15 important marketing interview questions

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1) Marketing – What is Marketing? Examples. Difference between Marketing and Selling. Why is Marketing the most important function in an organisation? What are 4 Ps of Marketing Mix and 7ps of Service Marketing Mix? What is the difference between Marketing a Good (tangible product) and Marketing a Service? Marketing – What is marketing? Examples. Marketing is the concept started in early years of 20 th century. Earlier when industrial revolution took place, the supply for the goods exceeded the demand and there was need to promote and sell the goods. With that need, the concept of selling evolved. As competition increased, companies went beyond the concept of selling to generate the revenue and then broader concept of marketing came to existence. The definition of marketing is as follows. General Definition: “Marketing is an integrated process of identifying the needs of customers, designing a product to fulfill the need, creating that need into demand for product and at the end selling the product profitably.” Definition of Philip Kotler: It is the Art and Science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping, and growing customers through creating, delivering, & communicating superior customer value. Definition by Peter Drucker: “The aim of marketing is to know and understand the customer so well that the product or service fits him and sell itself” E.g. Amazon started e-commerce. Customers wanted to save time of shopping. Amazon came up with a service which actually was saving time of customers selling them things online. This was an approach which met needs of the customer and this is a very good example of marketing. E.g. IKEA understood the need of the customers to have furniture in low price so they came up with the knockdown furniture. Difference between Marketing and Selling. Sales Marketing Sales starts with a product. Marketing starts with customer Sales is subset of marketing. Marketing is vast concept. Sales is just part of it. Focus is to achieve sales target Focus is to fulfill the customer’s needs Sales process is designed considering the short term Marketing process is designed considering the long term

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15 marketing questions asked in interviews

Transcript of 15 important marketing interview questions

Page 1: 15 important marketing interview questions

1) Marketing – What is Marketing? Examples. Difference between Marketing and Selling. Why is Marketing the most important function in an organisation? What are 4 Ps of Marketing Mix and 7ps of Service Marketing Mix? What is the difference between Marketing a Good (tangible product) and Marketing a Service? Marketing – What is marketing? Examples. Marketing is the concept started in early years of 20th century. Earlier when industrial revolution took place, the supply for the goods exceeded the demand and there was need to promote and sell the goods. With that need, the concept of selling evolved. As competition increased, companies went beyond the concept of selling to generate the revenue and then broader concept of marketing came to existence. The definition of marketing is as follows. General Definition: “Marketing is an integrated process of identifying the needs of customers, designing a product to fulfill the need, creating that need into demand for product and at the end selling the product profitably.”

Definition of Philip Kotler: It is the Art and Science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping, and growing customers through creating, delivering, & communicating superior customer value. Definition by Peter Drucker: “The aim of marketing is to know and understand the customer so well that the product or service fits him and sell itself” E.g. Amazon started e-commerce. Customers wanted to save time of shopping. Amazon came up with a service which actually was saving time of customers selling them things online. This was an approach which met needs of the customer and this is a very good example of marketing. E.g. IKEA understood the need of the customers to have furniture in low price so they came up with the knockdown furniture.

Difference between Marketing and Selling.

Sales Marketing

Sales starts with a product. Marketing starts with customer Sales is subset of marketing. Marketing is vast concept. Sales is just part of

it. Focus is to achieve sales target Focus is to fulfill the customer’s needs Sales process is designed considering the short term

Marketing process is designed considering the long term

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Why is Marketing the most important function in an organization? Following are the functions of Marketing which do make it as the most important function in an organization. i. Revenue generation: Marketing is the only department in an organization which brings

in the revenue for the organization. Other departments like finance, HR, operations etc. do spend money. Marketing is the department which actually sells the product or the service of an organization and deals with customers.

ii. Brand building: Brand building and PR is the part of marketing so, marketing builds reputation of a company.

iii. Sustainable growth: The reputation and positioning of an organization will decide the growth and value of the organization. So, marketing is the department which takes care of this is certainly the most important function of any organization.

What are 4 Ps of Marketing Mix and 7ps of Service Marketing Mix? The four P’s of marketing: McCarthy gave the 4 P’s of marketing mix. The four P’s are the pillars of marketing which becomes a frame for marketing campaigns. Product: Product is an item that satisfies the needs of consumers. It could be tangible good or an intangible service. Product has various attributes like product variety, quality, design, features, packaging etc. Marketer is expected to design all the attributes of the product and also expected to communicate those values to the customers. Price: Price is the amount the customer pays for the product or service. Price is a very important attribute. As price has direct impact on the profits of the company, it should be adjusted properly. The price should be well placed keeping in mind the value of offered product. Price should also complement the other elements of the marketing mix.

Promotion:

Promotion includes all of the methods of communication that a marketer may use to provide

information to different parties about the product. Promotion comprises elements such

as: advertising, public relations, sales organization and sales promotion.

Place: Place refers to providing the product at a place which is convenient for consumers to

access.

The 7P’s of service marketing:

Product:

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In case of services, the ‘product’ is intangible, heterogeneous and perishable. Moreover, its production and consumption are inseparable. Hence, there is scope for customizing the offering as per customer requirements and the actual customer encounter therefore assumes particular significance.

Pricing:

Pricing of services is tougher than pricing of goods. While the latter can be priced easily by taking into account the raw material costs. In the case of services, labor and overhead costs - also need to be considered.

Promotion:

Service offering can be easily replicated so, promotion is a crucial in differentiating a service offering in the mind of the consumer. Thus, service providers offering identical services such as airlines or banks and insurance companies invest heavily in advertising their services.

People:

People are a defining factor in a service delivery process, since a service is inseparable from the person providing it. Thus, a restaurant is known as much for its food as for the service provided by its staff. The same is true of banks and department stores. Consequently, customer service training for staff has become a top priority for many organizations today.

Process:

The process of service delivery is crucial since it ensures that the same standard of service is repeatedly delivered to the customers. Therefore, most companies have a service blueprint which provides the details of the service delivery process, often going down to even defining the service script and the greeting phrases to be used by the service staff.

