Course 2 Module 1 Chapter 1
Course 2 Module 1 Chapter 1
Course 2 Module 1 Chapter 1
Before diving into the wide field of digital marketing, you need to understand what
marketing actually means and why is it so important. This session will expose you
to the various functions of marketing like market research, branding, market
planning, promotion and customer service. Along with theoretical understanding,
you will also learn how marketing managers can implement these functions.
1. What is marketing?
2. Scope and importance of marketing
3. Various functions of marketing
4. Communication Framework
Guidelines for graded questions
Note that graded questions are given on a separate page labelled 'Graded Quizzes'
at the end of the last session. These graded questions will adhere to the following
guidelines:
What is Marketing
The heart of any business' success lies in its marketing. Marketing is a process by
which a product or service is introduced and promoted to potential customers.
Your business may offer the best products or services in your industry, but without
marketing, none of your potential customers would know about it. People often get
confused between marketing, sales, advertising and promotions. But there are
certain differences between these terms. Let us learn about marketing in more
detail.
Previously, you saw that Apple’s success can be attributed to its focused marketing
strategies. Let’s look at one such strategy.
Apple launched the Mac vs PC campaign in 2006 that showed two guys named
Mac and PC standing and interacting with each other. Across all ads, Apple
focused on the uniqueness of Mac by using taglines such as ‘One of a kind’. The
idea of this entire campaign that featured numerous ads was just one - how Macs
are better than PCs. You can see the ads here:
To understand this better, let’s take the example of Ola Bikes to understand the
different activities involved in marketing.
In various cities in India, autos and rickshaws dominated the market. Through
market research, Ola identified that a significant pain point that the customers
faced was traffic. Ola found out that a lot of customers preferred autos over cabs
because of their low cost as well as their ability to easily navigate through heavy
traffic. Based on this insight, they also realised that bikes were another automobile
that could easily navigate through traffic.
Based on these insights, marketers at Ola started offering Ola Autos and Ola Bikes.
Through this, they were able to provide commuting services at an even lower rate
than Ola Micro. For Ola Bikes, the driver used to bring an additional helmet for the
customer to wear.
Ola then communicated about its offerings by using taglines such as ‘Ab khulenge
naye raaste’ meaning, 'now new paths will open' and ‘Auto bole toh Ola auto’. Ola
dubbed the ‘Auto bole toh Ola auto’ ad campaign in 4 different languages and
delivered this offering through TV commercials showcasing the instant pick-up
service from Ola Autos. They also used different digital channels such as Youtube
and Facebook to spread their offerings.
Q&A
What is Marketing?
Based on the concepts covered in this session, identify which of the following
examples best describes a marketing activity?
1. A tiffin box service is launched in Mumbai, and its promotional messages are seen on bus
stand billboards across the city.
2. An e-commerce giant acquires an online fashion portal to increase its market share.
3. A start-up lays off underperforming employees to find a balance between lowering costs and
chasing growth
4. An e-commerce website sends promotional emails regarding a 20% discount on select
electronic appliances during the festive season.
5.
1 and 4
6. ✓ Correct
7. Feedback:
8. Correct! By launching a tiffin box service for working professionals in Mumbai,
the firm is creating an offering. An e-commerce giant acquiring an online
fashion portal is a Merger and Acquisition decision taken under the strategy.
The firing of employees by a start-up is a decision taken under organisational
operations. Sending promotional emails is a form of communication.
Therefore, as a marketing activity only 1 and 4 qualify.
Which of the following does NOT describe the process of creating an offering?
A shoe brand launching a new line of sports shoes
A multi-brand store advertising through mobile messages
A beverage company entering the fruit juice market
A commercial bank expanding its portfolio to finance home loans
Answer Correct! Option 2 describes the process of communication rather than the creation
of an offering. The rest of the options are creating value for the consumers by coming up
with some tangible good/service, i.e. creating an offering.
1. Goods and services: This includes physical goods such as marketing of shampoo
or soap, or services such as that of a bank, airline, hotel, etc.
2. Events and experiences: This includes the promotion of events such as concerts,
book fairs, automobile exhibitions. Some marketers also market the experience
offered by theme parks like WonderLa or Adlabs Imagica.
3. People, organisations and places: This includes the promotion of persons such as
Narendra Modi, organisations such as Amity University and places such as India,
Australia that use the taglines ‘Incredible India’ and ‘There’s nothing like
Australia’ respectively to attract more visitors.
4. Ideas and benefits: This includes the promotion of ideas and benefits such as ‘Don’t
Now that you have looked at the different entities that can be marketed, let us learn
more about the importance of marketing.
So, finally, you now know why marketing is required. To summarise, we identified
the objectives of marketing as follows:
Various Functions of
Marketing
Marketing refers to an exchange of goods and services between producers and
consumers in a way that maximises satisfaction to consumers. It involves multiple
functions and influences other areas within an organisation. The various functions
of marketing majorly depend on consumers, prevailing market trends and
competing products. Let’s understand this in more detail.
Play Video
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Let us look at the example of Domino’s to understand how the functions of market
research, market planning, branding and promotion helped it to meet its business
objectives.
Play Video
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Twitter - BP
Additional Examples
Vodafone (Promotion):
Let’s take the example of HDFC Bank, which is the first bank in the country to
launch an Artificial Intelligence based customer support bot named Eva. As you
saw previously, customer support is another function of marketing wherein you
provide continuous support or receive feedback from your customers. The chatbot
Eva answers many customer queries such as the type of banking products and
services offered to customers or if any issue is faced by a customer.
Question 1/5
Mandatory
Functions of Marketing
OnePlus, the Chinese phone maker, launched the OnePlus 6 in May 2018. The launch
was supported by multiple activities undertaken by the marketing team. Match the
activities with the 5 marketing functions as detailed by Prof. Jaideep.
A.
i) Market
Research
OnePlus ran a 360-degree marketing campaign with Amitabh
Bachchan crediting the OnePlus 6 with ‘making him feel
superior’
ii)
B.
OnePlus claims to resolve a majority of customer complaints
Market
through its online forums and FAQ guides, thus providing a
Planning
quick, cost-efficient redressal and high customer satisfaction
iii)
C.
OnePlus conducted group discussion sessions with OnePlus 5
Branding
users to understand whether they used the headphone jack
iv)
D.
OnePlus tied up with Amazon for the launch of the OnePlus 6
special Red edition. The device was available with a Rs. 1000 Promotion
cashback if purchased using an SBI credit card
v)
E.
OnePlus set up an offline experience store in Bengaluru, the
Customer
first of its kind globally. OnePlus hopes to showcase its
Support
products to Indians who are hesitant to purchase without the
Service
touch and feel only possible through offline
Report an error
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OnePlus tieing up with Amazon for the launch of the OnePlus 6 special Red edition
and offering Rs. 1000 cashback is to attract new customers to buy the product. So,
this aspect of marketing is promotions.
OnePlus setting up an offline store to give an offline experience for the Indian
customers who are generally hesitant to buy a product without looking at it. This
aspect of marketing is market planning
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Communication
Framework
Before progressing any further, let us understand the concept of a communication
framework. This will help you understand the concepts explained in the following
sessions and how you can integrate them.
Addressing any marketing challenge can be daunting because the challenge can be
addressed in multiple ways. You must assess the challenge from all perspectives to
identify an ideal solution. In this segment, we have created an outline of some of
the critical steps involved in putting together a campaign plan. We will go through
a planning architecture framework that will help you formulate the correct digital
marketing plan that can drive brand and business outcomes.
The framework presented here is only one way of integrating all the marketing
steps you will learn in the upcoming sessions. Different campaigns can have
different communication frameworks because there is no one-shoe-fits-all solution
for creating it.
Communication Framework
Broadly, there are two sections in a communication plan. The first is the problem
definition, and the second is the solution architecture. Investing a good amount of
time and energy in analysis is critical to understand the key set of problems before
getting into the second section, which involves devising solutions to the identified
problems.
Category/Company
Competition
Brand task
Category/Company
In order to identify the problem, it is critical to start with the category of your
brand and understand its various nuances. This part throws light on the business
potential of your brand in the category in which it operates. Some of the questions
that we must try to answer in this step are as follows:
- How is the category expected to change in the short and long term?
There are multiple ways to find answers to these questions, but you will need to tap
into multiple data points across multiple sources such as primary and secondary
research, social media research tools (such as Facebook Audience Insights) or tools
such as Google Trends. When you get these answers, you start gaining a better
understanding of the problem at hand.
Let us take the example of a manufacturer of digestive biscuits. As the name of the
brand cannot be disclosed, let us call this ‘Biscuit X’. In 2017, ‘Biscuit X’ or ‘BX’
wanted to break through the clutter in the healthy biscuits category and start
building a unique identity for itself and gain market share.
