Marketing Management - Wikipedia
Marketing Management - Wikipedia
Marketing Management - Wikipedia
management
Marketing management is the strategic organizational discipline which focuses on the practical
application of marketing orientation, techniques and methods inside enterprises and
organizations and on the management of a firm's marketing resources and activities.
Structure
Marketing management employs tools from economics and competitive strategy to analyze the
industry context in which the firm operates. These include Porter's five forces, analysis of
strategic groups of competitors, value chain analysis and others.[1]
In competitor analysis, marketers build detailed profiles of each competitor in the market,
focusing on their relative competitive strengths and weaknesses using SWOT analysis.
Marketing managers will examine each competitor's cost structure, sources of profits, resources
and competencies, competitive positioning and product differentiation, degree of vertical
integration, historical responses to industry developments, and other factors.
Marketing management often implies market research and marketing research to perform a
primary analysis. For this, a variety of techniques are implemented. Some of the most common
ones include:
Brand audit
A brand audit is a thorough examination of a brand's current position in an industry compared to
its competitors and the examination of its effectiveness. When it comes to brand auditing, six
questions should be carefully examined and assessed:
A brand audit examines whether a business's share of the market is increasing, decreasing, or
stable. It determines if the company's margin of profit is improving, or decreasing, and how
much it is in comparison to the profit margin of established competitors. Additionally, a brand
audit investigates trends in a business's net profits, the return on existing investments, and its
established economic value. It determines whether or not the business's entire financial strength
and credit rating are improving or getting worse. This kind of audit also assesses a business's
image and reputation with its customers. Furthermore, a brand audit seeks to determine whether
or not a business is perceived as an industry leader in technology, offering product or service
innovations, along with exceptional customer service, among other relevant issues that
customers use to decide on a brand of performance.
A brand audit usually focuses on a business's strengths and resource capabilities because these
are the elements that enhance its competitiveness. A business's competitive strengths can exist
in several forms. Some of these forms include skilled or pertinent expertise, valuable physical
assets, valuable human assets, valuable organizational assets, valuable intangible assets,
competitive capabilities, achievements and attributes that position the business into a
competitive advantage, and alliances or cooperative ventures.
The basic concept of a brand audit is to determine whether a business's resource strengths are
competitive assets or competitive liabilities. This type of audit seeks to ensure that a business
maintains a distinctive competence that allows it to build and reinforce its competitive
advantage. What's more, a successful brand audit seeks to establish what a business capitalizes
on best, its level of expertise, resource strengths, and strongest competitive capabilities, while
aiming to identify a business's position and future performance.
Marketing strategy
Two customer segments are often selected as targets because they score highly on two
dimensions:
The implication of selecting target segments is that the business will subsequently allocate
more resources to acquire and retain customers in the target segments than it will for other, non-
targeted customers. In some cases, the firm may go so far as to turn away customers who are
not in its target segment. The doorman at a swanky nightclub, for example, may deny entry to
unfashionably dressed individuals because the business has made a strategic decision to target
the "high fashion" segment of nightclub patrons.
In conjunction with targeting decisions, marketing managers will identify the desired positioning
they want the company, product, or brand to occupy in the target customer's mind. This
positioning is often an encapsulation of a key benefit the company's product or service offers
that is differentiated and superior to the benefits offered by competitive products.[4] For
example, Volvo has traditionally positioned its products in the automobile market in North
America in order to be perceived as the leader in "safety", whereas BMW has traditionally
positioned its brand to be perceived as the leader in "performance".
Ideally, a firm's positioning can be maintained over a long period of time because the company
possesses or can develop, some form of sustainable competitive advantage.[5] The positioning
should also be sufficiently relevant to the target segment such that it will drive the purchasing
behavior of target customers.[4] To sum up, the marketing branch of a company is to deal with
the selling and popularity of its products among people and its customers, as the central and
eventual goal of a company is customer satisfaction and the return of revenue.
Implementation planning
If the company has obtained an adequate understanding of the customer base and its own
competitive position in the industry, marketing managers are able to make their own key
strategic decisions and develop a marketing strategy designed to maximize the revenues and
profits of the firm. The selected strategy may aim for any of a variety of specific objectives,
including optimizing short-term unit margins, revenue growth, market share, long-term
profitability, or other goals.
After the firm's strategic objectives have been identified, the target market selected, and the
desired positioning for the company, product, or brand has been determined, marketing
managers focus on how to best implement the chosen strategy. Traditionally, this has involved
implementation planning across the "4 Ps": product management, pricing (at what price slot
does a producer position a product, e.g. low, medium, or high price), place (the place or area
where the products are going to be sold, which could be local, regional, countrywide or
international) (i.e. sales and distribution channels), and promotion.
Taken together, the company's implementation choices across the 4 P's are often described as
the marketing mix, meaning the mix of elements the business will employ to "go to market" and
execute the marketing strategy. The overall goal for the marketing mix is to consistently deliver a
compelling value proposition that reinforces the firm's chosen positioning, builds customer
loyalty and brand equity among target customers, and achieves the firm's marketing and
financial objectives.
In many cases, marketing management will develop a marketing plan to specify how the
company will execute the chosen strategy and achieve the business's objectives. The content of
marketing plans varies for each firm, but commonly includes:
An executive summary
Situation analysis to summarize facts
and insights gained from market
research and marketing analysis
The company's mission statement or
long-term strategic vision
A statement of the company's key
objectives often subdivided into
marketing objectives and financial
objectives
The marketing strategy the business has
chosen, specifying the target segments
to be pursued and the competitive
positioning to be achieved
Implementation choices for each
element of the marketing mix (the 4 Ps)
Effective execution may require management of both internal resources and a variety of external
vendors and service providers, such as the firm's advertising agency. Marketers may therefore
coordinate with the company's Purchasing department on the procurement of these services.
Under the area of marketing agency management (i.e. working with external marketing agencies
and suppliers) are techniques such as agency performance evaluation, scope of work, incentive
compensation, ERFx's and storage of agency information in a supplier database.
Reporting, measurement, feedback
and control systems
Marketing management employs a variety of metrics to measure progress against objectives. It
is the responsibility of marketing managers to ensure that the execution of marketing programs
achieves the desired objectives and does so in a cost-efficient manner.
Marketing management therefore often makes use of various organizational control systems,
such as sales forecasts, and sales force and reseller incentive programs, sales force
management systems, and customer relationship management tools (CRM). Some software
vendors have begun using the term customer data platform or marketing resource management
to describe systems that facilitate an integrated approach for controlling marketing resources.
In some cases, these efforts may be linked to various supply chain management systems, such
as enterprise resource planning (ERP), material requirements planning (MRP), efficient
consumer response (ECR), and inventory management systems.
See also
Marketing effectiveness
Predictive analytics
Strategic management
Outline of marketing
References
Further reading
External links
Marketing at Wikibooks
Quotations related to Marketing
management at Wikiquote
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