The development, execution, and administration of an advertising and promotions program involve the efforts of many individuals, both within the company and outside it. Participants in the integrated marketing communications process include the advertiser or client, ad agencies, media organizations, specialized marketing communications firms, and providers of collateral services.Companies use three basic systems to organize internally for advertising
and promotion. Centralized systems offer the
advantages of facilitated communications, lower personnel requirements, continuity in staff, and
more top management involvement. Disadvantages include a lower involvement with overall marketing goals, longer response times, and difficulties in handling multiple product lines.Decentralized systems offer the advantages of concentrated managerial attention, more rapid responses to problems, and
increased flexibility, though they may be limited by ineffective decision making, internal conflicts, mis-allocation of funds, and a lack of authority. In-house agencies, while offering the advantages of cost savings, control, and increased coordination, have the disadvantage of less experience, objectivity, and flexibility.
Many firms use advertising agencies to help develop and execute their programs. These agencies may take on a variety of forms, including full-service agencies, creative boutiques, and media buying services. The first offers the client a full range of services(including creative, account, marketing, and financial and management services); the other two specialize in creative services and
media buying, respectively. Agencies are compensated through
commission systems, percentage charges, and fee- and cost-based systems. Recently, the emphasis on agency accountability has
increased. Agencies are being evaluated on both financial and qualitative aspects, and some clients are using incentive-based compensation systems that tie agency compensation to performance measures such as sales and market share.In addition to using ad agencies, marketers use the services of other marketing communication specialists, including direct-marketing agencies, sales promotion agencies, public relations firms, and interactive
agencies. A marketer must decide whether to use a different special- ist for each promotional function or have all of its integrated marketing communications done by an advertising agency that offers all of these services under one roof.Recent studies have found that most marketers believe it is their responsibility, not the ad agency’s, to set strategy for and coordinate IMC campaigns. The lack of a broad perspective and specialized skills in non-advertising areas is seen as the major barrier to agencies’ increased involvement in integrated marketing communications.
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