Physical Evidence:

Services are intangible in nature most service providers strive to incorporate certain tangible elements into their offering to enhance customer experience. For e.g. there are hair salons that have well designed waiting areas often with magazines and plush sofas to relax while they await their turn.

What is the difference between Marketing a Good (tangible product) and Marketing a Service? While marketing a good, focus is on the Product, Price, Place, and Promotion. While marketing

a service, emphasis is surely on the 4P’s of goods marketing but there are additional elements

like Process, Physical evidence, and People also. Product is tangible and services are intangible

so physical evidence is the factor which is included in the 7P’s of service marketing.

Also the pricing of product is little easier than the pricing of a service.

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2) What is Positioning? What is a Positioning Map? What is an FCB Grid? What are Points Of Parity (POP) and Points Of Differences? What is Branding?

Positioning: Positioning is the distinct way by which the marketers attempt to create a distinct

impression on the customer’s mind.

Positioning is actually getting closer to the mind of customer and creating a good impression of

a product/service which will create a sort of faith in customer’s mind about the product. There

are different strategies used for positioning, distinction is the best way for positioning.

Organizations do always find a distinct way for differentiation of product/service. E.g. UBS is

distinguished from the other range of business school by the impression of “green b-school”.

Positioning map:

Positioning map is a diagrammatic representation of the perceptions of potential customers.

Positioning map has ‘n’ number of dimensions. Generally it has two dimensions.

Fig1- Positioning map of automobiles.

This map is the positioning map of automobile companies. There are four attributes viz.

conservative, sporty, practical affordable and classy distinctive. There are companies which are

positioned on the map with regard to their offerings.

FCB Grid:

The FCB Grid was created by Richard Vaughn. With this model, messages are categorized by "thinking" and "feeling", "low" and "high."

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Following diagram is demonstrating the structure of FCB grid.

Fig 2: Structure of FCB grid.

Low Think (practicality, pragmatism)

High Think

Low Feel (sensuality, pleasure)

High Feel (product as extension of self)

A Low Feel commercial demonstrates the pleasure obtained by using the product. This approach is popular for foods.

A High Feel commercial could emphasize how the product makes the consumer hip or cool. This approach is popular for advertising products like clothing, shoes, or sports cars.

Fig 3: FCB grid strategies for advertisement

FCB grid helps in developing the strategies for advertisements. It clarifies how consumer

approaches the buying process.

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Points of Parity (POPs):

POP are the associations those are not unique to the brand but those are the once which

cannot be missed by the brands. POPs are the associations where you can match the bets of

competitors. POPs may not be the reasons behind selection of brands. But, POPs could be the

reasons behind the rejections of brands.

Points of difference (PODs):

PODs are the associations/benefits those are unique to the brand. PODs are the points where

you claim the exclusivity over the other products in the category.

What is Branding?

Branding is the marketing practice of creating a name, symbol or design that identifies and

differentiates a product from other products. It’s all about creating differences between the

products. Marketers need to teach customers “who” the product is – by giving it name and

other brand elements to identify it.

Branding creates mental structures that help consumers organize their knowledge about

products and services in a way that clarifies their decision making.

3) What is Segmentation? What is Target Marketing? What is a Target Group (TG)? What is the difference between Target Market or Target Group and Target Audience? What is segmentation?

Market segmentation is dividing the group of potential customers with similar needs or

characteristics who are likely to exhibit similar purchase behavior.

Types of segmentation:

Geographic-

Marketers can segment according to geographic criteria—nations, states, regions,

countries, cities, neighborhoods, or postal codes. The geo-cluster approach combines

demographic data with geographic data to create a more accurate or specific

profile. With respect to region, in rainy regions merchants can sell things like raincoats,

umbrellas and gumboots. In hot regions, one can sell summer clothing.

Demographic- Based on age, gender, income family size

Psychographic- Based on lifestyle, personality and SEC grid.

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Behavioural-

Behavioral segmentation divides consumers into groups according to their knowledge

of, attitude towards, usage rate or response to a product

What is target marketing?

After identifying the market segments, the one which provides greatest opportunities is the

target segment. Targeting the target segment to achieve the goal of marketing is target

marketing.

What is target group?

A target market is a group of customers that the business has decided to aim its marketing

efforts and ultimately its merchandise. A well-defined target market is the first element to a

marketing strategy. The target market and the marketing mix variables of product,

place(distribution), promotion and price are the four elements of a marketing mix strategy that

determine the success of a product in the marketplace.

What is difference between target market and target audience?

Target market: A target market is a group of customers that the business has decided to aim its

marketing efforts and ultimately its merchandise. A well-defined target market is the first

element to a marketing strategy.

Target audience: Target audience is a specific group of people within the target market at which

a product or the marketing message of a product is aimed at. For example, if a company sells

new diet programs for men with heart disease problems (target market) the communication

may be aimed at the spouse (target audience) who takes care of the nutrition plan of her

husband and child.

4) What is a Product Strategy? Explain the Total Product Concept with Examples? What are Product Mix

and Product Line?

Customers will choose a product based on their perceived value of it. Satisfaction is the degree to which the actual use of a product matches the perceived value at the time of the purchase. A customer is satisfied only if the actual value is the same or exceeds the perceived value. Kotler defined five levels to a product:

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1. Core Benefit The fundamental need or want that consumers satisfy by consuming the product or service. The core product is just an abstract which is basic idea of the product. E.g. For a hotel service, core product would be rest or sleep.

2. Generic Product/ basic product A version of the product containing only those attributes or characteristics absolutely necessary for it to function. Generic product includes all the basic facilities those are essential for offering. E.g. Hotel having Bed, bathroom etc. 3. Expected Product The set of attributes or characteristics that buyers normally expect and agree to when they purchase a product. E.g. Buyer expects clean bed, working lamps and relative degree of quiet etc. 4. Augmented Product Inclusion of additional features, benefits, attributes or related services that serve to differentiate the product from its competitors. E.g. Hotels provide Wi-Fi services etc. 5. Potential Product All the augmentations and transformations a product might undergo in the future. There are always

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Product mix:

Product mix is the set of all the products and items a particular seller offers for sale. A product

mix is also termed as product assortments. A product mix consists of various product lines. For

e.g. HUL has a wide product mix. i.e. HUL offers products from personal care range, home care

and food. Under every category there are different brands.

