What are the most common mistakes students make about The Promotional Mix?
Why this trips students up
Defaulting to "more advertising" because it is familiar wastes budget when the target requires personal selling or when trial is the actual barrier to purchase. Overusing sales promotion erodes brand equity by training customers to wait for discounts.
Definition refresher
The promotional mix is the specific blend of advertising, sales promotion, public relations, personal selling, direct marketing, and digital channels a firm uses to communicate value to customers and persuade purchase. Mix design is a strategic choice tied to objective, budget, target, product type, and life-cycle stage.
The framework students should anchor to
Advertising is paid, mass, non-personal communication useful for awareness and image building. Sales promotion includes coupons, contests, and trade allowances that drive short-term action. Public relations earns credibility through third-party media. Personal selling excels in complex, high-value B2B sales where dialogue resolves objections. Direct marketing targets named individuals with measurable response. Digital channels span search, social, programmatic, owned media, and influencer collaborations and increasingly cross-cut all other categories. Push strategies emphasize trade promotion to retailers; pull strategies emphasize end-consumer demand.
An example that exposes the pitfalls
A new consumer packaged goods snack might lead with broadcast advertising and influencer content for awareness, sales promotions and in-store displays for trial, and PR around the product's sourcing story for credibility. A B2B cybersecurity firm allocates the same budget very differently — almost entirely to content marketing, account-based marketing, conferences, and a sizable enterprise sales team.
A self-check before submitting
A sound mix can be defended objective by objective: which mix element is driving awareness? Which is driving trial? Which is driving repeat? If the answers are vague, the mix is not strategic.
Source basis: Open Textbook Library: Communication for Business Success