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OVERVIEW
The success of your brand depends on whether
consumers buy your product or service, and it's your job to motivate
them to do so. Well-designed, well-coordinated premium promotions
are powerful motivators: they're offers that consumers can't refuse.
They cansimultaneously provide the impetus to buy your brand and
reward the consumer for doing so.
Premium promotions also stimulate consumer participation
in the brand. Technological advances have made building databases
cost-effective, making it feasible for companies to get to know
who their customers are and create highly targeted, interactive
promotions. Premiums are playing an important role as the prize
that spurs consumers to collect points for m9rchEAise register
on a Web site, or listen to a promotional message.
As technological capabilities have made premium
programs easier to monitor and track, suppliers have expanded
the selection of premiums available. Both factors can help marketers
build more effective consumer premium promotions.
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DEFINITIONS
Simply stated, consumer premium promotions
use merchandise to get buyers to sample, purchase, or remain loyal
to a brand or product. Consumers get a value-added offer in one
of several promotional vehicles. The main types are:
- In-pack, on-pack, near-pack.
Merchandise is packaged in, on, or near a brand (used by packaged
goods manufacturers).
- Self-liquidator or free mail-in offer.
Consumers can either purchase the item at a low cost (thus the
sponsor breaks even) or receive it free by mail as a reward
for choosing the brand (used by many top names in consumer products).
- Continuity or frequency program.
The premium is given to loyal consumers as a reward for repeat
business (used heavily by airline companies and hotel chains).
- Gift-with-purchase. An item that
prompts people to make or increase purchases
at the point-of-sale (used by fast-food restaurants, telecommunications
companies,
and gas stations).
- Sweepstakes, contests, games.
Promotions with prizes that get customer
attention and generate increased response (used by Web sites
and clothing
retailers).
Among the other types of consumer premium
promotions are traffic builders, door openers, direct-mail premiums,
and, newest on the scene, online premium promotions.
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THE POWER OF PREMIUMS
Consumer premium promotions are strong programs
for three reasons:
- Immediacy. Many, though not all,
types of premium promotions are instantaneous rewards that provide
consumers with immediate gratification.
- Impact. A premium is a tangible,
long-lasting prize (as opposed to a cash reward that can easily
disappear into a wallet).
- Measurability. When marketers
know their costs, the scope of the promotion, and the objectives
they want to accomplish, a consumer premium promotion becomes
a highly measurable marketing tool.
Creative, well-constructed premium promotions
are known for delivering brandenhancing and sales-building results.
A 1998 article in Pronio, titled "The Premium as Brand-Builder,"
stated it best: "If brands are reacquainting themselves with
the full promotional arsenal, marketers can't continue to overlook
a workhorse like premiums.
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PREMIUM
PROMOTIONS IN ACTION
George Meredith and Robert P. Fried report
in their definitive book, Incentives in Marketing & Motivation,
that the first formalized consumer premium promotion is credited
to Babbitt's soap. Done in 1851, the promotion sounds cumbersome.
Consumers had to save 25 soap wrappers to redeem them for a color
lithograph. Today the program would probably be described as a
frequency program.
Meredith and Fried note that premium promotions
share a common purpose: "The varieties of consumer premium
that have grown over time have all been modifications designed
to deliver the consumer benefit and/or differentiation in a way
that most surely reaches the desired end--customer satisfaction-for
a given marketer in a given climate."
These days, the climate for premium promotions is
favorable. According to the Incentive Federation!s " 1999
Incentive Survey of Buying Practices," 66 percent of respondents
reported using incentives in consumer/user promotions, making
that the second most popular use behind sales incentives (82 percent).
Second now, but for how long? Industry observers say marketers
are showing renewed interest in consumer premium promotions.
Another survey shows that consumer promotion allocation
is growing. "Promotion Trends 2000," conducted by Promo
magazine and the Promotion Marketing Association (PMA), found
that though consumer promotions commanded a smaller slice of the
marketing pie than trade promotions and advertising, about 43
percent of marketers said they increased their consumer promotion
spending. Compare that with only 29 percent who reported boosting
their trade promotion spending.
