Promotion
Promotion Methods
Promotion is any activity a business undertakes to communicate with customers, raise awareness of its products, and encourage purchases.
Advertising
Paid communication through media channels to reach a large audience. Methods include:
- Television — high reach, memorable, but expensive; suited to mass-market products
- Radio — cheaper than TV; can target specific time slots or local areas
- Print (newspapers, magazines) — useful for reaching older demographics or specialist audiences
- Online — banner ads, search engine ads (Google Ads), social media paid promotion; highly targetable and cost-effective
Sponsorship
A business pays to associate its brand with an event, organisation, or individual. Examples: a sportswear brand sponsoring a football club's kit; a bank naming rights to a stadium.
Benefits: strong brand exposure during events; positive association with success or prestige. Risk: if the sponsored party is involved in a scandal, the brand suffers by association.
Product Trials
Letting customers try a product before committing to purchase. Common in supermarkets (free samples), cosmetics, and software (free trials or freemium models).
Why it works: a customer who has experienced the product first-hand is less uncertain about buying — reducing the perceived risk of purchase.
Special Offers
Temporary price reductions or incentives: discounts, buy-one-get-one-free (BOGOF), loyalty points, money-off coupons. Effective at driving short-term sales and clearing stock, but overuse can damage brand perception (customers begin to expect discounts).
Branding
Building a recognisable and trusted identity — through a logo, colour palette, tone of voice, values, and consistent customer experience. Strong brands command customer loyalty and allow premium pricing.
Apple's brand is so strong that customers queue overnight for product launches — brand equity reduces the need for heavy discounting or aggressive promotion.
Technology in Promotion
Digital technology has transformed how businesses reach customers.
Targeted online advertising — algorithms on platforms like Google, Facebook, and Instagram analyse user behaviour, interests, and demographics to serve advertisements only to users most likely to be interested. This dramatically improves return on advertising spend compared to mass-media advertising.
Viral advertising via social media — content (videos, memes, challenges) that users share voluntarily, spreading the message at zero additional cost to the business. Viral campaigns can reach millions overnight but are difficult to engineer deliberately. User-generated content (reviews, unboxing videos) can amplify this effect.
E-newsletters — low-cost direct communication to subscribers who have opted in to receive updates. High relevance (the subscriber already showed interest) and measurable open/click-through rates. A business can segment its subscriber list and personalise content.
| Technology method | Main advantage | Limitation |
|---|---|---|
| Targeted online ads | Reaches the right audience; measurable | Requires data; ad-blockers reduce reach |
| Viral social media | Zero marginal cost; rapid reach | Hard to control; content must be compelling |
| E-newsletters | Direct, low cost, personalised | Risk of unsubscribes; inbox clutter |
Promotion for Different Market Segments
Different customer groups respond to different promotion methods. Choosing the right channel for the target segment is as important as the message itself.
| Market segment | Effective promotion methods | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| 55+ adults | TV, print (newspapers/magazines), radio | Higher traditional media consumption; less social media usage |
| 18–35 (digital natives) | Social media (Instagram, TikTok, YouTube), influencer marketing | High platform engagement; trust peer recommendations over brand ads |
| Children (under 12) | TV, YouTube Kids, in-store displays, product trials | Visual and experiential; parents influence purchase |
| Business buyers (B2B) | Trade press, industry events, direct sales, LinkedIn | Rational decision-making; need detailed product information |
| Luxury segment | Aspirational magazine ads, exclusive events, sponsorship | Exclusivity and prestige matter more than price |
Exam tip: always justify your promotion choice with two factors: (1) what the target segment responds to and (2) the budget available. A start-up targeting teenagers will not buy prime-time TV slots; social media is both appropriate and affordable.
Worked Example 1: Promoting a New Children's Toy
Scenario: Zap Toys is launching a new action figure range aimed at children aged 6–10. Budget is moderate; the brand is not yet widely known. The target buyer is the parent, but the target user is the child.
Recommended promotion strategy:
- Television advertising on children's channels (e.g. CBBC, Cartoon Network) — children see the product and create demand ("pester power"). High visual impact for a physical toy.
- YouTube Kids pre-roll advertising — children increasingly watch YouTube rather than broadcast TV; short skippable ads with engaging visuals can capture attention.
- Product trials at toy fairs and in-store events — parents can see quality and children engage with the toy; reduces parental hesitation about an unknown brand.
- Influencer marketing — child-friendly YouTube or TikTok creators reviewing the toy. Research shows children trust familiar content creators; a positive review from a followed creator drives immediate demand.
Sponsorship of a major sporting event would be inappropriate (wrong audience) and too costly for a moderate budget. E-newsletters could support parent-directed communication once a customer database exists.
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Worked Example 2: Above-the-Line vs Below-the-Line Thinking
Two useful categories (not named in the spec, but helpful for understanding promotion choices):
Above-the-line (ATL) — mass-media promotion (TV, radio, national press, cinema). Wide reach but expensive and not targeted. Best for large businesses building brand awareness across a broad market.
Below-the-line (BTL) — targeted, direct promotion (social media, e-newsletters, product trials, special offers, direct mail). More cost-effective; measurable; better for reaching specific segments.
A small business with a defined niche (e.g. vegan skincare for 25–40 year-olds) will achieve more with BTL: Instagram advertising, influencer partnerships, e-newsletter offers. Spending on TV advertising would waste most of the budget on uninterested viewers.
A large business like Coca-Cola uses both: ATL to maintain brand awareness globally, BTL to run targeted campaigns for specific product lines or events.
Branding and Long-Term Promotion
A brand is more than a logo. It is the total set of associations a customer has with a business — quality, values, personality, and emotional connection.
Strong branding:
- Creates loyalty — customers return without needing to be persuaded by promotions
- Supports premium pricing — brand equity means customers pay more
- Reduces promotion costs long-term — word-of-mouth does some of the work
- Makes new product launches easier — customers are more willing to try new products from a brand they trust
Building a brand takes time and consistency. Every customer touchpoint (packaging, customer service, social media tone, advertising) must reinforce the same identity.
Exam Technique and Common Mistakes
1. Link promotion to the target segment, not just the product
A common mistake is to say "TV advertising is good because many people see it." This ignores whether those people are the right audience. Always ask: does this channel reach the target segment efficiently?
2. Budget is a real constraint
For any question involving a small business, cost matters. Social media and viral promotion are appropriate partly because they are accessible on limited budgets. Naming TV advertising for a small local business loses marks without a caveat.
3. Sponsorship is not advertising
Sponsorship is about brand association — being linked to a team, event, or cause. Advertising directly communicates a message about the product. They have different purposes and suit different objectives.
4. Viral content cannot be guaranteed
Do not write "the business should go viral." Viral spread is organic and unpredictable. Write instead: "the business could create engaging social media content designed to be shared, which may increase reach at low cost."
5. Technology in promotion means more than "using social media"
For exam marks, explain the mechanism: "targeted advertising algorithms use data on user interests and demographics to show ads only to likely buyers, improving conversion rates and reducing wasted spend."
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