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Four Ps

Four Ps

Marketing Mix
Product Price Promotion Place

Marketing Mix
The concept is simple. Think about another common mix - a cake mix. All cakes contain eggs, milk, flour, and sugar. However, you can alter the final cake by altering the amounts of mix elements contained in it. So for a sweet cake add more sugar!

Marketing Mix
It is the same with the marketing mix. The offer you make to your customer can be altered by varying the mix elements. So for a high profile brand, increase the focus on promotion and desensitize the weight given to price.

Another way to think about the marketing mix is to use the image of an artist's palette.

Marketing Mix
The marketer mixes the prime colours (mix elements) in different quantities to deliver a particular final colour. Every hand painted picture is original in some way, as is every marketing mix.

Target Market is the key


Competition

Designing the right marketing mix


The most creative & challenging step in marketing is designing the right marketing mix The marketing mix is the specific collection of actions & associated instruments employed by an organisation to stimulate acceptance of its ideas, products & services

Total Offer to the Customer


First, the firm chooses the product to meet the identified need of the target segment Second, the right distribution channel is used to make the product available Third, the firm undertakes eye catching promotion Fourth, the price platform is acceptable to the customer & firm

4Ps & 4Cs


Product- Customer /Consumer Price- Customer cost Place- Convenience Promotion- Communication

4Ps & 4Cs


Four Cs The Four Ps is also being replaced by the Four Cs model, consisting of consumer, cost, convenience, and communication. The Four Cs model is more consumeroriented and fits better in the movement from mass marketing to niche marketing.

Product- Consumer
The product part of the Four Ps model is replaced by consumer or consumer models, shifting the focus to satisfying the consumer.

Price- Cost
Pricing is replaced by cost, reflecting the reality of the total cost of ownership.

Place- Convenience
Placement is replaced by the convenience function. With the rise of internet and hybrid models of purchasing, place is no longer as relevant as before. Convenience takes into account the ease to buy a product, find a product, find information about a product, and several other considerations.

Promotion- Communication
Finally, the promotions feature is replaced by communication. Communications represents a broader focus than simply promotions. Communications can include advertising, public relations, personal selling, viral advertising, and any form of communication between the firm and the consumer.

Extended Marketing Mix


There have been attempts to develop an 'extended marketing mix' to better accommodate specific aspects of marketing. For example, in the 1970s, Nickels and Jolson suggested the inclusion of packaging. In the 1980s Kotler proposed public opinion and political power

Booms & Bithner


Booms and Bitner included three additional 'Ps' to accommodate trends towards a service or knowledge based economy: People all people who directly or indirectly influence the perceived value of the product or service, including knowledge workers, employees, management and consumers.

Process procedures, mechanisms and flow of activities which lead to an exchange of value.
Physical evidence the direct sensory experience of a product or service that allows a customer to measure whether he or she has received value. Examples might include the way a customer is treated by a staff member, or the length of time a customer has to wait, or a cover letter from an insurance company, or the environment in which a product or service is delivered

Extended- Marketing Mix

Extended Marketing Mix


Booms and Bitner included three additional 'Ps' to accommodate trends towards a service or knowledge based economy: People Process Physical Evidence

Extended Marketing Mix

People
People all people who directly or indirectly influence the perceived value of the product or service, including knowledge workers, employees, management and consumers.

Process
Process procedures, mechanisms and flow of activities which lead to an exchange of value.

Physical Evidence
The direct sensory experience of a product or service that allows a customer to measure whether he has received value. Examples might include the way a customer is treated by a staff member, or the length of time a customer has to wait, or a cover letter from an insurance company, or the environment in which a product or service is delivered.

Physical Evidence
Physical evidence is the material part of a service. Strictly speaking there are no physical attributes to a service, so a consumer tends to rely on material cues.

Physical evidence
There are many examples of physical evidence, including some of the following: Packaging. Internet/web pages. Paperwork (such as invoices, tickets and despatch notes). Brochures.

Physical Evidence
Furnishings. Signage (such as those on aircraft and vehicles). Uniforms. Business cards. The building itself (such as prestigious offices or scenic headquarters).

