO 2 Wal-Mart sponsors a variety of community and public service programs, which help to promote its role as a good corporate citizen. 12 Possible Promotion Objectives in Retailing LO 2: Exhibit 11.1 Improve Long-Run Performance Store Image and Positioning Improve Short-Run Performance Public Service Attract New Customers From Existing Trade Area Increase Patronage of Existing Customers Expand Trade Area 13 Short-Term Objectives LO 2 • Promotional advertising is a type of advertising in which the retailer attempts to increase short-term performance by using product availability or price as a selling point. • Increased patronage form existing customers. • Attraction of new customers. 14 Interdependence LO 2 • Although promotion objectives can be established to improve either long- or short-term financial performance, programs designed to achieve either objective will benefit as well. 15 Steps in Planning a Retail Advertising Campaign LO 3 • Selecting Advertising Objectives • Budgeting for the Campaign • Designing the Message • Selecting the Media to Use • Scheduling the Ads • Evaluating the Results 16 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 • Factors unique to retailing that should be considered when determining objectives: • Age of the store • Store location • Type of merchandise sold • The competition • The size of trading area • Supplier support 17 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Make consumers in your trading area aware that you offer the lowest prices... Wal-Mart’s “ Always Low Prices” 18 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Make newcomers in your trading area aware of your existence... The “welcome wagon” coupons given to new residents of the area. 19 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Make customers aware of your large stock selection... Nordstrom’s promising the shopper a free shirt if the retailer is “out of stock” on the basic sizes. 20 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Making a specific target market aware of your product offering... JCPenney’s “At least part of you is comfortable” campaign 21 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Increase traffic during slow sales periods... Subway Sandwiches Shop’s “Two-for-One Tuesdays” 22 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Move old merchandise at the end of of a selling season... The “after-Christmas clearance sales” that many retailers use. 23 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Strengthen your store’s image or reputation... Neiman Marcus’s famous Christmas catalog that generates news stories around the world when the catalog is mailed to customers. 24 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Identify your store with the nationally advertised brands that it sells... Dillard’s featuring Tommy Hilfiger clothing in their ads 25 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Reposition the image of your store in the minds of consumers... Holiday Inn’s “On the Way” campaign 26 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Cultivate new customers... Any of the one-day discounts that a customer gets for opening a charge account with the retailer. 27 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Make consumers think of you first when a need for your products occurs, especially if they are not commonly purchased... 1-800-FLOWERS or “For a hole in your roof or a whole new roof - Frederick Roofing” 28 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Retain your present customers... Any of the airline’s frequent-flyer programs, or supermarkets’ use of a loyalty card 29 Selecting Advertising Objectives LO 3 Get customers who previously shopped at your store, but no longer do, to return to your store... The JCPenney “I Love Your Style” campaign 30 Budgeting for the Campaign: Retailer-Only Campaigns LO 3 • Affordable method is a technique for budgeting advertising in which all the money a retailer can afford to spend on advertising in a given time period becomes the advertising budget. • Percentage-of-sales method is a technique for budgeting advertising in which the retailer targets a specific percentage of forecasted sales as the advertising budget. 31 Budgeting for the Campaign: Retailer-Only Campaigns LO 3 • Task-and-objective method is a technique for budgeting in which the retailer establishes its advertising objectives and then determines the advertising tasks that need to be performed to achieve those objectives. 32 Advertising as a Percentage of Sales LO 3: Exhibit 11.2 33 Advertising as a Percentage of Sales LO 3: Exhibit 11.2 Source: From Advertising Ratios& Budgets, published by Schonfeld & Associates, 2003. Used with permission. 