Nation Branding and Place Marketing V. - Promotion, Sales, Public Relations
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Nation Branding and Place Marketing - Promotion, Sales, Public
Relations, Marketing, and Advertising
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
V. Promotion, Sales, Public Relations, Marketing, and Advertising
Advantages have to be communicated to potential customers if they
are not to remain unrealized potentials. Moreover, communication
alone - the exchange of information - is not enough. Clients have to
be influenced and motivated to visit a country, invest in it, or
trade with it.
This is where promotion comes in. Not to be confused with marketing,
it is concerned with setting up a trained sales force, and with
advertising, sales, and public relations.
We deal with sales forces at length in our next installment. Suffice
to say, at this stage, that poor countries will be hard pressed to
cater to the pecuniary needs of high-level and, therefore,
expensive, salespersons. Setting up a body of volunteers under the
supervision, guidance, and training of seasoned sales personnel
maybe a more suitable solution.
Advertising is a different ballgame. There is no substitute for a
continued presence in the media. The right mix of paid ads and
sponsored promotions of products, services, and ideas can work
miracles for a country's image as a preferred destination.
Clever, targeted, advertising also ties in with sales promotion.
Together they provide the customer with both motivation and
incentive to "buy" what the country has on offer. Brand switching is
common in the global arena. Investors and tourists, let alone
exporters and importers, are fickle and highly mobile. This inherent
disloyalty is a boon to new and emerging markets.
An interesting and related question is whether countries constitute
similar or dissimilar brands. In other words, are countries
interchangeable (fungible) as investment, tourism, and trade
destinations? Is cost the only determining factor? If countries are,
indeed, mere variants on given themes, acquiring and sustaining
permanent market shares (inducing a market shift) may prove to be a
problem.
The answer is that the issue is largely irrelevant. Specialization
and brand differentiation may be crucial inside countries - in
domestic markets - but, they are not very important in the global
arena.
Why is that?
Because the global marketplace is far less fractionated than
national markets. Niche investors, off-the-beaten-track tourists,
and boutique traders are rarities. Multinationals, organized package
tours, and commodity traders rule the Earth and they have pretty
similar tastes and uniform demands. Catering to these tastes and
demands makes or breaks the external sector of a country's economy.
Enter public relations.
While advertising and sales promotion try to access and influence
the masses - public relations focuses on opinion-leaders, decision-
makers, first-movers, and tipping points. Public relations is also
concerned with the country's partners, suppliers, and investors. It
directly appeals to major tour operators, foreign legislators,
multinationals, and important non-government organizations (NGOs),
as well as regional and international forums.
As the name implies, public relations is about follow-up
(monitoring) and relationships. This is especially true in the
country's dealings with the news media and with specialized
publications. Press conferences, presentations, contests, road
shows, one-on-one meetings or briefings, seminars, lobbying, and
community events - are all tools of the twin trades of marketing
public relations and image management.
A recent offshoot of the discipline of public relations - which may
be of particular relevance and importance where countries are
concerned - is crisis management. Public awareness of crises - from
civil wars to environmental disasters - can be manipulated within
limits of propriety and veracity. Governments would do well to
appoint "public policy and image advisors" to tackle the periodic
flare-ups that are an inevitable part of the political and the
economic dimensions of an increasingly complex world.
Yet, even governments are bottom-line orientated nowadays. How
should a country translate its intangible assets into dollars and
cents (or euros)?
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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