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Instructor Manual
Chapter 2
Roles of Advertising
Chapter Objectives
After studying this chapter, you will be able to:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Chapter Overview
This chapter discusses the basic goals of advertising and its role in contributing to the
bottom line through integrated marketing and other considerations. Because advertising
does not operate in a vacuum, its economic and social roles are reviewed, as well as the
different types of advertising, including national and local advertising, trade advertising,
and nonproduct advertising.
Lecture Outline
1.
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F.
Advertising as a Communications Tool.
1) Advertising rarely can accomplish tasks that are not related to communication.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.2 about here.*****
2) While derived from the overall marketing plan, advertising executes the communication
elements of the plan.
G.
A typical marketing plan lays out the overall thinking for product promotion.
1) Overall goal(s) of the plan.
a. These are often expressed in financial terms such as expected sales revenues at the end of
the first year or percentage increases over previous years.
2) Marketing objectives.
a. These should be clearly stated and measurable, such as a significant increase in market
share relative to specific competitors over a set time period.
3) Marketing strategy.
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a. This outlines the general course of action to achieve goals and objectives.
4) Situational analysis.
a. This states the product benefits as well as data concerning sales trends, competitive
environment, and industry forecasts.
5) Problems and opportunities.
a. These should include current and anticipated problems and opportunities facing the
brand.
6) Financial plan.
a. This outlines the expected profit or loss over various time frames, thus helping project
how much money is available for marketing.
7) Research.
a. The section on research outlines the data needed, where they can be obtained, their cost,
and time frame for availability.
H.
After the marketing plan, an advertising plan is developed to determine the
corresponding communication tasks.
1) Prospect identification.
a. This provides a detailed description of a companys prime prospects, including basic
demographic data and the social, cultural, and psychological characteristics useful for
predicting purchase behavior.
2) Consumer motivations.
a. Insights into motivations enhances understanding of the role advertising can play in
channeling consumer needs, wants, and aspirations into purchases of specific brands of
goods and services.
3) Advertising execution.
a. Overall creative themes and media plans are developed to effectively deliver messages to
set ones brand apart from its competitors.
4) The advertising budget and allocation.
a. This helps determine how much is spent on each area of advertising, including specific
media, creative executions.
2.
A.
The value of a particular marketing function is often expressed as return-oninvestment (ROI), that is, how many dollars are produced for every dollar spent.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.3 about here.*****
B.
The necessity of a good ROI means measuring advertising success on the basis of
effective communication rather than on audience exposure.
1) While measuring audience engagement and involvement addresses this need, no general
agreement exists on how to define and/or measure it.
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2) Advertising researchers realize that each communication outlet presents its own unique
challenges for measuring audience response.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.4 about here.*****
3) Some advertisers fear that an emphasis on short-term audience involvement runs the risk
of devaluing the long-term value of advertising.
3.
A.
B.
1)
a.
b.
2)
a.
b.
c.
3)
a.
Integrated Marketing
b.
c.
d.
Public relations uses what researchers call the two-step flow theory of communication,
that word-of-mouth endorsements by influential peers can be an important way of
changing others minds.
More recent techniques such as buzz, guerrilla marketing, and word-of-mouth marketing
are updated efforts to engage marketplace influencers.
While audiences see public relations as having more credibility than advertising, its
prevalence and effectiveness is ultimately controlled by other media.
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e.
4)
a.
b.
c.
C.
1)
2)
D.
1)
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Public relations tends to work best at the introductory stage of building brand awareness,
with advertising taking over to build long-term brand loyalty.
Advertising.
Advertising is a message paid for by an identified sponsor and delivered through a
medium of mass communication.
Advertising is biased and not neutral by definition.
It continues to undergo dramatic changes as its adapts to new communications
technologies.
Integrated marketing communications (IMC) labels the effort among agencies today
to more comprehensively coordinate and manage a greater variety of marketing
communications.
During the early development of modern marketing and advertising, different forms of
marketing communications were regarded as separate.