34 Task and Objective Method of Advertising Budget Development LO 3: Exhibit 11.3 Objective and Task Estimated Cost Objective 1: Increase traffic during dull periods. Task A: Task B: 15 full-page newspaper advertisements to be spread over these dates: February 2 - 16; June 8 - 23; October 4 - 18 240, 30-second radio spots split on two stations and spread over these dates: February 2 - 16; June 8 - 23; October 4 - 18 $22,500 4,320 35 Task and Objective Method of Advertising Budget Development LO 3: Exhibit 11.3 Objective and Task Estimated Cost Objective 2: Attract new customers from newcomers to the community Task A: Task B: Task C: 2,000 direct-mail letters greeting new residents to the community $1,000 2,000 direct-mail letters inviting new arrivals in the community to stop in to visit the store and fill out a credit application 1,000 Yellow-Page advertising 1,900 36 Task and Objective Method of Advertising Budget Development LO 3: Exhibit 11.3 Objective and Task Estimate d Cost Objective 3: Build store’s reputation. Task A: Task B: weekly 15-second institutional ads on the 10PM television news every Saturday and Sunday one half-page newspaper ad per month in the home living section of the local newspaper $20,800 9,500 37 Task and Objective Method of Advertising Budget Development LO 3: Exhibit 11.3 Objective and Task Estimated Cost Objective 4: Increase shopper traffic in shopping center. Task A: cooperate with other retailers in the shopping center in sponsoring transit advertising on buses and cabs $3,000 Task B: participate in “Midnight Madness Sale” with other retailers in the shopping center by taking out 2 full-page newspaper ads--one in mid-March and the other in mid-July 3,000 38 Task and Objective Method of Advertising Budget Development LO 3: Exhibit 11.3 Objective and Task Estimated Cost Objective 5: Clear out end-of-month, slow-moving merchandise. Task A: Task B: run a full-page newspaper ad on the last Thursday of every month $18,000 run 3, 30-second television spots on the last Thursday of every month 14,000 Total advertising budget $99,020 39 Factors in Allocating Advertising Dollars LO 3 HIGH ADVERTISING ALLOCATION •High Gross Margin Percentage •High Advertising Elasticity of Demand •Dominant or Potentially Dominant Market Share in Department or Merchandise Line •Good Backup Resources (Space, Inventory, Accounts Receivable, People) •Willingness to Allocate Enough to Achieve “Critical Mass” LOW ADVERTISING ALLOCATIONS •Low Gross Margin Percentage •Low Advertising Elasticity of Demand •Low Market Share and Limited Potential for Being Dominant Market Share Department or Line •Poor Backup Resource (Space, Inventory, Accounts Receivable, People) •Unwillingness to Allocate Enough to Achieve “Critical Mass” 40 Co-Op Campaigns LO 3 Vertical Cooperative Advertising occurs when the retailer and other channel members (usually manufacturers) share the advertising budget. Usually the manufacturer subsidizes some of the retailer’s advertising that features the manufacturer’s brands. Horizontal Cooperative Advertising occurs when two or more retailers band together to share the cost of advertising usually in the form of a joint promotion of an event or sale that would benefit both parties. 41 Designing the Message LO 3 Creative messages cannot be developed without knowing which media will be used to carry out the message to the target market. Some Common Approaches: Lifestyle Fantasy Humorous Slice-of-life Mood/Image 42 Media Alternatives LO 3 • Mass Media aimed at total markets: Newspapers Television • Specific market media forms: Radio Magazines Direct mail Internet 43 Media Alternatives LO 3 • Miscellaneous Media Yellow Pages Outdoor advertising Transit advertising Electronic information terminals Specialty firms Shopping guides 44 Media Alternatives LO 3 • Creative Ads should seek to: • Attract attention and retain attention. • Achieve the objective of the advertising strategy. • Avoid errors, especially legal ones. 45 Media Alternatives LO 3 • Monster.com’s parody of a popular Nike ad helped increased its web site traffic from 1.5 million unique visitors per month to more than 2.5 million. 46 Media Selection LO 3 • Coverage is the theoretical maximum number of consumers in the retailer’s target market that can be reached by a medium and not the number actually reached. • Reach is the actual total number of target customers who come in contact with an advertising message. • Cumulative Reach is the reach that is achieved over a period of time. 47 Media Selection LO 3 • Frequency is the average number of times each person who is reached is exposed to an advertisement during a given time period. • Cost Per Thousand Method (CPM) is a technique used to evaluate advertisements in different media based on cost. The cost per thousand is the cost of the advertisement divided by the number of people viewing it, which is then multiplied by 1,000. 