Introduction To Marketing: Prepared By: Mrs. Madhusmita Das Lecturer, VITAM
Introduction To Marketing: Prepared By: Mrs. Madhusmita Das Lecturer, VITAM
Introduction To Marketing: Prepared By: Mrs. Madhusmita Das Lecturer, VITAM
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What is Marketing?
Social definition
A societal process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating, offering and freely exchanging products and services of value with others
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What is Marketing?
Management definition
It is the process of planning and executing the conception, pricing, promotion and distribution of ideas, goods and services to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organizational goals.
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According to Philip Kotler, Marketing management is the art and science of choosing target markets and building profitable relationship with them. This involves getting, keeping and growing customers through creating, delivering and communicating superior value.
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Product
A product is any offering catered to satisfy needs and wants. A brand is when the product is from a known source.
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Need: Transportation- Student has to reach college in time. Buses are not dependable. Want: The students wants a bike, which looks grand, has many latest features and is dependable. Pulsar, cbz extreme. Demand: Purchasing power is provided by the boys father, who also 3/31/12 the willingness to buy the bike, has
Target Market
Very rarely does a product cater to the entire market. Most products are designed to cater to a group of customers who specifically want such a product. This group of customers is the target market which is a slice of the total market. We say it is the market segment.
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Value = Benefits/Costs Benefits = Functional Benefits + Emotional benefits Costs = Monetary costs + Time + Energy + Psychic costs
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Exchange
Get something (product /service) by offering something in return. Eg. kind (barter) or money (value ) Exchange is a value creating process because it leaves both parties better off (win win situation)
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A transaction is an exchange between two things of value on agreed conditions and a time and place of agreement. A transfer is a one way exchange without receiving anything in return.
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Relationship Marketing
Building long term mutually satisfying relations with customers, suppliers, distributors in order to retain their long term preference and business
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Marketing Network
A marketing network is the relationships built with its stakeholders. Effective relationships make up an effective and strong network
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Marketing Channels
Marketing channels are used to reach the target segment. Communication channels
Supply Chain
The supply chain represents a value delivery chain from procurement of raw materials to final delivery of product to consumer.
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Competition
Potential and rival substitutes and offerings a buyer might consider. Competition can be viewed in various perspectives brand, industry, form, generic
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Marketing Offers
Tangibles Non-durables Durables Non-tangibles Services Activities Others Persons, Ideas Places, Events Organisations Information Experiences
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Marketing Environment
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Marketing Mix
It is the tools that an organization employs to pursue its marketing objectives in the target market 4 Ps - Product, Price, Place, Promotion 3/31/12
Production concept: The production concept, one of the oldest in business, holds that consumers prefer products that are widely available and inexpensive. Managers of production-oriented businesses concentrate on achieving high production efficiency, low costs, and mass distribution.
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Customer needs
Stated needs Real needs Unstated needs Delight needs Secret Needs
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Reengineering: From focusing on functional departments to reorganizing by key processes, each managed by multidiscipline teams.
Outsourcing: From making everything inside the company to buying more products from outside if they can be obtained cheaper and better. Virtual companies outsource everything, so they own very few 3/31/12
Benchmarking: From relying on self-improvement to studying worldclass performers and adopting best practices. Alliances: From trying to win alone to forming networks of partner firms. Partnersuppliers: From using many suppliers to using fewer but more reliable suppliers who work 3/31/12 closely in a partnership relationship
Relationship marketing: From focusing on transactions to building long-term, profitable customer relationships. Companies focus on their most profitable customers, products, and channels. Customer lifetime value: From making a profit on each sale to making profits by managing customer lifetime value. Some 3/31/12
Target marketing: From selling to everyone to trying to be the best firm serving well defined target markets. Target marketing is being facilitated by the proliferation of special-interest magazines, TV channels, and Internet newsgroups. Individualization: From selling the same offer in the same way to everyone in the target market to 3/31/12
Integrated marketing communications: From reliance on one communication tool such as advertising to blending several tools to deliver a consistent brand image to customers at every brand contact. Channels as partners: From thinking of intermediaries as 3/31/12