Using many elements of marketing communication instead of one, can more accurately
measure the campaigns ROI.
In the past 20 years, companies have moved to organize the total communication
program under the general heading of integrated marketing communication (IMC)
This emphasizes the effectiveness of the total marketing communication plan.
In coming years, IMC will become even more the norm in the marketing plans of
virtually every company.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.6 about here.*****
4.
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1)
B.
1)
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C.
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2)
a.
b.
c.
3)
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5)
In a landscape of fragmented media and diverse audiences, it is more and more difficult
to develop messages that appeal to specific target audiences without exposure to
unintended consumers.
Advertising and contemporary marketing should:
Monitor changes so that a company is aware of what is happening in society.
Create products and services compatible with changing values.
Design marketing messages that reflect and build on the values target markets and
individual customers hold.
Advertising also provides revenues to support a diverse and independent press system
protected from government and special interest control.
In carrying out these goals, advertising must be aware of its responsibility as a mirror and
monitor of society.
New technology and sophisticated research methods have only increased the importance
of issues such as consumer privacy and the potentially intrusive nature of advertising.
5.
A.
1)
B.
1)
a.
2)
a.
3)
a.
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a.
Advertising is often used to influence public opinion so that when the inevitable disputes
about local tax assessments, excessive noise, or zoning ordinances arise, the company is
viewed as a good neighbor.
6) Advertisers should always consider the entire range of publics when developing the
campaign.
6.
A.
1)
2)
B.
1)
a.
b.
Advertising should be designed to reach those consumers who are interested in the
particular product features and benefits that a brand offers.
The most successful brands are those with features and benefits unique within a product
category and, consequently, those that hold a differentiated position in the minds of
consumers.
It is advertisings job to turn product benefits into an attention-getting story that appeals
to prospective buyers.
Brand Name.
An established brand name that customers recognize and respect is one of the most
valued assets of a company.
While products are concrete objects, brands represent attitudes and feelings about
products.
Although high brand recognition is important for any product, it is especially critical for
product categories that have little inherent product differentiation.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.8 about here.*****
C.
Brand Extension
1) A brand extension is the use of an established brand to reach new markets.
2) If the scope of established brand positions is significantly enlarged, consumers may
question the values and benefits of the original brand.
3) However, because most successful brands reach a point of saturation among their core
consumers, some form of brand extension is the often the only way to expand markets.
4) Potential advantages of brand extension strategy include:
a. Saving money by not needing to build awareness for a new and unknown brand name,
b. Adding equity to an existing brand name if the extension is successful.
5) Possible disadvantages of a brand-extension strategy include:
a. Damaging a core brand in the minds of loyal consumers with a failed introduction,
b. Losing marketing focus on your existing brand and/or diluting marketing efforts and
budget across several brands
6) Whether introducing a new product or maintaining the vitality of a mature one, brand
identity is crucial to a products success
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D.
Fulfilling Perceived Needs.
1) Successful products are those that solve a consumer problem better and/or more
economically than an available alternative.
2) A perceived need means that advertisers must not focus on their produce as a physical
object but, rather, as the means of solving a problem.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.9 about here.*****
3) The more closely a brand is associated with a specific job, the more likely it will be the
first choice of consumers faced with a particular task.
4) Successful products are those that are perceived by consumers as being best for a task,
not necessarily those that are considered the winner according to some objective
standard.
E.
Assessing Needs.
1) Reliable research is a key ingredient in determining product success.
a. Companies constantly employ a host of research techniques to discover the most
appealing products, advertising and promotional messages.
b. The reason why is that product purchase decisions are a result of numerous factors.
2) Conjoint analysis considers the many individual elements that together determine
consumer preference.
a. It places a value on each element to see how consumers actually weigh considerations in
making purchases.
F.
Sales, Revenues, and Profit Potential.