Consumer premium promotions are more conspicuous
than ever. For instance, many snack food and candy companies offer
redemption programs so consumers can earn logoed apparel, small
electronics, and other items. Tic Tac, for one, launched a campaign
called "Tic Tac Incredible Stuff." Consumers collect
points by saving the producVs label, which can be used to "purchase"
products from a print or Web-site catalog. Items include a Tic
Tac-logoed backpack, beach towel, raft, CD holder, watch, T-shirt
or water bottle. Among the high-ticket items offered are a portable
CD-player and mountain bike.
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PUTTING
PREMIEUMS TO WORK
All sorts of companies use premium promotions
to build brands and spur consumers to purchase. Gregory R. Canose,
president of the Incentive Marketing Association (IMA), says that
companies use them for brand awareness, customer retention, and
new product introductions. Canose, who is also president of Awards
Marketing Services LLC, a Whitehouse, NJ, manufacturers representative
for premium, incentive, and award programs, says tobacco companies,
dining clubs, hotel chains, pharmaceutical companies, cosmetic
manufacturers, insurance companies, and oil companies use them.
"The incentive (premium) industry is about a $24 billion
business," he says. Consumer premium promotions can achieve
many objectives for a brand, says Paul Kiewiet, president of Promotion
Concepts Inc., a Kalamazoo, MI, sales promotion firm. They can
stimulate loading or multiple-unit purchase; build repeat purchase;
enhance image; reinforce brand claim, promise, or mission; create
goodwill; or draw attention to a display, ad, or feature. Some
of the more powerful uses include generating trial through the
word "Free," attracting attention to a display, building
excitement, and adding value.
Among the most ardent users of consumer premiums
are cereal companies, which, after some painful experimentation,
found out that there is a direct correlation between consumer
premium promotions and sales. "They went away from using
them, and they saw sales suffer as a result," says Kevin
Hess, president of Skokie, IL-based Milmour Products Inc., a manufacturer
of custom-molded plastic premiums. "But in the past few years,
every cereal box has some kind of mail-in offer on it, especially
the kids cereals. It gives some energy as a promotion, and it
gives some appeal in the store at point of sale."
Typical is Kellogg, which leveraged the timeless
appeal of Sesame Street to add impact to its return to using in-pack
premiums. After signing a licensing agreement with Children's
Television Workshop, it inserted Sesame Street Mini Beans, a line
of plush bean bag toys, into 25 million boxes of eight Kellogg
cereal brands starting in January 2000. Kellogg printed the inside
of the cereal boxes with games, quizzes, and cutout activities.
Promo magazine observed that this promotion was significant for
two reasons: Not only did it mark Kellogg's return to in-pack
premiums (the company hadn't done one since 1995) but it used
the highest-value premium in the company's history.
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SIGNIFICANT
TRENDS
Technology.
Consumer premium promotions are proving powerful in today's tech-savvy
marketplace. They can stimulate participation in a brand, allowing
companies to collect data on loyal customers and ask for permission
to market to them. Companies can then tailor future promotions
to these consumers, striving to make the relationship interactive.
The premium offer provides marketers with a potent
tool to drive traffic to a Web site, and premiums used for Internet
promotions provide a tangible reward from cyberspace. Digital
premiums are coming into their own. For example, technology acted
as the "intermediary" for Procter & Gamble to create
one-to-one relationships with users of its Pampers disposable
diapers. P&G offered parents a digital baby book for registering
on the company's Web site, and that opened the door for Pampers
to start an ongoing e-mail dialog with parents.
Cooperative promotions.
Many companies are forming beneficial
relationships with others. "Co-branding programs can be very
effective," says Promotion Concepts' Kiewiet. "They're
used to share budget and lower overall costs, double the sales
force impact, and create a newsworthy event." But it's important
to allow sufficient lead time for a cooperative venture, he notes,
and working with another company almost always requires patience.
It also helps to have an experienced agency to facilitate the
partnership.
Licensed properties
continue to be a hot trend in consumer premium promotions. Sports
teams, cartoons, and rock groups are getting in on the act. Movie
tie-ins continue to be a mainstay. For instance, Disney's 102
Dalmatians and McDonald's have teamed up for a multifaceted consumer
promotion, including Dalmatian toy gifts-with-purchase and a "Win
on the Spot" sweepstakes with prizes.