Length- Width – Depth of product mix:

1. Width of the product mix refers to how many different product lines a company carries.

Over here in this example, HUL carries three product lines viz. personal care range,

home care and food.

2. Length of the product mix refers to total number of the products in the mix.

3. Depth of the product mix refers to how many variants are offered of each product line.

For e.g. Lux comes in four variants and in two sizes then Lux has depth of eight.

Product Line:

Product line is the category of the products offered by a company. For e.g. Personal care is a

product line offered by HUL. Personal care has different products under it like personal wash,

skin care cosmetics etc.

5) What are different types of Pricing Strategies?

Markup pricing-

Markup pricing is the most elementary method of pricing. Method is to add standard markup to

the product’s cost and adding markup to the profit. Lawyers and accountants typically price by

adding a standard markup on their time and cost.

Let’s take an example

Variable cost : Rs. 10

Fixed costs : Rs.300,000

Expected unite sales: 50,000

Suppose a toaster manufacturer has the following costs and sales expectations:

Unit cost= variable cost+ (fixed cost/unit sales)= Rs. 10+(300000/50000) = Rs. 16

Assuming manufacturer wants to earn 20 percent markup on sales. The manufacturer’s markup

price is given by :

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Markup price= unit cost/(1-desired return on sales) = Rs.16/(1-0.2) = Rs.20

The manufacturer will charge dealers Rs.20 per toaster and make profit of Rs. 4. If dealer wants

to earn 50 percent on their selling price they will markup the toster 100 percent to Rs.40.

Target- return pricing:

The process of setting an item's price by using an equation to compute the price that

will result in a certain level of planned profit given the sale of a specified amount of items. By

using a target return pricing method, a business is able to set its products' prices at such levels

that its corporate profit objectives are likely to be met if sales continue to run at or above the

amount specified.

Perceived value pricing :

The valuation of good or service according to how much consumers are willing to pay for it,

rather than upon its production and delivery costs. Using a perceived

value pricing technique might be somewhat arbitrary, but it can greatly assist in

the effective marketing of a product since it sets product pricing in line with its perceived value

by potential buyers.

Value based pricing:

Value-based pricing (also value optimized pricing) is a pricing strategy which sets prices

primarily, but not exclusively, on the value, perceived or estimated, to the customer rather than

on the cost of the product or historical prices. Where it is successfully used, it will improve

profitability due to the higher prices without impacting greatly on sales volumes.

Value-based pricing is predicated upon an understanding of customer value. In business-to-

consumer markets, sellers should understand the impact their products or services have on end

user utility. In the business-to-business environment, companies must know how their offering

helps customers, that is other businesses, become more profitable. In many settings, gaining

this understanding requires primary research. This may include evaluation of customer

operations and interviews with customer personnel. Survey methods are sometimes used to

determine the value a customer attributes to a product or a service. Purchase intent, won/loss

analysis and financial value measurement are examples of basic research methods that can

unearth customer insights during the pricing process. The results of such surveys often depict a

customer's 'willingness to pay.'

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Going rate pricing:

In going rate pricing, the firm sets its price largely on the competitor’s prices. In oligopolistic

industries that sell a commodity such as steel, paper or fertilizer all firms normally charge the

same price. Smaller firms “follow the leader”, changing their prices when the market leader’s

prices change rather than when their own demand or cost change.

Auction type pricing:

An auction is a process of buying and selling goods or services by offering them up for bid,

taking bids, and then selling the item to the highest bidder. In economic theory, an auction may

refer to any mechanism or set of trading rules for exchange.

English auction, also known as an open ascending price auction. This type of auction is arguably the most common form of auction in use today. Participants bid openly against one another, with each subsequent bid required to be higher than the previous bid. An auctioneer may announce prices, bidders may call out their bids themselves (or have a proxy call out a bid on their behalf), or bids may be submitted electronically with the highest current bid publicly displayed. In some cases a maximum bid might be left with the auctioneer, who may bid on behalf of the bidder according to the bidder's instructions. The auction ends when no participant is willing to bid further, at which point the highest bidder pays their bid. Alternatively, if the seller has set a minimum sale price in advance (the 'reserve' price) and the final bid does not reach that price the item remains unsold. Sometimes the auctioneer sets a minimum amount by which the next bid must exceed the current highest bid. The most significant distinguishing factor of this auction type is that the current highest bid is always available to potential bidders. The English auction is commonly used for selling goods, most prominently antiques and artwork, but also secondhand goods and real estate.

Dutch auction also known as an open descending price auction. In the traditional Dutch auction the auctioneer begins with a high asking price which is lowered until some participant is willing to accept the auctioneer's price. The winning participant pays the last announced price. The Dutch auction is named for its best known example, the Dutch tulip auctions. ("Dutch auction" is also sometimes used to describe online auctions where several identical goods are sold simultaneously to an equal number of high bidders.) In addition to cut flower sales in the Netherlands, Dutch auctions have also been used for perishable commodities such as fish and tobacco. The Dutch auction is not widely used.

Sealed first-price auction, also known as a first-price sealed-bid auction (FPSB). In this type of auction all bidders simultaneously submit sealed bids so that no bidder knows the bid of any other participant. The highest bidder pays the price they submitted. This type of auction is distinct from the English auction, in that bidders can only submit one bid each. Furthermore, as bidders cannot see the bids of other participants they cannot adjust their own bids accordingly. This kind of bid produces the same outcome as Dutch auction. What are effectively sealed first-price auctions are commonly

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called tendering for procurement by companies and organisations, particularly for government contracts and auctions for mining leases.

