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Integrated Organisational Communication


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Integrated_Organisational_Communication.indb 182 2012/07/02 12:33 PM

, Integrated marketing

6
CHAPTER

communication
Rachel Barker



[Integrated marketing communication] underpins the belief that marketing creates value by
building brands, nurturing innovation, developing relationships, creating good consumer
service and communicating benefits.
Gilligan & Wilson (2009: 3)


6.1 Introduction
The previous chapter addressed marketing management in detail. In this chapter the
focus will be on integrated marketing communication (IMC). A significant modern
premise that emerged in the field of marketing communication is the drive towards
integrated actions, which is also referred to as integrated marketing communication.
Baker (2003) sees it as the blurring of the edges of marketing communications. More
recently, the emphasis has been placed on the importance of brand competition which
compels organisations to implement the most effective communication strategy to create
and enhance relationships with consumers and other stakeholders where integration
is the key component to do this (Du Plessis, Van Heerden & Gordon, 2010: 8). One
of the most notable writers in the field, Schultz (in Jones, 1999) suggests that IMC
is the apparent progress made by mass market media advertising towards targeted
direct marketing. IMC therefore advocates that marketers make a paradigm shift from
promotion to their target markets, in the sense of advertising being a unidirectional set
of activities, to communicating with their target markets, which emphasises a two-way
flow of information. The shift, moreover, is away from the concept of promotional
mix and its focus on advertising and sales promotion activities, towards an integrated
communications approach that includes all marketing activities (Kitchen, 1999) to
create and enhance relationships. Hence, when the promotional mix is referred to
in this chapter, the term encompasses the concept ‘marketing communication mix’.
Consumers’ growing awareness of available choices has necessitated marketers
adjusting the way in which they communicate, through the promotional mix, with
these better-educated, cost-conscious and demanding people.
Because marketing communication is integrated with organisational operations
on a strategic level, it is problematic to continue to view marketing communications
as a separate field of activity. Therefore, the point of departure of this chapter is
to see IMC as an approach that is used to operationalise the relationship between
the elements of marketing communication, as well as the integration between these
elements and the broader marketing objectives of an organisation to align with and
enhance its corporate brand.




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