Developing an Annual Marketing Plan and Marketing Strategy | selling strategy For pune

Developing an Annual Marketing Plan and Marketing Strategy

Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune

Fulcrum Marketing is a strategic Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune. Our team of marketing consultants also specialise in marketing planning and Street marketing for all types of business of any size.

MARKETING STRATEGY

Effective marketing organisations must be driven through sound business strategy. Fulcrum produce marketing strategy that is always well embodied by your business strategy.

The best marketing strategy does not start with creative, it starts with a marketing process.

The Fulcrum Marketing Strategy Development Process is a thorough problem solving and marketing strategy development program that focusses on solving your growth challenges and maximising the return from your company’s marketing operations.  It is particularly useful for innovating within a market or creating a position of market leadership.

Overview

Indentifying key sources of growth, challenging the current business operations and identifying key growth creating activities are crucial for businesses which want to grow.

The process looks at your whole business with the aim to maximise the potential by focussing on:

  • reviewing your market conditions
  • reviewing your current market challenges and capabilities
  • identifying and maximising competitive advantage
  • creating and amplifying market positioning
  • developing new revenue sources
  • maximising market communication techniques

Action Orientated

Fulcrum works alongside senior management to develop achievable and actionable strategies and build the company plans around them. Real results are achieved when your management team have consistent and ongoing interaction with the Fulcrum team. At the end of the process, you must own the strategy and be able work the plan yourself. You are left with a growth system which is repeatable over time to achieve consistent growth. Companies effectively implementing this program often achieve more than 25% ongoing growth per annum.

Your Challenges

Business owners, senior executives and managers are frequently facing growth related issues such as: – Turning around a declining sales trend – Identifying and entering new markets – Launching new business and product lines – Identifying emerging growth opportunities – Managing the risks of growth If you have any of the above issues, then the Fulcrum Marketing Strategy Development Process is for you.

Approach

The process considers what could be rather than only what is. Whereas, a regular marketing strategy process might simply consider what a customer tells you and respond, Fulcrum considers how a customer might react when given a slightly or radically different proposition to the one currently in the market.

Benefits

Each strategy generates actionable tasks to achieve medium and long-term revenue and growth targets. Brief but highly strategic plans are created that drill down into action items. You are then lead through specific actions to implement, or the Fulcrum team implement them for you.

Development Process

Experience the Fulcrum Marketing Strategy Development Process. It is a tailored program designed to provide companies with the highly-focussed strategy development and implementation resources necessary to address specific growth challenges and opportunities.

1. Seek and learn.

Information Gathering – The first step is to gain an understanding of the market in which you are participating; target audiences, competitor offerings, current pricing and more. Review the business realities – Gain an understanding and commitment to potential resources available to make it all happen. Review the market realities – What limitations might we be dealing with and how far can we push the market potential?

2. Set the hypothesis.

Hypothesis development – Develop the potential strategic alternatives and understand what would need to happen for them to become reality. Reality test – Review the strategies for practical application, decide which are practical now and which could be left for a future date and understand what resources are necessary to make these alternatives. Solidify strategy – Make some strategic decisions to understand which alternatives provide the growth desired, build an understanding of the risks involved, ensure all strategies can work together and consider the reality of them working within the business.

3. Set the course.

Key strategies – Articulate the strategies and provide means for measurement and communication. Plan action – Develop broad and specific actions stemming from the strategies.

4. Build a foundation.

This stage involves developing a compelling ‘marketing tool box’ that clearly defines your value to the target audience and creates appropriate messages and triggers to sale.

5. Implement and educate.

The stage after the plan development involves completing agreed actions and driving deep engagement and understanding throughout the company, whilst developing the ongoing implementation activities, including allocation of resources.

Business-to-Business Marketing Strategies

What do business professionals think about marketing in the business-to-business (B2B) environment? We examined survey results and reports* that compiled data on the topic, and created a list of eight B2B marketing strategies commonly recognised as successful regardless of industry.

  • Referral Programs
  • Word of Mouth Plus
  • Trade Shows
  • Online Advertising
  • Remarketing
  • Search Engine Optimisation (SEO)
  • Content Marketing
  • Inbound Marketing

Choosing the Right Marketing Agency: Marketing Execution Vs Marketing Strategy

If you pretty much know what marketing you need to do and how it is going to be accomplished then most likely you need some type of marketing agencyto do it for you. Depending on what the activities are, you will choose a different type of agency. For example, if you are more likely to be doing TV, radio or magazine advertising you will likely need a traditional advertising agency. If it sits more in the digital realm, with a lot of Google AdWords or YouTube commercials, then a digital advertising agency is probably for you. Alternatively, you may simply need a graphic designer to bring your ideas to life.

Making Marketing Plans Happen

A marketing plan is paramount for achieving business growth. The purpose of a marketing plan is to assess the current market position of your business and develop marketing strategies and actions to undertake to meet your business objectives. Putting together a strategic plan that develops your business around your competitive advantage, and ensures that you are in a position to take advantage of your strengths, is a key to continued business prosperity. Of course, once you have the plan, making it work is the next step.

Developing an Annual Marketing Plan and Marketing Strategy

Make your business New Year resolution to start the year with an integrated marketing plan that clearly outlines your business objectives and the marketing strategies and tactics you plan to use to achieve them

An annual marketing plan helps keep businesses on track with goals and objectives for the year and ensures that marketing opportunities and budgets are maximized. Developing a marketing plan that you revisit every year is the key to success year after year.

A solid annual marketing plan should be structured with a disciplined approach to reaching your business goals and objectives, yet flexible enough to adapt to changing market conditions and business opportunities throughout the year.



Start Annual Marketing Planning by Reviewing Previous Year Marketing Performance

Before you begin the annual planning process for the coming year’s marketing efforts, you’ll want to take a close look at how you performed over the current year. Even if you did not have a structured marketing plan in place previously, you should be able to review past marketing activities and results.

Here are some questions to ask when evaluating the performance of a previous annual marketing plan or year’s activities:

  • Did you achieve desired results from your marketing efforts (such as improved brand recognition, X number of leads generated or sales/revenue figures)?
  • Which specific marketing activities were effective?
  • Which specific marketing activities were not effective?
  • Should you reallocate resources to better performing targets, markets or marketing tactics?
  • Has your target market, audience or geographic area changed over the year?
  • Were you able to stay within a marketing budget at the end of the year?
  • What areas of your marketing budget do you need to cut costs in for the coming year?
  • What areas of your marketing budget do you want to invest more in for the coming year?

The answers to questions about your previous year’s marketing plan will play a big part in building an annual marketing plan for the coming year. Each year adjustments should be made to your marketing planning efforts that incorporate learning from the past – what works or what doesn’t work.

Develop Essential Components of an Annual Marketing Plan

A marketing plan is a written document that contains a business’ marketing strategies and tactics. The first step in developing an annual marketing plan is getting organized. Make a list of all the marketing components or categories that are important for your business.

Typical components in a marketing plan include:

  • Advertising (print and/or online)
  • Branding and Graphics (promotional giveaway items, photography, video production, graphic development)
  • Collateral (sell sheets, brochures, business cards)
  • Events (trade shows, webinars)
  • Direct Marketing (email, direct mail, list generation, promotional incentives/contests)
  • Public Relations (press release distribution, PR agency)
  • Research (focus groups, surveys, marketing reference books)
  • Social Media (social media networks)
  • Website (search engine optimization, web development/hosting)

Of course the actual components for your business may vary depending on your business, industry and marketing budget. The important thing is to identify all the potential components in your annual marketing plan so you can decide how you plan to address those components for your business. Even if you do not plan to allocate budget for a category – like social media – it should be included if you have any marketing efforts planned for the category so strategies and tactics can be outlined in an integrated planning approach.