6) What is the role of “Place” in a Marketing Mix? What is a VMS and an HMS? What are different format of retail stores found in India? (You may refer to my class slides of RMS)

Role of Place: The important factor to note about the importance of place in the marketing mix is that it does not refer to the location of the business itself, but rather to the location of the customers. The place deals with strategies the business can employ to get its goods from its present location to the location of the customers. Such a project must of necessity entail a study of the demographic that constitutes the customers with the aim of finding out their location. In an increasingly global economy, the location of the customers of a company located in Singapore could span the different continents of the world. As such, the company must figure out the best way to channel its products from Singapore to its customers in Africa, Europe and other continents. In this way, it is easy to see the role of place in the marketing mix. This allows such companies to come up with the best methods for achieving maximum distribution of goods to the customers. One of the examples of a place or channel includes the retailer. After identifying the target market, retail stores located nearby could serve as a place for reaching these customers. Another element that could serve as a place for reaching the customers is the Internet. If the company is located in an industrialized country, then it is logical to assume that a large number of its customers use the Internet in some form. This element illustrates the importance of place in the marketing mix because such customers can order from the company directly through Web sites, which the company has set up in advance for such a purpose. In this sense, the Internet serves as a place for the purpose of reaching the customers. The place could also refer to the methods and channels for the effective and expeditious distribution of the product to the target customers. Such channels may include the distributors of the product. It may also include well-coordinated methods for the transportation of the goods to the final consumers.

VMS : Vertical Marketing system

A vertical marketing system (VMS) is one in which the main members of a distribution channel—

producer, wholesaler, and retailer—work together as a unified group in order to meet consumer

needs. In conventional marketing systems, producers, wholesalers, and retailers are separate

businesses that are all trying to maximize their profits. When the effort of one channel member

to maximize profits comes at the expense of other members, conflicts can arise that reduce

profits for the entire channel. To address this problem, more and more companies are forming

vertical marketing systems.

Vertical marketing systems can take several forms. In a corporate VMS, one member of the

distribution channel owns the other members. Although they are owned jointly, each company in

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the chain continues to perform a separate task. In an administered VMS, one member of the

channel is large and powerful enough to coordinate the activities of the other members without

an ownership stake. Finally, a contractual VMS consists of independent firms joined together by

contract for their mutual benefit. One type of contractual VMS is a retailer cooperative, in which

a group of retailers buy from a jointly owned wholesaler. Another type of contractual VMS is a

franchise organization, in which a producer licenses a wholesaler to distribute its products.

The concept behind vertical marketing systems is similar to vertical integration. In vertical

integration, a company expands its operations by assuming the activities of the next link in the

chain of distribution. For example, an auto parts supplier might practice forward integration by

purchasing a retail outlet to sell its products. Similarly, the auto parts supplier might practice

backward integration by purchasing a steel plant to obtain the raw materials needed to

manufacture its products. Vertical marketing should not be confused with horizontal marketing,

in which members at the same level in a channel of distribution band together in strategic

alliances or joint ventures to exploit a new marketing opportunity.

HMS – Horizontal Marketing system

A horizontal marketing system is a distribution channel arrangement whereby two or more organizations at the same level join together for marketing purposes to capitalize on a new opportunity. For example: a bank and a supermarket agree to have the bank’s ATMs located at the supermarket’s locations, two manufacturers combining to achieve economies of scale, otherwise not possible with each acting alone, in meeting the needs and demands of a very large retailer, or two wholesalers joining together to serve a particular region at a certain time of year.

According to businessdictionary.com, Horizontal Marketing System is a merger of firms on the same level in order to pursue marketing opportunities. The firms combine their resources such as production capabilities and distribution in order to maximize their earnings potential.

An example is of Apple and Starbucks announced music partnership in 2007. The purpose of this partnership was to allow Starbucks customers to wirelessly browse, search for, preview, buy, and download music from iTunes Music Store onto their iPod touch, iPhone, or PC or Mac running iTunes. Apple’s leadership in digital music together with the unique Starbucks experience synergized a partnership to offer customers a world class digital music experience.

Apple benefits from this partnership with higher iTunes sales because Starbucks has a lot of mug punters. When Apple first introduced its iTunes music store, it hoped to sell one million songs in six months, but to its surprise, Apple sold over one million songs within the first six days of its iTunes music store opening. With such loyal online music consumers, Starbucks benefit’s from higher sales, increase in market share, and stronger customer loyalty. This example demonstrates how two companies can join forces to follow a new market opportunity.

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This opportunity allowed Starbucks and Apple to both gain something of greater, than otherwise would be possible if they somehow attempted this strategy independently

7) What is Brand Equity? How can you Build Brand Equity? . How can you measure Brand Equity? Brand equity:

Brand equity is which describes the value of having a well-known brand name, based on the idea that the owner of a well-known brand name can generate more money from products with that brand name than from products with a less well-known name, as consumers believe that a product with a well-known name is better than products with less well-known names.

How to build brand equity?

Brand equity is built by choosing right set of brand equity drivers.

1. Initial choices of brand elements or identities that make up the brand. Like brand

names, URL’s , logos, symbols, characters, spokes people, slogans, jingles packages and

signage.

2. The products or service and all accompanying marketing activities and supporting

marketing programs-

For e.g. Vodafone came up with zoo-zoo campaign which was edgy and humorous.

Coming up with those kind of advertisements which depict mischievous acts by zoo-zoo

added fan following to Vodafone.

3. Other associates which are indirectly transferred to the brand by indirectly linking it to

some other entity:

For e.g. Airtel mobile operator uses A.R.Rehman as brand endorser. A.R.Rehman has

won Oscar awards for music composing. Also the signature tune of the brand is

composed by A.R.Rehman which is very famous. These things like person, music links

people to brand and helps in building brand equity.

How to measure brand equity?

There are many ways to measure a brand. Some measurements approaches are at the firm level, some at the product level , and still others are at the consumer level.

Firm Level: Firm level approaches measure the brand as a financial asset. In short, a calculation is made regarding how much the brand is worth as an intangible asset. For example, if you were to take the value of the firm, as derived by its market capitalization—and then subtract tangible assets and "measurable" intangible assets—the residual would be the brand equity. One high-profile firm level approach is by the consulting firm Inter brand. To do its calculation, Inter brand estimates brand value on the basis of projected profits discounted to a present value. The discount rate is a subjective rate determined by Inter brand and Wall Street equity

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specialists and reflects the risk profile, market leadership, stability and global reach of the brand. Brand valuation modeling is closely related to brand equity, and a number of models and approaches have been developed by different consultancies. Brand valuation models typically combine a brand equity measure (e.g.: the proportion of sales contributed by "brand") with commercial metrics such as margin or economic profit.