48 Media Selection LO 3 • Cost Per Thousand – Target Market (CPM-TM) is a technique used to evaluate advertisements in different media based on cost. The cost per thousand per target market is the cost of the advertisement divided by the number of people in the target market viewing it, which is then multiplied by 1,000. • Impact refers to how strong an impression an advertisement makes and how well it ultimately leads to a purchase. 49 Scheduling of Advertising LO 3 • Ads should appear on, or slightly precede, the days when customers are most likely to purchase. • Advertising should be concentrated around times when people receive their payroll checks. • If the retailer has limited funds, it should concentrate its advertising during periods of highest demand. • The retailer should time its ads to appear during the time of day or day of week when the best CPM-TM will be obtained. • The higher the degree of habitual purchasing of a product class, the more the advertising should precede the purchase time. 50 Evaluating the Results LO 3 • Advertising Effectiveness is the extent to which the advertising has produced the result desired. • Advertising Efficiency is concerned with whether the advertising result was achieved with minimum financial expenditure. 51 Evaluating the Results LO 3 • Most, but not all, ineffective advertising is due to one of ten errors: • Bombarding the customer with so many messages and sales that any single message or sale tends to be discounted. • The advertising was not creative or appealing. • The advertising didn’t give all the needed information. • Advertising dollars were spread too thinly over too many departments or merchandise lines. 52 Evaluating the Results LO 3 • Poor internal communication among salesclerks, cashiers, stock clerks, and management. • Advertisement not directed at the proper target market. • Retailer did not consider all media options. • Too many last-minute changes in the advertising copy. • Retailer took co-op dollars just because they were “free” and therefore presumably a good deal. • Used a medium that reached too many people not in the target market. 53 Question to Ponder • Should a retailer change its advertising campaign every year so that consumers do not get bored with it? 54 Does this Ad Discriminate? LO 3 Consider the following ad that may be very similar to one in your local paper this morning. For Sale A Spacious, Lovely House With a View. It has a beautiful view overlooking Buffalo Lake, spacious master bedroom, walk-in closets, and children’s rooms at the opposite end, complete with maid’s/nanny’s quarters. There’s even a family room/den downstairs. It’s perfect for newlyweds or for young couples, since it’s located in a peaceful residential community, within walking distance to private schools and the beach. 55 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 A LAWYER’S REWRITE OF … A DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE By the Representatives of the United States of America In General Congress Assembled Are you sure that everyone was there that day? 56 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 When in the Course of human of Events, it becomes necessary for one People to dissolve the Political Bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the Earth, the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the Separation. Where are these laws published? No copies are on file with the FTC 57 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 We hold these truths to be self-evident, and that all Men are created equal that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of -- warrant. This isHappiness an expressed Change copy to state it is not guaranteed. 58 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 We hold these truths to be self-evident, and that all Men are created equal that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness -That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that whenever anywe form What other rights are ready of Government becomes destructive of these to disclose later? 59 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 All is too general a term. Qualify Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient Causes; and accordingly all Experience hath shown, that Mankind are more disposed to suffer, which Evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the Forms to which they are accustomed. 