Define Marketing Plan Strategies, Tactics and Budget

Once marketing components are outlined for the business, all potential strategies and tactics should be defined per category or component.

Here is an example of defining strategies and tactics for the “advertising” category:

Marketing Category: Advertising
Strategy #1 – Drive traffic to website via online advertising
Tactic # 1 – Google Adwords
Tactic #2 – Banner ads on industry association website
Tactic #3 – Internet yellow pages ads

Each tactic will also need to have an allocated budget, if applicable. The marketing plan should include fields to capture your allocated budget, actual spend and budget variance so that you can track throughout the year and make any adjustments needed. For example, if you are tracking under budget in one category you can shift funds to another category where you may be tracking over budget.

Flexibility to adapt an annual marketing plan throughout the year is important to adapt to a changing business environment and be “opportunistic” in marketing efforts. Be sure to take advantage of tracking mechanisms for marketing efforts whenever possible – such as unique 800 numbers or website analytic reports – so that you can make adjustments to maximize performance of campaigns (or dump marketing efforts that are not producing desired results). Goals should also be set for all areas of a marketing plan so that you can measure the performance of marketing tactics against business objectives.

SALES METHODOLOGIES

Personal selling is a promotional method in which one party uses skills and techniques for building personal relationships with another party that results in both parties obtaining value. Personal selling occurs whenever an individual salesperson sells a product, service or solution to a client.

Sales methods

There are many different sales methods that can be used to complete a sale and form the required relationships. Determining which sales method is more effective depends on what you are selling, who you are selling to and when you are selling it.

AIDA Method

AIDA is an acronym that stands for Attention, Interest, Desire and Action. This is a method that looks at the steps a client will undertake from when they first becomes aware of the product or service, to when they are making a purchase decision.

Attention – Get the other person’s interest
Interest – Spark their curiosity
Desire – Create the need
Action – Get them to commit to something

Need satisfaction

The need satisfaction technique is a question and answer technique to make the client to recognise the need for your offering. This then leads to the client agreeing that they have a need to be fulfilled, which leads to you showing them how your offer can satisfy their needs. This method is based on a win-win approach for both the sales person and the client.

Depth Theory

Depth Theory is when a creation of trust occurs between the buyer and seller. The seller uses expertise in their product, service or industry to create trust between themselves and the buyer. The client will see the salesperson as an expert in that area and will trust them to solve the issues that they have.

 Step process

The 7 step process is a plan of action that starts at the planning and preparation to make the sale and leads to after sale follow ups. The 7 steps are:
1.   Planning and preparation
2.   Introduction or opening
3.   Questioning
4.   Presentation
5.   Overcoming objections/negotiating
6.   Closing
7.   After-sales follow-up

communication and Street marketing management

Effective communication and advertising management is important to not only correctly identify a target audience, but also to reach this audience efficiently through different information channels. There are many benefits of successfully managing these marketing communications, including, but not limited to:

  • A higher Return on Investment  (ROI)
  • Reaching more of your target audience
  • Reduced costs for Street marketing
  • Types of market segmentation:
    • Demographic segmentation: gender, age, income, education, occupation
    • Geographic segmentation: city, state, country
    • Psychographic segmentation: attitudes, values, attitudes, lifestyle
    • Behavioural segmentation: purchasing patterns, loyalty status

Implementing a Street marketing Strategy

 

Implementing a Marketing Strategy Execution Plan, known to Fulcrum and our clients as a “Sprint Plan” is the most effective way to prevent this highway-less journey , Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune. A Marketing Strategy is a set of strategic goal-focused plans for a certain period of time.

Street marketing Strategy and Planning

Implement your marketing plan

Your marketing plan must do more than just say what you want to happen. It must describe each step required to make sure that it happens.

Schedule
The plan should include a schedule of key tasks. This sets out what will be done, and by when. Refer to the schedule as often as possible to avoid losing sight of your objectives under the daily workload.

Team And Resources
It should also assess what resources you need. For example, you might need to think about what brochures you need, and whether they need to be available for distribution. You might also need to look at how much time it takes to sell to customers and whether you have enough salespeople.

Cost
The cost of everything in the plan needs to be included in a budget. If your finances are limited, your plan will need to take that into account. Don’t spread your marketing activities too thinly – it is better to concentrate your resources to make the most of your budget. You may also want to link your marketing budget to your sales forecast.

Control
As well as setting out the schedule, the plan needs to say how it will be controlled. You need an individual who takes responsibility for pushing things along. A good schedule and budget should make it easy to monitor progress. When things fall behind schedule, or costs overrun, you need to be ready to do something about it and to adapt your plan accordingly.

 

Marketing Execution – Plan, Execute, Track, Measure

Everyone likes to talk about creating a marketing plan. It’s the fun part of marketing, the creative aspect of your planning process and Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune. But strategy without execution won’t help your business succeed. In fact, marketing execution is how you achieve results.

Create your marketing strategy

Decide how to market your product or service to potential customers by developing a marketing strategy that positions your product to particular customers

Write a marketing execution plan

How to identify your objectives and write a plan that will help your marketing generate sales, including tactics and objectives

Marketing on a tight budget

How to get the most out of a small or limited marketing budget using cost-effective marketing methods such as Public Relations and online marketing

Marketing your business in Pune

How to market your business effectively in pune including researching your target audience and establishing new contacts

Hinjewadi Pune

Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune

Get in touch with us, we would love to discuss your marketing needs.

We love a good coffee and a challenge, so would behappy to meet up with you face to face.

Marketing Company in Pune

Call Us :-08433772261
Email:- info@fulcrumresources.in

Hinjewadi Pune

 

B2B Marketing: 

Fulcrum is a magnet for businesses with well-defined goals and a desire to harness the latest advantages that marketing and technology can offer.

Face To Face Marketing : 

face to face field marketing is also called personal selling or door to door marketing, customers are met directly in order to sell their products, using this method of field marketing.

Product Sampling :

Fulcrum are a highly recommended provider of product sampling staff. We specialise in the implementation of sampling campaigns using our in house sampling team and logistical know-how.

Dealer Marketing: 

Dealer marketing is of utmost importance for the success of any brand. For most brands, dealers, distributors and resellers are critical links to success.

Direct Marketing:  

we can help with everything from planning and design to production and delivery ensuring your direct marketing campaigns are delivered on time to the highest quality.

Guerrilla Marketing:

When it comes to guerrilla marketing the gloves are off. They are usually low budget campaigns but with the right imagination and ideas they offer up some unprecedented results

Retail Marketing:

Fulcrum is a dynamic-retail marketing agency born in tradition, fueled by innovation, and living at the intersection of commerce and imagination.

Direct Selling : 

Much like product demonstrations these campaigns have brand reps or ambassadors at the center of them. The difference is it’s more about the selling of the product

Retail Audits & Merchandising:

Auditing takes the reps out off the front line and away from the consumer. Auditing teams are used by marketers to monitor traditional marketing strategies that they put in place across retail.

Door To Door Marketing :

Nothing beats the reality that one gets when you can interact with potential clients face to face physically moving from door to door within a community or household to household,

Product Demonstrations:

As mentioned already, demo days are a popular tool of field marketing. These campaigns can stretch from as little as one week to 6 months however some are continuous and full time.

Street Marketing: 

We will still need to spend time interacting with people, face-to-face, Street Marketing. Personal interaction is what makes the world go around

Street marketing 

Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune

The team at Fulcrum has delivering successful Shopping Centre Marketing Campaigns across a wide range of shopping centres and retail complexes. From major  retail locations to local community focused shopping centres; we have secured real, measurable results across the board.

