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Showing posts with label competitive parity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label competitive parity. Show all posts

Sunday, February 2, 2014

PROMOTION MIX


In our daily life we all are exposed to various tools of promotion aiming at communicating one thing or the other to us. To illustrate, while at home welcome across advertisements when reading a newspaper, watching TV, listening to radio or even examining the water, electricity or telephone, bills. On our way to the office similar communications face us on bus panels, roadside hoardings, neon sighs, posters and banners etc. And, while at a retail shop these take the shape of traffic builders, product displays, streamers, hangers, bins etc., all sharing information relating to a specific product of a company.

Listed above are just a few types of the various promotion tools available to a marketer. Before proceeding further, let us take a look at the definitions of the four major methods of promotion. These are: advertising, personal selling, sales promotion and publicity. The committee on Definitions of the American Marketing Association defined these components as under:

Advertising: Any paid form of non-personal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods, or services by an identified sponsor. It includes the use of such media as magazines, newspapers, outdoor posters, direct mail novelties, radio, television, bus posters, catalogues, directories, programmes, circulars and very recently online ads and social media ads.

Personal selling: Oral presentation in a conversation with one or more prospective purchasers for the purpose of making sales.

Sales promotion: Those marketing activities-other than personal selling, advertising, and publicity-that stimulate consumer purchasing and dealer effectiveness such as displays, shows and exhibitions, demonstrations, coupons, contests, and other non-routine selling efforts. These are usually short-term activities.

Publicity: Non-personal stimulation of demand for a product, service or business unit by generating commercially significant news about it in published media or obtaining favourable presentation of it on radio, television or stage. Unlike advertising, this form of promotion is not paid for by the sponsor 

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