Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e
- Promotion −
Introduction to Integrated
Marketing
Communications
Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002
418 Chapter 14
- State Bank 19. myWedding.com
Questions and Problems
- Briefly explain the nature of the three basic promo-
tion methods available to a marketing manager.
What are the main strengths and limitations of
each? - In your own words, discuss the integrated marketing
communications concept. Explain what its emphasis
on “consistent” and “complete” messages implies
with respect to promotion blends. - Relate the three basic promotion objectives to the
four jobs (AIDA) of promotion using a specific
example. - Discuss the communication process in relation to a
producer’s promotion of an accessory product—say,
a new electronic security system businesses use to
limit access to areas where they store confidential
records. - If a company wants its promotion to appeal to a new
group of target customers in a foreign country, how
can it protect against its communications being mis-
interpreted? - Promotion has been the target of considerable criti-
cism. What specific types of promotion are probably
the object of this criticism? Give a specific example
that illustrates your thinking. - With direct-response promotion, customers provide
feedback to marketing communications. How can a
marketing manager use this feedback to improve the
effectiveness of the overall promotion blend? - How can a promotion manager target a message to a
certain target market with electronic media (like the
Internet) when the customer initiates the communi-
cation? Give an example. - What promotion blend would be most appropriate
for producers of the following established products?
Assume average- to large-sized firms in each case
and support your answer.
a. Chocolate candy bar.
b. Car batteries.
c. Panty hose.
d. Castings for truck engines.
e. A special computer used by manufacturers for
control of production equipment.
f. Inexpensive plastic rainhats.
g. A digital tape recorder that has achieved spe-
cialty-product status.
- A small company has developed an innovative new
spray-on glass cleaner that prevents the buildup of
electrostatic dust on computer screens and TVs.
Give examples of some low-cost ways the firm might
effectively promote its product. Be certain to con-
sider both push and pull approaches. - Would promotion be successful in expanding the
general demand for: (a)almonds, (b)air travel, (c)
golf clubs, (d)walking shoes, (e)high-octane un-
leaded gasoline, (f)single-serving, frozen gourmet
dinners, and (g)bricks? Explain why or why not in
each case. - Explain how an understanding of the adoption
process would help you develop a promotion blend
for digital tape recorders, a new consumer electron-
ics product that produces high-quality recordings.
Explain why you might change the promotion blend
during the course of the adoption process. - Explain how opinion leaders affect a firm’s promo-
tion planning. - Discuss how the adoption curve should be used to
plan the promotion blend(s) for a new automobile
accessory—an electronic radar system that alerts a
driver if he or she is about to change lanes into the
path of a car that is passing through a blind spot in
the driver’s mirrors. - If a marketing manager uses the task method to
budget for marketing promotions, are competitors’
promotion spending levels ignored? Explain your
thinking and give an example that supports your
point of view. - Discuss the potential conflict among the various
promotion managers. How could this be reduced?
Suggested Cases