Marketing Plan and Marketing Strategy

Street marketing | Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune

Hinjewadi ,  Pune

Overview

Hinjewadi situated on the north-western outskirts of Pune. It is situated very close to the NH-4 bypass, it has Talegaon Dabhade to its north, Pimpri Chinchwad to its east, Ambey Valley to its west, and Lavale Village to its south. Hinjewadi is recognised as a major IT hub of Pune. The area has good civic amenities and is very well-connected to other parts of the greater city of Pune. This locality comes under the limits of Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC). It has many residential and commercial projects lined up for the future. The need for residential projects is rising primarily because the large, ever increasing pool of employed people are eternally in search of houses closer to office, just to avoid the peak-hour traffic. Some of the prominent areas located close to Hinjewadi are Tathawade, Wakad, Pimple Saudagar, Baner, Aundh, Nande, Khadke, Lavale, Kasarwadi among others. Hinjewadi’s social infrastructure is also in good shape. Some of the key residential projects in Hinjewadi are Kohinoor Tinsel Town, Kolte Patil Life Republic ORO Avenue, Kohinoor Tinsel County, Eskay Basera Eternity, Godrej 24, Paranjape Blue Ridge among others.

Connectivity and Transit Points
The Pune Airport is at a distance of 25 km from Hinjewadi. The nearest railway station is the Khadki Railway Station, which is about 16 km from this locality. The Pune Junction, which is the main station, is about 21 km away.

There are a few major roads which run through the area namely The Hinjewadi Road and The Mumbai-Bengaluru Highway.

Apart from that, there are auto-rickshaws, cabs, buses, and shared auto systems (tam-tams) for covering short distances. The buses are operated by PMPML (Pune Mahanagar Parivahan Mahamandal Limited) and ply frequently. They’re an economical mode of transport, which is why they’re usually very crowded. Most people resort to using two-wheelers here.

The main transit points in Hinjewadi are Hinjewadi Phase 3, Mahindra Tech 1 and 2, Info Park, Tata Motors, Kannor, Infosys Phase 2, Wipro Circle, Tata Johnson, Hinjewadi Phase I, Shivaji Chowk, Hinjewadi Chowk, and Hinjewadi Phata. These are the bus stops where one can hop into a local bus for an easy commute.

Factors for Growth in The Past
The establishment of Rajiv Gandhi Infotech Park in Hinjewadi also boosted the locality’s growth, which was originally a small village. Now, many leading multinational organisations, EMERSON Innovation Centre Pune, IBM India, Mahindra Engineering, Tata Technologies, Wipro, Tata Consultancy Services, Tech Mahindra, Honeywell, Mindtree and Barclays to name a few, have set up their offices here.

Factors for Growth in the Future
With the real estate market reaching saturation within city limits, potential buyers are shifting their attention to the outskirts. And Hinjewadi ranks quite high on most people’s order of preference. Planned roads and excellent infrastructure facilities have successfully established Hinjewadi as a favorite destination in Pune. With an increase in the city’s population, the IT boom and a resulting large migrant population, the region has seen considerable rental demands for 2 BHK apartments in Hinjewadi.

Three phases of the IT park are already constructed here. Once these are fully functional, more phases will be constructed as planned. This will certainly increase property prices in the area.

There’s plenty of scope for infrastructure development too, especially with respect to roads. Currently, the roads are being widened and new roads are being laid. More residential projects and integrated townships are also being planned and developed, so as to accommodate the large growing population.

Infra Development (Social & Physical)
Hinjewadi offers very good social infrastructure to its residents. Some of the reputed schools in Hinjewadi include the KLAY Prep School & Daycare, Alard Public School, Pumpkin Patch School, Little Big World, VIBGYOR High School, The Genius English Medium School, Shanti Junior High School, Symbiosis Institute of International Business, Mercedes – Benz International School, Blue Ridge Public School to name a few. This locality also houses some prominent colleges in the vicinity. These are Alard Colleges of Pharmacy, Alard Institutes, Swami Vivekanand College of Education, International Institute of Information Technology, IBMR College, R.S Junior College, Indira College of commerce and Science among others.

Healthcare facilities are also good in the locality. Some of the leading hospitals in Hinjewadi include the Sanjeevani Hospital, Ayushree Hospital, City Care Hospital, Ruby Hall Clinic, Mediplus Speciality Hospital Pvt Ltd, Aditya Birla Memorial Hospital, Lifepoint Multispeciality Hospital, and Hinjewadi Hospital.

The shopping needs of the residents are catered to by malls in Hinjewadi such as the DLMart, Xion Mall, White Square, Spot 18, City One Mall among other. It also houses retail outlets of national and international brands that includes Jio Digital Life, Gurukrupa Retail Outlet, Chroma, Airtel Store, My Jio Store, Reliance Digital Jio, Pantaloons, Westside, Prestige etc.

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Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune

Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune

Pune

Pimpri-Chinchwad

Aurangabad

Kolhapur

Nashik

Nagpur

Ahmednagar

Akola

Amravati

KOTHRUD
Koregaon Park
Kondhwa
Kondhwa Budruk
Kharadi
Katraj
Kalyani Nagar
Kalewadi
Hinjewadi
Dhayari
Dhanori
Deccan Gymkhana
Chikhali
Camp
Bavdhan
Undri
Pimpri Chinchwad
Aundh
Wakad
Wagholi
Talegaon Dabhade
Sinhagad Road
Shivajinagar
Pimpri
Pimple Saudagar
Pimple Nilakh
Pashan
NIBM
NIBM Annexe
Mundhwa
Magarpatta
Hadapsar
Balewadi

 

Street marketing, Street marketing Service Provider Agency, Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi, Street marketing Service Provider Agency Hinjewadi Pune, Hinjewadi, Pune

Retail Marketing ideas | engagement marketing Work mumbai

Our talented team know how to excite, inspire and engage. With backgrounds in events, entertainment and travel, we’re full of ideas for amazing prizes and unforgettable incentives!

At Fulcrum, we all come to work every day because we have a shared love of travel and delivering once-in-a-lifetime experiences.

Our team meetings are buzzing with fresh ideas, brand new experiences and glowing feedback from our travellers. We know what makes a great incentive, we have an encyclopaedic knowledge of the best experiences around the world, and we have an ever-expanding ‘little black book’ of the most exclusive suppliers in the business.

In addition to our creative ideas and experience, we know that our clients value our expertise and dedication to solving problems rather than creating them. Prizes and incentives are our world, but we understand that our clients have other priorities, so we make sure we’re delivering our ideas on-time, on-budget and on-brand. We thrive on tight deadlines, logistical challenges and creating perfectly tailored solutions, without the headaches!

About us

Perfect solutions every time
As a leading marketing Agency, we’re immensely proud to work with brands and agencies across a huge range of sectors and industries, giving us an unrivalled breadth of experience.

we have created and fulfilled prizes for promotions and activations across the world.

Our aim: help our clients achieve their goals through our experience and expertise, taking the stress and hassle out of prize fulfilment.

We work for both direct brands and agencies, often in collaboration or with other specialist agencies and partners. Many of our clients have existing assets – from festival tickets to sports hospitality – which we help them to build into the best possible prize packages. Others want to create unique, eye-catching marketing and btl content around their prize winners. We can deal with winners from any country and in any language; we can provide a full btl management service; we can even source camera crews for content capture.

Whatever your brief, we’ve got it covered.

