Marketing Environment
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Transcript Marketing Environment
Marketing Environment
Definition
“The actors and forces outside marketing
that affect marketing mgt’s ability to build
and maintain successful relationships with
target customers” – Kotler
Today's markets change rapidly and
marketers need to adopt their strategies and
to meet new challenges and opportunities
The Environmental forces
Legal
Technological
factors
factors
Marketing Environment
-MicroConsumer
Political
factors
The Internal
Environment
COMPANY
Supplier
Economic
factors
Stakeholder
Environmental
factors
PESTLE
PESTLE
Marketing Environment
-Macro-
Socio- Cultural
factors
The Marketing Environment
Micro Environment
The actors close to the company that affect
its ability to serve its customers
Macro Environment
The larger societal forces that affect the
micro environment
Exercise :Internal Environment
Men
Money
Material
Machinery
Markets
(Analyzing in the context of Sri Lankan
Airlines)
Micro Environment- Key
Stakeholders
Suppliers
Pressure
groups
Competitors
Company
Employees
& Unions
Customers
Share
holders &
creditors
Channel
Partners
(Intermediaries)
Strengths
Weakness
Brand
Product portfolio
Financial Resources
Managerial ability
Knowledge/Skill
Economies of scale
Technology
Lack of skilled labor
High labor turn over
Overcapacity
Poor internal communication
Supplier relationships
Opportunity
Threats
Investments
Diversifying portfolio
Global markets
Internet
Innovation
Demand for high quality products
Competitor activity
Supplier desertion
Market saturation
Substitute products
Resistance to change
Porters 5 Forces
Potential Entrant
(Threat of
Mobility)
Supplier
(Supplier Power)
Industry
Rivalry
Substitutes
(Threat of
Substitutes)
Buyer
(Buyer Power)
Industry Rivalry
Sustainable competitive advantage through
innovation
Competition between online and offline
companies
Level of advertising expense
Powerful competitive strategy
Apple vs Anroid
Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Supplier switching costs relative to firm switching costs
Degree of differentiation of inputs
Impact of inputs on cost or differentiation
Presence of substitute inputs
Strength of distribution
channel
Supplier concentration to
firm concentration ratio
Employee solidarity (e.g.
labor unions)
Supplier competition – ability
to forward vertically integrate
and cut out the BUYER
Bargaining Power of Buyers
Buyer concentration to firm concentration ratio
Degree of dependency upon existing channels of
distribution
Bargaining leverage, particularly in industries with
high fixed costs
Buyer switching costs relative to firm switching
costs
Buyer information availability
Availability of existing
substitute products
Buyer price sensitivity
Differential advantage
(uniqueness) of industry
products
Key Accounts Chains
Threat of Substitutes
Buyer propensity to substitute
Relative price performance of substitute
Buyer switching costs
Perceived level of product differentiation
Number of substitute products available in
the market
Ease of substitution
Substandard product
Quality depreciation
Water vs Cola
Threat of New Competition
The existence of barriers to entry (patents,
rights, etc.)
Economies of product differences
Brand equity
Switching costs
Capital requirements
Access to distribution
Customer loyalty to established brand
Absolute cost
Industry profitability; the more profitable the
industry the more attractive it will be to new
competitors.
Analyzing the Macro
Environment
P
Political
E
Economic
S
Social
T
Technological
L
Legal
E
Environmental
Political factors
Main concern for business is for stability in
political decision making, a dependable planning
horizon and a positive climate
Alert management to impending legislation
Mobilize efforts to represent stakeholder interest
to the legislators
Develop awareness of the intentions of those
public bodies that can make decisions affecting
business operations
Identify changes out of electoral shifts
Implications of Political manifestos and
philosophies of the party
Economic factors
Business cycle
Inflation
GDP
Economic policies
Employment levels
Disposable income
Social factors
Trends in population
Dependency ratio
Population structure
Occupational structure
Regional distribution
Marital status and household structure
(Case: BMW)
Technological factors
Technology is a primary driving force for
social change
Computer, mobile media and
telecommunications are converging
Credit transfers rather than cash based
society
Rise of the knowledge worker
Rising proportion of IT and tele
communications ownership
(Case: Nike)
Ecological factors
What are the issues that will directly and
indirectly impact the business
How will the business mitigate this
challenge?
Assess stakeholder impact
Can the environmental issues be used to
ones advantage?
What should be our strategic positioning?
(Case: Marks & Spencer)
Legal factors
Legislation governing business
Legislation governing trade practices
Laws governing packaging
Price ceiling