Answer to Question 1
False
Answer to Question 2
Share-of-market strategy. In the memo, you will want to explain that you can run into several problems associated with the share-of-market method of setting advertising objectives. First, it may be difficult to gain access to precise information about your competitors' expenditures. Second, there is no reason to believe that your competitors are spending their money wisely, or in a way even remotely related to what your firm wants to accomplish. Third, a likely outcome of budgeting in this fashion is that your firm will make little headway over the competition and but will simply maintain the status quo. Fourth, the flaw in logic behind this method is the presumption that every advertising effort has the same goals, is of the same quality, and will have the same effect from a creative execution standpoint.
Objective-and-task strategy. Now your memo will address the preferred alternative. The objective-and-task approach will allow you to focus on the relationship between your spending and your advertising objectives. The budget is formulated by identifying the specific tasks necessary to achieve different aspects of the objectives. The four major steps that must be taken after advertising objectives have been set are (1) using a build-up analysis to determine costs; (2) comparing the costs against industry and corporate benchmarks; (3) reconciling and modifying the budget; and (4) determining the time frame for payout.