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Phillip. Kevin Lane. Kotler • Keller. Marketing Management • 14e. Chapter 19. Managing Personal Communications: Direct and Interactive Marketing, Word of Mouth and Personal Selling. Discussion Questions. How can companies conduct direct marketing for competitive advantage?
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Phillip Kevin Lane Kotler • Keller Marketing Management • 14e
Chapter 19 Managing Personal Communications:Direct and Interactive Marketing, Word of Mouth and Personal Selling
Discussion Questions • How can companies conduct direct marketing for competitive advantage? • How can companies carry out effective interactive marketing? • How does word of mouth affect marketing success? • What decisions do companies face in designing and managing a sales force? • How can salespeople improve their selling, negotiating, and relationship marketing skills?
Direct Marketing Web Sites Telemarketing Interactive TV Direct Mail Mobile Devices Catalogs and Kiosks
Direct Marketing The use of consumer-direct (CD) channels to reach and deliver goods and services to customers without using marketing middlemen.
Benefits of Direct Marketing Market Demassification Consumers Selective targeting Personalized messages Measure effectiveness
Direct Mail Target market selectivity Flexible Higher CPM Measureable
Objectives • Sales Order • Prospect Leads • Customer Relationships • Inform and Educate • Reinforce Recent Purchases Objectives
Target Markets and Prospects • Identify Prospects • Demographics • Lifestyle • Previous purchases • RFM Formula • Recency • Frequency • Monetary amount
Offer Elements Offer strategy
Testing and Measuring • Testing • Product • Features • Copy platform • Mailer type • Envelope • Prices • Mailing lists • Measuring • Campaign costs • Returned merchandise • Bad debt • Customer lifetime value
Catalog Marketing • Catalog Types • Full-line • Specialty consumer • Business • Top B-to-C catalog sellers • Dell - $51 billion • Staples - $8.9 billion • CDW - $8.1 billion Print and Online • Catalogs • 16,000 companies • $235 billion in sales
Telemarketing Sell to existing customers Answer questions Inbound Take orders Attract prospects Outbound
Public and Ethical Issues Irritation Unfairness Invasion of Privacy Deception and Fraud
Advantages and Disadvantages Contextual Placement Screen out message Measureable Loss of control Online Communities
Figure 19.1 Daily Usage of Select Media Online 4:13 TV/Video 3:17 Music/Radio 1:26 Mobile Phone 1:18 Landline Phone 0:36 Gaming 0:36 Reading 0:24
Interactive Marketing Options E-Mail Web Sites & Display Ads Search Ads Mobile Marketing
Word of Mouth Social Media Buzz and Viral Marketing Opinion Leaders
Social Media Social Networks Online Communities and Forums
Buzz and Viral Marketing Viral Marketing Buzz Marketing
Opinion Leaders Connectors Mavens Salesmen
Designing the Sales Force Deliverer One Day Only SPECIAL OFFER Demand Creator Technician Order Taker Missionary Solution Vendor
Figure 19.3 Designing the Sales Force Objectives Size Strategy Compensation Structure
Sales Force Objectives and Strategy Information Gathering Communicating Prospecting Targeting Servicing Allocating
Sales Force Structure Product or Market Territorial Inside Sales Force Strategic
Sales Force Size Workload Approach Group customers (sales volume) 1,000 - A Accounts 2,000 - B Accounts Establish Call Frequency A Accounts – 36 calls B Accounts – 12 calls A Accounts – 36,000 B Accounts – 24,000 Total Calls – 60,000 Accounts x Frequency Determine Average No. of Sales Calls Average Rep – 1,000 calls Calls Required / Average Sales Calls 60,000/1,000 = 60 reps
Sales Force Compensation Regular Income Rewards Fair pay • Compensation Components • Fixed amount (salary) • Variable amount (commission or bonus) • Expense allowances • Benefits T R E N D S Profitability Customer Satisfaction Customer Retention Control Economy Simplicity
Figure 19.3 Managing the Sales Force Recruiting Motivating Training Evaluating Supervising
Recruiting and Selecting 20% Turnover Selection Criteria • Formal Tests • Simulations Recruiting Methods • Referrals • Agencies • Classifieds • Career Fairs
Training and Supervising Time in Training 28 weeks – Industrial products 12 weeks – Service companies 4 weeks – Consumer products Training Methods Computer-based Video Role Playing
Sales Rep Productivity Using Sales Time Wisely Current Accounts New Accounts Norms for Prospect Calls Sales Technology
Motivating Intrinsic Rewards Extrinsic Rewards Sales Quotas
Evaluating Sales Performance Indicators • Calls per day • Call time per contact • Revenue per sales call • Cost per sales call • Entertainment cost per call • % of orders per 100 calls • New customers per period • Lost customers per period • Sales force cost as a percent of total sales
Principals of Personal Selling S Situation Questions P Problem Questions N I Implication Questions Need-payoff Questions
Figure 19.6 Major Steps in Effective Selling Prospecting and Qualifying Preapproach Presentation and Demonstration Overcome Objections Closing Follow-up and Maintenance
Prospecting and Qualifying Hot Warm Cold
Preapproach Company Information • Product/Service Needs • Decision Makers Buyer Information • Personal Characteristics • Buying Style Contact Approach • Personal visit • Phone call • Letter
Presentation/Demonstration FABV Approach Features Advantages Benefits Value
Overcoming Objections Psychological Resistance Logical Resistance
Closing Ask for the order Recapitulate points of agreement Gain agreement on minor points