SALES INCENTIVES

Driving sales and performance through tailored, flexible incentive programmes

With pressure always on to drive sales and performance, sales incentives are an essential part of rewarding achievement within many companies. From internal staff reward programmes to dealer and channel incentives, there’s no better way to create a happy, engaged and motivated workforce.

Our main goal is to understand your people and what makes them tick. From hundreds in a call centre team to a small on ground sales team, a clear overview of your audience is the most important part of the process. By taking a best approach, offering maximum choice and flexibility, we create incentives which are targeted, effective and tailored to your team.

Whether it’s sales rewards, dealer incentives or channel incentives, drop us a line; we’d love to help you drive sales with our fresh and creative approach to prizes and incentives. From once-in-a-lifetime holidays to mini-breaks, high-street vouchers and designer goods, you can rest assured that with Fulcrum you’re in safe hands.

24 hour turnaround for urgent briefs
Topline ideas within 2 hours if needed
Competitive fixed quotes with no hidden costs
Expert Winner Management and Fulfilment

Retail Marketing ideas | engagement marketing Work mumbai

Using Marketing Channels to Create Value for Customers

Chapter 8: Using Marketing Channels to Create Value for Customers

8.1 Marketing Channels and Channel Partners
8.2 Typical Marketing Channels
8.3 Functions Performed by Channel Partners
8.4 Marketing Channel Strategies
8.5 Channel Dynamics
8.6 Discussion Questions and Activities

 

8.1 Marketing Channels and Channel Partners

Learning Objectives

  1. Explain why marketing channel decisions can result in the success or failure of products.
  2. Understand how supply chains differ from marketing channels.
  3. Describe the different types of organizations that work together as channel partners and what each does.

Today, marketing channel decisions are as important as the decisions companies make about the features and prices of products (Littleson, 2007). Consumers have become more demanding. They are used to getting what they want. If you can’t get your product to them when, where, and how they want it, they will simply buy a competing product. In other words, how companies sell has become as important as what they sell1.

The firms a company partners with to actively promote and sell a product as it travels through its marketing channel to users are referred to by the firm as its channel members (or partners). Companies strive to choose not only the best marketing channels but also the best channel partners. A strong channel partner like Walmart can promote and sell the heck out of a product that might not otherwise turn a profit for its producer. In turn, Walmart wants to work with strong channel partners it can depend on to continuously provide it with great products that fly off the shelves. By contrast, a weak channel partner can be a liability.

The simplest marketing channel consists of just two parties—a producer and a consumer. Your haircut is a good example. When you get a haircut, it travels straight from your hairdresser to you. No one else owns, handles, or remarkets the haircut to you before you get it. However, many other products and services pass through multiple organizations before they get to you. These organizations are called intermediaries (or middlemen or resellers).

Companies partner with intermediaries not because they necessarily want to (ideally they could sell their products straight to users) but because the intermediaries can help them sell the products better than they could working alone. In other words, they have some sort of capabilities the producer needs: contact with many customers or the right customers, marketing expertise, shipping and handling capabilities, and the ability to lend the producer credit are among the types of help a firm can get by utilizing a channel partner. There are four forms of utility, or value, that channels offer. These are time, form, place, and ownership.

Intermediaries also create efficiencies by streamlining the number of transactions an organization must make, each of which takes time and costs money to conduct. As Figure 8.1 “Using Intermediaries to Streamline the Number of Transactions” shows, by selling the tractors it makes through local farm machinery dealers, the farm machinery manufacturer John Deere can streamline the number of transactions it makes from eight to just two.

Figure 8.1 Using Intermediaries to Streamline the Number of Transactions

Using Intermediaries to Streamline the Number of Transactions. John Deere can sell to many different farmers, or John Deere can sell to many dealers, who in turn sell to many farmers

The marketing environment is always changing, so what was a great channel or channel partner yesterday might not be a great channel partner today. Changes in technology, production techniques, and your customer’s needs mean you have to continually reevaluate your marketing channels and the channel partners you ally yourself with. Moreover, when you create a new product, you can’t assume the channels that were used in the past are the best ones (Lancaster & Withey, 2007). A different channel or channel partner might be better.

Consider Microsoft’s digital encyclopedia, Encarta, which was first sold on CD and via online subscription in the early 1990s. Encarta nearly destroyed Encyclopedia Britannica, a firm that had dominated the print encyclopedia business for literally centuries. Ironically, Microsoft had actually tried to partner with Encyclopedia Britannica to use its encyclopedia information to make Encarta but was turned down.

Figure 8.2

World Book Encyclopedias

Neither Encyclopedia Britannica nor Microsoft saw Wikipedia on the horizon.

But today, Encarta no longer exists. It’s been put out of business by the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia. The point is that products and their marketing channels are constantly evolving. Consequently, you and your company have to be ready to evolve, too.

Marketing Channels versus Supply Chains

In the past few decades, organizations have begun taking a more holistic look at their marketing channels. Instead of looking at only the firms that sell and promote their products, they have begun looking at all the organizations that figure into any part of the process of producing, promoting, and delivering an offering to its user. All these organizations are considered part of the offering’s supply chain.

For instance, the supply chain includes producers of the raw materials that go into a product. If it’s a food product, the supply chain extends back through the distributors all the way to the farmers who grew the ingredients and the companies from which the farmers purchased the seeds, fertilizer, or animals. A product’s supply chain also includes transportation companies such as railroads that help physically move the product and companies that build Web sites for other companies. If a software maker hires a company in India to help it write a computer program, the Indian company is part of the partner’s supply chain. These types of firms aren’t considered channel partners because it’s not their job to actively sell the products being produced. Nonetheless, they all contribute to a product’s success or failure.

Firms are constantly monitoring their supply chains and tinkering with them so they’re as efficient as possible. This process is called supply chain management. Supply chain management is challenging. If done well, it’s practically an art.

Types of Channel Partners

Let’s now look at the basic types of channel partners. To help you understand the various types of channel partners, we will go over the most common types of intermediaries. The two types you hear about most frequently are wholesalers and retailers. Keep in mind, however, that the categories we discuss in this section are just that—categories. In recent years, the lines between wholesalers, retailers, and producers have begun to blur considerably. Microsoft is a producer of goods, but recently it began opening up its own retail stores to sell products to consumers, much as Apple has done (Lyons, 2009). As you will learn later in the chapter, Walmart and other large retailers now produce their own store brands and sell them to other retailers. Similarly, many producers have outsourced their manufacturing, and although they still call themselves manufacturers, they act more like wholesalers. Wherever organizations see an opportunity, they are beginning to take it, regardless of their positions in marketing channels.

Wholesalers

Wholesalers obtain large quantities of products from producers, store them, and break them down into cases and other smaller units more convenient for retailers to buy, a process called “breaking bulk.” Wholesalers get their name from the fact that they resell goods “whole” to other companies without transforming the goods. If you are trying to stock a small electronics store, you probably don’t want to purchase a truckload of iPods. Instead, you probably want to buy a smaller assortment of iPods as well as other merchandise. Via wholesalers, you can get the assortment of products you want in the quantities you want. Some wholesalers carry a wide range of different products. Other carry narrow ranges of products.

Most wholesalers “take title” to goods—or own them until purchased by other sellers. Wholesalers such as these assume a great deal of risk on the part of companies further down the marketing channel as a result. For example, if the iPods you plan to purchase are stolen during shipment, damaged, or become outdated because a new model has been released, the wholesaler suffers the loss—not you. Electronic products, in particular, become obsolete very quickly. Think about the cell phone you owned just a couple of years ago. Would you want to have to use it today?

