1 / 23

Event Marketing

Event Marketing. Planning a Media Event: Who do I Invite, What do I Say?. Event Marketing. Form of brand promotion that ties a brand to a meaningful, cultural, social, athletic, or other type of high-interest public activity. Generally incorporates all forms of promotion. Event Marketing.

foster
Download Presentation

Event Marketing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Event Marketing Planning a Media Event: Who do I Invite, What do I Say?

  2. Event Marketing • Form of brand promotion that ties a brand to a meaningful, cultural, social, athletic, or other type of high-interest public activity. • Generally incorporates all forms of promotion

  3. Event Marketing • Become a $6 billion a year business • Increasing range of events and ideas used • Kibble ‘n Bits did a 33 city event (tour) to audition dogs for their next commercial • Auditions supported by local media, pr and promotions • More than 11,000 people turned out • Revlon is known for its support of Breast Cancer research and sponsors a ball every Spring to raise money

  4. Event Sponsorship • A company develops a sponsorship relationship with a particular event • Estimated 4,500 companies spent $4.2 billion on event sponsorships • Sports receives 2/3 of this funding • Golf and tennis tournaments • Auto racing and running events

  5. Why Event Marketing or Sponsorship? • an alternative to the mass media clutter • ability to segment on a local or regional basis • opportunities for reaching narrow lifestyle groups whose consumption pattern is linked to the local event

  6. Primary Considerations • Audience composition • Will the event reach the TM • Exclusivity • Media Coverage and Recognition • Measurability of Audience Composition • Continuity • Ongoing relationship possible? • Trade Opportunities • Major clients given tickets, etc.

  7. Common Reasons for Sponsoring Events Master’s Golf Tournament • Increase awareness of company or product name • Identify with a particular lifestyle • Differentiate product from competitors • Enhance commitment to community or ethnic group

  8. $110-115 million Philips Morris Kraft General Foods Miller Brewing $90-95 million Anheuser-Busch $35-40 million RJR Nabisco Coca-Cola $30-35 Million IBM $25-30 million PepsiCo McDonald’s Quaker Oats Chrysler AT&T $20-25 million Sara Lee P&G $10-15 million American Airlines Coors Home Depot Major Event Marketers

  9. Sponsorship Activities • Sports Sponsorship • Auto-racing • P&G and Tide, Folgers, and Coca Cola • Ice Capades • Sara Lee for L’eggs and Sheer Energy

  10. NASCAR Sponsorship • $4-6 million for primary sponsorship • Get hood, rear quarter panel, maybe trunk • DuPont estimates that Jeff Gordon generates $5 for every $1 they invest • Mattel and Hot Wheels • Sales jumped 30% when sponsored Kyle Petty’s car • NASCAR Barbie the hottest collectible

  11. Sponsorship Activities • Company-sponsored cultural event • New York Marathon • Mercedes-Benz • Perrier • Live Aid Concerts • Chevrolet • Pepsi • Kodak • Olympics • Coca-Cola

  12. Down Side to Sponsorships • Weak on research to document effectiveness • IRS Code changes that may enable taxing corporate sponsorships of non-profit organizations • Documented problems with the tobacco industry and sports sponsorships • Ambush Marketing • Intentional attempts to deceive the public into thinking a company has an association with an event such as the Olympics

  13. Event Marketing • Cause-related Marketing • assumes link between event participation and the revenue generating behaviors of consumers • contributions to causes made by purchasing some product

  14. PR Tools Available for the Event • News (press) Release • Press (media) Kit • Photos • Featured Articles • Printed Materials • brochures • annual reports • Posters, Bulletin Boards • Audio Visual Materials

  15. News (Press) Release • One or more typed sheets of information • Information to be included • company logo • release date • contact person • headline • double space story

  16. How to Write the News Release • Preparing the news release • triple the text and use wide margins • top of the page include contact name and # • write a headline to grab attention/signals keyfact

  17. Writing the News Release • Editing Problems • editors cut from the bottom • structure by putting the most important information first • lead sentence • who, what, where, why and how • body text • directly support lead • final text • background details

  18. Etiquette in the Press Release • Don’t call to see if the editor received your release • editors don’t like pressure • if you promise advertising dollars you will offend the editor • If the article is run - send a thank-you

  19. Mailing List • Prepare a list of local publications • Group publications by interest or readership profiles • Don’t send inappropriate information to pubs

  20. Press (media) Kit • Supports the publicity gained at events such as press conferences or open houses • Should include • basic fact sheet of information about the event • program or schedule of events • list of participants and their biographical info

  21. Press (media) Kit • Kit should also include: • a news story about the event for the broadcast media • news and feature stories for the print media • brochures and photos

  22. Press Conferences • When does an event warrant a press conference? • Exceptional newsworthiness/community relevance • disseminating positive publicity • dividends, new product introductions • new hires • controlling negative publicity scenarios

  23. Press Conferences • Who is invited? • Relevant publications, news sources (broadcast and print) • What information is relayed? • Distribute press kits • Address information of relevance • Negative Publicity • address questions with regards to the situation

More Related