7Ps & 7Cs


The 7 Ps Organisation Facing Product = Price = Place = Promotion = People = Cost Convenience Communication Caring The 7 Cs Customer Facing Customer/ Consumer

Processes =
Physical Evidence =

Co-ordinated
Confirmation

Fundamental Actions
The term 'marketing mix' however, does not imply that the 4P elements represent options. They are not trade-offs but are fundamental marketing issues that always need to be addressed. They are the fundamental actions that marketing requires whether determined explicitly or by default.

Product
Product: A product, service or idea is that which satisfies the needs & wants of the customers

Product- (Learn)
A tangible object or an intangible service that is mass produced or manufactured on a large scale with a specific volume of units. Intangible products are often service based like the tourism industry & the hotel industry or codes-based products like cell phone load and credits.

Product
Typical examples of a mass produced tangible object are the motor car and the disposable razor. A less obvious but everpresent mass produced service is a computer operating system.

Product
Cars

Cars- Reva
Reva

Car- Maruti 800


Maruti

Product
Variety Quality Design Features Brand Name Packaging Service

Product Variety
Even today, manufacturers of products which are built to customer order, for example, cars, aeroplanes and medical equipment, offer such a large range of combinations of product features that millions of variants of a single product are possible. Commercially available software systems support the automation of many aspects of the engineering process; product databases enable the description of single products and engineering applications can use these product descriptions to carry out their tasks.

Product Quality
A product or process that is reliable, and that performs its intended function is said to be a quality product. Quality in business, has an interpretation as the non-inferiority or superiority of something. Quality is a perceptual, conditional and somewhat subjective attribute and may be understood differently by different people. Consumers may focus on the specification quality of a product/service, or how it compares to competitors in the marketplace.

Product design
Product design can be defined as the idea generation, concept development, testing and manufacturing or implementation of a physical object or service

Brand Name
The brand name is often used interchangeably within "brand", although it is more correctly used to specifically denote written or spoken linguistic elements of any product. In this context a "brand name" constitutes a type of trademark, if the brand name exclusively identifies the brand owner as the commercial source of products or services

Product
Instruments that aim at satisfaction of the prospective exchange partys needs Examples: Product characteristics, options, assortments, packaging, guarantees, quality, features, style, brand name, size & packaging, services, warranties/guarantees, returns & replacements

Product
Titan introduces quartz watches 24 Hour banking & ATMs by banks Tetra pack cartons for milk, juices Indoor coolers 7 year warranty on refrigerators- Allwyn

Product & Packaging

FMCG

Product
Consumer durable products

Products
Increase in mobile services in India

Product- Durable
Washing machines

Product
Camera

Product

Products
Latest Gadgets

New generation products


Ipod, & walkman mobile

Services
Courier Aviation

Services
Despatch

Modern gadgets
ipod

Aviation

Place
Place represents the location where a product can be purchased. It is often referred to as the distribution channel. It can include any physical store as well as virtual stores on the Internet.

Place
Physical distribution are activities involved in transporting products from the producer to the consumer: Mode of transport Warehousing & Storage Order processing Inventory control

Place
Channels of distribution are the routes through which the ownership of goods flow on its way from the producer to the customer Distributor Super-stockist Wholesalers Retailers

Place
Instruments that determine the intensity & manner in which goods or services will be made available Types of channels, density of distribution, trade-relation mix, merchandising advise

Place
Channels Coverage Locations Inventory Transportation Logistics

Duty Free Stores - Airports

Hypermart-Store Signage's

Availability- Place
Large Format stores

Large Format Stores


Lifestyle Westside Shoppers Stop Pantaloons Big Bazaar

Retail brands
Stores

Nokia Store

Place
Global Players in India

Place
Markets

Place
Stores

Modern Grocery Store

Local stores
Local kirana stores

Price
The price is the amount a customer pays for the product. It is determined by a number of factors including market share, competition, material costs, product identity and the customer's perceived value of the product. The business may increase or decrease the price of product if other stores have the same product.

Price
List Price Discounts Allowances Payment Period Credit Terms

List Price
In retail, price regularly quoted to customers before applying discounts. List prices are usually the prices printed on dealer lists, invoices, price tags, catalogs, or dealer purchase orders.

