Media Selling. Warner Charles Dudley

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and accurately define the terms: a customer buys a product; a consumer uses a product. Consumers on the Internet are often referred to as users. Sometimes a customer and a consumer are the same person, for example, when a man buys an electric shaver for himself and uses it. Sometimes they are different people, for example, when a teenager says she wants an iPhone and her mother buys it for her. Proctor and Gamble (P&G) year after year is the world’s largest advertiser; P&G’s customers are retailers such as Walmart and their consumers are people who buy Crest. By advertising to consumers and creating demand for Crest, P&G pulls the product through the distribution system. Some manufacturers do not advertise their products but sell them to wholesalers who then sell the product to retailers and, thus, push products through the distribution system. In the media business, the customer is the advertiser and the consumer is the user, viewer, reader, or listener.

      In today’s marketing ecosystem, many companies, such as Facebook, are referring to customers as partners, and this trend toward partnership selling will be discussed more thoroughly in Chapter 2.

      You will also find a more detailed discussion of marketing in Chapter 15 and of advertising in Chapter 16 because media salespeople must have a deeper understanding of marketing and advertising than is provided here in this introductory section in order to be effective problem‐solvers and solutions sellers for the media.

      Levitt defended advertising against critics who would constrain advertising’s creativity, who want less fluff and more fact in advertising. Many critics of advertising come from: (1) high‐income brackets in business and government whose affluence was generated in industries that either create advertising (advertising agencies) or distribute it (the media), (2) industries that have grown through the use of effective advertising, or (3) by using advertising to promote themselves (politicians). Thus, advertising’s critics must look carefully at their own glass houses when throwing stones at advertising.

      In the digital era Google extended the definition of advertising to include search, or keyword, advertising, and Google’s search advertising is primarily direct‐response advertising, which is different from branding advertising, which sells the dreams mentioned in the paragraphs above. Direct‐response advertising tries to close a sale or a transaction in real time. Branding advertising, on the other hand, invests in building brand equity and attempts to establish a brand’s value proposition in consumers’ minds. The return on direct‐response advertising investment will often occur immediately with a click and a sale, the return on branding advertising investment will take longer, sometimes years, to pay off.

      Advertising is a vital part of the nation’s economy, and as the nation’s population increases and products proliferate, marketers and their ad agencies will invest more and more in media advertising, especially in the digital media, to influence consumers and to introduce new products and services to highly fragmented media audiences. Therefore, media salespeople must understand the complexities and technologies that create and distribute advertising in order to effectively sell it. You will find out more about how advertising works in Chapter 16, and in that chapter and other chapters that follow, we will try to help you navigate through the maze of those complexities and technologies.

      Advertising is one of the integral elements of the marketing process. We might look at advertising as the mass selling of a product. Where is advertising seen or heard? In the media. For the purposes of this book, as mentioned earlier in this chapter, the authors will define the media as businesses that are wholly or in part supported by advertising, e.g. Google, Facebook, ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, ESPN, CNN, iHeart Media (radio), The New York Times, Cosmopolitan, the New Yorker, and BuzzFeed.

      When people talk about the media, they are typically referring to the distributors of news and entertainment content – digital media such as Google and Facebook, plus television, newspapers, radio, magazines, and podcasts. The vast majority of media businesses are dependent in full or in part on advertising, and advertising, as an integral part

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