In AP Business, promotion is how a company communicates with customers through the promotional mix (five tools: media advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations) to differentiate products, build brand loyalty, and increase sales.
Promotion is the part of marketing where a business actually talks to its customers. The goal is to get a message across that makes people want to buy, and to keep them coming back. Under AP Business EK 2.7.A.2, promotion runs on the promotional mix, which is five communication tools: media advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations. Each tool does a slightly different job, and you'll usually combine several of them in a coordinated marketing campaign (EK 2.7.A.1).
The reason these tools exist is to do three things: differentiate your product from competitors, build brand loyalty, and increase sales and revenue. Smart businesses also match the tool to how customers actually make decisions (EK 2.7.A.3). Want to reach millions at once? Media advertising. Need a detailed demo and a relationship? Personal selling. Want to push a fast purchase? Sales promotion like a coupon or limited-time discount. In the early 21st century a lot of this shifted toward digital marketing (EK 2.7.B.1), because online tools reach targeted audiences with more personalization at a lower cost.
Promotion is the heart of Topic 2.7 (Promotion and Marketing Communications) in Unit 2: Marketing. It anchors learning objective AP Business 2.7.A (develop or evaluate a marketing campaign) and connects to AP Business 2.7.B (how digital marketing changed business-customer interactions). On the exam you're expected to do more than name the five tools. You have to pick the right tool for a stated business goal and justify why it fits, which is exactly the kind of applied thinking AP Business rewards.
Keep studying AP Business with Personal Finance Unit 2
Visual cheatsheet
view galleryAdvertising (Unit 2)
Advertising is one of the five promotional tools, not a synonym for promotion. Think of promotion as the whole toolbox and media advertising as the tool you grab when you want to hit millions of people with the same message at once.
Digital Marketing (Unit 2)
Digital marketing is promotion delivered through websites, email, social media, and apps. EK 2.7.B explains the early-21st-century shift away from newspaper, radio, and TV toward digital tools because they target segments cheaply and personally.
The 4 Ps / Marketing Mix (Unit 2)
Promotion is the 'P' that handles communication. It works alongside product, price, and place, so a campaign only succeeds when the promotional message matches what you're actually selling and how you're selling it.
Multiple-choice stems love scenario matching. A classic one describes a smartphone manufacturer that wants to reach millions of customers with the same message simultaneously and asks which promotional tool fits (answer: media advertising). Another asks which tool encourages customers to make faster purchasing decisions (answer: sales promotion). Some stems layer two goals, like reaching millions AND training reps to give in-store demos, so you have to pair media advertising with personal selling. On free-response items tied to objective 2.7.A, you may need to develop or evaluate a marketing campaign, which means naming specific tools from the promotional mix and explaining how each one supports the business's goal.
Advertising is just one of the five tools inside promotion, while promotion is the entire promotional mix. All advertising is promotion, but not all promotion is advertising. If a question is about reaching a mass audience with one paid message, that's advertising specifically; if it's about the overall communication strategy, that's promotion.
Promotion is how a business communicates with customers, and it runs on the promotional mix of five tools (EK 2.7.A.2).
The five promotional tools are media advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations.
Promotion's three jobs are to differentiate products, build brand loyalty, and increase sales and revenue.
Choose the tool based on the goal: media advertising for mass reach, personal selling for demos, sales promotion for fast purchases.
Digital marketing has shifted promotion away from traditional ads toward cheaper, more personalized online tools (EK 2.7.B).
Promotion is the marketing function of communicating with customers through the promotional mix, which is five tools (media advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations) used to differentiate products, build loyalty, and grow sales.
No. Advertising is only one of the five tools inside promotion. Promotion is the entire communication strategy, so a campaign can use advertising plus personal selling, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations all at once.
Media advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, direct marketing, and public relations (EK 2.7.A.2). Each tool fits a different goal, so exam questions often ask you to match the right tool to a specific business objective.
Media advertising. It delivers the same message to a mass audience simultaneously, which is why scenario questions about a manufacturer wanting nationwide reach point to advertising rather than personal selling.
Sales promotion. Tools like coupons, discounts, and limited-time offers push customers toward quicker purchasing decisions, so any stem about speeding up a buy is signaling sales promotion.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.