Video Clip

Marketing Channels and Products That Become Obsolete

(click to see video)

Good thing you don’t have to use the cell phone shown in this YouTube video. You could forget about putting it in your purse or pocket. But in 1973, the phone was the latest and greatest of gadgets. Martin Cooper, who championed the development of the device, was a lead engineer at Motorola. To whom do you think Cooper made his first phone call on the device? To his rivals at AT&T, which at the time manufactured only “landline” phones. He wanted to let them know he and Motorola had changed the telephone game.

There are many types of wholesalers. The three basic types of wholesalers are merchant wholesalers, brokers, and manufacturers’ agents, each of which we discuss next.

Merchant Wholesalers

Merchant wholesalers are wholesalers that take title to the goods. They are also sometimes referred to as distributorsdealers, and jobbers. The category includes both full-service wholesalers and limited-service wholesalers. Full-service wholesalers perform a broad range of services for their customers, such as stocking inventories, operating warehouses, supplying credit to buyers, employing salespeople to assist customers, and delivering goods to customers. Maurice Sporting Goods is a large North American full-service wholesaler of hunting and fishing equipment. The firm’s services include helping customers figure out which products to stock, how to price them, and how to display them1.

Limited-service wholesalers offer fewer services to their customers but lower prices. They might not offer delivery services, extend their customers’ credit, or have sales forces that actively call sellers. Cash-and-carry wholesalers are an example. Small retailers often buy from cash-and-carry wholesalers to keep their prices as low as big retailers that get large discounts because of the huge volumes of goods they buy.

Drop shippers are another type of limited-service wholesaler. Although drop shippers take title to the goods, they don’t actually take possession of them or handle them, oftentimes because they deal with goods that are large or bulky. Instead, they earn a commission by finding sellers and passing their orders along to producers, who then ship them directly to the sellers. Mail-order wholesalers sell their products using catalogs instead of sales forces and then ship the products to buyers. Truck jobbers (or truck wholesalers) actually store products, which are often highly perishable (e.g., fresh fish), on their trucks. The trucks make the rounds to customers, who inspect and select the products they want straight off the trucks.

Rack jobbers sell specialty products, such as books, hosiery, and magazines that they display on their own racks in stores. Rack jobbers retain the title to the goods while the merchandise is in the stores for sale. Periodically, they take count of what’s been sold off their racks and then bill the stores for those items.

Brokers

Figure 8.3

A broker smiling, standing next to a lake

Good brokers with excellent contacts are able to quickly match up buyers and sellers.

Brokers, or agents, don’t purchase or take title to the products they sell. Their role is limited to negotiating sales contracts for producers. Clothing, furniture, food, and commodities such as lumber and steel are often sold by brokers. They are generally paid a commission for what they sell and are assigned to different geographical territories by the producers with whom they work. Because they have excellent industry contacts, brokers and agents are “go-to” resources for both consumers and companies trying to buy and sell products.

The most common form of agent and broker consumers encounter are in real estate. A real estate agent represents, or acts for, either the buyer or the seller. The listing agent is contacted by the homeowner who wants to sell, and puts the house on the market. The buyer also contacts an agent who shows the buyer a number of houses. If there is a house that the buyer wants to purchase, the agent calls the listing agent and the price is negotiated. In some states, the buyer’s agent is a legal representative of the seller, unless a buyer’s agent agreement is signed, which is something to keep in mind when you are the buyer. Agents work for brokers, who act as sort of a head agent and market the company’s services while making sure that all of the legal requirements are met.

Manufacturers’ Sales Offices or Branches

Manufacturers’ sales offices or branches are selling units that work directly for manufacturers. These are found in business-to-business settings. For example, Konica-Minolta Business Systems (KMBS) has a system of sales branches that sell KMBS printers and copiers directly to companies that need them. As a consumer, it would be rare for you to interact directly with a manufacturer through a sales office because in those instances, such as with Apple stores and Nike stores, these are considered retail outlets.

Retailers

Retailers buy products from wholesalers, agents, or distributors and then sell them to consumers. Retailers vary by the types of products they sell, their sizes, the prices they charge, the level of service they provide consumers, and the convenience or speed they offer. You are familiar with many of these types of retailers because you have purchased products from them. We mentioned Nike and Apple as examples of companies that make and sell products directly to consumers, but in reality, Nike and Apple contract manufacturing to other companies. They may design the products, but they actually buy the finished goods from others.

Supermarkets, or grocery stores, are self-service retailers that provide a full range of food products to consumers, as well as some household products. Supermarkets can be high, medium, or low range in terms of the prices they charge and the service and variety of products they offer. Whole Foods and Central Market are grocers that offer a wide variety of products, generally at higher prices. Midrange supermarkets include stores like Albertsons and Kroger. Aldi and Sack ’n Save are examples of supermarkets with a limited selection of products and service but low prices. Drugstores specialize in selling over-the-counter medications, prescriptions, and health and beauty products and offer services such as photo developing.

Convenience stores are miniature supermarkets. Many of them sell gasoline and are open twenty-four hours a day. Often they are located on corners, making it easy and fast for consumers to get in and out. Some of these stores contain fast-food franchises like Church’s Chicken and Jack in the Box. Consumers pay for the convenience in the form of higher markups on products. In Europe, as well as in rural parts of the United States, you’ll find convenience stores that offer fresh meat and produce.

Specialty stores sell a certain type of product, but they usually carry a deep line of it. Zales, which sells jewelry, and Williams-Sonoma, which sells an array of kitchen and cooking-related products, are examples of specialty stores. The personnel who work in specialty stores are usually knowledgeable and often provide customers with a high level of service. Specialty stores vary by size. Many are small. However, in recent years, giant specialty stores called category killers have emerged. A category killer sells a high volume of a particular type of product and, in doing so, dominates the competition, or “category.” PETCO and PetSmart are category killers in the retail pet-products market. Best Buy is a category killer in the electronics-product market. Many category killers are, themselves, struggling, as shoppers for their products are moving to the Web or to discount department stores.

Department stores, by contrast, carry a wide variety of household and personal types of merchandise such as clothing and jewelry. Many are chain stores. The prices department stores charge range widely, as does the level of service shoppers receive. Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue, and Nordstrom sell expensive products and offer extensive personal service to customers. The prices department stores such as JCPenney, Sears, and Macy’s charge are midrange, as is the level of service shoppers receive. Walmart, Kmart, and Target are discount department stores with cheaper goods and a limited amount of service. As mentioned earlier, these discount department stores are a real threat to category killers, especially in the form of a superstore.

Superstores are oversized department stores that carry a broad array of general merchandise as well as groceries. Banks, hair and nail salons, and restaurants such as Starbucks are often located within these stores for the convenience of shoppers. You have probably shopped at a SuperTarget or a huge Walmart with offerings such as these. Superstores are also referred to as hypermarkets and supercenters.

Warehouse clubs are supercenters that sell products at a discount. They require people who shop with them to become members by paying an annual fee. Costco and Sam’s Club are examples. Off-price retailers are stores that sell a variety of discount merchandise that consists of seconds, overruns, and the previous season’s stock other stores have liquidated. Big Lots, Ross Dress for Less, and dollar stores are off-price retailers.

Outlet stores were a new phenomenon at the end of the last century. These were discount retailers that operated under the brand name of a single manufacturer, selling products that couldn’t be sold through normal retail channels due to mistakes made in manufacturing. Often located in rural areas but along interstate highways, these stores had lower overhead than similar stores in big cities due to lower rent and lower employee salaries. But due to the high popularity of the stores, demand far outstripped the supply of mistakes. Most outlet malls are now selling first-quality products only, perhaps at a discount.

