In AP Business, marketing communications are the activities a business uses to promote, message, and deliver information about its products to target customers, part of the broader marketing function in Unit 2.
Marketing communications are the "promote" piece of marketing. EK 2.1.A.1 defines marketing as everything a business does to identify customer needs and to promote, sell, and deliver products. Marketing communications cover that promote part, meaning the messages, ads, and channels a business uses to reach buyers and tell them why a product solves their problem.
Here's the thing: good communication isn't random. It's aimed. Businesses collect customer data (EK 2.1.A.2) and use market segmentation to find their target customers (EK 2.1.B.2), then shape their messaging around what those specific people want. So marketing communications sit at the end of a chain. You figure out who your customer is, build a customer profile, then craft and deliver a message that actually lands with them.
This lives in Unit 2: Marketing, specifically Topic 2.1 Marketing to Customers. It connects to AP Business 2.1.A (why marketers collect data) and AP Business 2.1.B (using segmentation to find target customers and build a profile). The whole point of collecting data and segmenting a market is so your communications hit the right people with the right message. On the exam, you'll be expected to link the message a business sends back to the customer data and segments that justify it, not treat promotion as a standalone activity.
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Visual cheatsheet
view galleryMarketing (Unit 2)
Marketing communications are one slice of marketing, the promote-and-deliver-the-message part. Marketing as a whole also includes identifying needs and actually selling the product, so communications is the voice of the bigger function.
Market segmentation and customer profiles (Unit 2)
You can't communicate well to everyone at once. Segmentation groups buyers by demographic and psychographic traits, and the customer profile tells you the tone and message that will click with your target customer.
Digital marketing (Unit 2)
Digital marketing is marketing communications delivered online. EK 2.1.C.1 notes social media and the internet make it easier to send personalized messages, run rewards programs, and gather feedback, all communication in action.
Customer relationships and CAC (Unit 2)
Communication isn't just selling, it's also keeping customers. Strong relationships built through feedback and personalized messaging can lower customer acquisition cost (EK 2.1.C.2) because happy customers refer new ones.
Expect this in Unit 2 marketing scenarios. Multiple-choice stems may describe a business sending a message or running a promotion and ask you to identify the segment or customer data behind it. On free-response, you'll likely connect a communication tactic to a target customer or explain how data and segmentation make messaging more effective and profitable. No released FRQ uses the phrase "marketing communications" verbatim, but the skill of justifying a promotional choice with customer data is exactly what Topic 2.1 questions reward. Always tie the message back to who the customer is.
A marketing channel is the path or route a message (or product) travels through, like social media, email, or a retail store. Marketing communications are the actual message itself, the what you're saying. Channels are the how-it-gets-there. You send communications through channels.
Marketing communications are the promote-and-message part of the broader marketing function defined in EK 2.1.A.1.
Effective communications are aimed using customer data and market segmentation, so you message the right people the right way.
Digital marketing is just marketing communications delivered through online and social media channels.
Communication also maintains relationships, and strong relationships can lower customer acquisition cost (CAC).
On the exam, always connect a promotional message back to the target customer and the data that justifies it.
They're the activities a business uses to promote and message its products to target customers, the promote part of the marketing definition in EK 2.1.A.1. This includes ads, social media posts, and personalized outreach aimed at a specific segment.
No. Marketing communications are the message itself, while a marketing channel is the route that message travels through, like email, social media, or a store. You deliver your communications through a channel.
Businesses collect demographic and psychographic data (EK 2.1.A.3) and use segmentation to find target customers (EK 2.1.B.2). That data shapes what you say and to whom, so communications are only effective when they're built on real customer information.
Yes, as part of Unit 2 Topic 2.1 Marketing to Customers. You'll see it in scenarios about promotion and segmentation, where you connect a business's messaging to its target customer and the data behind it.
Good communication builds strong customer relationships through personalized service, feedback, and rewards (EK 2.1.C.1). Satisfied customers refer new ones, which can reduce CAC and raise profits per EK 2.1.C.2.
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