To achieve this, the company understood the category in which it operated. In the
health and wellness industry, valued at INR 736 billion, biscuits and snacks/bars
stood at 5% of the total market. Of this, health biscuits’ share was 0.3%.
Category/ Company
From all of this research, the takeaway for this section could be ‘Health Biscuits
have the headroom to grow to match with the growth in consumer intent and
interest’.
Competition
Another area that you need to consider is your competition. The key question to
ask here would be where you stand vis-a-vis your competitors. Some questions to
ask yourself in this step are:
Brand Task
The next part is the exact brand problem and task. To arrive at the brand task, it is
critical to ask yourself a few questions about your brand. This is where you will
analyse at which stage of the consumer funnel your consumers currently are and
what objectives you need to achieve through your marketing efforts.
Here are some of the key questions that you can ask about your brand:
How many people are aware of your brand? What are their awareness levels?
If the awareness levels are high, are people willing to consider your brand? If not, what is the reason
for that?
If the awareness and consideration levels are high, is it translating into adoption or trials or sales?
If the sales are good, do you have repeat purchases? If not, how can you create loyalists?
These questions are universal and can be asked for any brand in any category. By
asking these questions, you can ascertain where the problem lies and what needs to
be done to address it. The brand task will stem from the problem statement. So, if
the problem is that people are unaware of your product, then you need to identify
ways of enhancing product visibility. If the problem is about consideration, assess
what you should use in your communication that can help change perceptions and
increase consideration levels.
Qualitative analysis conducted by BX revealed that the awareness levels for the
brand are lower than those of its competitors. The brand also had low awareness-
to-trial ratios (i.e., even the consumers who were aware of the brand were less
willing to try it). Hence, the brand task for BX was to increase its awareness levels
through two key prongs of action, the first being visibility, that is, making the
brand more visible to the target audience, and the second being education, that is,
educating the target audience about the merits of BX over its competitors.
Once you have clearly identified the brand task, you can get into the solution
architecture.
Consumer understanding
Targeting your audiences with the right message in the right context, at the right time
Understanding your overall universe or the total number of people who are potential consumers of
your product
psychographic or behavioural.
BX analysed the digital audience active in the health and wellness segment and
identified 6 million potential consumers in this space based on their interests. BX
further divided these into 4 sub-segments:
Calorie counters
Consumers who were interested in weight watching and carefully consumed their
food
Planners
Consumers who were always planning their next healthy venture, be it yoga or
zumba.
Oversized Bellies
Consumers who had medical reasons to restrict their diet and consume healthy
food.
Starvers
Customers
Once you have clear indicators that your communication is going to work, you can
move forward to the next step, which entails identifying the right channels through
which you would want to distribute the content and using the right kind of creative
and content formats to establish communication. You will understand how to
choose the right channels and how to create the right kind of content that will
resonate best with your audiences in the modules on ‘Designing a Robust Digital
Marketing Strategy’ and ‘Content Marketing’, respectively.
You will learn about each of these aspects in detail as you progress through this
program.
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Summary: Introduction to
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Marketing
Additional readings
To understand marketing better, here are some additional reading material for
reference:
1. Introduction to marketing
1. Understanding marketing: Learn how to take advantage of the new age of marketing.
2. The complete overview of marketing: Learn what is marketing and why is it important.
2. Role of marketing
3. Scope of marketing
0. The great branding campaign that made PM Modi the winner: Learn how to craft a marketing
4. Marketing technology
0. What is Marketing technology: Understand how marketing technology is changing what marketers
do.
1. Digital Marketing trends and beyond: 22 Practical recommendations you can implement.
Disclaimer: upGrad does not endorse or advocate the use of any product/service
covered in the session and the examples are solely meant for illustration purposes.
If you work in a marketing role like I do, it's probably difficult for you to
define marketing even though you see and use it every day -- the term
marketing is a bit all-encompassing and variable for a straightforward
definition.
The selling part, for instance, overlaps a little too snuggly with a "what is
sales" definition, and the word advertising makes me think of Mad
Men brainstorming sessions.
But upon digging deeper, I began seeing that actually, marketing does
overlap heavily with advertising and sales. Marketing is present in all
stages of the business, beginning to end.
What is marketing?
Purpose of Marketing
Modern marketing began in the 1950s when people started to use more
than just print media to endorse a product. As TV -- and soon, the internet -
- entered households, marketers could conduct entire campaigns across
multiple platforms. And as you might expect, over the last 70 years,
marketers have become increasingly important to fine-tuning how a
business sells a product to consumers to optimize success.
Today, there are literally dozens of places one can carry out a marketing
campaign -- where does one do it in the 21st century?
Types of Marketing
Now, which of the above decisions were marketing, and which were
advertising?
Let's say you come up with an idea for a product you want your business to
sell. What's next? You probably won't be successful if you just start selling
it.
Instead, you need your marketing team to do market research and answer
some critical questions: Who's your target audience? Is there market fit for
this product? What messaging will increase product sales, and on which
platforms? How should your product developers modify the product to
increase likelihood of success? What do focus groups think of the product,
and what questions or hesitations do they have?
Price
Your marketing team will check out competitors' product prices, or use
focus groups and surveys, to estimate how much your ideal customer is
willing to pay. Price it too high, and you'll lose out on a solid customer base.
Price it too low, and you might lose more money than you gain. Fortunately,
marketers can use industry research and consumer analysis to gauge a
good price range.
Place
It's critical that your marketing department uses their understanding and
analysis of your business's consumers to offer suggestions for how and
where to sell your product. Perhaps they believe an ecommerce site works
better than a retail location, or vice versa. Or, maybe they can offer insights
into which locations would be most viable to sell your product, either
nationally and internationally.
Promotion
This P is likely the one you expected from the get-go: promotion entails any
online or print advertisement, event, or discount your marketing team
creates to increase awareness and interest in your product, and, ultimately,
lead to more sales. During this stage, you'll likely see methods like public
relations campaigns, advertisements, or social media promotions.
Hopefully, our definition and the four Ps help you understand marketing's
purpose and how to define it. Marketing intersects with all areas of a
business, so it's important you understand how to use marketing to
increase your business's effficiency and success.
4 Ways to Take
Advantage of the New
Age of Marketing
It’s time to ditch habits that don’t translate into the digital
world.
TV, print and billboard ads were once the gold standard for marketing.
Basically, companies pushed their name in front of the masses in an
attempt to build brand awareness.
Print, radio and Super Bowl commercials — there’s only one reason
companies spend money on these marketing methods: bragging rights.
They have little to do with actual branding and lead generation.
But you probably knew that. What you may not realize is that many startups
still use techniques that seem hyper-personal and new but actually don’t
move the needle for their companies. Here are some conventional methods
that are missing the mark:
Cold calls: Although the B2C world has long rejected this method, B2B
companies are discovering the faults in this strategy too. Buyers want to
establish their own solutions and work out their issues online. Marketers
need to offer as much information as possible online, or potential clients will
find a competitor that does.
Blast emails: Many people still swear by email marketing. But a mass-
delivered message just doesn’t work for most companies — even if it’s
delivered by email. One message can never resonate with a general
audience.
Knowing your buyer is the most effective marketing tool you can have. Start
with customer profiles and dig deep into who your customers are to figure
out how to reach them.
4. Don’t forget the old ways. Personalization doesn’t mean you should
completely reject older methods. Instead, personalization can transform
those old techniques into efficient marketing tools.
Direct mail is one example. Mailboxes were constantly stuffed with junk a
few years ago, so no one noticed a good campaign. But many companies
have stopped sending mail, and buyers are becoming much more receptive
to good mail campaigns. This presents the perfect opportunity to create a
targeted direct-mail message that potential customers will find refreshing.
marketing, the sum of activities involved in directing the flow of goods and services
from producers to consumers.
Marketing’s principal function is to promote and facilitate exchange. Through
marketing, individuals and groups obtain what they need and want by exchanging
products and services with other parties. Such a process can occur only when there
are at least two parties, each of whom has something to offer. In addition, exchange
cannot occur unless the parties are able to communicate about and to deliver what
they offer. Marketing is not a coercive process: all parties must be free to accept or
reject what others are offering. So defined, marketing is distinguished from other
modes of obtaining desired goods, such as through self-production, begging, theft, or
force.
Marketing is not confined to any particular type of economy, because goods must be
exchanged and therefore marketed in all economies and societies except perhaps in
the most primitive. Furthermore, marketing is not a function that is limited to profit-
oriented business; even such public institutions as hospitals, schools, and museums
engage in some forms of marketing. Within the broad scope of marketing,
merchandising is concerned more specifically with promoting the sale of goods and
services to consumers (i.e., retailing) and hence is more characteristic of free-market
economies.
