2. Planning Flashcards

1
Q

Examples of Campaign Objectives

A
  1. Sales Targets
  2. Product Launch
  3. Growing Brand Awareness

Need to be SMART

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2
Q

3 Key Media Planning Priorities to be considered

A
  1. Reach - How many?
  2. Frequency - How often?
  3. Continuity - How long?
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3
Q
  1. Reach Strategy
A

Reach refers to the % of people or households within a demographic that were exposed to a program or advertisement within a specified period

E.g. 40% reach of people 18-39 years over a 2-week campaign period

A campaign that needs fast broad reach (a wide target group) would likely select TV.

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4
Q

Types of Reach Strategies (and the reasons)

A
  • Seasonal (Sunscreen in Summer)
  • New product (telling as many people as possible)
  • Short-term sales objectives
  • Time-sensitive announcements
  • Announcements of something new (e.g. new packaging so the brand is recognised)
  • Products or services that are well known/impactful TV, not needing to get the frequency up
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5
Q
  1. Frequency Strategy
A
  • Cluttered or competitive market
  • Complex Communication
  • Low involvement non-emotional brand (e.g. toilet cleaner), will require Brand Tracking
  • Low interest categories e.g. Super
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6
Q
  1. Continuity Strategy
A

Lower weekly TARP weights, but will be on for more weeks, giving the brand constant presence.

Useful if a brand is purchased regularly. Not good for brand launches because TARP weight will not be high enough for consumers to trial/talk about the product.

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7
Q

Types of Continuity Strategies (and the reasons)

A
  • Low loyalty category, constant presence ensures you are top of mind
  • FMCG, frequently purchased goods
  • High awareness - brands that have been around for years can have a continuity strategy to stay top of mind
  • Long purchase cycle (e.g. home loans) may use continuity to ensure their brand is always visible in the marketplace.
  • Keeping the brand top of mind whilst minimising costs and messaging fatigue
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8
Q

Ehrenberg Bass Model

A
  • To drive the growth of products
  • The media investment should aim to reach all types of category buyers (from the lightest to the heaviest)
  • And be as close to the point of purchase as possible
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9
Q

How Brands Grow by Byron Sharp

A

A philosophy for evidence-based marketing

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10
Q

Users

A

Those who consume the service/product

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11
Q

Purchasers

A

Wont’s necessarily consume the product/service

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12
Q

Non-purchasers

A

A group of shoppers not interested in purchasing your brand

  • Cannot be convinced to purchase the product
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13
Q

Light purchaser

A

Only purchases brand at key times, i.e Christmas

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14
Q

Medium purchaser

A

Purchases the brand on a monthly basis (dependent on category)

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15
Q

Heavy purchasers

A

Regularly (on a weekly basis or more)
- Smallest segment but most valuable

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