This presentation introduces the online marketing mix concept. It takes you through the challenges faced with the digital marketing mix and how 7P's of marketing are applied in the digital arena.
3. Internet users in India have grown beyond 566 million (87% are regular
users )
87% are regular users : 293 mn (Urban) & 200 mn (Rural)
By 2020 : around 627 million
◦ 67% < 35 yrs & 33% > 35 yrs
The Indian e-commerce market is expected to grow to US$ 200 billion by
2026 from US$ 38.5 billion as of 2017.
◦ (desire for convenience, lack of brand loyalty, willingness to switch, explore other products, take risks,
double income in families has given rise to an era of e-commerce)
4. Understanding the optimal utilisation of the internet for enhanced
marketing efficiency
Designing the best possible way to position products and servuces in the
online domain for greater marketing productivity
Creating a value proposition in which the product and price meet the
consumers’ expectations
5.
6. Value proposition offered to customer
Value – product experience, individual beliefs of the customer, &
customer expectations
Operating only in online
domain & sell products
only through online media
Exist in physical as well
as on internet for
promoting products
E.g. Amazon, ebay etc. E.g. P&G, LG, HUL etc.
7. High levels of convenience for consumers
Offers good customer service
Saves consumer time and money
Provides an enjoyable shopping experience
Merchandises in the context of product offerings and product
information
Provides site design and transaction security
8. 1) Attributes
◦ physical components of the product – shape, size, colour, features and
quality offered by the Internet mass customisation and personalisation.
◦ Can help in one-to-one customer engagement for product proliferation &
sale volume
◦ Medium : online websites, blogs, online communities and social networks
2) Branding
◦ Customers interact in online space, engages with it, and advocates the
brands to others - leading to customer relationship with the brands
3) Co-creation
◦ A creative and active collaboration btw producers and consumers to
generate value both for firm and the consumers. For e.g. asking feedbacks,
suggestions from consumers and other parties solving problems related to
designs, quality etc.
9. 1. Pure Tangible Goods
Tangible products primarily in physical form and mostly commodity in nature.
E.g. Sugar, steel, a basic accessory etc
- No service element
- Consumers are unable to build a connect to the product
2. Tangible goods and related services
Tangible goods with a decent service element to it.
E.g. Mobiles, automobiles, furniture etc. (aesthetics, features, customisation,
conveniences etc)
- Products sold through e-commerce sites
- Products sold in physical form with good amount of intangible elements
like information, history, positive customer references, demo videos, etc.
10. 3. Hybrid Model
Offering having equal mix of product & service elements
E.g. Hospitality services like theme park, restaurants, Apple, Samsung etc.
- Very few firms (as they need to have strong product and service elements in their portfolio that
is hard to achieve & sustain)
4. Major service with few goods
Intangible part forms the core service, while the tangible part is built up as a support element.
E.g. Air travel – additional services or supporting goods like snacks and drinks are sold.
- Service oriented companies moving to a productized format wherein each of their key features
and processes are being broken down and sold as product in itself. (banking, insurance etc)
5. Pure Service
Offering having complete intangible attributes.
E.g. Spa and wellness services, online consulting, support helplines, etc.
11. Distribution
Types of online channel intermediaries
Length of the online channel
Functions performed by members of the online channel
Physical and informational systems that link the channel members and
provide for coordination and management of their collective effort to
deliver the collective product or service
Marketing Segmentation
Consumer segmentation - based on need, website characteristics search &
pre-purchase judgement
Consumer Segmentation - based on consumer traits & online shopping
issues
12.
13.
14. Consumer Traits
Willingness to take risk
Seeking joy in surfing internet
Saving time while shopping
Feeling socially aware
Likes playing games and using trendy apps with pleasant colour schemes
Enjoys voicing their opinions
Feeling smart in front of their peers
Emotionally satisfying experience
Online shopping issues
Product risk issues
Interactive risk issues
Transaction security issues
Privacy issues
15. Targeting
Two main strategies:
1) Niche Marketing : a company selects a target segment and develops one
or more marketing mixes to meet the needs of the segment
2) Micro Marketing or individualised targeting : a company tailors all or part
of the marketing mix to a small number of people.