Based on these criteria, marketing can take a variety of forms: it can be a set of
functions, a department within an organization, a managerial process, a managerial
philosophy, and a social process.
The evolving discipline of marketing
The marketing discipline had its origins in the early 20th century as an offspring
of economics. Economic science had neglected the role of middlemen and the role of
functions other than price in the determination of demand levels and characteristics.
Early marketing economists examined agricultural and industrial markets and
described them in greater detail than the classical economists. This examination
resulted in the development of three approaches to the analysis of marketing
activity: the commodity, the institution, and the function.
Commodity analysis studies the ways in which a product or product group is brought
to market. A commodity analysis of milk, for example, traces the ways in which milk
is collected at individual dairy farms, transported to and processed at local dairy
cooperatives, and shipped to grocers and supermarkets
for consumer purchase. Institutional analysis describes the types of businesses that
play a prevalent role in marketing, such as wholesale or retail institutions. For
instance, an institutional analysis of clothing wholesalers examines the ongoing
concerns that wholesalers face in order to ensure both the correct supply for their
customers and the appropriate inventory and shipping capabilities. Finally,
a functional analysis examines the general tasks that marketing performs. For
example, any marketing effort must ensure that the product is transported from the
supplier to the customer. In some industries this transportation function may be
handled by a truck, while in others it may be done by mail or e-mail, facsimile,
television signal, the Internet, or airline. All these institutions perform the same
function.
As the study of marketing became more prevalent throughout the 20th century,
large companies—particularly mass consumer manufacturers—began to recognize
the importance of market research, better product design, effective distribution, and
sustained communication with consumers in the success of their brands. Marketing
concepts and techniques later moved into the industrial-goods sector and
subsequently into the services sector. It soon became apparent that organizations
and individuals market not only goods and services but also ideas (social marketing),
places (location marketing), personalities (celebrity marketing), events (event
marketing), and even the organizations themselves (public relations).
Roles of marketing
As marketing developed, it took a variety of forms. It was noted above that marketing
can be viewed as a set of functions in the sense that certain activities are traditionally
associated with the exchange process. A common but incorrect view is that selling
and advertising are the only marketing activities. Yet, in addition to promotion,
marketing includes a much broader set of functions, including product
development, packaging, pricing, distribution, and customer service.
Finally, marketing is a social process that occurs in all economies, regardless of their
political structure and orientation. It is the process by which a society organizes and
distributes its resources to meet the material needs of its citizens. However,
marketing activity is more pronounced under conditions of goods surpluses than
goods shortages. When goods are in short supply, consumers are usually so desirous
of goods that the exchange process does not require significant promotion or
facilitation. In contrast, when there are more goods and services than consumers
need or want, companies must work harder to convince customers to exchange with
them.
Market segments
Segments can be divided into even smaller groups, called subsegments or niches.
A niche is defined as a small target group that has special requirements. For example,
a bank may specialize in serving the investment needs of not only senior citizens but
also senior citizens with high incomes and perhaps even those with particular
investment preferences. It is more likely that larger organizations will serve the
larger market segments (mass marketing) and ignore niches. As a result, smaller
companies typically emerge that are intimately familiar with a particular niche and
specialize in serving its needs.
Marketing to individuals
A growing number of companies are now trying to serve “segments of one.” They
attempt to adapt their offer and communication to each individual customer. This is
understandable, for instance, with large industrial companies that have only a few
major customers. For example, The Boeing Company (United States) designs its 747
planes differently for each major customer, such as United Airlines, Inc.,
or American Airlines, Inc. Serving individual customers is increasingly possible with
the advent of database marketing, through which individual customer characteristics
and purchase histories are retained in company information systems. Even mass-
marketing companies, particularly large retailers and catalog houses,
compile comprehensive data on individual customers and are able to customize their
offerings and communications.
Positioning
Having developed a strategy, a company must then decide which tactics will be most
effective in achieving strategy goals. Tactical marketing involves creating a marketing
mix of four components—product, price, place, promotion—that fulfills the strategy
for the targeted set of customer needs.
Product
Product development
The first marketing-mix element is the product, which refers to the offering or group
of offerings that will be made available to customers. In the case of a physical
product, such as a car, a company will gather information about the features and
benefits desired by a target market. Before assembling a product, the marketer’s role
is to communicate customer desires to the engineers who design the product or
service. This is in contrast to past practice, when engineers designed a product based
on their own preferences, interests, or expertise and then expected marketers to find
as many customers as possible to buy this product. Contemporary thinking calls for
products to be designed based on customer input and not solely on engineers’ ideas.
In traditional economies, the goods produced and consumed often remain the same
from one generation to the next—including food, clothing, and housing. As
economies develop, the range of products available tends to expand, and the
products themselves change. In contemporary industrialized societies, products, like
people, go through life cycles: birth, growth, maturity, and decline. This constant
replacement of existing products with new or altered products has significant
consequences for professional marketers. The development of new products involves
all aspects of a business—production, finance, research and development, and even
personnel administration and public relations.
Packaging and branding
The same general marketing approach about the product applies to the development
of service offerings as well. For example, a health maintenance organization (HMO)
must design a contract for its members that describes which medical procedures will
be covered, how much physician choice will be available, how out-of-town medical
costs will be handled, and so forth. In creating a successful service mix, the HMO
must choose features that are preferred and expected by target customers, or the
service will not be valued in the marketplace.
Price
The second marketing-mix element is price. Ordinarily companies determine a price
by gauging the quality or performance level of the offer and then selecting a price
that reflects how the market values its level of quality. However, marketers also are
aware that price can send a message to a customer about the product’s presumed
quality level. A Mercedes-Benz vehicle is generally considered to be a high-quality
automobile, and it therefore can command a high price in the marketplace. But, even
if the manufacturer could price its cars competitively with economy cars, it might not
do so, knowing that the lower price might communicate lower quality. On the other
hand, in order to gain market share, some companies have moved to “more for the
same” or “the same for less” pricing, which means offering prices that are
consistently lower than those of their competitors. This kind of discount pricing has
caused firms in such industries as airlines and pharmaceuticals (which used to
charge a price premium based on their past brand strength and reputation) to
significantly reevaluate their marketing strategies.
Place
Place, or where the product is made available, is the third element of the marketing
mix and is most commonly referred to as distribution. When a product moves along
its path from producer to consumer, it is said to be following a channel of
distribution. For example, the channel of distribution for many food products
includes food-processing plants, warehouses, wholesalers, and supermarkets. By
using this channel, a food manufacturer makes its products easily accessible by
ensuring that they are in stores that are frequented by those in the target market. In
another example, a mutual funds organization makes its investment products
available by enlisting the assistance of brokerage houses and banks, which in turn
establish relationships with particular customers. However, each channel participant
can handle only a certain number of products: space at supermarkets is limited, and
investment brokers can keep abreast of only a limited number of mutual funds.
Because of this, some marketers may decide to skip steps in the channel and instead
market directly to buyers through factory outlets, direct mail, and shopping via the
Internet (a significant trend from the late 20th century).
two broad groups, captive riders and choice riders. Captive transit...
Promotion
Sales representatives are the most expensive means of promotion, because they
require income, expenses, and supplementary benefits. Their ability to personalize
the promotion process makes salespeople most effective at selling complex goods,
big-ticket items, and highly personal goods—for example, those related to religion
or insurance. Salespeople are trained to make presentations, answer objections, gain
commitments to purchase, and manage account growth. Some companies have
successfully reduced their sales-force costs by replacing certain functions (for
example, finding new customers) with less expensive methods.
Advertising
Sales promotion
While advertising presents a reason to buy a product, sales promotion offers a short-
term incentive to purchase. Sales promotions often attract brand switchers (those
who are not loyal to a specific brand) who are looking primarily for low price and
good value. Thus, especially in markets where brands are highly similar, sales
promotions can cause a short-term increase in sales but little permanent gain
in market share. Alternatively, in markets where brands are quite dissimilar, sales
promotions can alter market shares more permanently. The use of promotions rose
considerably during the late 20th century. This was due to a number of factors within
companies, including an increased sophistication in sales promotion techniques and
greater pressure to increase sales. Several market factors also fostered this increase,
including a rise in the number of brands (especially similar ones) and a decrease in
the efficiency of traditional advertising due to increasingly fractionated consumer
markets.