Product Level: The classic product level brand measurement example is to compare the price of a no-name or private label product to an "equivalent" branded product. The difference in price, assuming all things equal, is due to the brand. More recently a revenue premium approach has been advocated. Marketing mix modeling can isolate "base" and "incremental" sales, and it is sometimes argued that base sales approximate to a measure of brand equity. More sophisticated marketing mix models have a floating base that can capture changes in underlying brand equity for a product over time.

Consumer Level: This approach seeks to map the mind of the consumer to find out what associations with the brand the consumer has. This approach seeks to measure the awareness (recall and recognition) and brand image (the overall associations that the brand has). Free association tests and projective techniques are commonly used to uncover the tangible and intangible attributes, attitudes, and intentions about a brand. Brands with high levels of awareness and strong, favorable and unique associations are high equity brands.

All of these calculations are, at best, approximations. A more complete understanding of the brand can occur if multiple measures are used.

8) What is Marketing ROI or Return On Marketing Investment (ROMI)?

Return on marketing investment (ROMI) is the contribution attributable to marketing (net of marketing spending), divided by the marketing 'invested' or risked. It is not like the other 'return-on-investment' metrics because marketing is not the same kind of investment. Instead of moneys that are 'tied' up in plants and inventories (often considered Capital Expenditure or CAPEX), marketing funds are typically 'risked.' Marketing spending is typically expensed in the current period (Operational Expenditure or OPEX). The idea of measuring the market’s response in terms of sales and profits is not new, but terms such as marketing ROI and ROMI are used more frequently now than in past periods. Usually, marketing spending will be deemed as justified if the ROMI is positive. In a survey of nearly 200 senior marketing managers, nearly half responded that they found the ROMI metric very useful.

The ROMI concept first came to prominence in the 1990s. The phrase "return on marketing investment" became more widespread in the next decade following the publication of two books Return on Marketing Investment by Guy Powell (2002) and Marketing ROI by James Lenskold (2003).In the book "What Sticks: Why Advertising Fails And How To Guarantee Yours Succeeds," Rex Briggs suggested the term "ROMO" for Return-On-Marketing-Objective, to reflect the idea that marketing campaigns may have a range of objectives, where the return is not immediate sales or profits. For example, a marketing campaign may aim to change the perception of a brand.

Short term vs. Long term

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Short term - The first, short-term ROMI, is also used as a simple index measuring the dollars of revenue (or market share, contribution margin or other desired outputs) for every dollar of marketing spend.

For example, if a company spends $100,000 on a direct mail piece and it delivers $500,000 in incremental revenue, then the ROMI factor is 5.0. If the incremental contribution margin for that $500,000 in revenue is 60%, then the margin ROMI (the incremental margin for $100,000 of marketing spent is $300,000 (= $500,000 x 60%). Of which, the $100,000 spent on direct mail advertising will be subtracted and the difference will be divided by the same $100,000 . Every dollar expended in direct mail advertising translates an additional $2 on the company's bottomline.

The value of the first ROMI is in its simplicity. In most cases a simple determination of revenue per dollar spent for each marketing activity can be sufficient enough to help make important decisions to improve the entire marketing mix.

The most common Short Term approach to measuring ROMI is by applying Marketing Mix Modeling techniques to separate out the incremental sales effects of marketing investment.

Long term - In a similar way the second ROMI concept, long-term ROMI can be used to determine other less tangible aspects of marketing effectiveness. For example, ROMI could be used to determine the incremental value of marketing as it pertains to increased brand awareness, consideration or purchase intent. In this way both the longer-term value of marketing activities (incremental brand awareness, etc.) and the shorter-term revenue and profit can be determined. This is a sophisticated metric that balances marketing and business analytics and is used increasingly by many of the world's leading organizations (Hewlett-Packard and Procter & Gamble to name two) to measure the economic (that is, cash-flow derived) benefits created by marketing investments. For many other organizations, this method offers a way to prioritize investments and allocate marketing and other resources on a formalized basis.

Long term ROMI models will often draw on Customer lifetime value models to demonstrate the long term value of incremental customer acquisition or reduced churn rate. Some more sophisticated Marketing Mix Modeling approaches include multi-year long term ROMI by including CLV type analysis.

Long term ROMI models have sometimes used Brand valuation techniques to measure how building a brand with marketing spend can create balance sheet value for brands (or at least for brands that have been transacted, and therefore under accounting rules can have a balance sheet value). The ISO 10668 standard sets out the appropriate process of valuing brands and sets out six key requirements, transparency, validity, reliability, sufficiency, objectivity and financial, behavioral and legal parameters. Brand valuation is distinguished from brand equity by placing a money value on a brand, and in this way a ROMI can be calculated.

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9) What is BCG Matrix and what is the purpose of BCG Matrix? What is Ansoff Matrix and the purpose of such a Matrix? What is McKinsey 7’s Framework?

BCG is a useful tool for developing marketing objectives. The growth–share matrix is a chart that was created by Bruce D. Henderson for the Boston Consulting Group in 1970 to help corporations to analyze their business units, that is, their product lines. This helps the company allocate resources and is used as an analytical tool in brand marketing, product management, strategic management, and portfolio analysis.

Cash cows is where company has high market share in a slow-growing industry. These units typically generate cash in excess of the amount of cash needed to maintain the business. They are regarded as staid and boring, in a "mature" market, and every corporation would be thrilled to own as many as possible. They are to be "milked" continuously with as little investment as possible, since such investment would be wasted in an industry with low growth.

Dogs, more charitably called pets, are units with low market share in a mature, slow-growing industry. These units typically "break even", generating barely enough cash to maintain the business's market share. Though owning a break-even unit provides the social benefit of providing jobs and possible synergies that assist other business units, from an accounting point of view such a unit is worthless, not generating cash for the company. They depress a profitable company's return on assets ratio, used by many investors to judge how well a company is being managed. Dogs, it is thought, should be sold off.