Price Lists

Discounts & Allowances


Discounting is a financial mechanism in which a debtor obtains the right to delay payments to a creditor, for a defined period of time, in exchange for a charge or fee Discounts and allowances are reductions to a basic price of goods or services.

Payment Period & Credit Terms


The stipulation by a business as to when it should be paid for goods or services supplied, for example, cash with order, payment on delivery, or within a particular number of days of the invoice date

Price
Bills

Price
Price is the amount a consumer pays in exchange for the product or service. Marketers must consider the following in setting prices:

Price
Target segment- How much the target segment is willing to pay at different price levels- price elasticity of demand Cost- How much it costs the firm to produce & market the product Competition- Prices of competitors Society & Law- Within legal framework

Price elasticity of demand-1


Elasticity is a measure of responsiveness. Two words are important here. The word "measure" means that elasticity results are reported as numbers, or elasticity coefficients. The word "responsiveness" means that there is a stimulus-reaction involved. Some change or stimulus causes people to react by changing their behavior, and elasticity measures the extent to which people react.

Price elasticity of demand-2


The most common elasticity measurement is that of price elasticity of demand. It measures how much consumers respond in their buying decisions to a change in price. The basic formula used to determine price elasticity is e= (percentage change in quantity) / (percentage change in price). (Read that as elasticity is the percentage change in quantity divided by the percentage change in price.)

Price
Marketers have to determine prices to consumers & channel partners Prices across models & geographic regions have to be established Policies on discounts have to be framed These decisions are vital to enhance sales volumes

Innovative Discounts
Discount sales in shopping malls Off season sales Closing down sales Festival sales Credit points Exchange offers mobiles, cookers, cars

Festive Sales
Christmas & Diwali Sales

Innovative discounts
Discounts

End of season sale

Special Sales
Sales

Gold Sale- Impact


Festive season revives gold demand, premiums steady

Report- Gold Sales


Wednesday August 12, 01:40 PM Festive season revives gold demand, premiums steady SINGAPORE/MUMBAI (Reuters) - Gold trading picked up in India, the world's largest consumer, as jewellers took advantage of a price drop to replenish stocks during the festive season, while premiums for kilobars were mostly steady in Asia in the past week.

Discount Rush

Promotion
Promotion activities are meant to communicate & persuade the target market to buy the companys products This is done by:-

Promotion
Advertising Personal selling Sales promotion- POS Public Relations Word of mouth Viral advertising

Promotion
Promotion represents all of the communications that a marketer may use in the marketplace. Promotion has five distinct elements advertising, personal selling, public relations, word of mouth and point of sale. A certain amount of crossover occurs when promotion uses the five principal elements together Advertising covers any communication that is paid for, from and cinema commercials, radio and Internet adverts through print media and billboards.

ATL & BTL


Above the line (ATL) is an advertising technique using mass media to promote brands. Major above-the-line techniques include TV and radio advertising, print advertising and internet banner ads. This type of communication is conventional in nature and is considered impersonal to customers. The ATL strategy makes use of current traditional media: television, newspapers, magazines, radio, outdoor, and internet. It differs from BTL (Below the line), that believes in unconventional brand-building strategies, such as direct mail.

BTL- Below the line


The terms "below the line" promotion or communications, refers to forms of nonmedia communication, even non-media advertising. Below the line promotions are becoming increasingly important within the communications mix of many companies, not only those involved in FMCG products, but also for industrial products.

ATL & BTL


Whats the difference between Above the line and below the line advertising? Below the line (BTL) is an advertising technique. It uses less conventional methods than the usual specific channels of advertising to promote products, services, etc. than ATL (Above the line) strategy. These may include activities such as direct mail, public relations and sales promotion for which a fee is agreed upon and charged up front.

Below the Line


Below the line advertising typically focuses on direct means of communication, most commonly direct mail and e-mail, often using highly targeted lists of names to maximize response rates The term "Below the Line" is rapidly going out of fashion in advertising circles as agencies and clients switch to an 'Integrated Communication Approach.' BTL is a common technique used for touch and feel products. Those consumer items where the customer will rely on immediate information than previously researched items. BTL techniques ensures recall of the brand while at the same time highlighting the features of the product.