Public relations
Because public relations does not always seek to impact sales or profitability directly,
it is sometimes seen as serving a function that is separate from marketing. However,
some companies recognize that public relations can work in conjunction with other
marketing activities to facilitate the exchange process directly and indirectly. These
organizations have established marketing public relations departments to directly
support corporate and product promotion and image management.
Philip KotlerKent A. GraysonJonathan D. Hibbard
Marketing implementation
There are four types of marketing control, each of which has a different
purpose: annual-plan control, profitability control, efficiency control, and strategic
control.
Annual-plan control
Profitability control and efficiency control allow a company to closely monitor its
sales, profits, and expenditures. Profitability control demonstrates the relative profit-
earning capacity of a company’s different products and consumer groups. Companies
are frequently surprised to find that a small percentage of their products and
customers contribute to a large percentage of their profits. This knowledge helps a
company allocate its resources and effort.
Efficiency control
Knowledge of when, where, and how purchases are made is also useful. A furniture
store whose target customers tend to make major purchases in the spring may send
its mailings at the beginning of this season. A food vendor may set up a stand near
the door of a busy office complex so that employees must pass the stand on their way
to lunch. And a jeweler who knows that customers prefer to pay with credit cards
may ensure that all major credit cards are accepted at the store. In other cases,
marketers who understand specifics about buying habits and preferences also may
try to alter them. Thus, a remotely situated wholesale store may use deeply
discounted prices to lure customers away from local shopping malls or online stores.
Customers can be divided into two categories: consumer customers, who purchase
goods and services for use by themselves and by those with whom they live; and
business customers, who purchase goods and services for use by the organization for
which they work. Although there are a number of similarities between the purchasing
approaches of each type of customer, there are important differences as well.
Consumer customers
Four major types of factors influence consumer buying behaviour: cultural, social,
personal, and psychological.
Cultural factors
Cultural factors have the broadest influence, because they constitute a stable set of
values, perceptions, preferences, and behaviours that have been learned by the
consumer throughout life. For example, in Western cultures consumption is often
driven by a consumer’s need to express individuality, while in Eastern cultures
consumers are more interested in conforming to group norms. In addition to the
influence of a dominant culture, consumers may also be influenced by several
subcultures. In Quebec the dominant culture is French-speaking, but one influential
subculture is English-speaking. Social class is also a subcultural factor: members of
any given social class tend to share similar values, interests, and behaviours.
Social factors
A consumer may interact with several individuals on a daily basis, and the influence
of these people constitutes the social factors that affect the buying process. Social
factors include reference groups—that is, the formal or informal social groups against
which consumers compare themselves. Consumers may be influenced not only by
their own membership groups but also by reference groups of which they wish to be a
part. Thus, a consumer who wishes to be considered a successful white-collar
professional may buy a particular kind of clothing because the people in this
reference group tend to wear that style. Typically, the most influential reference
group is the family. In this case, family includes the people who raised the consumer
(the “family of orientation”) as well as the consumer’s spouse and children (the
“family of procreation”). Within each group, a consumer will be expected to play a
specific role or set of roles dictated by the norms of the group. Roles in each group
generally are tied closely to status.
Personal factors
Finally, psychological factors are the ways in which human thinking and thought
patterns influence buying decisions. Consumers are influenced, for example, by their
motivation to fulfill a need. In addition, the ways in which an individual acquires and
retains information will affect the buying process significantly. Consumers also make
their decisions based on past experiences—both positive and negative.
Consumer buying tasks
Complex buying behaviour occurs when the consumer is highly involved with the
purchase and when there are significant differences between brands. This behaviour
can be associated with the purchase of a new home or a personal computer. Such
tasks are complex because the risk is high (significant financial commitment), and
the large differences between brands or products require gathering a substantial
amount of information prior to purchase. Marketers who wish to influence this
buying task must help the consumer process the information as readily as possible.
This may include informing the consumer about the product category and its
important attributes, providing detailed information about product benefits, and
motivating sales personnel to influence final brand choice. For instance, realtors’
Web sites typically offer extensive photographs and videos and full descriptions of
each available home. And a computer sales representative is likely to spend time
providing information to customers who have questions.
There are two types of low-involvement purchases. Habitual buying behaviour occurs
when involvement is low and differences between brands are small. Consumers in
this case usually do not form a strong attitude toward a brand but select it because it
is familiar. In these markets, promotions tend to be simple and repetitive so that the
consumer can, without much effort, learn the association between a brand and a
product class. Marketers may also try to make their product more involving. For
instance, toothpaste was at one time purchased primarily out of habit, but Procter &
Gamble introduced a brand, Crest toothpaste, that increased consumer involvement
by raising awareness about the importance of good dental hygiene.
Brand differences
Variety-seeking buying behaviour occurs when the consumer is not involved with the
purchase, yet there are significant brand differences. In this case, the cost of
switching products is low, and so the consumer may, perhaps simply out of boredom,
move from one brand to another. Such is often the case with frozen desserts,
breakfast cereals, and soft drinks. Dominant firms in such a market situation will
attempt to encourage habitual buying and will try to keep other brands from being
considered by the consumer. These strategies reduce customer switching behaviour.
Challenger firms, on the other hand, want consumers to switch from the market
leader, so they will offer promotions, free samples, and advertising that
encourage consumers to try something new.
For example, a plumber may be motivated to consider buying a new set of tools to
replace tools that are getting rusty. To gather information about what kind of new
tool set to buy, this plumber may examine the tools of a colleague who just bought a
new set, read advertisements in plumbing trade magazines, and visit different stores
to examine the sets available. The plumber then processes all the information
collected, focusing perhaps on durability as one of the most important attributes. In
making a particular purchase, the plumber initiates a relationship with a particular
tool company. This company may try to enhance post-purchase loyalty and
satisfaction by sending the plumber promotions about new tools.
Business customers
Although business customers are affected by the same cultural, social, personal, and
psychological factors that influence consumer customers, the business arena imposes
other factors that can be even more influential. First, there is the
economic environment, which is characterized by such factors as primary demand,
economic forecast, political and regulatory developments, and the type of
competition in the market. In a highly competitive market such as airline travel,
firms may be concerned about price and therefore make purchases with a focus
on saving money. In markets where there is more differentiation among
competitors—e.g., in the hotel industry—many firms may make purchases with a
focus on quality rather than on price.
Second, there are organizational factors, which include the objectives, policies,
procedures, structures, and systems that characterize any particular company. Some
companies are structured in such a way that purchases must pass through a complex
system of checks and balances, while other companies allow purchasing managers to
make more individual decisions. Interpersonal factors are more salient among
business customers, because the participants in the buying process—perhaps
representing several departments within a company—often have different interests,
authority, and persuasiveness. Furthermore, the factors that affect an individual in
the business buying process are related to the participant’s role in the organization.
These factors include job position, risk attitudes, and income.
The business buying process
The business buying process mirrors the consumer buying process, with a few
notable exceptions. Business buying is not generally need-driven and is instead
problem-driven. A business buying process is usually initiated when someone in the
company sees a problem that needs to be solved or recognizes a way in which the
company can increase profitability or efficiency. The ensuing process follows the
same pattern as that of consumers, including information search, evaluation of
alternatives, purchase decision, and post-purchase evaluation. However, in part
because business purchase decisions require accountability and are often closely
analyzed according to cost and efficiency, the process is more systematic than
consumer buying and often involves significant documentation. Typically, a
purchasing agent for a business buyer will generate documentation regarding
product specifications, preferred supplier lists, requests for bids from suppliers, and
performance reviews.
Kent A. GraysonJonathan D. HibbardPhilip Kotler
The channel design is based on the level of service desired by the target consumer.
There are five primary service components that facilitate the marketer’s
understanding of what, where, why, when, and how target customers buy certain
products. The service variables are quantity or lot size (the number of units a
customer purchases on any given purchase occasion), waiting time (the amount of
time customers are willing to wait for receipt of goods), proximity or spatial
convenience (accessibility of the product), product variety (the breadth of assortment
of the product offering), and service backup (add-on services such as delivery or
installation provided by the channel). It is essential for the designer of the marketing
channel—typically the manufacturer—to recognize the level of each service point that
the target customer desires. A single manufacturer may service several target
customer groups through separate channels, and therefore each set of service outputs
for these groups could vary. One group of target customers may want elevated levels
of service (that is, fast delivery, high product availability, large product assortment,
and installation). Their demand for such increased service translates into higher
costs for the channel and higher prices for customers.
