The advent of 21st century has marked a sharp change in
almost all fields of life, including business strategies. The old strategies,
beliefs and tactics of marketing and selling a product are no longer valid in
today’s world. New techniques and technologies have emerged on the surface of
the business arena and have become eminent for effective marketing strategies.
In the following paragraphs, we will be highlighting one of these strategies
that is Integrated Marketing Communications which is currently in practice by
all big multinationals and the role it is playing in enhancing business
approach.
Any organization that wants to exchange
its products or services in the marketplace successfully should have a
strategic marketing plan to guide the allocation of its resources. A strategic
marketing plan usually evolves from an organization’s overall corporate
strategy and serves as a guide for specific marketing programs and policies.
Competitive Analysis
In developing the firm’s marketing
strategies and plans for its products and services, the manager must carefully analyse
the competition to be faced in the marketplace. For example, recently the U.S.
market has seen significant growth in the high-end luxury market, with more
consumers spending more of their money on luxury goods than ever before. High-end
products from Coach, Tiffany’s, and Ralph Lauren are all benefiting from this change
in consumer spending habits. Interestingly, it is not just the wealthy that are
purchasing these very expensive products, but the middle class is doing so as well.
Leading marketers apply labels such as the “massification of luxury,” “luxflation,”
or the “new luxury” segments
Target Market Selection
After evaluating the opportunities
presented by various market segments, including a detailed competitive
analysis, the company may select one, or more, as a target market. This target market
becomes the focus of the firm’s marketing effort, and goals and objectives are
set according to where the company wants to be and what it hopes to accomplish in
this market. Marketers rarely go after the entire market with one product, brand,
or service offering. Rather, they pursue a number of different strategies, breaking
the market into segments and targeting one or more of these segments or marketing
and promotional efforts. This means different objectives may be established, different
budgets may be used, and the promotional-mix strategies may vary, depending on
the market approach used.
IMC is defined as customer centric, data
driven method of communicating with the customers. IMC is the coordination and
integration of all marketing communication tools,
avenues, functions and sources within a company into a seamless program that
maximizes the impact on consumers and other end users at a minimal cost. Integrated Marketing Communications is a simple
concept. It ensures that all forms of communications and messages are
carefully linked together.
All elements of marketing mix must be
consistent with the strategic plan that will produce an integrated marketing
communications program. This chapter discusses how to influence the marketing
strategies of promotion activities and how the promotion decision should be
coordinated with other marketing mix elements. This chapter also discusses the
role of advertising and other promotional elements in an integrated marketing
program, a decision to be taken on each element of the marketing mix and find
out how decisions that affect and interact with a promotional strategy, the
concept of target marketing in integrated marketing communications program; the
role of market segmentation and its application on integrated marketing
communications programs as well; the use of positioning strategies.
We use the model below as a framework
for analysing how promotion fits into an organization’s marketing strategy and
programs. This model consists of four major components: the organization’s
marketing strategy and analysis, the target marketing process, the marketing planning
program development (which includes the promotional mix), and the target market.

Marketing Strategy and Analysis

Opportunity Analysis
Market opportunities are areas where
there are favourable demand trends, where the company believes customer needs
and opportunities are not being satisfied, and where it can compete
effectively. Athletic-shoe companies such as Nike,
Reebok, and others see the shoe market as an opportunity to broaden their
customer base both domestically and internationally.
Competitive Analysis