1) Marketings contribution to profitability is achieved through a complex balance among
sales, market share, promotional expenditures, and cost efficiency.
a. Despite the contemporary demand for marketing accountability, there is no easy answer
to the equation.
b. For example, significant cuts in marketing and promotional outlays may contribute to
immediate profits, but doing so may also harm long-term success.
2) The cleverest advertisement or the most humorous, memorable television commercial is
totally worthless unless it contributes directly to company profitability.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.10 about here.*****
G.
1)
2)
3)
4)
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I.
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Many companies are beginning to identify and reward their best customers (i.e., most
profitable) while discouraging less-valuable buyers.
The emphasis on profit-based accountability in all areas of advertising and promotion
has created major changes in many areas of advertising.
Advertising agencies are being compensated on how their work contributes to a clients
bottom line, not whether they produce award-winning advertisements.
This move to more precisely measure the contributions of advertising has led to a
broader view of what advertising can and should accomplish.
Some advertisers focus as much on simply maintaining sales and market share as they do
on increasing sales.
Given the cost involved in finding new customers versus keeping present ones, the
overall contributions to profitability may actually be greater in the former case.
Product Timing.
Properly timing strategic decisions can be clarified by understanding it in terms of a
product life cycle.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.11 about here.*****
2) The typical life cycle of a brand progresses linearly through four distinct phases.
a. Introduction and growth phases:
(1) Businesses advertise to establish a beachhead against competition
and to gain a level of consumer awareness.
b. Mature and declining stages of development:
(1) Advertising strategies take longer perspectives and their goals are
likely to center on brand equity and a longer horizon for sales
development.
3) No matter how good a product is, it can rarely be forced on consumers before they are
ready to accept it.
4) Market timing may be a matter of doing something first rather than doing something
different.
5) Timing can be either strategic, involving long-term decisions by both customers and
marketers, or tactical, involving sales related to specific events or occasions.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.12 about here.*****
6) Finally, timing also is a major factor in the everyday function of advertising, such as in
the decisions made by agency media planners.
K.
Product Differentiation.
1) Product differentiation is the degree to which a target audience regards a product as
different from others in the same category.
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a.
b.
The difference may be the result of some tangible attribute of the physical product,.
But it also is often based on some intangible elements about the product including a
brand image created in part by advertising.
2) Without a strong brand identity built on meaningful differentiation, buyers tend to view
all brands in a category as interchangeable, and purchase decisions tend to be based on
price.
a. To the extent that price is the primary differentiating factor, profitability suffers as brands
offer deeper and deeper price cuts to maintain market share.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.13 about here.*****
3) One of the most important elements of differentiation is keeping an open mind about how
to achieve it.
a. Too often when companies search for product differentiation they concentrate on product
function to the exclusion of other possibilities.
4) Product differentiation is also a means of target marketing, because positioning a brand to
a specific market segment also means surrendering consumers who are looking for
features the brand doesnt emphasize.
5) Because much of the criticism of modern advertising is that it tries to make obscure and
inconsequential product variations important, advertisers have an obligation to promote
meaningful product differences.
L.
Price.
1) Pricing strategy is much more complicated than simply covering costs and providing a
reasonable profit.
2) Rather than viewing pricing strategy as solely a means of covering costs, it should also be
seen as an integral part of overall marketing strategy.
a. Price is most often dictated by favorable consumer perceptions of the value of a product
a perception that is created in part by advertising.
b. A primary function of advertising is to create, or enhance, a positive gap between the
price of a product and the value the average consumer assigns to the product.
c. The greater this value gap, the more insulated the product is from price competition.
3) A major part of positioning a product in the market and in the minds of consumers is
setting the price.
a. At least some segment of consumers in each product category equates price with value.
b. Price can help consumers gain a psychological benefit by the mere fact of paying more
for a product.
4) Price also defines who your competitors are.
5) New technology helps marketers be more flexible and precise in relating price to specific
market segments, seasonal selling, and particular items within a product line
a. The technique of yield management helps even out supply and demand.
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b.
c.