Integrated Communication Approach


Definition: A management concept that is designed to make all aspects of marketing communication such as advertising, sales promotion, public relations, and direct marketing work together as a unified force, rather than permitting each to work in isolation.

Through the line-TTL


Through the line" refers to an advertising strategy involving both above and below the line communications in which one form of advertising points the target to another form of advertising thereby crossing the "line". An example would be a TV commercial that says 'come into the store to sample XYZ product'. In this example, the TV commercial is a form of "above the line" advertising and once in the store, the target customer is presented with "below the line" promotional material such as store banners, competition entry forms, etc

Personal selling
Personal Selling: Face to face personal communication- Eureka Forbes In person selling, tele-marketing Advertising- Mass communication efforts through media Sales Promotion- Communication through contests, OOH, trade shows, free samples, yellow pages, call helplines

Personal Selling
Personal Selling

Discount coupons
Discount coupons

Promotion-2
Publicity- Communicating with an audience by personal or non-personal media that are not paid for delivering the message Print media news, broadcast media newsUTI,PTI, Reuters, annual reports, speeches by employees

Branding
Signages

Known companies
Recognizable companies

Nokia
Nokia

Messages
Fly High

Examples-Lux Same theme over the years

Chips
Competition

Celebrity endorsement
Using famous people to attract target segment

ICICI Bank- Print Ad

Brand Ambassador Star Power

TV Channels

TV Channels

TV Channels
TVC

TV Channels

TV Channels

More than just news


Entertaining information to add spice

First thing in the morning

Print Media
Print- Newspapers & Magazines

Newspapers

Print Media
Newspapers & Magazines

Read everywhere
Omnipresent

Newspapers you could read


Economic Times Business Standard Mint Hindu Businessline Business News in daily newspapers The Hindu

Radio
Growing radio stations in India

Radio Stations
Numerous- FM

Radio channels
Meow targets at women

Bajaate Raho- Red FM

Radio on the internet


On the internet

Videos can be uploaded


Companies upload their corporate films www.youtube.com

Sales Staff & PR


Sales staff often plays an important role in word of mouth and Public Relations

Public Relations
Public relations are where the communication is not directly paid for and includes press releases, sponsorship deals, exhibitions, conferences, seminars or trade fairs and events. Word of mouth is any apparently informal communication about the product by ordinary individuals, satisfied customers or people specifically engaged to create word of mouth momentum.

Press Release
Press Release

Public Relations
Press Conferences

Media Entertainment

PR Material
Press kit to be given to press with all info.

Press Conference
Spokesperson of the company talks to the press

Client Meetings
Word of mouth publicity

Word of mouth publicity


Word of mouth is a reference to the passing of information from person to person. Originally the term referred specifically to oral communication but now includes any type of human communication, such as face to face, telephone, email, and text messaging

Word of mouth publicity


Salespersons

Word of mouth publicity


At meetings

Competitors
Responding to competitor activity & messages You may have seen similar activity in cola ad wars

Reports in media
Cola war shifts to a new turf The famous cola wars have found a new battleground the Indian fields. The worlds largest beverage company CocaCola, like its rival PepsiCo, is finalising plans for sourcing fruit from India for its juice brands.

OOH
Cola vans act as OOH

OOH
Pepsi van

OOH
Cola signages

Vending Machines
Vending machine- Note both brands

Recognizable logos
Coke vs Pepsi

Sales Promotion
Yeh Dil Maange More!!!

Point of Sales
Point of sales (POS) or checkout refers to both a checkout counter in a shop, and the location where a transaction occurs

POS Display

Cola Ads-Promotion
Cola drinks- Thums Up, Coca Cola

Vodafone vs Airtel

Airtel

Telecom Ad- Messages


Airtel- Now Airtel removes distances across India. Vodafone- Happy to Help Spice- Faltoo callers ki No Entry

Vodafone vs Airtel Ads

Signages
Celebrity endorsement

Reliance Telecom
Reliance

Reliance Mobile- Hritik

Reliance Mobile
Hritik Roshan

What an idea, Sirji


Walk when you talk

OOH- Idea Cellular

Idea Cellular
IDEAs ad campaigns based on the theme of Democracy; Championing a world without caste; Championing a world in which no one suffers from the disability to communicate; and Education for All, have been a huge success amongst all categories of audience.