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CALCULATING
THE PAYOFF
Estimating the cost of doing a consumer premium
promotion is complicated, but the potential payoff of a well-executed
program is high. Remember to factor in costs for:
- The premiumdeveloping the
item, packaging, displays, and collateral materials.
- Distributionlogistics of
executing the promotion; fulfillment and mailing; depending
on the delivery vehicle, costs may vary widely for getting premiums
inside packaging or attached to it. Premium offers that arent
instantaneous require special care. "Do not disappoint
recipients," the IMA's Canose warns. "Make sure they're
shipped what they won and on time."
- Promotionnotifying consumers
about the premium offer with a TV, radio, or magazine ad or
by creating a free-standing newspaper insert (FSI) for a supermarket
promotion.
- Tracking and administrationevaluating
the promotion. Were sales increases sustained? Kiewiet says
companies want to look at brand movement, unit sales, volume,
market share, long-term volume and share, and consumer/trade
satisfaction.
It is important to consider all these elements carefully.
Trial and error can produce a mediocre promotion or even a flop.
"Many factors must come together to execute a program that
has the impact it should," notes Milmour Products'Hess. Anticipating
response to a premium offer is difficult, especially with a mail-in
promotion. Whenever
possible, suggests Hess, use domestic manufacturers that can do
a short run, followed up with additional runs as needed.
One reason that programs sometimes fall short
of their goals, says Hess, is that few vehicles exist to educate
marketers and brand managers on when, why, and how to execute
a consumer premium promotion. "Premium promotions are not
really discussed at the college or masters level," he says.
"There's no formal training for them." As a result,
they are often overlooked or not used to their full potential.
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CHECKLIST
OF ACTION STEPS
Marketers and brand managers must allow sufficient
lead time to ensure smooth promotion development and operation.
The most important step is setting objectives.
What's the best vehicle to achieve those objectives? Hess
warns against "falling in love" with a premium: "The
promotional objectives should drive the premium item, not vice
versa," he says. Other critical steps:
- Identifying the target audience.
- Reviewing successes and shortcomings
of past premium promotions.
- Researching competitors' strategies and
market conditions.
- Determining the budget.
- Calling in and choosing experienced professionals
to help coordinate, plan, and
execute the promotion.
- Determining tactics and considering logistical
concerns.
- Generating and reviewing ideas
- Choosing the premium and the delivery
method. Safety testing of the premium.
- Calling in legal department to review
the promotion.
- Test marketing and focus groups (if budget
allows).
- Evaluating program results and return
on investment.
- Recording successes and pitfalls.
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SELECTING
A PREMIUM
There are hundreds of thousands of premiums
to choose from, including apparel, sporting equipment, camping
gear, kitchen items, electronics, health and beauty products,
gourmet foods, and candy. To narrow the field, marketers must
keep program objectives in mind. Ask yourself, is a low-end or
a high-end premium appropriate? Is it beneficial to use brand-name
merchandise? Does the premium support the image of the brand?
Does the premium idea complement or add value to the brand? Will
the premium appeal to the target audience? Should the premium
be imprinted with the company logo?
Milmour Products'Hess suggests using the following
guidelines when choosing a premium:
- Offer premiums that enhance your brand,
making it easier to prepare, use, store, serve or transport.
- Capitalize on the equity of your brand's
logo, mascot, or promotional character by incorporating it into
the premium item.
- Avoid generic items that are readily
available at retail.
- Choose premiums that are especially suited
to your brand (important for ensuring a strong consumer response).
Whenever possible, offer premiums that promote new
or alternative uses for your brand, increasing brand consumption.
Remember, too, that premiums sometimes become
collectibles. Take, for instance, Woodbridge, NJ-based Arnerada
Hess Corp. Since the early 1960s the oil company has made a toy
truck every holiday season, offering it for a low price with a
fill-up at participating gas stations. The trucks, created to
thank loyal customers, have become high-ticket collector's items
that sell out fast. The company distributes approximately 2 million
toy trucks per year.