60 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 Jefferson, aren’t you getting a little carried away? But when a Long Train of Abuses and Usurpations pursuing invariably the same Object, evinces a Design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their Right, it is their Duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future Security. 61 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 Will he sign a release? The History of the present King of Great Britain is a History of repeated injuries and Usurpations, all having in direct Object the Establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. 62 Lawyer’s Declaration of Independence LO 3 Aren’t you confusing “your opinions” with ‘facts?” To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid World 63 Management of Sales Promotions and Publicity LO 4 • Role of Sales Promotion • Types of Sales Promotion • Evaluating Sales Promotions • Publicity Management 64 Types of Sales Promotions LO 4 • Sole-Sponsored Sales Promotions are sales promotions that the expense to the retailer may or may not be shared with others. • Premiums are extra items offered to the customer when purchasing promoted products. • Contests and Sweepstakes are sales promotion techniques in which customers have a chance of winning a special prize based on entering a contest in which the entrant competes with others, or a sweepstakes in which all entrants have an equal chance of winning a prize. • Loyalty Programs are a from of sales promotion program in which buyers are rewarded with special rewards, which other shoppers are not offered, for purchasing often from the retailer. 65 Types of Sales Promotion LO 4: Exhibit 11.5 Sales Promotions Sole Sponsored Joint Sponsored Contest and Frequent Premiums Sweepstakes Buyer Programs Coupons In-Store Demonstrations Displays and Sampling 66 Types of Sales Promotions LO 4 • Jointly Sponsored Sales Promotions offers retailer the advantage of using “other people’s money” (OPM). • Coupons are a sales promotion toll in which the shopper is offered a price discount on a specific item if the retailer is presented with the appropriate coupon at time of purchase. • In-Store Displays are promotional fixtures of displays that seek to generate traffic, highlight individual items, and encourage impulse buying. • Demonstrations and Sampling are in-store presentations with the intent of reducing the consumer’s perceived risk of purchasing a product. 67 Types of Sales Promotions LO 4 • Jointly Sponsored Sales Promotions: • Best Buy coordinates promotional efforts with manufacturers to provide consumers price savings through rebates. • Pizza Hut’s premium offer of a 6 song custom made CD stimulated sales of its New Yorker Pizza when first introduced. 68 Eight Most Popular Types of Joint-Sponsored Sales Promotions LO 4 Coupons in retailer ads 90% Cents-off 90% In-store coupons 88% Refunds 85% Electronic, in-store displays 83% Samples of established products 78% Premiums 75% Sweepstakes 70% 69 Percentage of Rebates Redeemed by Dollar Value LO 4 Value Redeemed Greater than $50 88% $25.00 - 49.99 48% $15.00 - 24.99 18% $ 5.00 - 14.99 11% $ 2.00 - 4.99 5% Less than $2.00 1% 70 Evaluating Sales Promotions: What Sales Promotions Can and Cannot Achieve LO 4: Exhibit 11.6 Tasks That Sales Promotion Can Accomplish: Get consumers to try a new product Stimulate the sales of products Neutralize competitive advertising and sales promotions Encourage repeat usage by current users Reinforce advertising 71 Evaluating Sales Promotions: What Sales Promotions Can and Cannot Achieve LO 4: Exhibit 11.6 Tasks That Sales Promotion Cannot Achieve: Change the basic non-acceptance of an undesired product Compensate for a poorly trained sales force Give consumers a compelling reason to continue purchasing a product over the long run Permanently stop an established product’s declining sales trend 72 Publicity Management LO 4 When publicity is formally managed, it should be integrated with other elements of the promotion mix. Advantages of publicity: Objective Credible Appeals to a mass audience Disadvantages of publicity: Difficult to control and time 73 Additional Slides 74 Retail Promotion Mix LO 1 Sales Advertising Promotion Publicity Personal Selling 75 Promotional Objectives LO 2 Interdependence Short-term Objectives Long-term Objectives 76 Budgeting for the Campaign: Retailer-Only Campaigns LO 3 Affordable method Percentageof-sales method Task-andobjective method 77 Designing Creative Ads LO 3 Attract attention And retain attention Achieve the objective of the advertising strategy Avoid having any errors, especially legal ones 78 79