Channel functions and flows
In order to deliver the optimal level of service outputs to their target consumers,
manufacturers are willing to allocate some of their tasks, or marketing flows, to
intermediaries. As any marketing channel moves goods from producers to
consumers, the marketing intermediaries perform, or participate in, a number
of marketing flows, or activities. The typical marketing flows, listed in the usual
sequence in which they arise, are collection and distribution of marketing research
information (information), development and dissemination of persuasive
communications (promotion), agreement on terms for transfer of ownership or
possession (negotiation), intentions to buy (ordering), acquisition and allocation of
funds (financing), assumption of risks (risk taking), storage and movement of
product (physical possession), buyers paying sellers (payment), and transfer of
ownership (title).
Each of these flows must be performed by a marketing intermediary for any channel
to deliver the goods to the final consumer. Thus, each producer must decide who will
perform which of these functions in order to deliver the service output levels that the
target consumers desire. Producers delegate these flows for a variety of reasons.
First, they may lack the financial resources to carry out the intermediary activities
themselves. Second, many producers can earn a superior return on their capital by
investing profits back into their core business rather than into the distribution of
their products. Finally, intermediaries, or middlemen, offer superior efficiency in
making goods and services widely available and accessible to final users. For
instance, in overseas markets it may be difficult for an exporter to establish contact
with end users, and various kinds of agents must therefore be employed. Because an
intermediary typically focuses on only a small handful of specialized tasks within the
marketing channel, each intermediary, through specialization, experience, or scale of
operation, can offer a producer greater distribution benefits.
Management of channel systems
Wholesaling includes all activities required to sell goods or services to other firms,
either for resale or for business use, usually in bulk quantities and at lower-than-
retail prices. Wholesalers, also called distributors, are independent merchants
operating any number of wholesale establishments. Wholesalers are typically
classified into one of three groups: merchant wholesalers, brokers and agents, and
manufacturers’ and retailers’ branches and offices.
Merchant wholesalers
Full-service wholesalers usually handle larger sales volumes; they may perform a
broad range of services for their customers, such as stocking inventories, operating
warehouses, supplying credit, employing salespeople to assist customers, and
delivering goods to customers. General-line wholesalers carry a wide variety of
merchandise, such as groceries; specialty wholesalers, on the other hand, deal with a
narrow line of goods, such as coffee and tea or seafood.
Limited-service wholesalers
Unlike merchant wholesalers, agent middlemen do not take legal ownership of the
goods they sell; nor do they generally take physical possession of them. The three
principal types of agent middlemen are manufacturers’ agents, selling agents, and
purchasing agents. Manufacturers’ agents, who represent two or more
manufacturers’ complementary lines on a continuous basis, are usually compensated
by commission. As a rule, they carry only part of a manufacturer’s output, perhaps in
areas where the manufacturer cannot maintain full-time salespeople. Many
manufacturers’ agents are businesses of only a few employees and are most
commonly found in the furniture, electric, and apparel industries. Sales agents are
given contractual authority to sell all of a manufacturer’s output and generally have
considerable autonomy to set prices, terms, and conditions of sale. Sometimes they
perform the duties of a manufacturer’s marketing department, although
they work on a commission basis. Sales agents often provide market feedback and
product information to the manufacturers and play an important role in product
development. They are found in such product areas as chemicals, metals, and
industrial machinery and equipment. Purchasing agents, who routinely have long-
term relationships with buyers, typically receive, inspect, store, and ship goods to
their buyers.
Manufacturers’ and retailers’ branches and offices
Retail chains are known to have existed in China several centuries before the
Common Era and in some European cities in the 16th and 17th centuries. However,
the birth of the modern chain store can be traced to 1859, with the inauguration of
what became the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, Inc. (A&P), in New York
City. During the 15th and 16th centuries the Fugger family of Germany was the first
to carry out mercantile operations of a chain-store variety. In 1670 the Hudson’s Bay
Company chartered its chain of outposts in Canada.
Department stores also were seen in Europe and Asia as early as the 17th century.
The famous Bon Marché in Paris grew from a large specialty store into a full-
fledged department store in the mid-1800s. By the middle of the 20th century,
department stores existed in major U.S. cities, although small independent
merchants still constitute the majority of retailers.
Other mall proprietors have used recreation and entertainment to attract customers.
Movie theatres, holiday displays, and live musical performances are often found in
shopping malls. In Asian countries, malls also have been known to house swimming
pools, arcades, and amusement parks. Hong Kong’s City Plaza shopping
mall includes one of the territory’s two ice rinks. Some malls, such as the Mall of
America in Bloomington, Minnesota, U.S., may offer exhibitions, sideshows, and
other diversions. However, in the early 21st century malls seemed to be falling from
favour.
Mall of America
Amusement park rides at the Mall of America, Bloomington, Minnesota.
© Jeff Coleman/Dreamstime.com
Although there is a great variety of retail enterprises, with new types constantly
emerging, they can be classified into three main types: store retailers, nonstore
retailers, and retail organizations.
Store retailers
A specialty store carries a deep assortment within a narrow line of goods. Furniture
stores, florists, sporting-goods stores, and bookstores are all specialty stores. Stores
such as The Athlete’s Foot (sports shoes only) and DXL Big + Tall (clothing for large
and tall men) are considered superspecialty stores because they carry a very narrow
product line.
Department stores
Department stores carry a wider variety of merchandise than most stores but offer
these items in separate departments within the store. These departments usually
include home furnishings and electronic and household goods, as well as clothing,
which may be divided into departments according to gender and age. Department
stores increasingly also have large food departments, such as the renowned food
court at Harrods in the United Kingdom. Departments within each store are usually
operated as separate entities, each with its own buyers, promotions, and service
personnel. Some departments, such as restaurants and beauty parlours, are leased to
external providers.
Department stores generally account for less than 10 percent of a country’s total
retail sales, but they draw large numbers of customers in urban areas. The most
influential of the department stores may even be trendsetters in various fields, such
as fashion. Department stores such as Sears, Roebuck and Company have also
spawned chain organizations. Others may do this through mergers or by opening
branch units within a region or by expanding to other countries.
Supermarkets
The first true supermarket was opened in the United States by Michael Cullin in
1930. His King Kullen chain of large-volume food stores was so successful that it
encouraged the major food-store chains to convert their specialty stores into
supermarkets. When compared with the conventional independent grocer,
supermarkets generally offered greater variety and convenience and often better
prices as well. Consequently, in the two decades after World War II, the supermarket
drove many small food retailers out of business, not only in the United States but
throughout the world. In France, for example, the number of larger food stores grew
from about 50 in 1960 to 4,700 in 1982, while the number of small food retailers fell
from 130,000 to 60,000.
Convenience stores
Located primarily near residential areas, convenience stores are relatively small
outlets that are open long hours and carry a limited line of high-turnover
convenience products at high prices. Although many have added food
services, consumers use them mainly for “fill-in” purchases, such as bread, milk, or
miscellaneous goods.
Superstores
Some retailers do not operate stores, and these nonstore businesses have grown
much faster than store retailers. The major types of nonstore retailing are direct
selling, direct marketing, and automatic vending.
Direct selling
This form of retailing originated several centuries ago and has mushroomed into a
multibillion-dollar industry consisting of companies selling door-to-door, office-to-
office, or at private-home sales meetings. The forerunners in the direct-selling
industry include The Fuller Brush Company (brushes, brooms, etc.), Electrolux
(vacuum cleaners), and Avon (cosmetics). In addition, Tupperware pioneered the
home-sales approach, in which friends and neighbours gather in a home where
Tupperware products are demonstrated and sold. Network marketing, a direct-
selling approach similar to home sales, is also gaining prevalence in
markets worldwide. In the model used by companies such as Amway and Shaklee,
distributors are rewarded not only for their direct sales but also for the sales of those
they have recruited to become distributors. In 2007 Amway’s parent company tested
an Internet recruitment model by launching Fanista, a Web site that sells
entertainment media such as books, movies, and music while rewarding users for
bringing other customers to the site.
Direct marketing
Direct marketing has expanded from its early forms, among them direct mail and
catalog mailings, to include such vehicles as telemarketing, direct-response radio and
television, and Internet shopping. Unlike many other forms of promotion, a direct-
marketing campaign is quantitatively measurable.
Automatic vending
While merchants can sell their wares through a store or nonstore retailing format,
retail organizations can also structure themselves in several different ways. The
major types of retail organizations are corporate chains, voluntary chains and retailer
cooperatives, consumer cooperatives, franchise organizations, and merchandising
conglomerates.
Corporate chains
Two or more outlets that have common ownership and control, centralized buying
and merchandising operations, and similar lines of merchandise are
considered corporate chain stores. Corporate chain stores appear to be strongest in
the food, drug, shoe, variety, and clothing industries. Managed chain stores have a
number of advantages over independently managed stores. Because managed chains
buy large volumes of products, suppliers are willing to offer cost advantages that are
not usually available to other stores. These savings can be passed on to consumers in
the form of lower prices and better sales. In addition, because managed chains
operate on such a large scale, they can hire more specialized and experienced
personnel, who may be better able to take full advantage of purchasing and
promotion opportunities. Chain stores also have the opportunity to take advantage of
economies of scale in the areas of advertising, store design, and inventory control.
