Marketing
Marketing
Marketing
MARKETING
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Lecture outline:
• Introduction to marketing
• Marketing system
• Sales versus marketing
• Marketing management philosophies
• Core concepts of marketing
• The marketing mix
• Strategic marketing
• Marketing plan
• Marketing environment
• Marketing process
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Marketing: An Introduction
Do you know??
What is Marketing…??
•Selling?
•Advertising?
•Promotions?
•Making products available in stores?
•Maintaining inventories?
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What is Marketing?
American Marketing Association Definition
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The Concept of Exchange
At Least Two
Parties Something of
Value
Necessary Ability to
Communicate
Conditions Offer
for Exchange
Freedom to
Accept or Reject
Desire to Deal
With Other
©2003Party
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Why Study Marketing?
Plays an important role in society
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Simple Marketing System
Communication
Goods/services
Industry Market
(a collection (a collection
of sellers) of Buyers)
Money
Information
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Five Basic Market
Manufacturer markets
Resource markets
Government markets
Intermediary markets
Consumer markets
Structure of Flows
Resources Resources
Money Resource Money
markets
Services,
money Taxes,
goods
Services, Taxes
money
Manufacturer Government Consumer
markets markets markets
Taxes,
goods Services
Services, Taxes,
money goods
Money Money
Intermediary
Goods, services markets Goods, services
Difference Between - Sales & Marketing ?
Sales
trying to get the customer to want what the
company produces
Marketing
trying to get the company produce what the
customer wants
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Marketing Concept versus
Selling Concept
Starting
point Focus Means Ends
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Marketing Management:
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Marketing Management
Philosophies
Production
Sales
Competing Market
Philosophies
Product
Societal Marketing
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Marketing Management Philosophies
Consumers prefer products that are
Production widely available and inexpensive
Marketing Convenience
Mix
Place
Product
Customer
Solution Price Promotion
Customer Communication
Cost
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Core Concepts of Marketing
Target Markets & Segmentation
Needs, Wants, and Demands
Product or Offering
Value and Satisfaction
Exchange and Transactions
Relationships and Networks
Marketing Channels
Supply Chain
Competition
Marketing Environment
Core Concepts of Marketing
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Core Concepts of Marketing
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Marketing Triangle
Customers
Company Competition
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Who is a Customer ??
CUSTOMER IS . . . . .
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Customer –
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How Do Consumers Choose Among Products
& Services?
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Customer looks for Value
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Strategic Marketing
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Strategic Planning
• Strategic Planning is the managerial
process of creating and maintaining a fit
between the organization’s objectives and
resources and the evolving market
opportunities.
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The Strategic-Planning, Implementation,
and Control Process
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Business Strategic-Planning Process
External environment
(Opportunity &
Threat analysis)
Internal Environment
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Strategy Formulation
Environmental Analysis
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Firm Strategies
The Marketing Plan
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The Marketing Process/Plan
Business
Mission
Statemen
t
Objective
s
Situation
or SWOT
Analysis
Marketing Strategy
Target Market
Strategy
Marketing Mix
Product Place/Distribution
Promotion Price
Implementation
Evaluation, Control
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Marketing Environment
All the factors and forces
influencing the company’s ability to
transact business effectively with it’s
target market
Market Environment
Includes:
Microenvironment - forces close to the
company that affect its ability to serve its
customers.
Macroenvironment - larger societal forces
that affect the whole microenvironment
Demographic
Company
Cultural Economic
Public Suppliers
Company
Customers
Competitors Natural
Political
Intermediaries
Technological
External Marketing Environment
External Environment
Social Ever-Changing
is not controllable Change Marketplace
Demographics
Economic
Product Physical / Natural Conditions
Distribution
Promotion
Price
Competition
Target Market
Political &
Legal Factors
Technology
Environmental
Scanning
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The macro-environment
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UNCONTROLLABLE FACTORS AFFECTING
MARKETING DECISIONS
Social
Natural
Economic
External Technologic
Environmental
Factors Political and Legal
Competitive
Political factors
Economic factors
Socio-cultural factors
Technological factors
Political/legal
Monopolies legislation
Environmental protection laws
Taxation policy
Employment laws
Government policy
Legislation
Economic Factors
Inflation
Employment
Income
Energy availability and cost
Sociocultural factors
Demographics
Distribution of income
Social mobility
Lifestyle changes
Consumerism
Levels of education
Technological
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Product
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Product is . . . . .
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Types of Products
PRODUCTS
Consumer Industrial
Services
Products Products
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Product Items, Lines, and Mixes
A group of closely-related
Product Line
product items.
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Product Mix
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Gillette’s Product Lines & Mix
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What is a Service? Defining the
Essence
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Difference between physical
goods and services
Physical goods Services
tangible intangible
homogeneous heterogeneous
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Classification of Services
Pure Intangible
Banking
Service
Good Transportation
Computers
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The Give and Get of Marketing
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Stages of Customer Interaction
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Roles of marketing
main roles:
advertising (advertising and promotion managers)
selling (sales representatives/sales force)
but also:
product development
(brand and product managers)
packaging
(packaging designers)
pricing
(pricing specialists)
distribution
(sales personnel)
Marketing Process
three elements:
1. Market analysis
(Who will buy?)
2. Marketing-mix planning
(What? Where? How much? How?)
3. Marketing control
(Have we been successful?)
1. Market analysis (STP)
a) Segmentation
niche segment
individuals
elements:
a) Product
b) Price
c) Place
d) Promotion
a) Product
Product development
Branding
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b) Price
Pricing strategies:
1. Market determines
the price
2. Price as an expression
of quality
3. Price as a method of
gaining market share
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c) Place (distribution)
Production site Warehouse Wholesaler
- factory outlet
- mail order house
- internet
- TV shopping
- door-to-door selling
consumer Retailer
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c) Promotion
Aims:
communicate with customers
influence customers
4 major tools:
1. Sales force
2. Advertising
3. Sales promotion
4. Public relations
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1. Sales force
Representatives who advertise for and sell products
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2. Advertising
Presents a reason to buy a product/service
Media:
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3. Sales promotion
is a short-term incentive
to buy a product/service
Techniques:
1 price reduction
Does not aim to increase sales directly but tries to boost the
image of the company
Techniques:
- press conferences
- contests
- community events
- charitable events
- ecological projects
- foundations
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3. Evaluation and control
= looking back at the entire process to find out
whether or not it was successful
Why control?
• planning is no guarantee for profit
• markets change constantly
• strategies not always effective
Tools:
a) Annual-plan control
b) Profitability control
c) Efficiency control
d) Strategic control
a) Annual-plan control
Tools:
1. Sales analysis
(Did we sell as much as we planned?)
2. Market-share analysis
(Have we lost or gained market share?)
3. Marketing expense-to-sales analysis
(Did the marketing efforts pay?)
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b) Profitability control
Do we have more earnings than expenditures?
Strategies:
Aim:
Which of my products is the most profitable?
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c) Efficiency control
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d) Strategic control
Is my marketing program effective
over a long period of time?
marketing philosophy
information policy
- enough advertisement?
- enough promotion?
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1. Sales analysis
reasons
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2. Market share analysis
17%
28%
Gucci
13% Joop
Dolce & Gabbana
Kuniberg
42%
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3. Marketing expense-to-sales
analysis
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