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Marketing vs Advertising: What's the Difference?
by officeready, Window Shopper
- Created: April 25, 2012, 3:38 am
You will often find that many people confuse marketing with advertising or
vice versa. While both components are important they are very different.
Knowing the difference and doing your market research can put your company on
the path to substantial growth.
Let's start off by reviewing the formal definitions of each and then I'll go
into the explanation of how marketing and advertising differ from one
another:
Advertising: The paid, public, non-personal announcement of a persuasive
message by an identified sponsor; the non-personal presentation or promotion
by a firm of its products to its existing and potential customers.
Marketing: The systematic planning, implementation and control of a mix of
business activities intended to bring together buyers and sellers for the
mutually advantageous exchange or transfer of products.
After reading both of the definitions it is easy to understand how the
difference can be confusing to the point that people think of them as
one-in-the same, so lets break it down a bit.
Advertising is a single component of the marketing process. It's the part
that involves getting the word out concerning your business, product, or the
services you are offering. It involves the process of developing strategies
such as ad placement, frequency, etc. Advertising includes the placement of
an ad in such mediums as newspapers, direct mail, billboards, television,
radio, and of course the Internet. Advertising is the largest expense of most
marketing plans, with public relations following in a close second and market
research not falling far behind.
The best way to distinguish between advertising and marketing is to think of
marketing as a pie, inside that pie you have slices of advertising, market
research, media planning, public relations, product pricing, distribution,
customer support, sales strategy, and community involvement. Advertising only
equals one piece of the pie in the strategy. All of these elements must not
only work independently but they also must work together towards the bigger
goal. Marketing is a process that takes time and can involve hours of
research for a marketing plan to be effective. Think of marketing as
everything that an organization does to facilitate an exchange between
company and consumer.
SBA Community

clevertim | Window Shopper | 5/4/2012 - 4:47 pm
give some examples/case studies relevant for small businesses.
Next Century Studios | Window Shopper | 5/4/2012 - 11:34 am
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