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Media-driven marketing
DIRECT MARKETING CONCEPTS AND CASES: Mukesh Chaturvedi; Excel
Books, A-45, Naraina, Phase I, New Delhi-110028. Rs. 595.
MARKETING IS an ``interactive system of marketing which uses one
or more advertising media to effect a measurable response and/or
transaction at any location''. This definition given by the
Direct Marketing Association is perhaps no longer valid with the
continuing growth and development in the field.
Bob Stone, the author of Successful Direct Marketing Methods,has
virtually dissected the definition and has established that
direct marketing is a mainstream marketing medium and the
database is the linch-pin of marketing in future.
The book under review, divided into 13 parts of 87 small
chapters, deals with the entire gamut of direct marketing,
bringing out clearly that it is a media-driven selling unlike
personal selling or direct selling which is face-to-face selling.
Part I deals with the new paradigms and philosophies in direct
marketing. Is junk mail superior to mass communication? The
author has not answered this question. In part II he has clearly
brought out that direct marketing is not for everyone. Part III
deals with the economics and the chapter on ``inter-channel
marketing'' is good.
Part VI, the smallest write-up on consumer behaviour, does not
throw much light. In fact, F. Lyttle's ``What does your customer
really want'' throws much more light on the core topic itself.
Part VII, the longest one with 28 chapters, deals with the
nuances of direct mail even though the whole thing mirrors part I
more elaborately.
Advertising is part of marketing. Marketing and advertising
become effective only when the deal is closed by sales. Should
this not have been brought out better in part VIII? Part IX,
``Telemarketing'' should have gone with parts VII, XII and VI,
instead of getting scattered as separate parts.
The author has rightly concluded that the ``industry crystal ball
is cloudy'' and ``database marketing is still only a promise.''
Direct marketing has certainly picked up now, with the advent of
dot.coms and definitely has a good future.
This excellently got up, highly readable book with good contents,
could have been much better if ``too small and too many
chapters'' are combined into condensed numbers, supported by
Indian case studies, since this well-known concept has yet to
catch up with our culture of ``seeing is believing''.
What is suitable to the West will not and need not suit us.
However this book spreads awareness in direct marketing.
N. RAMASWAMI
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