Social Marketing

Read this article, which discusses achieving marketing success by emotionally connecting customers to products, piquing the interest of target media, and creating a media hook through innovation rather than imitation.

Unit questions

Try to answer the following questions:


Question 1

What is meant by 'social cognitive theory'?


Answer

Social cognitive theory describes how an individual's behaviour is determined by environmental factors such as family and friends, the individual's personal characteristics, perceptions of and interactions with the environment. An approach to adapting social cognitive theory to health behaviours is illustrated in Figure 1, and is also discussed in Hastings, Chapter 2.


Question 2

Why is it important for social marketers to understand this?


Answer

Social cognitive theory explains how people acquire and maintain behaviours. Social marketing programmes and interventions aim to change behaviour for the achievement of social goals. An understanding of the determinants of behaviour is therefore essential for the design of effective interventions.


Question 3

What is meant by 'moving upstream' in social marketing?


Answer

Upstream organisations and individuals include policy makers, politicians, regulators, educators, etc. This contrasts with downstream which relates to those whose behaviour change is the goal of social marketing activity. By influencing those upstream, social marketers can help to effect legislative, policy, attitudinal and behavioural change of key actors such as medical, social and educational workers, which will ultimately impact on the focal behaviours of the end consumer.


Question 4

Effective social marketing communications require consistency of messages. Fill describes six elements which combine to produce an integrated communications programme. List the elements.


Answer

  • Advertising

  • Sales promotion

  • Public relations/publicity

  • Personal selling

  • Direct marketing

  • Interactive/internet marketing