Promotional Mix
The Marketing Mix: Promotion
Select TWO products from the list of product categories below and using the teaching materials and any additional research explain what you think would be an appropriate promotions strategy for both them. In doing so compare and contrast the two promotions strategies explaining why you think they would be similar or different.
Select TWO products from the following product categories:
AIRLINE FLIGHTS
BREAKFAST CEREALS
Illustrate your answer by referring to specific brands within each of the two product categories you have chosen.
In defining promotional strategies for airline flights and breakfast cereal, the many differences in the broader marketing, selling and service aspects of these two products need to be taken into account. In addition, the way customers purchase airline flights are markedly different than how they purchase breakfast cereal. For any promotional strategy to be effective they must take into account differences in hwo customers choose to learn and purchase new products (Shum, 2004). The factors most critical to someone purchasing a seat on an airline flight, which is a service by definition, are significantly different than the criterion used in evaluating and purchasing breakfast cereals. Yet both share the need to educate customers of their benefits, and most importantly, what kind of customer experience each delivers (Palmer, 2010). Both the service category of flights and the commodity-like natural of breakfast cereal both have a common foundation in having to communicate with customers over the channels their prospects most want to use. Increasingly, customers of services and products both are relying on social media more than ever, due to the authenticity, transparency and trust level they see in how their peers rate and value products
(Bernoff, Li, 2008). For airlines this is critically important as their reputation is an industry is lacking; there are many business travelers on Facebook and Twitter routinely complaining about the lack of service. For breakfast cereal producers, the challenge of getting their voices heard over the loud voices of larger advertisers is met with social media. While both share the need to effectively use social media to their brands' benefits, both also must balance the role of traditional media in their promotional strategies mix as well. The intent of this analysis is to compare and contrast the promotional strategies of airlines relative to breakfast cereals.
Promotional Strategies of Airlines
By nature, airlines are a transportation service, one that is oriented towards both the causal pleasure traveler and the more frequent business traveler. There is today a vast difference in how airlines approach their promotional strategies (Hvass, Munar, 2012) with many incouding United Airlines choosing to ignore the customer even if they loudly ask for service over social media channels (Bernoff, Li, 2008). The traditional role of promotional strategies dictates that service-based businesses seek to generate awareness and interest in their service, prompting the business and leisure traveler to choose their airline for travel. The promotional strategies of airlines in the past concentrated on the safety, stability and luxury of their jets (Sin, Chellappa, Siddarth, 2012). Promotional programs by now-defunct Pan Am specifically looked to create the aura of exclusivity and glamour from flying across the country and internationally, as air travel was initially very costly for the typical consumer (Sin, Chellappa, Siddarth, 2012). An elitism emerged form these promotional strategies that continued until deregulation of this industry unleashed competitive forces that completely re-ordered the economics of this industry.
With deregulation the airline industry experienced a proliferation of new entrants that concentrated on low prices, excellent customer experiences and a new egalitarianism that concentrated more on the common traveler, not the elite. The airline industry is in this area today, with Southwest Airlines leading this revolution in pricing and customer experience value. Their value proposition is predicated on being less expensive to fly than drive (Sin, Chellappa, Siddarth, 2012). It is noteworthy that Southwest Airlines is the only U.S....
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