Question marks (also known as problem children) are business operating in a high market growth, but having a low market share. They are a starting point for most businesses. Question marks have a potential to gain market share and become stars, and eventually cash cows when market growth slows. If question marks do not succeed in becoming a market leader, then after perhaps years of cash consumption, they will degenerate into

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dogs when market growth declines. Question marks must be analyzed carefully in order to determine whether they are worth the investment required to grow market share.

Stars are units with a high market share in a fast-growing industry. They are

graduated question marks with a market or niche leading trajectory, for example:

amongst market share front-runners in a high-growth sector, and/or having

a monopolistic or increasingly dominant USP with

burgeoning/fortuitous proposition drive(s) from: novelty (e.g. Last.FM upon CBS

Interactive due diligence), fashion/promotion (e.g. newly prestigious celebrity branded

fragrances), customer loyalty (e.g. greenfield or military/gang enforcement backed,

and/or innovative, grey-market/illicit retail of addictive drugs, for instance the British

East India Company's, late-1700s opium-based Qianlong Emperor embargo-busting,

Canton System), Stars require high funding to fight competitions and maintain a growth

rate. When industry growth slows, if they remain a niche leader or are amongst market

leaders it’s have been able to maintain their category leadership stars become cash

cows, else they become dogs due to low relative market share.

Ansoff matrix :

To portray alternative corporate growth strategies, Igor Ansoff presented a matrix that focused on the firm's present and potential products and markets (customers). By considering ways to grow via existing products and new products, and in existing markets and new markets, there are four possible product-market combinations. Ansoff's matrix is shown below:

Ansoff Matrix

Existing Products New Products

Existing

Markets

Market Penetration

Product Development

New

Markets

Market Development

Diversification

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Ansoff's matrix provides four different growth strategies:

Market Penetration - the firm seeks to achieve growth with existing products in their current market segments, aiming to increase its market share.

Market Development - the firm seeks growth by targeting its existing products to new market segments.

Product Development - the firms develops new products targeted to its existing market segments.

Diversification - the firm grows by diversifying into new businesses by developing new products for new markets.

Selecting a Product-Market Growth Strategy

The market penetration strategy is the least risky since it leverages many of the firm's existing resources and capabilities. In a growing market, simply maintaining market share will result in growth, and there may exist opportunities to increase market share if competitors reach capacity limits. However, market penetration has limits, and once the market approaches saturation another strategy must be pursued if the firm is to continue to grow.

Market development options include the pursuit of additional market segments or geographical regions. The development of new markets for the product may be a good strategy if the firm's core competencies are related more to the specific product than to its experience with a specific market segment. Because the firm is expanding into a new market, a market development strategy typically has more risk than a market penetration strategy.

A product development strategy may be appropriate if the firm's strengths are related to its specific customers rather than to the specific product itself. In this situation, it can leverage its strengths by developing a new product targeted to its existing customers. Similar to the case of new market development, new product development carries more risk than simply attempting to increase market share.

Diversification is the most risky of the four growth strategies since it requires both product and market development and may be outside the core competencies of the firm. In fact, this quadrant of the matrix has been referred to by some as the "suicide cell". However, diversification may be a reasonable choice if the high risk is compensated by the chance of a high rate of return. Other advantages of diversification include the potential to gain a foothold in an attractive industry and the reduction of overall business portfolio risk.

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10) What is an SBU? What is a Value Chain? What is Supply Chain Management?

SBU- Strategic business unit:

In business, a strategic business unit (SBU) is a profit center which focuses on product offering and market segment. SBUs typically have a discrete marketing plan, analysis of competition, and marketing campaign, even though they may be part of a larger business entity.

An SBU may be a business unit within a larger corporation, or it may be a business unto itself or a branch. Corporations may be composed of multiple SBUs, each of which is responsible for its own profitability. General Electric is an example of a company with this sort of business organization. SBUs are able to affect most factors which influence their performance. Managed as separate businesses, they are responsible to a parent corporation. General Electric has 49 SBUs.

Companies today often use the word segmentation or division when referring to SBUs or an aggregation of SBUs that share such commonalities.

Value chain:

A value chain is a chain of activities that a firm operating in a specific industry performs in order to deliver a valuable product or service for the market. The concept comes from business management and was first described and popularized by Michael Porter in his 1985 best-seller, Competitive Advantage: Creating and Sustaining Superior Performance

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Supply chain management:

Supply chain management is a cross-function approach including managing the movement of

raw materials into an organization, certain aspects of the internal processing of materials into

finished goods, and the movement of finished goods out of the organization and toward the

end-consumer. As organizations strive to focus on core competencies and becoming more

flexible, they reduce their ownership of raw materials sources and distribution channels. These

functions are increasingly being outsourced to other entities that can perform the activities

better or more cost effectively. The effect is to increase the number of organizations involved in

satisfying customer demand, while reducing management control of daily logistics operations.

Less control and more supply chain partners led to the creation of supply chain management

concepts. The purpose of supply chain management is to improve trust and collaboration

among supply chain partners, thus improving inventory visibility and the velocity of inventory

movement.

Several models have been proposed for understanding the activities required to manage

material movements across organizational and functional boundaries. SCOR is a supply chain

management model promoted by the Supply Chain Council. Another model is the SCM Model

proposed by the Global Supply Chain Forum (GSCF). Supply chain activities can be grouped into

strategic, tactical, and operational levels . The CSCMP has adopted The American Productivity &

Quality Center (APQC) Process Classification Framework a high-level, industry-neutral

enterprise process model that allows organizations to see their business processes from a

cross-industry viewpoint .

Strategic

Strategic network optimization, including the number, location, and size of

warehousing, distribution centers, and facilities.

Strategic partnerships with suppliers, distributors, and customers, creating communication

channels for critical information and operational improvements such as cross docking,

direct shipping, and third-party logistics.

Product life cycle management, so that new and existing products can be optimally

integrated into the supply chain and capacity management activities.

Tactical

Sourcing contracts and other purchasing decisions.