Online retailers can fit into any of the previous categories; indeed, most traditional stores also have an online version. You can buy from JCPenney.com, Walmart.com, BigLots.com, and so forth. There are also stores, like O.co (formerly called Overstock.com) that operate only on the Web.

Used retailers are retailers that sell used products. Online versions, like eBay and Craigslist, sell everything from used airplanes to clothing. Traditional stores with a physical presence that sell used products include Half-Priced Books and clothing consignment or furniture stores like Amelia’s Attic. Note that in consignment stores, the stores do not take title to the products but only retail them for the seller.

A new type of retail store that turned up in the last few years is the pop-up store. Pop-up stores are small temporary stores. They can be kiosks or temporarily occupy unused retail space. The goal is to create excitement and “buzz” for a retailer that then drives customers to their regular stores. In 2006, JCPenney created a pop-up store in Times Square for a month. Kate Coultas, a spokesperson for JCPenney, said the store got the attention of Manhattan’s residents. Many hadn’t been to a JCPenney store in a long time. “It was a real dramatic statement,” Coultas says. “It kind of had a halo effect” on the company’s stores in the surrounding boroughs of New York City (Austin, 2009). Most commonly, though, pop-up stores are used for seasonal sales, such as a costume store before Halloween or the Hillshire Farms sausage and cheese shops you see at the mall just before Christmas.

Not all retailing goes on in stores, however. Nonstore retailing—retailing not conducted in stores—is a growing trend. Online retailing; party selling; selling to consumers via television, catalogs, and vending machines; and telemarketing are examples of nonstore retailing. These are forms of direct marketing. Companies that engage in direct marketing communicate with consumers urging them to contact their firms directly to buy products.

Key Takeaway

How a product moves from raw material to finished good to the consumer is a marketing channel, also called a supply chain. Marketing channel decisions are as important as the decisions companies make about the features and prices of products. Channel partners are firms that actively promote and sell a product as it travels through its channel to its user. Companies try to choose the best channels and channel partners to help them sell products because doing so can give them a competitive advantage.

Review Questions

  1. Why are marketing channel decisions as important as pricing and product feature decisions?
  2. What are the benefits of looking at all of the organizations that contribute to the production of a product versus just the organizations that sell them?
  3. Why do channel partners rely on each other to sell their products and services?
  4. How do companies add value to products via their marketing channels?

1“Developing a Channel Strategy,” CBSNews.comhttp://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505125_162-51168339/developing-a-channel-strategy/?tag=mncol;lst;1 (accessed April 13, 2012).

References

Austin, J., “Pop-Up Stores Offer Long-Term Strategy,” Fort Worth Star-Telegram, November 27, 2009, 1C–2C.

Lancaster G. and Frank Withey, Marketing Fundamentals (Burlington, MA: Butterworth-Heinemann, 2007), 173.

Littleson, R., “Supply Chain Trends: What’s In, What’s Out,” Manufacturing.net, February 6, 2007, http://www.manufacturing.net/articles/2007/02/supply-chain-trends-whats-in-whats-out(accessed April 13, 2012).

Lyons, D., “The Lost Decade,” Newsweek, November 9, 2009, 27.

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We inspire the people who power your business.

No matter who you are and what you sell, the success of your business relies on your ability to engage with two critically important groups – the people who buy from you and the people who work for you. At Fulcrum, we create truly personalised incentive programmes that have the power to energize your business. Each Fulcrum initiative is designed around the specific interests and aspirations of your customers and your people. We engage and inspire the people that matter – the people who power your business.

Our Values
Client- centricity and the provision of quality service are key values. Providing a developmental and supportive marketing environment for our staff and recognising the importance of our suppliers are integral to our business ethic. Openness, honesty, transparency and a commitment to our community underpin everything we do.

Our Team
The heart and soul of what has made us so successful is our staff. It is their passion, commitment to quality and positive, can-do attitude that delivers outstanding performance to our clients and reinforces our reputation for service excellence.
From selection & recruitment through to training & development, we continually invest in our staff to ensure we have the right people, with the right skills to make sure that the job gets done right, first time.

Quality
Fulcrum has always aimed to be quality leaders in our industry. An impressive array of accreditations, for Quality, Environment, Security and Staff development are simply the kite-marks that demonstrate our core values in this respect.

Fulcrum Agencies
Over the years we have worked with agencies of all sizes and styles. We understand the hectic world of marketing and advertising and we have developed services specifically designed to adapt to short lead-times, changing needs, last minute requests and the occasional ‘sprint finish’.

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With a long-history of providing services to retailers, whether major chains or small specialist outlets, it was a very easy step for us to adapt that to the on-line world. These days we can handle high-volume fulfilment for direct-to consumer on-line web-orders as we can easily provide retail replenishment and store refurbishment.

Perspectives: Women in Advertising 2018

Tell us about who you are and what your job title is?

I’m Amy Beth Stern, a New York City native with 20 years of experience in the brand marketing space and currently the Senior Director of Business Growth & Client Strategy at Eventive Marketing. Eventive is a highly creative experiential and strategic brand .

 

Was there a job you had at one point, outside of advertising, that prepared you most for success later in life?

I was a Psychology major in school, but had a passion for theater. So, I spent some time after college pursuing my illustrious acting career. During this time, I did quite a bit of serving and tending bar. If anything prepares you for the different type of personalities you will encounter in your career, for the various ways individuals will judge and treat you, it’s the restaurant industry. It prepared me for how to handle clients, co-workers, and bosses.

 

What do you see as being the biggest change in the advertising industry since women have begun to break the “glass ceiling”?

Well, aside from the obvious changes that have been occurring over time, since the of the demise of “Don Draper” days, I would say the biggest change is that women have been able to reach higher positions brand side. There are many more female CMOs than ever before. These women run the agency selection process and they see the value of women in strategy and creative roles that will help drive their business goals.

But, that ceiling is not gone, it just may be raised a bit higher. I am always surprised at how few female creative directors there are. We still have work to do in creating true gender-neutral opportunities.

As for challenges that still exist, I sometimes think we (women) are our own worst enemy. We have to shed our fears and gain confidence about our jobs and worth. I don’t know one man that would settle for a salary that he deemed less than his full value, or be nervous of asking for a raise and a promotion. Yet, I hear this all the time from women.

 

From Like A Girl to Fearless Girl, a raft of advertising campaigns have set out to empower women. How do you feel about these campaigns? Can they change attitudes within the industry?

I remember the first time I saw a “Like a Girl” spot at an industry conference. I needed tissues! I have two little boys and I strive every day to teach them that girls and boys are equally capable of anything. I think if we continue with positive messaging like this, disseminated in the right way and right places, we can absolutely change attitudes. It’s important to reach them young and also in adolescence. But I believe we can eventually eradicate the biases that exist as this generation grows up. This is a huge passion of mine and we are working on an experiential activation that will reach ‘tweens and teens with positive messaging around gender equality.

 

How have the recent #MeToo and #TimesUp movements played out in the advertising sector? Are they making a significant impact?

I think #MeToo and #TimesUp are making an impact in all sectors. Bringing this immoral treatment and behavior into the national and pop-culture spotlight sends the message to all. No more. You are not going to get away with it anymore. We are watching out for one another.

 

Initiatives such as Free The Bid are trying to create more opportunities for women in advertising. But what could be done at a more grass roots level to attract women in the first place?

Great work created by women should inspire other young women to get involved in the industry. Role models in higher-up agency positions should do their best to be visible and engaging to millennials and Gen Zers.

 

Can you reflect on a mentor that helped guide you in your career and tell us what made them special?