However, a corporate chain may have disadvantages as well. Its size
and bureaucracy often weaken staff members’ personal interest, drive, creativity, and
customer-service motivation.
Voluntary chains and retailer cooperatives
Consumer cooperatives, or co-ops, are retail outlets that are owned and operated by
consumers for their mutual benefit. The first consumer cooperative store was
established in Rochdale, England, in 1844, and most co-ops are modeled after the
same, original principles. They are based on open consumer membership, equal
voting among members, limited customer services, and shared profits among
members in the form of rebates generally related to the amounts of their purchases.
Consumer cooperatives have gained widespread popularity throughout western and
northern Europe, particularly in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, and
Great Britain. Co-ops typically emerge because community residents believe that
local retailers’ prices are too high or service is substandard.
Franchise organizations
Marketing facilitators
There are four major types of marketing facilitators: advertising agencies, market
research firms, transportation firms, and warehousing firms.
Advertising agencies
Advertising agencies are responsible for initiating, managing, and implementing paid
marketing communications. In addition, some agencies have diversified into other
types of marketing communications, including public relations, sales
promotion, interactive media, and direct marketing. Agencies typically consist of four
departments: account management, a creative division, a research group, and a
media planning department. Those in account management act as liaisons between
the client and the agency, ensuring that client needs are communicated to the agency
and that agency recommendations are clearly understood by the client. Account
managers also manage the flow of work within the agency, making sure that projects
proceed according to schedule. The creative department is where advertisements are
conceived, developed, and produced. Artists, writers, and producers work together to
craft a message that meets agency and client objectives. In this department, slogans,
jingles, and logos are developed. The research department gathers and
processes data about the target market and consumers. This information provides a
foundation for the work of the creative department and account management. Media
planning personnel specialize in selecting and placing advertisements in print and
broadcast media.
As a product moves from producer to consumer, it must often travel long distances.
Many products consumed in the United States have been manufactured in another
area of the world, such as Asia or Mexico. In addition, if the channel of distribution
includes several firms, the product must be moved a number of times before it
becomes accessible to consumers. A basic home appliance begins as a raw material
(iron ore at a steel mill, for example) that is transported from a processing plant to
a manufacturing facility.
Because products are not usually sold or shipped as soon as they are produced or
delivered, firms require storage facilities. Two types of warehouses meet this need:
storage warehouses hold goods for longer periods of time, and distribution
warehouses serve as way stations for goods as they pass from one location to the
next. Like the other marketing functions, warehouses can be wholly owned by firms,
or space can be rented as needed. Although companies have more control over
wholly owned facilities, warehouses of this sort can tie up capital and firm resources.
Operations within warehouses usually require inspecting goods, tracking inventories,
repackaging goods, shipping, and invoicing.
Kent A. GraysonPhilip KotlerJonathan D. Hibbard
Although the basic principles of marketing apply to all industries, the ways in which
these principles are best applied can differ considerably based on the kind of product
or service sold, the kind of buying behaviour associated with the purchase, and the
sector (government, consumer goods, services, etc.).
The government market
This market consists of federal, state, and local governmental units that purchase
or rent goods to fulfill their functions and responsibilities to the public. Government
agencies purchase a wide range of products and services, including helicopters,
paintings, office furniture, clothing, alcohol, and fuel. Most of the agencies manage a
significant portion of their own purchasing.
The civilian establishment
One prominent sector of the government market is the federal civilian buying
establishment. In the United States this establishment consists of six categories:
departments (e.g., the Department of Commerce), administration (e.g., the General
Services Administration), agencies (e.g., the Federal Aviation Administration),
boards (e.g., the Railroad Retirement Board), commissions (e.g., the Federal
Communications Commission), and the executive office (e.g., the Office of
Management and Budget). In addition there are several miscellaneous civilian
buying establishments, such as, for example, the Tennessee Valley Authority.
The military establishment
Government purchasing procedures fall into two categories: the open bid and the
negotiated contract. Under open-bid buying, the government disseminates very
specific information about the products and services required and requests bids from
suppliers. Contracts generally are awarded to the lowest bidder. In negotiated-
contract buying, a government agency negotiates directly with one or more
companies regarding a specific project or supply need. In most cases, contracts are
negotiated for complex projects that involve major research-and-development costs
and in matters where there is little effective competition.
Consumer-goods marketing
Convenience goods are those that the customer purchases frequently, immediately,
and with minimum effort. Soaps and newspapers are considered convenience goods,
as are common staples like ketchup or pasta. Convenience-goods purchasing is
usually based on habitual behaviour, where the consumer will routinely purchase a
particular product. Some convenience goods, however, may be purchased
impulsively, involving no habit, planning, or search effort. These goods, usually
displayed near the cash register in a store in order to encourage quick choice and
purchase, include candy, razors, and batteries. A slightly different type of
convenience product is the emergency good, which is purchased when there is an
urgent need. Such goods include umbrellas and snow shovels, and these are usually
distributed at a wide variety of outlets so that they will be readily available when
necessary.
Shopping goods
A second type of product is the shopping good, which usually requires a more
involved selection process than convenience goods. A consumer usually compares a
variety of attributes, including suitability, quality, price, and style. Homogeneous
shopping goods are those that are similar in quality but different enough in other
attributes (such as price, brand image, or style) to justify a search process. These
products might include automobile tires or a stereo or television
system. Homogeneous shopping goods are often sold strongly on price.
With heterogeneous shopping goods, product features become more important to the
consumer than price. Such is often the case with the purchase of major appliances,
clothing, furniture, and high-tech equipment. In this situation, the item purchased
must be a certain size or colour and must perform very specific functions that cannot
be fulfilled by all items offered by every supplier. With goods of this sort, the seller
has to carry a wide assortment to satisfy individual tastes and must have well-trained
salespeople to provide both information and advice to consumers.
Specialty goods
Specialty goods have particularly unique characteristics and brand identifications for
which a significant group of buyers is willing to make a special purchasing effort.
Examples include specific brands of fancy products, luxury cars, professional
photographic equipment, and high-fashion clothing. For instance, consumers who
favour merchandise produced by a certain shoe manufacturer or furniture maker
will, if necessary, travel considerable distances in order to purchase that particular
brand. In specialty-goods markets, sellers do not encourage comparisons between
options; buyers invest time to reach dealers carrying the product desired, and these
dealers therefore do not necessarily need to be conveniently located.
Unsought goods
Finally, an unsought good is one that a consumer does not know about—or knows
about but does not normally think of buying. New products, such as new frozen-food
concepts or new smartphones, are unsought until consumers learn about them
through word-of-mouth influence or advertising. In addition, the need for unsought
goods may not seem urgent to the consumer, and purchase is often deferred. This is
frequently the case with life insurance, preventive car maintenance, and cemetery
plots. Because of this, unsought goods require significant marketing efforts, and
some of the more sophisticated selling techniques have been developed from the
challenge to sell unsought goods.
Services marketing
A service is an act of labour or a performance that does not produce
a tangible commodity and does not result in the customer’s ownership of anything.
Its production may or may not be tied to a physical product. Thus, there are pure
services that involve no tangible product (as with psychotherapy), tangible goods
with accompanying services (such as a computer software package with free software
support), and hybrid product-services that consist of parts of each (for instance,
restaurants are usually patronized for both their food and their service).
Services can be distinguished from products because they are intangible, inseparable
from the production process, variable, and perishable. Services are intangible
because they can often not be seen, tasted, felt, heard, or smelled before they are
purchased. A person purchasing plastic surgery cannot see the results before the
purchase, and a lawyer’s client cannot anticipate the outcome of a case before the
lawyer’s work is presented in court. To reduce the uncertainty that results from this
intangibility, marketers may strive to make their service tangible by emphasizing the
place, people, equipment, communications, symbols, or price of the service. For
example, consider the insurance slogan “You’re in good hands with Allstate.”
Services are inseparable from their production because they are typically produced
and consumed simultaneously. This is not true of physical products, which are often
consumed long after the product has been manufactured, inventoried, distributed,
and placed in a retail store. Inseparability is especially evident in entertainment
services or professional services. In many cases, inseparability limits the production
of services because they are so directly tied to the individuals who perform them.
This problem can be alleviated if a service provider learns to work faster or if the
service expertise can be standardized and performed by a number of individuals or in
some cases by software that the consumer purchases or uses online for a fee (as H&R
Block, Inc., has done with its network of trained tax consultants and its tax-return
software packages and online tax-return service).