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It has been made more precise through the use of software programs that identify
consumer segments in terms of their sensitivity to price.
A variable pricing strategy offers each customer a different price at a different point in
time.
(1) It helps enhance a marketers ability to neither lose sales by
offering price-sensitive customers merchandise at too high a cost
nor lose profits by selling goods below what premium buyers
would be willing to pay.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.14 about here.*****
6) It is very difficult for an advertising creative plan to ignore the basic price/value
perception held by a target audience.
a. The pricing strategy for a brand determines to a significant degree the type of marketing
strategy that can be used and the success that advertising will have in promoting and
selling a specific brand.
7.
A.
B.
1)
a.
2)
a.
3)
4)
5)
a.
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C.
Many variables must be considered when a business is deciding what role advertising
will play.
8.
A.
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One of the most important aspects of marketing is the development of the marketing
channel.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.16 about here.*****
1) A well-organized channel is one in which both products and communication flow from
manufacturers to ultimate consumers.
2) It also creates efficiencies through specialization in the movement of goods from
producers, wholesalers, and retailers to ultimate consumers.
B.
Crucial to market-channel efficiency is effective communication, including
advertising.
1) Most of the advertising that we see every day is called consumer advertising because it is
directed to end-of-channel customers.
C.
Traditional channels remained unchanged over most of the twentieth century.
1) Each product and service developed certain distribution methods for reaching consumers
that were relatively consistent within an industry.
D.
The past decade, however, has seen many changes resulting from technological
innovations.
1) With the advent of the World Wide Web, travelers can now bypass travel agents and go
directly to airlines and hotels to make reservations.
2) Digital cameras are greatly impacting film processors.
3) The downloading of music is now significantly impacting the distribution and sale of
recording companies products.
4) The traditional marketing channel has largely been replaced by distribution and
marketing communication systems that are unique to each seller.
E.
One of the most fundamental changes has been the control of both marketing and
communication channels by the consumer.
1) Research studies underscore the importance of the Internet as a marketing
communications tool across a number of product categories and market segments.
F.
Marketing strategy not only determines the role of advertising and its budget but also
plays a major part in decisions concerning media choices.
1) The use of coupons will dictate the use of print media.
2) Product demonstrations will call for the use of television or the Internet.
3) Complex messages may require magazine media.
4) Local messages will employ newspaper media.
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G.
1)
H.
1)
a.
b.
2)
a.
3)
a.
4)
a.
b.
c.
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Although consumer advertising is the most familiar to us, it is only one category of
marketing communication necessary at any number of distribution levels.
Advertising must both communicate and carry out marketing goals.
Directness and Duration.
Marketers must continually assess:
the success of the directness of the intended communication effect, and
The anticipated time over which the effect is supposed to function.
Direct-action, short-term.
Designed to produce an immediate response in the form of a product purchase.
Direct-action, long-term.
Used with high-ticket items in which the purchase decision is the result of many factors
and the purchase cycle is relatively long.
Indirect sales tools.
Intended to affect sales only over the long term.
Promote general attributes of the manufacturer rather than specific product
characteristics.
Most institutional or public relations advertising falls in this category.
(1) The exception would be remedial public relations advertising
designed to overcome some immediate negative publicity.
9.
Advertising
to the
Consumer
*****NOTES:
Use
Chapter Objective #4 Here*****
A.
National advertising.
1) National advertising refers to advertising by the owner of a trademarked product (brand)
or service through different distributors or stores.
2) Despite differences, all national advertising has common characteristics:
a. It tends to be general in terms of product information.
(1) Because retailers often have varying policies and business
practices, information concerning price, retail availability, and
even service and installation is often omitted from national
advertising or mentioned only in general terms.
(2) Conversely, retail advertising often includes price information,
service and return policies, store locations, and hours of operation
information that national advertisers usually cannot provide.
b. However, the need to communicate more closely with targeted consumers has caused
national advertising to take on a more personalized tone during the past decade.