Production decisions, including contracting, scheduling, and planning process definition.

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Inventory decisions, including quantity, location, and quality of inventory.

Transportation strategy, including frequency, routes, and contracting.

Benchmarking of all operations against competitors and implementation of best

practices throughout the enterprise.

Milestone payments.

Focus on customer demand.

Operational

Daily production and distribution planning, including all nodes in the supply chain.

Production scheduling for each manufacturing facility in the supply chain (minute by

minute).

Demand planning and forecasting, coordinating the demand forecast of all customers and

sharing the forecast with all suppliers.

11) What is CRM? What is “Share of Wallet”? What is Customer Life Time Value?

CRM- Customer relationship management (CRM) is a model for managing a company’s interactions

with current and future customers. It involves using technology to organize, automate, and

synchronize sales, marketing, customer service, and technical support.

Types of CRM:

Marketing and customer service

CRM systems for marketing track and measure campaigns over multiple contact channels, such as call centers, email, chat, social networking services, inbound/outbound calling, and direct mail. These systems track clicks, responses, leads and deals.

CRM in customer contact centers

CRM systems are Customer Relationship Management platforms. Their goal is to track, record, store in databases, and then data mine the information in a way that increases customer relations (predominantly increased ARPU, and decreased churn) The CRM codifies the interactions between you and your customers, so you can maximize sales and profits using analytics, KPIs, to give the users as much information on where to focus your marketing, customer service to maximize revenue, and decrease idle and unproductive contact with your customers. The contact channels (now aiming to be Omni-Channel from Multi-Channel, uses such operational methods as contact centers The CRM software is installed in the contact centers, and help direct customers to the right agent or self-embowered knowledge . CRM software can also be used to identify and reward loyal customers over a period of time.

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Appointments

CRM systems can automatically suggest suitable times to contact customers via phone, e-mail, chat, email, or calendar invitations or web. These can then be synchronized with the representative or agent's calendar.

CRM in B2B market

The modern environment requires one business to interact with another via the web. According to a Sweeney Group definition, CRM is “all the tools, technologies and procedures to manage, improve, or facilitate sales, support and related interactions with customers, prospects, and business partners throughout the enterprise” It assumes that CRM is involved in every B2Btransaction.

Despite the general notion that CRM systems were created for the customer-centric businesses, they can also be applied to B2B environments to streamline and improve customer management conditions. B2C and B2B CRM systems are not created equally and different CRM software applies to B2B and B2C conditions. B2B relationships usually have longer maturity times than B2C relationships. For the best level of CRM operation in a B2B environment, the software must be personalized and delivered at individual levels.

Share of wallet:

Share-of-wallet (SOW) is a survey method used in performance management that helps managers understand the amount of business a company gets from specific customers.

Share of Wallet is the percentage ("share") of a customer's expenses ("of wallet") for a product that goes to the firm selling the product. Different firms fight over the share they have of a customer's wallet, all trying to get as much as possible. Typically, these different firms don't sell the same but rather ancillary or complementary product.

Customer lifetime value:

Customer lifetime value lifetime customer value (LCV), or user lifetime value (LTV) is a prediction of the net profit attributed to the entire future relationship with a customer. The prediction model can have varying levels of sophistication and accuracy, ranging from a crude heuristic to the use of complex predictive analytics techniques.

Customer lifetime value (CLV) can also be defined as the dollar value of a customer relationship, based on the present value of the projected future cash flows from the customer relationship. Customer lifetime value is an important concept in that it encourages firms to shift their focus from quarterly profits to the long-term health of their customer relationships. Customer lifetime value is an important number because it represents an upper limit on spending to acquire new customers.

CLV applies the concept of present value to cash flows attributed to the customer relationship. Because the present value of any stream of future cash flows is designed to measure the single lump sum value today of the future stream of cash flows, CLV will represent the single lump

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sum value today of the customer relationship. Even more simply, CLV is the dollar value of the customer relationship to the firm. It is an upper limit on what the firm would be willing to pay to acquire the customer relationship as well as an upper limit on the amount the firm would be willing to pay to avoid losing the customer relationship. If we view a customer relationship as an asset of the firm, CLV would present the dollar value of that asset.

One of the major uses of CLV is customer segmentation, which starts with the understanding that not all customers are equally important. CLV-based segmentation model allows the company to predict the most profitable group of customers, understand those customers' common characteristics, and focus more on them rather than on less profitable customers. CLV-based segmentation can be combined with a Share of Wallet (SOW) model to identify "high CLV but low SOW" customers with the assumption that the company's profit could be maximized by investing marketing resources in those customers.

12) What is a Value Proposition? Explain in detail with Examples?

A value proposition is a promise of value to be delivered and a belief from the customer that

value will be experienced. A value proposition can apply to an entire organization, or parts

thereof, or customer accounts, or products or services.

Creating a value proposition is a part of business strategy. Kaplan and Norton say "Strategy is

based on a differentiated customer value proposition. Satisfying customers is the source of

sustainable value creation.

Developing a value proposition is based on a review and analysis of the benefits, costs and

value that an organization can deliver to its customers, prospective customers, and

other constituent groups within and outside the organization. It is also a positioning of value,

where Value = Benefits - Cost (cost includes economic risk).

13) What is a Promotional Mix? A promotion mix is the act of combining promotional methods such as advertising, new media,

direct mail marketing, selling, use of retail displays, and merchandising for the sale of products and services. Promotional mix is the marketing strategies used by a company to market and promote its products and services. These strategies include personal selling, advertising, public relations

What is IMC and what are its tools?

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IMC stands for Integrated Marketing Communication. Companies use IMC to set company goals and objectives using this as a form of communication. IMC is the abbreviated term for Integrated Marketing Communication. IMC is the practice of unifying all marketing communications to convey the company's objectives and goals to all.

One of the most common and early IMC objectives is brand awareness. Before a company can sell specific products and services, it has to create brand awareness among its target market.

Various integrated marketing communication tools: Integrated marketing communication effectively integrates all modes of brand communication and uses them simultaneously to promote various products and services among customers effectively and eventually yield higher revenues for the organization.

