Thursday, August 25, 2016

Developing a global marketing strategy, the latest in loyalty marketing & companies who lobby



Developing a global marketing strategy
 “No one size fits all”.  If developing an international marketing strategy, local behaviours and trends have to be taken into account according to this article which presents findings from Kantar Worldpanel’s Brand Footprint Annual Report 2016.   The unifying global trend is for convenience and this is driving strategies to impact on the “moment of truth” – when a shopper chooses one brand over another. 
The article tells us that ease of access is the most important factor for buyers of FMCG (fast moving consumer goods) – but I was interested to read that supermarkets only account for 30% of sales in the Philippines and Thailand versus 80% of sales in western Europe. The author explains how yoghurt maker Yakult manages the logistics of there being 18,000 islands in Indonesia!  She also talks about the ‘Lidl Effect’ and the ‘Uberisation of FMCG”.

The latest in loyalty marketing
Participation is the Holy Grail for loyalty according to Leanne Papaioannou of Chilli Pepper.  Points for Action (PFA) programmes are the new focus for incentivising consumers, she tells us and explains that these reward consumers for taking action rather than just for what they spend and aim to engage consumers beyond the everyday transaction.
Papaioannou quotes a number of examples of PFAs in action - she explains how, in Australia, scare-based safety ads hadn't worked in reaching young motorists, so Samsung switched to a carrot-based strategy and ran a pilot launch for its S-Drive loyalty programme.  Stateside, pharmacy giant, Walgreens' Balance Rewards Programme (BRP) rewards customer for positive life choices and staying active while South African financial services provider Discovery Health launched an App which tracks fitness and training, maintains running groups through social networks and registers points for lifestyle decisions.   She concludes by saying that today's best loyalty programmes have a broader take on customer relationships.

Minimalist approach to new lobbying rules a mistake for Irish firms

John Carroll, CEO, the Public Relations Institute of Ireland (PRII) advises in this article that the lobbying regulator, the Standards Commission, will shortly have the powers to investigate possible infringements and take enforcement actions against those who are not compliant.  Consequently, he recommends that businesses take stock of their approach to lobbying compliance. The Standards Commission on its website
Has a three-step guide to what is lobbying activity.  http://www.sipo.gov.ie/Website/en/About-Us/Registration-of-Lobbying/
However, the damage for non-compliance with the Act will be reputational, he says. “While the commission will soon have enforcement powers, it is the media that will be the main police for the legislation.”  Ultimately, Carroll says that for a company to impact policy, the argument must stand up to public scrutiny, and if an organisation is undertaking lobbying activity that it cannot stand behind in public, then it must consider why it is undertaking that activity.




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