3) Geographic targeting began in the 1980s.
a. At first regional, it started reaching more narrowly defined segments on a market-bymarket basis.
4) Advances in computer technology are now allowing individual tailoring based upon
lifestyles and product usage.
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b.
The modern era of direct selling was ushered in with the publication of the Montgomery
Ward catalog in 1872.
2) Techniques and media of direct-response advertising have changed dramatically.
a. As advertisers have shifted dollars from traditional mass media to more targeted vehicles,
direct-response advertising has grown to more than $170 billion or almost half of all
advertising expenditures.
b. The largest sector is direct mail, which accounts for almost 1/3 of total spending.
c. Internet advertising is the fastest growing sector.
3) Advertisers in traditional media will increasingly adopt direct-response techniques.
10. Advertising to Business and Professions
A.
B.
1)
2)
3)
4)
C.
1)
2)
3)
4)
The average consumer does not see the large share of advertising directed to business,
industry, professions, and all stages of the marketing distribution channel.
Business-to-business advertising (B2B) is one of the fastest growing categories of
advertising, and it requires a different strategy from consumer advertising.
Personal selling, telemarketing and other forms of direct response, and the Internet
occupy a much higher share of expenditures directed to businesses.
B2B advertisements tend to be factual, efficiency- and profit-oriented, rather than the
emotional appeals seen in consumer ads.
Business-to-business messages are addressed not only to specific industries but also often
to particular job classifications within these industries.
Profit-oriented appeals are very common.
The buying process is different for B2B.
Purchase decisions made by companies frequently involve many people, including those
who do the actual buying, those who directly or indirectly influence this decision, and the
employees who will actually use the product or service.
Organizational and industrial products are often bought according to precise, technical
specifications that require significant knowledge about the product category on the part of
both buyers and sellers.
Impulse buying is rare (industrial buyers do not suddenly get an urge to splurge on
heavy machinery or silicon chips).
The dollar volume of purchases is often substantial, dwarfing most individual consumer
grocery bills or mortgage payments.
11. Categories of Business Advertising
A.
Trade Advertising.
1) Trade advertising is created by manufacturers and directed to middle components of the
marketing channelusually wholesalers and retailers.
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e.
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A.
Idea advertising.
1) Idea advertising is used to promote an idea or cause rather than to sell a product or
service.
2) Although it is not a new phenomenon, the number of public interest groups using
advertising and the sophistication of the communication techniques being employed is
new.
3) Idea advertising is often controversial.
a. Critics think advertising messages are too short and superficial to fully debate many of
the issues.
b. Proponents argue that it is the most practical means to reach mass audiences.
4) The increasing sophistication of medias ability to narrowly target audiences by ideology
will make this type of advertising more prevalent in the future.
B.
Service advertising.
1) Service advertising is that which promotes a service rather than a product.
2) America is increasingly becoming a service economy, with consumers seeking a wide
range of help from financial planning and advice to child care.
3) Similar to corporate advertising, providers of services need to build consumer awareness
over a prolonged period of time and develop distinct differentiation among competitors.
4) Some basic principles of service advertising include:
a. Feature tangibles. Adding a personal dimension through testimonials and stressing
service benefits.
b. Feature employees. Building trust with customers by demonstrating the quality of the
firms employees; an added benefit is improvement of employee morale.
c. Stress quality. Advertising messages should emphasize consistency and high levels of
competency.
13. Government Advertising
A.
Advertising has been used by governmental agencies for generations and labeled as
propaganda.
B.
The more recent growth in numbers of government services and programs has,
however, resulted in greater use of traditional advertising by government agencies.
C.
Traditional advertising techniques are being applied by an array of national agencies
such as the volunteer armed forces, consumer protection agencies, and environmental and
health initiatives.
*****NOTES: Use Exhibit 2.19 about here.*****
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D.
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State governmental agencies, too, are finding the use of advertising to advise the
citizenry on beneficial services related to savings plans for higher education.