I mentioned I have two little boys, right? I cannot believe how hard it is to play the dual role of a working mom. The strength it takes, the time it needs. There is no such thing as off-duty. I go from one job to the other and back. My mom was (still is) probably the best mother on this planet. She went above and beyond for my sister and I (we are talking home-sewn Halloween costumes and baked from scratch birthday cakes, PTA, etc). All the while, running retail for the Girl Scouts of the USA in their Manhattan HQ. She is a mentor and a half.

And if “mom” is too cliché for you, the woman who really mentored me in my career and made me a stronger woman was Annette Bachner. Annette was a dear friend and neighbor and the first female television director ever. She was “accidentally” promoted from stage manager on the Howdy Doody Show to Director on NBC news. When they saw that “A. Bachner” was a woman, she was promptly removed. That did not stop Annette. She went on to be a successful TV commercial director and producer and the first female American ever to win a Gold Lion at Cannes! Her stories, always over a scotch on the rocks, of using her gymnastic skills, hanging lights from riggings while the men on the set stood around dumbfounded, make me smile to this day.

 

 

 

 

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Results are realized through both the speed of lease-ups and financial performance of the on-going stabilized investment.

MARKET RESEARCH
We crunch the numbers, ask the questions, assess current trends and forecast future trends with detailed, up-to-date research to understand our markets; Ensuring our clients have the right data points to make the best decisions going forward.

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What’s the experience living here? What’s the story and name of this place? Our experience and insight allows us to identify and position each project’s distinctive offerings as its market niche. We provide an understanding that goes deeper than looking at trends. We create sought-after, thoughtfully executed apartment communities that are compatible with their surrounding neighborhoods.

MARKETING STRATEGY
Overall success relies on a thoughtful marketing strategy. In a constantly changing environment, we develop and implement each marketing initiative specific to your audience and budget. Reaching consumers in a way that educates and informs; ultimately creating product desirability and excellent rates of return.

 

 

How to Market to Consumers in a Post-Screen World

It seems like just yesterday that marketers were wondering how their brands would survive once consumers started paying more attention to their mobile devices than they did to the TV, radio, or newspaper. Marketers were forced to forget much of what they knew about marketing and advertising in order to rapidly adjust to the new digital world. But now, even the digital and mobile world is changing, and marketers must quickly adjust once more in order to stay relevant.

Changes in the Digital and Mobile World

Although the iPhone X made a lot of headlines this year, it was another new Apple product that should have caught marketers’ attention. The Apple Watch Series 3 was also introduced in 2017, and it was the first watch to come with LTE cellular connectivity. With this new technology, consumers with an Apple Watch will be able to put on a pair of headphones and do many of the same things with their watch that they can do on their phone. This includes making phone calls, getting directions, playing music, sending text messages, and even asking Siri to look up movie times online.

The Apple Watch isn’t the only device that consumers can use to perform many of these tasks. Many consumers have turned to digital home assistants such as Amazon’s Alexa when they want to complete many of the tasks that they relied on their smartphones for in the past. Using a smart speaker, consumers don’t have to pick up their smartphones to place phone calls, set reminders, play music, or even search for affordable plane tickets for an upcoming trip.

The Problems Marketers Must Face

Why do these changes to how consumers use their devices matter to marketers? Now that consumers can rely on a hands-free device to do all of these tasks, there’s no need for them to look at their smartphone screens. As a result, marketers may find that communicating with consumers via digital ads, social media, and mobile apps may not be as effective. Since the vast majority of brands rely on reaching consumers through these channels, marketers may find the need to drastically adjust their strategies to align with consumer behavior in a post-screen world.

Of course, devices such as Apple Watches have screens, too. But, the size of the Apple Watch’s screen is significantly smaller than the size of a standard smartphone screen. Marketers who attempt to get their message across to someone who is wearing an Apple Watch must remember that small fonts or details may not be visible on such a tiny screen.

Another challenge that marketers will face is the fact that many consumers will rely on voice commands and digital assistants to make important purchase decisions. In the past, a consumer who is looking for a local pizza restaurant typically used Google to search for the best pizza places nearby. Brands who wanted to target these consumers could invest in SEO or bid on pay-per-click ads in order to increase their chances of appearing in the search results. Then, the brand would have an opportunity to sell to the person looking for pizza with a catchy headline or enticing pay-per-click ad. But now, consumers who have Apple Watches or smart speakers may simple use voice commands to ask for this information instead. Consumers will no longer be presented with a list of options—instead they may rely on whatever their digital assistant suggests.

How Marketers Can Adjust to the Post-Screen World

It’s estimated that about 30% of interactions that take place between a human and a computer will be voice or location activated by the end of the decade. What does this mean for marketers? It’s not time to completely abandon all digital and mobile marketing efforts, but it is an appropriate time to start making adjustments.

Some industry experts believe that brands need to invest heavily in “anticipatory” services that can predict what consumers want with such accuracy that consumers place their complete trust in the service. For example, in an ideal world, a woman who is shopping for a red lipstick could use voice commands to order a lipstick without ever looking at the screen to check the color. In this example, the anticipatory service built by the cosmetic brand would use the consumer’s past purchases to determine which shade of red lipstick would look best on her.

Building anticipatory services may be effective, but it is also incredibly costly, which means it’s not an option for the vast majority of brands. One inexpensive way for marketers to start adjusting to the post-screen world is to implement a voice-friendly SEO strategy.

Researchers have found that search queries vary greatly depending on whether the consumer is searching by text or voice. For instance, someone who is searching for a red lipstick by text may type in “best red lipstick” or “dark red lipstick” whereas someone who is searching by voice may ask “What is the best red lipstick?” or “Where can I buy dark red lipstick?” A brand that only uses “best red lipstick” and “dark red lipstick” as keywords may not have a chance with the customers who are searching by voice. To ensure that both groups of customers are targeted, marketers must adjust their SEO keyword strategy.

 

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Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in navi mumbai

Becoming Marketing Active: The Fulcrum Guide to Getting Started with Business Marketing –  In the first part of our guide to becoming marketing active Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in navi mumbai, we looked at some of the reasons that drive a business to start marketing (if you missed part one, check it out here). But once you’ve made the decision to embark on a marketing strategy for your business, what next? Where do you start and what steps should you take to ensure a smooth and successful process? As is so often the case in business (and life!), preparation is key. So before rushing into any kind of marketing, it’s important to take the time to plan, research and strategise for success. In order to create an effective marketing strategy, you need to develop a thorough understanding of your market, your competitors and your business itself. This means getting back to basics and equipping yourself with all the information you need to identify marketing activities that work for your brand. 1) Research your target market How much do you know about the target audience of your product or service? We’re not just talking about age, sex or occupation (though, of course, you need to know these too). To have the best chance of reaching your target market, you need to dig deeper and find out exactly what drives them towards purchase. What kind of triggers are they most likely to respond to? Which elements of the marketing mix have the most impact on them? How will your product or service benefit them? Understanding these aspects of your target audience will enable you to position and market your brand accordingly, so comprehensive market research is essential. It’s often easier (and more cost-effective) to outsource this type of research to a professional agency who will be better placed to obtain the information you need. 2) Analyse your competition In order to stay ahead of your competitors, you need to know who they are, what they’re doing and how they’re doing it. Once you’ve identified who your key business competitors are, look into the marketing methods they’re using and the way in which they have positioned their brand. What channels and platforms have they chosen to market their business? How are they promoting their brand and its products/services? Consider which elements are crucial to your own business and how you can position your brand in order to get ahead. 3) Define your objectives What do you want to achieve from your marketing activity? Whether it’s to increase your revenue, establish your business in a new market segment or improve brand awareness, setting clear, measurable marketing objectives is vital in understanding what steps need to be taken in order to achieve these goals. Make sure that each identified objective is specific (how much do you want to increase revenue by?), achievable (is it realistic?) and has a timeframe for accomplishment (are you aiming to achieve this goal in three months or a year?). You also need to make sure that your marketing objectives tie in with your overall business objectives. 4) Understand your business You may think you have a pretty good understanding of your business, but it’s surprising what insights can be achieved when you conduct a thorough SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats). Be rigorous, be meticulous, and above all be brutally honest. Is a lack of staff training letting your business down? Are your prices too high to compete in today’s market? Arming yourself with this knowledge is invaluable in developing a marketing strategy that leverages your company’s strengths and addresses those areas which need to be improved. In the next instalment of the Fulcrum guide to becoming marketing active, we’ll be looking at the raft of marketing channels available and helping you to identify which ones are best for your business. If you have something to share on this topic, why not get in touch? Leave your comments below…  

Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in navi mumbai

Sales Staff

Our team of skilful and detail-focussed sales and marketing professionals offer our Principal Suppliers and their brands dependable and sustainable long-term growth and profitability. From brand managers to area managers and knowledgeable in-store staff, we act as  of our clients’ brands, ensuring the very best representation. We do more than the average distributor; together with our in-house team and our preferred partners, we also provide the very best in media, digital, marketing, advertising and field services.
We dig deeper into the detail by incorporating our sales and marketing management with the necessary business intelligence through forecasting and planning, and we realise successful objectives. We link brands to the people they are meant for through meaningful connections and drive brand success through integrated and holistic sales and marketing.

 

In-shop Branding, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in pune, house to house Promotion, Market engagement selling, Rural advertising, , campus interactive experiential, RWA interactive experiential, Market interactive experiential, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in navi mumbai

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Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in navi mumbai

Marketing and Sales companies Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in navi mumbai with high quality, ethical, outsourced sales through transparent and effective business programs. We have a team of marketing and sales professionals and trainers who are committed to ensure effective delivery of the message from the client to a prospective customer. Our specialty is tailor-fitting our service to suit each individual client’s needs, ensuring compliance and delivering ethical sales every single time. We are focused on compliant and ethical selling that puts the needs of the customer first and we value transparency, integrity, diligence and hard work to ensure that our employees, clients and customers all get the best experience possible. We look for long term investments, in both our employees and our clients to ensure quality in our work, and in the opportunity for growth potential and stability for all parties involved.

Marketing

Door to Door Marketing

Face to Face Marketing

B 2 B Marketing

Field Marketing

Sales Staff

Our team of skilful and detail-focussed sales and marketing professionals offer our Principal Suppliers and their brands dependable and sustainable long-term growth and profitability. From brand managers to area managers and knowledgeable in-store staff, we act as  of our clients’ brands, ensuring the very best representation. We do more than the average distributor; together with our in-house team and our preferred partners, we also provide the very best in media, digital, marketing, advertising and field services.
We dig deeper into the detail by incorporating our sales and marketing management with the necessary business intelligence through forecasting and planning, and we realise successful objectives. We link brands to the people they are meant for through meaningful connections and drive brand success through integrated and holistic sales and marketing.

 

Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in navi mumbai

 

In-shop Branding, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency, house to house Promotion, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in pune, Market engagement selling, Rural advertising, , campus interactive experiential, RWA interactive experiential, Market interactive experiential,

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Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in pune

B2B Experiential Marketing – When does it work?

What is experiential marketing? On the rise in recent years, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in pune and experiential marketing is all about customer interaction with your brand. It offers a unique experience with products or services, allowing customers to get a feel for how they would use it in their lives. For years marketers have been trying to get customers to use and trial their products. In this way it’s not a new concept; there have however, certainly been some innovative spins on how it’s done. Let’s look at experiential marketing, how it can work for B2Bs and some of the ways it can help build your brand.

Emotional + Experiential Branding = Experiential Marketing The two elements that underpin experiential marketing are emotional branding and experiential branding.

Emotional branding: is about building the relationship between your brand and customers. Promoting emotional benefits like brand trust, security and credibility as a result of engaging with your brand is crucial. Experiential branding: designs and creates interactions that are sensory in nature, which emotionally influences preferences, shaping brand perception, and influencing satisfaction and loyalty. An excellent experiential marketing campaign is able to fuse both elements seamlessly together. Experiential Marketing for B2Bs In recent years interest in B2B experiential marketing has grown and some of the initial hesitation surrounding it has been replaced with a working understanding, when to do it, and how it stimulates ROI. For B2Bs, experiential marketing is generally less obvious, with the focus often on services (for example) in place of B2C exciting product launches. Oftentimes the B2B budget is also stretched. However we are seeing marketers begin to recognise the potentials that the experience can offer consumers. “The success of brand experience within the B2C market has not gone unnoticed, and B2B marketers are waking up to the potential of brand experience. However, there is a long way to go before they catch up with their B2C counterparts.” – Graham Ede, Ion Group 3 Examples of B2B experiential marketing Location with B2Bs can be one of the major barriers, and while it may not be easy to do experiential marketing in quite the same way as B2C, there’s certainly room to employ some of the same principals. Creating sensory interactions that promote core feelings of trust, and awareness of your product or services is central to this. Fulcrum marketing in public spaces – Linked with experiential, some marketers use a form of Fulcrum marketing. They tend to hold this drive in places where there are high concentrations of business buyers. Branded promotional staff can offer business people the opportunity to enter in a promotion, or sign up to attend an event whilst promoting the benefits of the product.  demonstrations & reward – as part of a targeted marketing strategy, those in the IT space can offer information via webinar or video, which can showcase some aspects of the technology solution. Some marketing and web-based tools such as  offer a free trial period, together with online coaching via Skype. This allows the user to build confidence in using the tool, and to experience all of the benefits of the trial period. At the end of the trial period (7 days), the participant is given a report with feedback on how well they have used the tool. Then they are awarded a certificate. Surprises and games – Surprising customers by showing up where they least expect you, gifting them, or sending them a card is a way to provide an out of the box experience and drive brand awareness. Another option could be to exhibit at a partner’s event as IBM did. Their interactive stand came complete with a candy bar, and plasma screens which posted live tweets from event attendees. Digital technology such as apps and games are also opportunity areas, and while often costly, look set to become more widespread and affordable in future. Experiential marketing reflects the growing importance of emphasising emotions to build successful brands. Digital media offers expanding opportunities to offer such experiences. In the ever-competitive B2B marketplace, it’s no longer enough to rely on traditional modes for lead generation. B2B marketers need to consider the complete kit that is available to them including; social media, mobile, search, paid advertising, print, telemarketing and increasingly placing emotion at the heart of it all with an experiential approach.

Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in pune

Sales Staff

Our team of skilful and detail-focussed sales and marketing professionals offer our Principal Suppliers and their brands dependable and sustainable long-term growth and profitability. From brand managers to area managers and knowledgeable in-store staff, we act as  of our clients’ brands, ensuring the very best representation. We do more than the average distributor; together with our in-house team and our preferred partners, we also provide the very best in media, digital, marketing, advertising and field services.
We dig deeper into the detail by incorporating our sales and marketing management with the necessary business intelligence through forecasting and planning, and we realise successful objectives. We link brands to the people they are meant for through meaningful connections and drive brand success through integrated and holistic sales and marketing.

In-shop Branding, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency, Street Marketing Service Provider Agency in pune, house to house Promotion, Market engagement selling, Rural advertising, , campus interactive experiential, RWA interactive experiential, Market interactive experiential

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