Chapter1-Creating and Capturing Customer Value
Chapter1-Creating and Capturing Customer Value
Chapter Overview
1. 2.
3.
4.
5.
Define marketing and the marketing process. Explain the importance of understanding customers and identify the five core marketplace concepts. Identify the elements of a customer-driven marketing strategy and discuss the marketing management orientations. Discuss customer relationship management and creating value for and capturing value from customers. Describe the major trends and forces changing the marketing landscape.
Building Relationships
History: Tide is an innovative brand, historically positioned on the basis of superior functional performance. At Issue: Competitors can copy product benefits quickly, but can not copy feelings toward the brand.
Research Process: Explored emotional connections women have with their laundry via consumer immersion. Findings: Women are linked emotionally to clothing. Fabrics allow women to express their attitidues, personality, and multiple faces of being female. Tide Knows Fabrics Best: Campaign featured in rich visual imagery and meaningful emotional connections.
Challenge: Understand what the brand name means to consumers and how it fits into their lives.
Goal: Speak eye-to-eye with consumers.
What Is Marketing?
Simple Definition: Marketing is managing profitable customer relationships.
Goals: 1. Attract new customers by promising superior value. 2. Keep and grow current customers by delivering satisfaction.
4
Marketing Defined
A social and managerial process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating and exchanging products and value with others.
NEW View New View of Marketing: of Marketing:
Need: State of felt deprivation including physical, social, and individual needs.
Physical needs:
Food, clothing, shelter, safety
Social needs:
Belonging, affection
Individual needs:
Learning, knowledge, self-expression
Wants: Form that a human need takes, as shaped by culture and individual personality. Wants + Buying Power = Demand
10
Products:
Persons Places Organizations Information Ideas
Services
Activity or benefit offered for sale that is essentially intangible and does not result in ownership.
Brand Experiences:
. . . dazzle their senses, touch their hearts, stimulate their minds.
11
Marketing Myopia
Marketing myopia occurs when sellers pay more attention to the specific products they offer than to the benefits and experiences produced by the products. They focus on the existing wants and lose sight of the underlying needs.
12
13
Exchange:
Act of obtaining a desired object from someone by offering something in return.
Transaction:
A trade of values between two parties. One party gives X to another party and gets Y in return. Can include cash, credit, or check.
14
What Is a Market?
The set of actual and potential buyers of a product. These people share a need or want that can be satisfied through exchange relationships.
15
16
Marketing Management
The art and science of choosing target markets and building profitable relationships with them.
Requires that consumers and the marketplace be fully understood What Customers Will We Serve? How will we Serve them Best? (Our VALUE Proposition)
17
Marketing Management
Designing a winning marketing strategy requires answers to the following questions: 1. What customers will we serve?
What is our target market?
Market Segmentation:
Divide the market into segments of customers
Target Marketing:
Select the segment to cultivate
19
Marketing Management
Demand Management
Finding and increasing demand, also changing or reducing demand, as in demarketing.
Demarketing
Temporarily or permanently reducing the number of customers or shifting their demand.
20
Value Proposition
The set of benefits or values a company promises to deliver to consumers to satisfy their needs.
Value propositions dictate how firms will differentiate and position their brands in the marketplace.
21
22
23
The overall process of building and maintaining profitable customer relationships by delivering superior customer value and satisfaction.
Acquiring customers Keeping customers Growing customers
24
Customers evaluation of the difference between all of the benefits and all of the costs of a marketing offer relative to those of competing offers.
25
Customer Satisfaction
26
Customer Relationships
Social Benefits
EX: Club marketing programs
Structural Ties
27
28
Share of Customer
The share a company gets of the customers purchasing in their product categories.
29
Customer Equity
The combined discounted customer lifetime values of all the companys current and potential customers.
Classify customers by loyalty and potential profitability Manage accordingly
30
31
32
3.
4.
5.
Define marketing and the marketing process. Explain the importance of understanding customers and identify the five core marketplace concepts. Identify the elements of a customer-driven marketing strategy and discuss the marketing management orientations. Discuss customer relationship management and creating value for and capturing value from customers. Describe the major trends and forces changing the marketing landscape.
34