Review Questions
1
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where, and if a particular product story will be carried. The elements of message
control and credibility most distinguish public relations and advertising.
5
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force greater integration and coordination of all aspects of the marketing function,
especially those involved in the communication process.
7
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strategy, companies must make sure that their brand position is important to
enough prospects that they will be able to sustain a profitable niche.
10 Discuss price strategy as a means of marketing strategy.
A major part of positioning a product in the market and in the minds of consumers
is setting the price. At least some segment of consumers in each product category
equates price with value; and, especially at the retail level, price plays an
important role in maintaining sales. Price also defines who your competitors are.
11 Compare and contrast business-to-business and consumer advertising in
terms of audiences, media, and promotional techniques.
Business-to-business (B2B) advertising is not seen by the average person because
it is aimed at retail stores, doctors, home builders, wholesalers, and others who
operate at various stages of the marketing channel. Business publications are a
primary tool of B2B marketing, but personal selling, telemarketing and other
forms of direct response, and the Internet occupy a much higher share of
expenditures directed to businesses compared to traditional media. Another major
difference between B2B and consumer advertising is the messages used in each.
B2B tends to be fact-oriented with a few of the emotional appeals found in
consumer advertising. B2B messages are addressed not only to specific industries
but also often to particular job classifications and they tend to be profit-oriented.
B2B advertising also has to consider major differences in the buying process
compared to consumer purchase behavior. Consumer purchases tend to be fairly
straightforward. In the B2B market, purchase decisions frequently involve many
people, including those who do the actual buying, those who directly or indirectly
influence this decision, and the employees who will actually use the product or
service. In addition, B2B products are often bought according to precise, technical
specifications that require significant knowledge about the product category on
the part of both buyers and sellers. Impulse buying is rare and the dollar volume
of purchases is often substantial.
Instructor Manual
approach, given the product or service (such as a product whose benefit is to give
pleasure, but whose advertising stresses utilitarian benefits)?
2. (*) Find three current articles about measuring advertising ROI. In a short memo to
your teacher, outline the current issues and challenges in this area.
3. (**) Select samples of advertisements that address the distribution channel, employees,
stockholders, the community at large. Describe the techniques they use to address each.
4. (**) Select samples of two advertisements for the same product category and describe
how each company has differentiated its product clearly from the competition.
5. (***) Review examples of business, industry, trade, and professional publications.
Select examples of advertisements for providers of equipment or office equipment
targeted to: 1) a corporate manufacturer, 2) a retailer, and 3) a professional. Discuss the
rationale and selling platform used in each case.
6. (***) To illustrate integrated marketing communication select a company and find
examples of how it uses advertising in conjunction with the other parts of the
communication component of the marketing mix. Analyze these examples and explain to
the class how they illustrate an integrated marketing communication strategy.
Internet Exercises
1. (**) Search various Internet commercial and noncommercial websites. Find, list, and
describe examples of Internet forms of direct-response advertising. Given the apparent
intended target market of each website you use, assess the effectiveness of the chosen
form of direct-response advertising. Rank the various forms you find in terms of likely
effectiveness; justify your ranking.
2. (**) Using an Internet search engine (Google, Yahoo, AltaVista, etc.), find examples of
Web sites which are designed to serve each of the three categories of business advertising
discussed in the text: 1) trade advertising; 2) industrial advertising; and 3) professional
advertising. Describe the advertising objective of each site and briefly describe the
services offered through each Web site. Attach a copy of the home page for each of the
three categories.
3. (***) Analyze the Proctor & Gamble (P&G) Web site (www.pg.com) in terms of how
P&G uses its Web site to advertise to its diverse publics. What publics does P&G try to
reach through its Web site? What specific content or functionality is offered to each
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public? What messages are sent to each public and what are their purposes? Do you think
that P&G needs to consider the effect of their messages on any publics that the messages
are not primarily intended for? Deliver your findings to the class through an oral
presentation. Illustrate your presentation with a demonstration of the P&G Web site.
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