The variability of services comes from their significant human component. Not only
do humans differ from one another, but their performance at any given time may
differ from their performance at another time. The mechanics at a particular auto
service garage, for example, may differ in terms of their knowledge and expertise,
and each mechanic will have “good” days and “bad” days. Variability can be reduced
by quality-control measures. These measures can include good selection and training
of personnel and allowing customers to communicate dissatisfaction (e.g., through
customer suggestion and complaint systems) so that poor service can be detected and
corrected.
Finally, services are perishable because they cannot be stored. Because of this, it is
difficult for service providers to manage anything other than steady demand. When
demand increases dramatically, service organizations face the problem of producing
enough output to meet customer needs. When a large tour bus unexpectedly arrives
at a restaurant, its staff must rush to meet the demand, because the food services
(taking orders, making food, taking money, etc.) cannot be “warehoused” for such an
occasion. To manage such instances, companies may hire part-time employees,
develop efficiency routines for peak demand occasions, or ask consumers to
participate in the service-delivery process. On the other hand, when demand drops
off precipitously, service organizations are often burdened with a staff of service
providers who are not performing. Organizations can maintain steady demand by
offering differential pricing during off-peak times, anticipating off-peak hours by
requiring reservations, and giving or requiring of employees more flexible work
shifts.
Kent A. GraysonJonathan D. HibbardPhilip Kotler
Business marketing
Customers for industrial goods can be divided into three groups: user customers,
original-equipment manufacturers, and resellers. User customers make use of the
goods they purchase in their own businesses. An automobile manufacturer, for
example, might purchase a metal-stamping press to produce parts for its
vehicles. Original-equipment manufacturers incorporate the purchased goods into
their final products, which are then sold to final consumers. Industrial resellers are
middlemen—essentially wholesalers but in some cases retailers—who distribute
goods to user customers, to original-equipment manufacturers, and to other
middlemen. Industrial-goods wholesalers include mill-supply houses, steel
warehouses, machine-tool dealers, paper jobbers, and chemical distributors.
Nonprofit marketing
Place marketing employs marketing principles and techniques to advance the appeal
and viability of a place (town, city, state, region, or nation) to tourists, businesses,
investors, and residents. Among the “place sellers” are economic development
agencies, tourist promotion agencies, and mayors’ offices. Place sellers must gain a
deep understanding of how place buyers make their purchasing decisions. Place-
marketing activities can be found in both the private and public sectors at the local,
regional, national, and international levels. They can range from activities involving
downtrodden cities trying to attract businesses to vacation spots seeking to attract
tourists. In implementing these marketing activities, each locale must adapt to
external shocks and forces beyond its control (intergovernmental power shifts,
increasing global competition, and rapid technological change) as well as to internal
forces and decline cycles.
Jonathan D. HibbardPhilip Kotler
Criticisms have been leveled against marketers, claiming that some of their practices
may damage individual welfare. While this may be true in certain circumstances, it is
important to recognize that, if a business damages individual welfare, it cannot hope
to continue in the marketplace for long. As a consequence, most unfavourable views
of marketing are criticisms of poor marketing, not of strategically sound marketing
practices.
Others have raised concerns about marketing by saying that it increases prices by
encouraging excessive markups. Marketers recognize that consumers may be willing
to pay more for a product—such as a necklace from Tiffany & Co.—simply because of
the associated prestige. This not only results in greater costs for promotion and
distribution, but it allows marketers to earn profit margins that may be significantly
higher than industry norms. Marketers counter these concerns by pointing out that
products provide not only functional benefits but symbolic ones as well. By creating a
symbol of prestige and luxury, Tiffany offers a symbolic benefit that, according to
some consumers, justifies the price. In addition, brands may symbolize not only
prestige but also quality and functionality, which gives consumers greater confidence
when they purchase a branded product. Finally, advertising and promotions are
often very cost-effective methods of informing the general public about items and
services that are available in the marketplace.
A few marketers have been accused of using deceptive practices, such as misleading
promotional activities or high-pressure selling. These deceptive practices have given
rise to legislative and administrative remedies, including guidelines offered by
the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regarding advertising practices, automatic 30-
day guarantee policies by some manufacturers, and “cooling off” periods during
which a consumer may cancel any contract signed. In addition, professional
marketing associations, such as the Direct Marketing Association (now the Data &
Marketing Association), have promulgated a set of professional standards for their
industry, including a requirement that marketers provide consumers with the
opportunity to modify or decline future mail or e-mail solicitations.
Marketing and societal welfare
Concern also has been raised that some marketing practices may encourage excessive
interest in material possessions, create “false wants,” or promote the purchase of
nonessential goods. For example, in the United States, children’s Saturday morning
television programming came under fire for promoting materialistic values.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) responded in the early 1990s by
regulating the amount of commercial time per hour. In many of these cases, however,
the criticisms overstate the power of marketing communications to influence
individuals and portray members of the public as individuals unable to distinguish
between a good decision and a bad one. In addition, such charges cast marketing as a
cause of social problems when often the problems have much deeper societal roots.
Marketing activity also has been sometimes criticized because of its control by strong
private interests and its neglect of social and public concern. For example, while
companies in the oil and alcohol industries may have significant influence on
legislation, media, and individual behaviour, organizations that focus on
environmental, health, or education concerns are not able to wield such influence
and often fail to receive appropriate recognition for their efforts. While there is
clearly an imbalance of power between private interests and public ones, since the
late 20th century private companies have received more praise for their marketing
efforts for social causes.
Philip KotlerKent A. GraysonJonathan D. Hibbard
Marketing’s contribution to individuals and society
Marketing has had many other positive benefits for individuals and society. It has
helped accelerate economic development and create new jobs. It has also contributed
to technological progress and enhanced consumers’ choices.
Focus on Intangibles
The 2019 election campaign could well be a marketing guide book for
marketers and brand experts. The biggest take away for marketers is to
build a brand campaign on the basis of one's strength, focus on the
intangibles and not so much on the tangibles. We all know that the
economy during the Modi Government has been in shambles. There is an
all-time high rate of unemployment, a liquidity crisis and a consumption
slowdown. The electorate nevertheless voted Modi back with a thumping
majority. "He avoided talking about the economy, he went on to talk about
uniting India, and he talked about how he would aggressively encounter
Pakistan. This made people feel that there is a strong leader who is
standing up for them," points out Prathap Suthan, Chief Creative Officer,
Bang In The Middle. Suthan in his earlier avatar as National Creative
Director of Grey was the brain behind the Atal Bihari Vajpayee
government's 'India Shining' campaign.
In order to create the right kind of buzz for the brand, a marketer needs to
hammer his brand message across media and Modi did just that. Apart
from the conventional TV, print and radio, the BJP was all over on social
media. "The BJP cadre continuously talked about their election strategies
even on their respective school and college alumni groups on WhatsApp,
the various communities they were part of, on Facebook as well as on
Twitter. You may not have seen BJP ads on social media, but they were all
over. It was a concerted 360-degree marketing approach," points out
Pankaj Mudholkar, MD, Aakriti Promotions & Media.
Modi had been severely criticised for launching promotional channels such
as Namo TV and his biopic on Eros Now, which deviated the Election
Commission norms. He also did an interview with actor Akshay Kumar,
where he talked him as a person. Though the EC had ordered the
withdrawal of Namo TV and his biopic, it certainly created the desired
chatter and made an impact on the people it was meant for.
In fact M.G. Parameswaran, Founder of brand advisory, Brand-
Building.com, says that the BJP played a great game of chess with the
opposition. "The Congress did talk about creating jobs and about
agriculture, but the BJP successfully diverted its attention and the
Congress ended up answering questions to incidents such as INS Virat,
which happened decades ago."
Listen To Consumers
Distribution plays a huge role in building a successful brand and apart from
that, a marketer also needs to listen to the people. Carpet bombing a
product across markets doesn't work, creating variants for individual
markets, suiting the needs of the consumers always works better. Modi,
marketing gurus say, did a far better job of connecting emotionally with the
voters than Congress President, Rahul Gandhi. In the last couple of weeks
of election campaigning, Modi is known to have done as many as 135
rallies while Gandhi did 102 rallies. "Modi and the BJP always had their
ears to the ground and have shown all marketing gurus how marketing
should be done," says Shashi Sinha, CEO, IPG Mediabrands.
You can see that these cuts are consistent across sector and we can
anticipate these reductions across businesses of all sizes. Consumer
brands, financial services companies and healthcare seem to have been
less impacted by the pandemic as we would expect.