Advertising

Advertising is one of the most effective ways of brand promotion. Advertising helps organizations reach a wider audience within the shortest possible time frame. Advertisements in newspaper, television, Radio, billboards help end-users to believe in your brand and also motivate them to buy the same and remain loyal towards the brand. Advertisements not only increase the consumption of a particular product/service but also create brand awareness among customers. Marketers need to ensure that the right message reaches the right customers at the right time. Be careful about the content of the advertisement, after all you are paying for every second.

Sales Promotion

Brands (Products and services) can also be promoted through discount coupons, loyalty clubs, membership coupons, incentives, lucrative schemes, attractive packages for loyal customers, specially designed deals and so on. Brands can also be promoted effectively through newspaper inserts, danglers, banners at the right place, glorifiers, wobblers etc.

Direct Marketing

Direct marketing enables organizations to communicate directly with the end-users. Various tools for direct marketing are emails, text messages, catalogues, brochures, promotional letters and so on. Through direct marketing, messages reach end-users directly.

Personal Selling

Personal selling is also one of the most effective tools for integrated marketing communication. Personal selling takes place when marketer or sales representative sells products or services to clients. Personal selling goes a long way in strengthening the relationship between the organization and the end-users.

Personal selling involves the following steps:

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1. Prospecting - Prospecting helps you find the right and potential contact. 2. Making first contact - Marketers need to establish first contact with their prospective

clients through emails, telephone calls etc.An appointment is essential and make sure you reach on time for the meeting.

3. The sales call - Never ever lie to your customers. Share what all unique your brand has to offer to customers. As a marketer, you yourself should be convinced with your products and services if you expect your customers to invest in your brand.

4. Objection handling - Be ready to answer any of the client’s queries. 5. Closing the sale - Do not leave unless and until you successfully close the deal. There is

no harm in giving customers some time to think and decide accordingly. Do not be after their life.

Public Relation Activities

Public relation activities help promote a brand through press releases, news, events, public appearances etc.The role of public relations officer is to present the organization in the best light.

14) What is Media Planning and Media Buying?

Media planning is one of the four key disciplines within advertising, along with account

management, brand planning and developing creative. Typically media planning is a role that

falls to an outside agency, but some companies choose to keep it in-house.

Media planning entails finding the most appropriate media platform to advertise the company

or client’s brand/product. Media planners determine when, where and how often a message

should be placed. Their goal is to reach the right audience at the right time with the right

message to generate the desired response and then stay within the designated budget

Anyone can purchase advertising time on a radio or television station but media buyers do it better. A media buyer purchases time by researching the audience for that time spot and placing ads at a time when they will reach the most customers. They may also purchase media in large blocks to get better rates. Media buyers work for large corporations and advertising agencies. Media buying, a sub function of advertising management, is the procurement of media real

estate at optimal placement and price. The main task of media buying lies within the

negotiation of price

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What is the difference between “Above-the-line” (ATL) and “Below-the-line” (BTL) Advertising?

Above the line (ATL) is an advertising technique using mass media to promote brands.

This type of communication is conventional in nature and is considered impersonal to

customers. It differs from BTL (below the line), that believes in unconventional brand-building

strategies. The ATL strategy makes use of current traditional media:

Television, newspapers, magazines, radio, outdoor, and internet.

Below the line (BTL) is an advertising technique. It uses less conventional methods than the

usual specific channels of advertising to promote products, services, etc. than ATL (above the

line) strategy; these may include activities such as direct mail, public relations, sales promotion,

consumer promotions, consumer incentives, trade incentives

Retail promtions etc for which a fee is agreed upon and charged up front.

Below the line advertising typically focuses on direct means of communication, most commonly

direct mail and e-mail, often using highly targeted lists of names to maximize response rates.

15) What is Advertising? Advertising is a form of communication that is used to persuade an audience to recognize

and/or support particular services, ideas or products. The advertising messages are usually paid for by the sponsors and are transmitted through various media such as television or the internet. Each company strives to increase sales through advertising.

What are the Principles of Advertising?

1. An advertisement should accurately reflect the nature and content of the product it represents and the rating issued (i.e., an advertisement should not mislead the consumer as to the product’s true character.)

2. An advertisement should not glamorize or exploit the ESRB rating of a product or a ruling

or determination made by ARC, nor misrepresent the scope of ARC’s determination.

3. All advertisements should be created with a sense of responsibility toward the public.

4. No advertisement should contain any content that is likely to cause serious or widespread offense to the average consumer.

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5. Companies must not specifically target advertising for entertainment software products rated “Teen,” “Mature,” or “Adults Only” to consumers for whom the product is not rated as appropriate.

What is the difference between Advertising and PR and Publicity?

1. Paid Space or Free Coverage

Advertising: The Company pays for ad space. You know exactly when that ad will air or be published.

Public Relations: Your job is to get free publicity for the company. From news conferences to press releases, you're focused on getting free media exposure for the company and its products/services.

2. Creative Control Vs. No Control

Advertising: Since you're paying for the space, you have creative control on what goes into that ad.

Public Relations: You have no control over how the media presents your information, if they decide to use your info at all. They're not obligated to cover your event or publish your press release just because you sent something to them.

3. Shelf Life

Advertising: Since you pay for the space, you can run your ads over and over for as long as your budget allows. An ad generally has a longer shelf life than one press release.

Public Relations: You only submit a press release about a new product once. You only submit a press release about a news conference once. The PR exposure you receive is only circulated once. An editor won't publish your same press release three or four times in their magazine.

4. Wise Consumers

Advertising: Consumers know when they're reading an advertisement they're trying to be sold a product or service.

Public Relations: When someone reads a third-party article written about your product or views coverage of

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your event on TV, they're seeing something you didn't pay for with ad dollars and view it differently than they do paid advertising.

5. Creativity or a Nose for News

Advertising: In advertising, you get to exercise your creativity in creating new ad campaigns and materials.

Public Relations: In public relations, you have to have a nose for news and be able to generate buzz through that news. You exercise your creativity, to an extent, in the way you search for new news to release to the media.