"Promotional Strategy" Vodafone: Assignment On

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Assignment

On

“Promotional Strategy”

Vodafone

Submitted To: Submitted By:

Prof. Leni Varghese Mohit Malviya

Deepak Upadhyay

Prateek Thakur
CATEGORY: TELECOMMUNICATIONS

BRAND: VODAFONE

Vodafone is the world’s largest mobile telecommunications community,


employing over 65,000 staff and with over 130 million customers. The business
operates in 26 countries worldwide. Vodafone is a public limited company with
listings on the London and New York stock exchanges. Global recognition of the
Vodafone brand is growing as the company rolls out its identity into new markets.
However, it retains local names and imagery in markets where this is essential to
maintaining the trust of customers. To help promote its image worldwide,
Vodafone uses leading sports stars from high profile global sports, including David
Beckham and Michael Schumacher. This Case Study concentrates on how such
promotion can help to keep a leading brand at the forefront of public awareness.

VODAFONE’S MARKETING MIX:

A longer term marketing strategy is underpinned by careful planning and a


successful marketing mix. The marketing mix is a combination of many features
that can be represented by the four Ps.

 product - features and benefits of a good or service


 place - where the good or service can be bought
 price - the cost of a good or service
 promotion - how customers are made aware of a good or service.

Product:
 A product with many different features provides customers with opportunities to
chat, play games, send and receive pictures, change ring tones, receive
information about travel and sporting events, obtain billing information - and
soon view video clips and send video
messages.
 Vodafone live! provides on-the-move information services.
Place:
 Vodafone UK operates over 300 of its own stores.
 It also sells through independent retailers e.g. Carphone Warehouse.
 Customers are able to see and handle products they are considering
buying.
 People are on hand to ensure customers’ needs are matched with the
right product and to explain the different options available.

Price:
 Vodafone wants to make its services accessible to as many people as possible:
from the young, through apprentices and high powered business executives, to
the more mature users.
 It offers various pricing structures to suit different customer groups.
 Monthly price plans are available as well as prepay options. Phone users can
top up their phone on line.
 Vodafone UK gives NECTAR reward points for every £1 spent on calls, text
messages, picture messages and ring tones.

Promotion:
Vodafone works with icons such as David Beckham to communicate its brand
values.

 Advertising on TV, on billboards, in magazines and in other media outlets


reaches large audiences and spreads the brand image and the message very
effectively. This is known as above the line promotion.
 Stores have special offers, promotions and point of sale posters to attract those
inside the stores to buy.
 Vodafone’s stores, its products and its staff all project the brand image.
 Vodafone actively develops good public relations by sending press releases to
national newspapers and magazines to explain new products and ideas.
Promotional Strategies of Vodafone:

Hutch is converted to Vodafone in India

Is now
‘Pink is now red as Hutch is Vodafone in India from September 21, 2007,
officially announced in Mumbai.

PUG AS A LUCKY CHARM FOR VODAFONE

Pug’ taken over from Hutch, was the lucky charm for Vodafone.
IPL 2008 had Vodafone going in Pug for its ‘Happy to Help’ service.
Earlier Campaigns: Happy to help, Friend circle, Cheaper SMS.

Beginning of New Promotion through ZOOZOOS…


Advertisement characters promoted by Vodafone during the India Premier League
Season 2 (IPL).
Campaign to communicate the VAS offered by the company.
The ads were created by Ogilvy & Mather, an agency under Executive Creative
Director, Rajiv Rao, South Asia.

Themes for Advertisements through Zoozoos….

 Magic Box
 Stock Alerts
 International Roaming
 Bhakti Saagar
 Dating Tips
 Voice SMS
 Fashion Tips
 Recharge Anywhere
 Ringtone
 Group SMS
 Call Divert
 Background Music
 Exam Results
 Beauty Tips
 Phone Backup
 IPL commentary
 Cricket Alerts
 IPL contests
 Chotta Credit
 Maps Live
 Live Games
 Musical greetings

Other Promotions

1. Number Portability Promotion

2. For Booking Phones like Nokia E7

3. Promotion of 3G services
Apart from these promotions various other things were also used by Vodafone
to promote their brand in the market. They spend aggressively in print and
electronic media to create new markets for them and considered as one of the
powerful brands in the India.

Product Life Cycle:

Vodafone is in the growth stage of PLC as day by day they are coming out
with new services and products. They are looking for new markets and
creating the ones. There are many things yet to come like 4G and other
services in telecom. So, the market is not saturated in terms of services.
Companies are doing innovations continuously.

Brand Positioning:

Vodafone has a very good brand image in India as well as in the world. People
know Vodafone because of its good services and great marketing efforts as well as
an ethical company. It is considered as the potential player in telecom world.
Vodafone’s brand image is very good in the eye of the people. David Beckham is
the brand ambassador of Vodafone. David Beckham is more than a footballer. He
is also regarded as a fashion icon, a caring family man and a nice guy: an overall
image that attracted Vodafone to him. Beckham’s popularity with football fans
comes largely from his England team captaincy.

As a footballer, he is well regarded around the world. Other young men who might
aspire to his success and style also tend to identify with him. He appeals to many
females because of his reputation as a fashion and lifestyle icon. He is also married
to a female icon in her own right.

Vodafone’s sponsorship of the Manchester United team appeals to a broad section


of the global football/sports audience, whereas aspects of Beckham’s broader
image have grown to appeal to a much wider section of society. That suits
Vodafone, who needs to appeal to different
segments of the market. Beckham’s healthy lifestyle allied to his talent suggests
an energy and a controlled passion for life; an image that Vodafone would also like
to project for itself. On a football field, Beckham is innovative, creative, exciting;
characteristics that Vodafone aspires to. Beckham the family man comes across as
caring and empathetic; Vodafone wants people to appreciate that it too understands
and cares about what people want and need. Beckham is generally seen as
dependable; Vodafone wants to communicate a similar image. The synergy is
clear.

The campaign

Beckham is supporting the campaign to promote Vodafone live! in the UK and in


other markets. The UK campaign shows Beckham doing everyday things: a happy,
relaxed, competent shopper sending pictures and accepting a message to remember
to buy eggs. At the same time he
is also clearly demonstrating what Vodafone live! can do.

The TV campaign has been a huge success. Many people have seen it and can
recall the adverts. The campaign captured the imagination of the press, and many
newspapers covered stories about Beckham’s sponsorship deal. Slogans such as
‘Send it like Beckham’ help to further promote the Vodafone message. Beckham’s
image is also used on a variety of other customer communications including in-
store posters, billboards, in the company’s magazines and catalogues and in leaflets
mailed to customers.
Benefits Projected by Vodafone:

The benefits which customers get out of it is Utilitarian because all the things
depends upon usage. No one can gain pleasure if they are not able to talk to people
because of poor network coverage or other services. Every service which
Vodafone provides is of some use and that is the reason it is majorly Utilitarian.
Vodafone is not iPhone because someone may find pleasure in keeping iPhone
whether he or she don’t know how to use it. This is Telecom and it is purely based
on the functions and utility of any product or service offered by the company to its
customers.

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