Effectiveness of Campaign
The testimony of the success of the campaign is reflected from the rapid growth of IDEAs subscriber base in the country. The Aditya Birla Group company has grown to become the 3rd largest private GSM operator with over 43 million subscribers across 16 service areas, nationally.

Bus shelters
Same message across all media

Outdoor
Hoarding/Billboard

OOH
Signages & Gates

Brands using OOH


Amul

Mobile truck- OOH


Outdoor trucks with billboard

Trade Shows & Events


Trade Shows Events

Wall paintings- Shutters

Websites

Airline Ad Wars
Marketers should be ready to face communication challenges Jet Airways- Weve Changed Kingfisher- We made them change Go Air- Weve not changed; we are still the smartest way to fly

Ad wars
In Mumbai- Same location on Nariman Point

Viral Marketing- Word of mouth


Viral marketing depends on a high passalong rate from person to person. If a large percentage of recipients forward something to a large number of friends, the overall growth snowballs very quickly. If the pass-along numbers get too low, the overall growth quickly fizzles.

Viral Marketing
Word of mouth

Word of Mouth Publicity

On the internet
On the Internet, viral marketing is any marketing technique that induces Web sites or users to pass on a marketing message to other sites or users, creating a potentially exponential growth in the message's visibility and effect.

Hotmail- Excellent Viral Marketing


Hotmail--One example of successful viral marketing is Hotmail, a company, now owned by Microsoft, that promotes its service and its own advertisers' messages in every user's e-mail notes.

www.hotmail.com

Hotmail- Viral Marketing


In 1996, Hotmail was a particularly unique email service in that it was free, could be accessed anywhere, and would allow the user to have multiple accounts. One of the interesting things Hotmail did was it would attach the message "Get your free email at Hotmail" at the bottom of every email sent by a Hotmail user. Once the receiving user clicked on the word "Hotmail" they were taken to Hotmail's homepage where the free email service was further explained. The plan, original at the time, worked. By 1998, Hotmail had accumulated 12 million subscribers. Hotmail eventually sold to Microsoft for a cool $400 million.

Cadburys in UK
Cadbury's Dairy Milk 2007 Gorilla advertising campaign was heavily popularised on YouTube and Facebook.

Gorilla
Gorilla is a British advertising campaign launched by Cadbury Schweppes in 2007 to promote Cadbury Dairy Milk-brand chocolate. The 90-second television and cinema advertisement, which formed the centrepiece of the 6.2 million campaign, was created and directed by Juan Cabral and starred actor Garon Michael. The campaign itself, which comprised appearances on billboards, print newspapers and magazines, television and cinema spots, event sponsorships and an internet presence, was handled by advertising agency Fallon London, with the online segment contracted out to Hyper.

Gorilla Ad Campaign
Gorilla Campaign

Definition- Viral Marketing


The buzzwords viral marketing and viral advertising refer to marketing techniques that use pre-existing social networks to produce increases in brand awareness or to achieve other marketing objectives (such as product sales) through self-replicating viral processes, analogous to the spread of pathological and computer viruses. It can be word-of-mouth delivered or enhanced by the network effects of the Internet. Viral promotions may take the form of video clips, interactive Flash games, advergames, ebooks, brandable software, images, or even text messages. The basic form of viral marketing is not infinitely sustainable.

Going Viral
Funny Helpful & Unique Controversial Amazing & Spectacular Schematic

Word of Mouth
Word of Mouth

Viral Marketing- Internet


Social Networking sites

Close to 35 million internet users in India


According to Internet market research firm comScore Inc. India had 34.6 million Internet users (who access the Web from their homes/offices) in June, of which at least 65%, or 22.61 million, accessed social networking sites. These figures have meant that people have kept launching new social sites in India fuelled by the hype but success is still far for them.

T-Shirts
T-Shirts with company & Logo message

Inflated Balloons

Scooter covers

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