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CHOOSING
SUPPLIERS
Brand managers and other marketers can consult
trade associations, industry magazines, and Web sites for supplier
recommendations (see listings at the end of this article). They
should choose a promotion agency and a supplier/vendor based on
the candidate's experience in creating and coordinating consumer
premium promotions and on their ability to provide the services
that the company wants. If youre considering a company for the
first time, look at the experience of their principals and ask
to see documentation of past promotions.
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MAKE
THE RETAILER YOUR PARTNER
If your company sells through retailers, consider
them your promotion partners. After all, they may not care about
your promotion unless it helps build their business, too. Retailers
like a premium promotion that' s an exclusive opportunity (known
as an account- specific promotion). Why? "They want to be
different from the guy down the street," says Kiewiet of
Promotion Concepts. "They want their circular to have different
items and offers in it." Your promotion can provide differentiation
and take the focus off price competition.
Make your promotion as simple as possible for the
retailer. "If the premium changes the product code or configuration,
retailers may not be able to utilize the promotion, or may charge
you a slotting allowance," Kiewiet says.
If your promotion requires displays, make
them easy to assemble. If you're working with a warehouse club
or a discount store, consider a display-ready pallet (DRP) where
retailers need only open the top of the pallet and put it out
on the sales floor.
Some companies set up their own in-store premium displays; others
pay an agency to do it. Either way, it doesn't pay to stint on
this procedure. "It's a cost," says Hess, "but
it's the difference between getting 100 percent of your displays
up or having 60 percent out and 40 percent left in the back room."
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LEGAL
CONSIDERATIONS
Legal regulations, safety, and FDA compliance
may come into play with consumer premium promotions. Postal regulations
must be heeded. "The big one is the Federal Trade Commission
mail-order rule, which states that if you make an offer to the
consumer you must fulfill it within 30 days unless you specify
otherwise," says Kiewiet. "The odd thing about that
law is that it even applies to free-in-the-mail [premiums].
That's why so many offers say,'Allow six to eight
weeks for delivery."' Marketers at large companies should
consult in-house counsel on such matters. For smaller companies,
regulations should be brought up by promotion or ad agencies during
the planning process.
Premium laws vary from state to state. "Certain
states are tougher than others," says Hess. "Some require
simply labeling the package if the premium is not suited for all
ages. Others settle for any notification on the package. Other
states require notification on every part.
Safety testing can be done by one of the two major
testing agencies, ACTS and STR, which specialize in premium promotions.
"Any premium specialist worth their salt would not only suggest
but insist a premium item being run though," says Hess. "It
takes as little as a week and usually costs under $2,000."
The U.S. Consumer Protection and Safety Commission
encourages fast-food chains to let it preview premiums before
distribution. New federal guidelines for toy safety may follow.
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CASE
HISTORIES
Sunshine Biscuits'
"Baker's Wonder Cup."
Sunshine offered consumers a free-in-the mail premium to add value
to its brand. The offer was featured on boxes of Sunshine Honey
Graham Crackers. Consumers sent in two proof-of-purchase seals
from any of the company's cracker brands to get a measuring cup.
Milmour Products Inc. created "The Baker's
Wonder Cup" for Sunshine. The measuring cup could be used
for all types of ingredients, even sticky solids. A self-cleaning
feature was added, making the premium a unique item that offered
the baker convenience: no stopping to clean the cup between measurements.
The item also encouraged multiple brand purchase.
Sunshine enjoyed a substantial increase in cracker
sales during the promotion. It generated over 100,000 premium
redemptions. Due to its success, the brand continues to offer
similar free-in-the-mail premium offers flagged on their packages.
Pizza Hut and CDNOW combine
for "The Big Mix" music giveaway. Pizza
Hut and leading online music destination CDNOW joined forces to
create a co-branded consumer premium promotion with an interactive
element. When consumers ordered a Big New Yorker pizza from Pizza
Hut, they received a colorful cardboard foldout printed with an
access code. The code allowed the purchaser to go online and create
a free, six-song compact disc on the CDNOW Web site.
Pizza Huts objective was to thank loyal customers
for making the introduction of the Bi New Yorker pizza the most
successful launch in the company's history. CDNOW's objective
for the redemption was to increase its brand awareness and get
Web site visitors to try making a custom CD. The promotion was
targeted to the "echo boomer" generation (also called
Gen Y) and was supported by a $15-million advertising campaign,
including four weeks of commercials on network and cable TV and
radio before, during, and after the Super Bowl.
