Understanding the Customer and Creating Goods and Services that

Download Report

Transcript Understanding the Customer and Creating Goods and Services that

Understanding the Customer
and Creating Goods and Services
that Satisfy
Chapter 11
Chapter 11 Learning Goals
•
•
•
•
What are the marketing concept and
relationship building?
How do managers create a marketing
strategy?
What is the marketing mix?
How do consumers and organizations make
buying decisions?
Chapter 11 Learning Goals (cont’d.)
•
•
•
What are the five basic forms of market
segmentation?
How is marketing research used in
marketing decision making?
What are the trends in understanding the
consumer?
Learning Goal 1
• What are the marketing concept and relationship
building?
– Marketing concept involves
• Identifying consumer needs and wants
• Producing goods or services that will satisfy consumers while
making a profit
– Relationship marketing entails
• Forging long-term relationships with customers
• Can lead to repeat sales, reduced costs, and stable relationships
Marketing Concept:
Identifying consumer needs and
then producing the goods or
services that will satisfy them
while making a profit for the
organization
Elements of the Marketing Concept
• Customer value
• Customer satisfaction
• Building relationships
Deere’s Customer Orientation
• Understand needs of the agricultural farmer
customer
• Provide good products that rarely fail
• Quickly repair any problem equipment
• Develop products based on what farmers want
• Extend credit to farmers if needed; build trust
and loyalty
• Provide information that increases customer
value
Source: Neff & Citrin, Lessons from the Top, 1999, p. 47-53.
Learning Goal 2
• How do managers create a marketing strategy?
– Marketing strategies are created by
• Understanding the external environment
– Using environmental scanning
• Defining the target market
– Specific group of consumers toward which a firm directs its
marketing efforts
• Determining a competitive advantage
– Set of unique features of a company and its products
– Perceived by target market as significant and superior to those of the
competition
• Developing a marketing mix
Creating a Marketing Strategy
• Understanding the external
environment
• Defining the target market
• Creating a competitive advantage
– cost competitive advantage
– differential competitive advantage
– niche competitive advantage
Learning Goal 3
• What is the marketing mix?
– Marketing mix is a blend of
•
•
•
•
Products
Distribution systems
Prices
Promotion
– Marketing mix is used by marketing managers to satisfy
target consumers
– Mix can be applied to non-business or business situations
Marketing Mix:
The blend of ‘4 Ps’: product
offering, pricing, promotional
methods, and place (distribution
system) that brings a specific group
of consumers superior value
Developing a Marketing Mix
• Product strategy
• Pricing strategy
• Distribution strategy
• Promotion strategy
360° Branding
360° branding: making a strong brand impact on
the customer every time contact is made
Opportunities for 360° branding:
– showrooms, advertisements, web pages, retail
locations, packaging, customer service
Ogilvy & Mather advertising agency applies 360°
branding to its clients
Source: Neff & Citrin, Lessons from the Top, 1999, p. 221-227.
Learning Goal 4
• How do consumers and organizations make buying
decisions?
– Consumer decision making process consists of:
•
•
•
•
•
Responding to a stimulus
Recognizing a problem or opportunity
Seeking information and evaluating alternatives
Purchasing the product and judging the purchase outcome
Engaging in post-purchase behavior
– Factors that influence the process
• Individual factors – unique to each person
• Social factors – family, social classes, and culture
Learning Goal 4
(cont’d.)
• How do consumers and organizations make buying
decisions?
– Differences between consumer and business markets:
•
•
•
•
•
Purchase volume
Number of customers
Location of buyers
Direct distribution
Rational purchase decisions
Buyer Behavior:
Consumer Decision-Making
1. Sense stimulus
2. Recognize problem
3. Search for information
Individual &
Social factors
4. Evaluate alternatives
5. Purchase product
6. Evaluate outcome
7. Post-purchase behavior
Memory
When the Buyer is a Business
(Not a Customer)
•
•
•
•
•
Higher purchase volume
Fewer buyers
More concentrated location of buyers
Direct distribution
Rational purchase decisions
Top 10
Business-to-Business Advertisers
1. AT&T Corp.
2. IBM Corp.
3. Microsoft Corp.
4. Compaq Computer Corp.
5. MCI Communications Corp.
6. Hewlett-Packard Co.
7. Sprint Corp.
8. American Express Co.
9. Canon
10. 3Com Corp.
Source: Business Marketing,
www.businessmarketing.com
Learning Goal 5
• What are the five basic forms of market
segmentation?
–
–
–
–
–
Demographic (population statistics)
Geographic (location)
Psychographic (personality or lifestyle)
Benefit (product features)
Volume (amount purchased)
Market Segmentation:
The process of separating,
identifying, and evaluating the
layers of a market in order to
design a marketing mix
Types of Market Segmentation
Type
General characteristics
Demographic
age, education, gender, income, race,
family, size
regional location (I.e., midwest),
population density, city/county size,
climate
lifestyle, personality, interests, values,
attitudes
benefits provided by the good or
service
amount of use (light to heavy)
Geographic
Psychographic
Benefit
Volume
Learning Goal 6
• How is marketing research used in marketing
decision making?
– Much can be learned about consumers through marketing
research by
• Collecting, recording, and analyzing data important in marketing
goods and services
• Communicating results to management
– Primary data is
• Collected in these ways:
–
–
–
–
–
Door-to-door
Mall-intercept
Telephone
Internet
Mail interviews
Learning Goal 6
(cont’d.)
• How is marketing research used in marketing decision
making?
– Secondary data
• Available from these associations:
– Government
– Trade
– Commercial
• Saves time and money but may not meet researchers’ needs
– Both primary and secondary data give researchers a better
idea of how market will respond to a product
– Reduces the risk of producing something the market doesn’t
want
Marketing Research Process
1. Define the marketing problem
2. Choose a method of research
survey, observation, experiment
3. Collect the data
primary data, secondary data
4. Analyze the data
5. Make recommendations to management
Learning Goal 7
• What are the trends in understanding the consumer?
– New technology has:
• Increased the sophistication of observation research techniques
• Improved the accuracy of data
• Researchers are analyzing the brain to better understand how
people think
– Growing use of decision support systems
• Enable managers to make decisions quickly and accurately
– Growing use of databases for micromarketing
Trends in Marketing
 Advanced observation research methods
 Decision support systems (DSS)
 Use of databases for micromarketing
 allows customized marketing to individuals
 Amazon.com records what every customer buys; this gives
them a sense of every customer’s taste & preferences, which
can be used to target specific customers with customized
purchase suggestions & special offers (Source: Fortune, Sept. 28,
1998, p. 124)