Internet B2B Marketing – Unicist Advertising


Unicist advertising is based on double dialectical communications that integrate the objective of stimulating the need of a solution that is being proposed with the confirmation that the credibility is ensured.

This type of advertising requires the existence of differentiated value propositions that propose new solutions, which may imply structural or functional differentiations or innovations.

This approach is basically simple when using Internet advertising because it enables giving simultaneous double messages that awaken the interest of potential buyers using segmented media and one to one communication as vehicles.

On the one hand, it is necessary to stimulate the perception of the aesthetics of the proposal that requires that the solution becomes perceived as necessary, desirable and essentially harmonic. On the other hand, the credibility of the solutions has to be made tangible.

These processes have to happen in an ambiguous environment in order to allow the prospects to project their needs on the communication that is being published.

This needs to occur within the context of image driven marketing, which uses the attributes of the products and of the institution to catalyze buying processes.

The double dialectical communication requires managing the conceptual segmentation of the market. It requires using semantic objects to install the knowledge on the differentiations or innovations and commercial objects to influence the buying processes.
http://www.unicist.org/scientific-collaboration/#Marketing

This technology is necessary to build virtual marketplaces in B2B markets. A variation of this approach is also used in B2C markets.

Diana Belohlavek

NOTE: The Unicist Research Institute was the pioneer in using the unicist logical approach in complexity science research and became a private global decentralized leading research organization in the field of human adaptive systems. It has an academic arm and a business arm.
https://www.unicist.net/marketing/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/turi.pdf

Share

Main Markets

• Automobile • Food • Mass consumption • Financial • Insurance • Sports and social institutions • Information Technology (IT) • High-Tech • Knowledge Businesses • Communications • Perishable goods • Mass media • Direct sales • Industrial commodities • Agribusiness • Healthcare • Pharmaceutical • Oil and Gas • Chemical • Paints • Fashion • Education • Services • Commerce and distribution • Mining • Timber • Apparel • Passenger transportation –land, sea and air • Tourism • Cargo transportation • Professional services • e-market • Entertainment and show-business • Advertising • Gastronomic • Hospitality • Credit card • Real estate • Fishing • Publishing • Industrial Equipment • Construction and Engineering • Bike, motorbike, scooter and moped • Sporting goods

Country Archetypes Developed

• Algeria • Argentina • Australia • Austria • Belarus • Belgium • Bolivia • Brazil • Cambodia • Canada • Chile • China • Colombia • Costa Rica • Croatia • Cuba • Czech Republic • Denmark • Ecuador • Egypt • Finland • France • Georgia • Germany • Honduras • Hungary • India • Iran • Iraq • Ireland • Israel • Italy • Japan • Jordan • Libya • Malaysia • Mexico • Morocco • Netherlands • New Zealand • Nicaragua • Norway • Pakistan • Panama • Paraguay • Peru • Philippines • Poland • Portugal • Romania • Russia • Saudi Arabia • Serbia • Singapore • Slovakia • South Africa • Spain • Sweden • Switzerland • Syria • Thailand • Tunisia • Turkey • Ukraine • United Arab Emirates • United Kingdom • United States • Uruguay • Venezuela • Vietnam