Finding Clients
The term "marketing mix" is
used to describe how
businesses promote their
products and services or how
customers learn about a
business's products and
services.
There are
many methods to use. No one
method works all the time
but all the methods work
some of the time. Developing
a marketing mix is not
unlike making a cake. Using
flour alone does not make a
cake. It takes other
ingredients, carefully
chosen, blended and handled
to come up with a recipe for
a cake that most people will
like.
There are
lots of methods one has to
choose from when thinking
about and discussing what
the marketing mix should be.
As with the ingredients that
go into making a cake, any
one used alone will not do
the job. It is the combining
and coordination of them
that means each will be more
effective than if used
alone. To come up with the
right marketing mix it may
take trying different
recipes until the right mix
is found. Each business will
have to choose the methods
that are best for them.
When
making the choices of what
the ingredients are and how
much of each needs to be
used to make up the
marketing mix, one has to
take into consideration if
the customer comes to the
business (store, office, web
site) if the business goes
out to the customers (mail,
e-mail, fax, letter, phone),
or if customers might do
either or both.
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IN-PERSON
PRESENTATIONS
-
One-on-One
-
Internet
teleconferencing
-
In Person,
Telephone,
Letter, Fax,
E-mail
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Selling
Environment
-
Attire/Grooming
-
Public
Presentations,
Civic Activities
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Networking
-
Trade Shows?
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IMPERSONAL
PRESENTATIONS
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Print, Radio/TV
and Yellow Pages
Advertising
-
Web site
-
Printed
Materials of all
kinds
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Signage
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Window, Counter,
Shelf Display
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Broadcast Fax
and E-Mail
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Direct Mail
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Sponsorships?
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As a
marketing mix or plan is
being created, consideration
for developing and designing
what the public will
eventually see or read has
to be coordinated so that
prospective customers get
only one message. Too often,
unfortunately, various
materials for different
methods are designed at
different times and each
because they are seen as
standing alone give off
mixed messages.
The two
major factors that affect
the marketing mix are:
1) Does
the business sell products
or services?
For
businesses selling products,
they need to take into
account that they are
providing the service of
offering their products, as
well as the services that
support the product.
For
businesses selling services,
they need to put their menu
of services into product
formats. They, too, have
services that go along with
the outputs (nee products)
of their services.
2) Is
the business the distributor
of their or other's products
and services?
Is one selling to the
end-users/customers? Is one
selling to businesses that
either buy and pass on what
they bought? Or, does their
business sell to someone who
will convert it into
something else that they
sell?
The
choices of what go into the
marketing mix are different
even though many of the
ingredients from one may be
right for the other. The two
viewpoints are not exclusive
of the other . . . they are
mutually inclusive.
Marketing Mix for Businesses
Selling to
End-Users/Consumers:
Mass
Media:
Print, Broadcast, Internet,
Direct Mail, Telemarketing,
Fax & E-Mail, Public
Relations Releases
Display
Presentations (as
applicable):
Location, Building, Signage,
Windows/Counters/Shelf
Display, Printed Materials,
Web Site, Attire, Business
Environment
One-on-One:
In person, Letter, E-mail,
Fax, Telephone
Follow-up:
In person, Letter, E-mail,
Fax, Telephone
Marketing Mix for Businesses
Selling to Other Businesses:
As a
Supplier:
through Agents,
Brochures/Catalogues, Web
Site, Trade
Media/Shows/Organizations,
Telemarketing, Direct Mail,
and other formats for
presenting ideas,
information, services,
and/or products.
Customers' staff &
management
reacting to their wants,
needs, and ideas
The
Media:
Newspapers, Books,
Magazines, Movies, Radio,
Television, Internet, and
Public Relations Releases
3rd-Parties:
Family, Friends, Associates,
Acquaintances, Customers,
Competitors, and Others in
Their Industry
Once a
marketing mix has been found
that "tastes good" one
cannot sit back and rest.
What works today may not
work tomorrow due to a
changes in the business and
the marketplace.
Alan J. Zell
Web site:
http://www.sellingselling.com/ |