Positioning
- Creating image of the company & products
- Positioning among the competitors to carve out own market niche
- Positioning on the basis of service attributes, innovative technology
image, benefits, user categories, or comparisons with competitors
16. Factors affecting costs in online domain are :
Online customer service, which can be expensive
High distribution costs for specific customers as products need to be shipped
separately
Affiliate programmes tend to be expensive as they involve rewarding the referring
parties
Maintenance and development of websites involve costs
The Internet spells low-order processing fee due to self-service
Just-in-time inventories and low overheads
Costs of distribution of certain digital products like music which is downloadable
online are very low
Animated shop bots offer online customer service at low cost by replacing service
personnel
17. Fixed pricing
1) Price Leadership : lowest priced product entry in a particular category.
In online domain, low prices are a function of low costs of small time
organisations their products through the Internet
2) Promotional pricing : Targeted email messages allow organisations to
follow promotional pricing to promote a first time purchase
Dynamic pricing
◦ Pricing can be devised based on order size and timing, demand and supply
levels, and other preset decision factors.
◦ Using cookie files, online sellers recognise individual and experiments with
offers and prices to motivate transactions.
◦ For example, any person who books a flight within seven days of departure is quoted the
full price
18. Goals of online marketing promotion include the following :
◦ Driving the prospects to the website
◦ Increasing website registrations
◦ Increasing online transactions
◦ Building consumer engagement and involvement
Online promotion Mix
◦ Online advertisement,
◦ Personalised selling,
◦ Online promotion using online coupons,
◦ Sweepstakes contests
◦ Product samples online
◦ Online exhibitions along with virtual tours
◦ E-newspapers & Magazines
◦ Emails
◦ Interactive websites
◦ Online display ads
◦ Fliers
19.
20. People – developing online teams with a mix of
◦ digital marketing expertise,
◦ technology know-how,
◦ multi-channel experience,
◦ knowledge of automation tools,
◦ and target customer insights,
◦ as well as understand of human impulse and desire.
Processes – developing rigorous process-driven marketing organisation
– clear steps to
◦ identify target customer clusters,
◦ Develop integrated supplier-customer processes
◦ Manage campaigns
◦ Aligning goals to consumer funnel
21. Programs : consumer –driven programs which run in a holistic
manner online and offline to meet a firm’s marketing
objectives. Includes multi-channel initiatives targeting all
stages
Performance : setting up systems and ways to measure
performance and desired output at each stage of the
marketing activity
22. E-product
◦ Digitisation allows firms to create virtual marketplaces
◦ Helps firms to present expanded assortment of products options
◦ Direct and immediate delivery of digitizable products has created new
opportunities to wireless services such as bill payment, maps etc.
◦ Organisation selling products that can be evaluated adequately prior to
purchase have a higher success rate
E-price
◦ Wider and easier availability of price information increases consumer power in
the marketplace and create a tendency of price levels to decrease.
◦ The seller-provided advertised reference prices is reduced in the online
environments because of greater transparency.
23. E-promotion
◦ When and where an ad is placed during an online session can significantly
impact advertising effectiveness
◦ Firms must devote considerable efforts to develop and implement an online
advertising and promotion strategy
◦ Carefully coordinated ads on channels like television, radio, and print can
lead to good returns and will add to firm’s online visibility
E-place
◦ The retention rate of customer can vary significantly depending upon the
specific channel in which that customer was initially acquired.
◦ Compared to radio, television, and direct mail, websites is associated with
higher retention rates
◦ Consumers who shop access multiple channels provide higher revenues,
higher share of wallet, and tend to be more active than single-channel
customers.