Target Market Selection

The Target Marketing Process
Because few, if any, products can
satisfy the needs of all consumers, companies often develop different marketing
strategies to satisfy different consumer needs. The process by which marketers
do this is referred to as target marketing and involves four basic steps:
identifying markets with unfulfilled needs, segmenting the market, targeting
specific segments, and positioning one’s product or service through marketing strategies.
Identifying
Markets
Target market identification isolates
consumers with similar lifestyles, needs, and the like, and increases our
knowledge of their specific requirements. The more marketers can establish this
common ground with consumers, the more effective they will be in addressing
these requirements in their communications programs and informing and/or persuading
potential consumers that the product or service offering will meet their needs.
Market
Segmentation
The segmentation process involves five
distinct steps:
- Finding ways to group consumers according to their needs
- Finding ways to group the marketing actions—usually the products offered
- Developing a market-product grid to relate the market segments to the firm’s products or actions
- Selecting the target segments toward which the firm directs its marketing actions
- Taking marketing actions to reach target segments
Segmentation can be done on the basis
of:
- Geographic location
- Demographic attributes
- Psychographic attributes
- Behavioural attributes
Selecting
a target market
The next objective is to select the
segment of the consumers which you want to target. Three market coverage alternatives
are available. Undifferentiated marketing involves ignoring segment differences
and offering just one product or service to the entire market. Differentiated
marketing involves marketing in a number of segments, developing separate
marketing strategies for each. Concentrated marketing is used when the firm
selects one segment and attempts to capture a large share of this market.
Market
Positioning
Positioning has been defined as “the
art and science of fitting the product or service to one or more segments of
the broad market in such a way as to set it meaningfully apart from
competition.” Positioning strategies generally focus on either the consumer or
the competition.
Developing a Positioning Strategy: To
create a position for a product or service, managers must ask themselves six
basic questions:
- What position, if any, do we already have in the prospect’s mind?
- What position do we want to own?
- What companies must be outgunned if we are to establish that position?
- Do we have enough marketing money to occupy and hold the position?
- Do we have the guts to stick with one consistent positioning strategy?
- Does our creative approach match our positioning strategy?
Developing the marketing planning
program
The development of the marketing
strategy and selection of a target market(s) tell the marketing department
which customers to focus on and what needs to attempt to satisfy. The next stage
of the marketing process involves combining the various elements of the
marketing mix into a cohesive, effective marketing program. Each marketing-mix
element is multidimensional and includes a number of decision areas. Likewise, each
must consider and contribute to the overall IMC program.
Product
decisions
An organization exists because it has
some product, service, or idea to offer consumers, generally in exchange for
money. This offering may come in the form of a physical product (such as a soft
drink, pair of jeans, or car), a service (banking, airlines, or legal
assistance), a cause (United Way, March of Dimes), or even a person (a
political candidate). The product is anything that can be marketed and that,
when used or supported, gives satisfaction to the individual. The term product
symbolism refers to what a product or brand means to consumers and what they
experience in purchasing and using it.

Price
Decisions
The price variable refers to what the
consumer must give up to purchase a product or service. While price is
discussed in terms of the dollar amount exchanged for an item, the cost of a
product to the consumer includes time, mental activity, and behavioural effort.
From an IMC perspective, the price must be consistent with the perceptions of
the product, as well as the communications strategy. Higher prices, of course,
will communicate a higher product quality, while lower prices reflect bargain or
“value” perceptions.
Distribution
Channel Decisions
One of a marketer’s most important marketing
decisions involves the way it makes its products and services available for
purchase. A firm can have an excellent product at a great price, but it will be
of little value unless it is available where the customer wants it, when the
customer wants it, and with the proper support and service. Channel decisions
involve selecting, managing, and motivating intermediaries such as wholesalers,
distributors, brokers, and retailers that help a firm make a product or service
available to customers. The distribution strategy should also take into
consideration the communication objectives and the impact that the channel
strategy will have on the IMC program.
Developing
Promotional Strategies: Push or Pull?
Promotion to the trade includes all the
elements of the promotional mix. Company sales representatives call on
resellers to explain the product, discuss the firm’s plans for building demand
among ultimate consumers, and describe special programs being offered to the
trade, such as introductory discounts, promotional allowances, and cooperative ad
programs. The company may use trade advertising to interest wholesalers and
retailers and motivate them to purchase its products for resale to their
customers. Trade advertising usually appears in publications that serve the
particular industry.
A push strategy tries to convince
resellers they can make a profit on a manufacturer’s product and to encourage
them to order the merchandise and push it through to their customers. Sometimes
manufacturers face resistance from channel members who do not want to take on
an additional product line or brand. In these cases, companies may turn to a
promotional pull strategy, spending money on advertising and sales promotion efforts
directed toward the ultimate consumer. The goal of a pull strategy is to create
demand among consumers and encourage them to request the product from the retailer.
Seeing the consumer demand, retailers will order the product from wholesalers which
in turn will request it from the manufacturer. Thus, stimulating demand at the
end-user level pulls the product through the channels of distribution.
Role of Advertising and Promotion
Marketers use the various
promotional-mix elements—advertising, sales promotion, direct marketing, publicity/public
relations, and personal selling—to inform consumers about their products, their
prices, and places where the products are available. Each promotional mix variable
helps marketers achieve their promotional objectives, and all variables must work
together to achieve an integrated marketing communications program. The
development and implementation of an IMC program is based on a strong
foundation that includes market analysis, target marketing and positioning, and coordination of the
various marketing-mix elements.