Participants could name their own compilation.
Approximately three weeks after choosing songs on the CDNOW site,
the custom CD arrived in a plain sleeve. During the eight-week
promotion, more than 800,000 custom CDs were created, earning
a 16 percent redemption rate and exceeding CDNOW's estimates.
The Recording Industry Association of America awarded CDNOW an
honorary Gold Record for selling over 500,000 custom CDs.
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ASSOCIATIONS
Promotion Marketing
Association represents the
promotion profession and promotes understanding of the importance
of promotion in the marketing mix. Call 212-420-1100; go to www.pmalink.org.
Promotional Products
Association International
represents the specialty advertising, premium, incentive, and
gift industry. Members are suppliers or distributors of imprinted
promotional advertising products. Call 972-252-0404; go to
www.ppa.org.
The Incentive Federation
was formed to protect the rights of organizations to motivate
customers and employees through the intelligent and ethical use
of incentive programs. Comprised of the leading associations,
trade shows, and some of the top suppliers in the incentive field,
the Federation monitors Federal regulations that could affect
the proper use of incentive programs and lobbies against proposals
that could hinder the ability of businesses to properly use incentive
programs. As part of its industry services, the Federation also
conducts the only regular research on use of incentives by U.S.
organizations, and manages the Incentive Promotion Campaign, the
industry-wide effort to promote professional use of incentives
and that underwrote this Web site. For information, call 908-233-4009,
e-mail hhenry333@aol.com.
Incentive Marketing
Association is the voice
of suppliers in the incentive marketplace. Primary purpose is
to increase corporate Ameri&s use of incentives. Call 630-369-7780;
go to www.incentivemarketing.org.
Association of Retail
Marketing Services. ARMS
is a market-information network for suppliers of premium and continuity
plans, customer incentive programs, and motivation techniques
for retail sales personnel. Call 732-842-5070.
Point-of-Purchase
Advertising Institute. Members
are producers, buyers, and users of signs and displays used at
retail. Call 202-530-3000; go to www.popai.com.
Society of Incentive
& Travel Executives.
A worldwide organization of business professionals dedicated to
the recognition and development of motivational and performance
improvement strategies, of which travel is a key component. Call
212-5750910; go to www.site-intl.org.
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TRADE
SHOWS
The Motivation Show
has product displays, pavilions, and seminars that keep executives
up-to-date on innovative products, technology, and ideas in the
incentive industry. Sept. 16-18, 2003, at McCormick Place, Chicago. Call 800-752-6312; go to
www.motivationshow.com.
Premium Incentive Marketplace (formerly
the New York Premium Incentive Show) features approximately 1,000
companies exhibiting sales incentives and promotional products.
April 7-9, 2003, at the Jacob Javits Convention Center, New York
City. Call 888-202-1276; go to www.piexpo.com.
Promo Expo 2003,
sponsored by Promo magazine, includes exhibits as well as seminars
on the latest trends in sales promotion. Sept. 30-Oct. 2, 2003, at
the Navy Pier, Chicago. Call 203-358-3751 or 800-927-5007.
Basics of Promotion
Marketing seminar is held
several times a year at different locations. This is a well-rounded
introduction taught by senior marketing executives and marketing
law attorneys. Call for dates and locations. $1,095 PMA member;
$1,395 nonmember. Call 212-420-1100; fax 212-533-7622.
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BOOKS
Incentives in Marketing
& Motivation, by
George Meredith and Robert P. Fried, contains a chapter on consumer
premiums that provides historical information, case studies, and
useful advice. It discusses the emergence of, and issues related
to, in-pack, on-pack, and near-pack premium promotions. 1999.
Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co. $28 through Amazon.com.
Dartnell's Sales
Promotion Handbook, Eighth
Edition, edited by Tamara Brezen Block and William A. Robinson.
An all-in-one reference for marketers, divided into four parts
with each part devoted to different aspects of sales promotion,
from planning and techniques to strategies and issues. Each chapter
is written by an expert with experience working in the field.
Hundreds of examples and case histories are included. 1998. Dartnell
Corp. $69.95 through Amazon.com.