I can help here since I’m constantly scanning for the latest developments to
help keep our members content up-to-date and to feature the latest
techniques in updates to my books.
Each year, towards the end of the year I review the digital marketing trends
landscape to help give recommendations on the digital marketing trends
marketers should focus on in the future. I like to keep it practical, showing
real-world techniques that businesses can apply.
In this 2022 edition marketing trends review, I’ll review the main trends
across our RACE customer lifecycle framework which defines 25 practical
digital marketing activities relevant to all businesses. This means that you
will get ideas from across marketing that can be harnessed by your
business.
Download our Free digital marketing plan template
Our popular digital marketing strategy template will give you an integrated
structure for applying the Smart Insights RACE Framework to help you
rapidly create an integrated digital marketing plan and incorporate digital
marketing trends in your business.
Use the RACE Framework to set and track your marketing objectives at
each stage of your marketing funnel and identify new opportunities to
increase leads and sales.
Our popular digital marketing strategy template will give you an integrated
structure for applying the Smart Insights RACE Framework to help you
rapidly create an integrated digital marketing plan and incorporate digital
marketing trends in your business.
So evaluating innovations can help you push the boundaries, but also
improve your digital marketing activities in 2022.
Truth be told, at a high level, the trends across digital marketing tactics are
similar each year - with a lot of interest in search, social and email
marketing, and new web design and content marketing techniques to
engage and convert our audiences. Traditionally, technology innovations
are the drivers of trends in digital marketing including changes in:
If core updates are new to you, their advisory What webmasters should
know about Google’s core updates Google explains these like this:
The advisory and the more recent case studies often reference the
perennial importance of content quality affecting Expertise, Authority and
Trust signals. So anyone serious about competing in search should grab a
copy of the latest search quality guidelines to benchmark their content.
In 2021 Google has also continued its ongoing battle against link spam with
more guidance and an update in 2021. Check your approach against the
guidance.
The latest SERPs Features summary from Moz shows where you could
focus if you are missing out on visits from some of these features such as
Related Questions. These have remained important.
I agree with the views of Cameo Digital who explain the limited impact of
voice search when they comment that regardless of whether the uptake for
voice search increases, the game stays virtually the same for SEOs. They
explain that Voice Search involves using a spoken command to retrieve the
information you want from search engines with two types of voice search,
each differing in their type of output. Only the first of these, however, is
relevant to SEO:
You may have noticed the 'Smart' prefix being attached to more and more
Google Services. The aim is to help businesses manage the complexity of
ad targeting to increase ROI, while of course protecting Google's ad
revenue. Some of these should be treated with caution. For example,
Smart Goals in Analytics assesses what a positive marketing outcome is
rather than the business specifying it, which is preferable.
Some see the application of AI as reducing control and they are right to
question the ROI. But my view is that businesses should embrace Machine
Learning and develop the skills to understand it. For example, Google’s
Smart Bidding can help manage bidding across large product inventories
on Google Shopping – but we have to question just how smart is Smart
Bidding actually? This article from agency Precis introduces some of
the mechanisms behind Smart Bidding for Google Shopping and suggests
a practical approach to maximizing efficiency for your inventory. This article
from White Shark Media gives further examples of the analysis techniques
for machine learning that marketers should master rather than simply
treating Machine Learning as a black box.
Our popular digital marketing strategy template will give you an integrated
structure for applying the Smart Insights RACE Framework to help you
rapidly create an integrated digital marketing plan and incorporate digital
marketing trends in your business.
With more than two-thirds of digital ad spend now going to Facebook and
Google, optimization on these platforms is becoming ever more important.
Yet research by the Boston Consulting Group shows that only 9% of
marketers can accurately forecast the impact of a 10% shift in marketing
spend.
Social media user numbers have surged in the past 12 months too, with
520 million new users joining social media in the year to July 2021.
Reviewing social media trends, Global Web Index consider the influence of
social media on purchase intent. They note the continuing importance of
influencers, particularly in some age groups, reporting that:
27% of Gen Zs say following influencers is one of the main reasons they
use social media, ahead of seeing content from their favorite brands.
"A design system maintains the visual and functional elements of your
organisation in one place, in order to fulfill your brand principles through the
design, realisation, and development of products and services. It may
include a sketch library, style guide, pattern library, organisation principles,
best practices, templates, codes, and more".
Often, articles on web design trends are based on web designer or agency
sites pushing the boundaries using new design technologies - and while
these approaches may go on to inform brand and company sites, more
typically they don't. So we have to consider visual design trends across the
most popular sites which our audience is familiar with to see whether a site.
Venngage catalogues these web-graphic design trends that are likely to
continue into 2022:
Inclusive visuals
Fun data visualizations
Bold backgrounds
Colorful icons and illustrations
Serif fonts
Branded memes
Quotes
Social screencaps
Recommendation 11. Consider innovations
in interaction design and video to boost
conversion
Taff have this useful summary, with examples, of what they see as
the latest interaction design trends which we can see continuing into 2022.
Some of these are familiar from recent years, including Mobile-first design
ethos and personalized experiences. My pick of newer interactive design
techniques for marketers to be aware of include:
Rise of micro-influencers
More focus on performance marketing
Influencers as an 'always-on' strategy
Long-term relationships with influencers
From amplifiers to communicators
With more focus on performance and ROI, influencer marketing tools will
continue to evolve with a move away from unrepresentative Twitter follower
based measures. For example, Onalytica have recently announced that
they will blend B2B future influencer lists based on the Twitter API with
traditional influencers who could include:
Social influencers
Content creators
Event speakers
Industry analysts
Brand employees
Brands and publications
I think this is long overdue since a focus on celebrity and micro-influencers
alone misses the opportunities to form long-term relationships with the
other types who are often more influential!
CONVERT: Increasing conversion to sales through
online and offline channels
It might be thought that dark patterns are limited to smaller ‘get rich quick’
schemes, but they also offer big advantages to large brands who test
techniques. Econsultancy gives these recent examples of large brands
using Dark Patterns including: Airbnb excluding additional amounts,
including cleaning fees and Airbnb’s service fee and Amazon prompting
new customers who check out with a default order qualifying for free
shipping.
It's ironic, but a recognition of the problem that Tim Allen VP, Design at
Airbnb suggests that Brands should champion inclusion. He says:
"Designers, business leaders, and engineers will continue to embrace
inclusivity and the need for brands to reflect a rich diversity of perspectives.
This will lead to increased advocacy for human interests in technology; a
more intentional integration of ethics, equity, and justice into design
decision-making; and the dismantling of sustained bias within algorithms,
products, and services".
Recommendation 17. Review the
sophistication of your website
personalization
According to a SmarterHQ report, 72% of consumers say they now only
engage with marketing messages that personalized and tailored to their
interests.
Despite this, the same report also reveals that 86% of consumers are
concerned about their data privacy. Of these, Baby Boomers and Gen X
are the least trusting consumers, with Millennials and Gen Z being around
47% more trusting than their older counterparts.
80% of self-classified frequent shoppers will only shop with brands who
personalize their experience. So, it becomes important to explain the value
proposition of data collection to reassure consumers about privacy and
understand what is valued most.
We now talk about 'lifecycle email marketing' and sales cadences within
B2B nurturing. These do highlight the trend to increased integration
between channels though and email marketing to prospects and customers
is now treated as a channel that is better integrated with web, social,
display ads and personal ads.
However, these techniques are exciting for the businesses and marketers
involved if they are novel and should result in improvements in engagement
and sales. This lifecycle email marketing case study of Nike in Hong Kong
caught my eye. Automation of 10 new lifecycle campaigns and improved
relevance and targeting increased website visits by +32.5% and
automation revenue by 110% (abandoned basket campaigns were already
in use). Lifecycle segmentation included categories like purchase lifecycle
groups, first-time buyers, inactive, and defecting customers.
Recommendation 23. Applying Big Data
analysis and machine learning to improve
customer email targeting and website
personalization
More novel is the use of these techniques, which weren't practical 10 years
ago. Previously, many email marketing systems were limited to reporting
on individual newsletter and campaign email broadcasts. These are still the
'bread and butter' of email marketing for many marketers. However, a more
sophisticated approach (which I have been recommending for over 15
years for more advanced email marketers) is to consider lifecycle
engagement reporting and targeting based on this. Predictive analytics can
be used to identify:
Best send times to engage an individual (can be based when they originally
bought or subscribed, but this can be refined through time)
Best timing and offer for follow-up communications based on analysis of
latency (average interval of response)
Best product or category combinations from cluster-based segmentation
This chart from the research shows that many businesses are active in
transformation to try to achieve this aim through the success factors
covered in this briefing.