Best Sales Promotions,
Sixth Edition, by William A. Robinson, reviews 126 of the best
recent sales promotion campaigns. Readers will develop a better
understanding of what constitutes a successful promotion and of
what a good promotion can-and can't--do. 1987. NTC Business Books.
$34.95 through Amazon.com.
Brand Leadership:
Building Assets in the Information Society,
by David A. Aaker and Erich Joachimsthaler, guides managers in
the implementation of strategic brand leadership. Citing such
brand-focused companies as Virgin, L.L. Bean, and Nike, the authors
provide hundreds of case studies to support theories on building
brand equity. 2000. Free Press. $30, through Amazon.com.
$24.
Sales Promotion
Essentials: The Basic Sales Promotion Techniques ... and How to
Use Them, by Don E. Schultz,
William A. Robinson, and Lisa A. Petrison. Introduces current
trends in sales promotion and advises readers on planning programs
and selecting promotional tools. 1997. NTC Business Books. $19.95,
through Amazon.com.
$17.95.
Sales Promotion:
Concepts, Methods and Strategies,
by Robert C. Blattberg and Scott
A. Neslin, deals extensively with sales promotion planning and
analysis. Particularly good for marketers involved in packaged
goods promotion. 1995. Prentice Hall. $23.60 through Amazon.com.
Advertising and
Sales Promotion Strategy, by
Gerard J. Tellis. A comprehensive handbook on advertising and
sales promotion, covering strategic and tactical issues. Includes
examples of creative advertising campaigns. 1997. Addison-Wesley
Publishing Co. $97 through Amazon.com.
Advertising and
Promotion: An Integrated Marketing Communications Perspective,
by George E. Belch and Michael A.
Belch. Explores how marketers must look beyond traditional media
to communicate with consumers in the changing field of advertising
and promotion. Describes the shift from conventional methods to
implementation of an integrated marketing communications strategy
and reviews the promotional tools available to help make the transition.
2000. Irwin Professional Publishing. $98 through Amazon.com.
Advertising, Communications
& Promotion Management,
revised with new sections, by John R. Rossiter and Larry Percy.
The definitive advertising and promotion management text for students
at the MBA level. Emphasizes corporate communications and business
products/services in addition to the traditional focus on consumer
packaged goods. 1997. McGraw-Hill Higher Education. $102.25 through
Amazon.com.
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PUBLICATIONS
Promo,
monthly. Published by Intertee Publishing for marketing and promotion
specialists, the magazine covers much of interest to users of
premiums, POP advertising,
sampling, games, contests and sweepstakes, events, direct marketing
programs, and newspaper inserts. Also publishes Promo's 2000 Annual
Report of the Promotion Industry. Go to www.promomagazine.com.
Creative,
bi-monthly. Published by Magazines/Creative Inc. Contains articles
of interest to sales promotion and marketing executives who manage
sales promotion programs, POP displays, and trade show exhibits.
Go to www.creativemag.com.
Incentive,
monthly. Published by Bill Communications Inc. Contains articles
and news about incentives, premiums, and promotional products.
Its tag line is "Managing and marketing through motivation."
Go to www.incentivemag.com.
Potentials, monthly. Published by Bill Communications.
Contains ideas, products, and services for marketing, sales, advertising,
and promotional professionals. Go to www.trainingsupersite.com.
ONLINE
RESOURCES
www.incentivecity.com.
offers an extensive proprietary collection of online tools connecting
marketers to incentive suppliers. In October 2000, Incentivecity
acquired SupplierFinder.com and integrated its services into a
new e-marketplace.
www.promomart.com.
Developed by the Advertising Specialty Institute and the Millstar
Electronic Publishing Group, this site allows users to search
an online promotional products mall.
www.incentivesatwork.com. A joint initiative of Potentials and
Incentive magazines, this is a one-stop center for incentive ideas,
suppliers, and products.
www.incentivecentral.org,
managed by the Incentive Federation Inc., provides management
with objective information on all aspects of incentive programs,
including lists of available resources.
RELATED
SMN ARTICLES
For information related to this article, go
to 3010, Incentives Core Overview; 3051, More Power from In-Packs,
On-Packs, and Near-Packs; and 60 10, Promotions Core Overview.
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