Introduction to Marketing 1 Module intro, marketing
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Transcript Introduction to Marketing 1 Module intro, marketing
Introduction to Marketing
Marketing concept and
business orientation
Geoff Leese Dec 2001 revised
Sept 2002, August 2003,
November 2008, January 2010
(special thanks to Geoff Leese)
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Content
The marketing concept
Micro & Macro environments
Marketing research
Buying behaviour
Segmentation
Product/service, Price, Place,
Promotion
Marketing planning
2
The marketing concept
What marketing isn’t
Presentation
& image - “spin”
Glossy brochures & expensive
advertising
Persuasive selling methods
Excessive/wasteful packaging
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What is marketing?
“The aim of marketing is to make selling superfluous. The aim is
to know and understand the customer so well that the
product/service provided fits him/her and sells itself.
Drucker.
“…..a social & managerial process by which individuals &
organisations obtain what they need and want through
creating and exchanging products and value with others
Kotler
“The management process responsible for identifying,
anticipating and satisfying customer requirements
profitably.”
CIM
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Marketing concepts (1)
Target markets
All
different
Classification using criteria
Customer needs
Real
needs
Stated needs
Unstated needs (assumptions)
Delight needs
Secret needs
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Marketing concepts (2)
Co-ordinated marketing
all
functions working together
marketing throughout the organisation
marketing management
Profitability
long
term success through customer
satisfaction
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– Employee performance
– Customer satisfaction
– profitability
Business orientations (1)
Production orientation
Affordable
available products
Prioritise production & distribution
efficiency
Price sensitivity?
Until 1950s
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Business orientations (2)
Sales orientation
Selling
lines that are produced
Customers encouraged to buy
Personal selling/persuasive advertising
1950s and 1960s
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Business orientations (3)
Product orientation
Excellent,
well designed products
Mass market appeal leads to production
orientation
Fall in demand leads to sales orientation
Until 1960s
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Business orientations (4)
Marketing orientation
Customer
needs are focus of firm
“Find a need and fill it”
Flexible production/distribution methods
Organisational philosophy
Profitability rather than sales volume
1970s onwards
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Business orientations (5)
Relationship marketing
Building
long term relationships between
suppliers & customers
Ensuring that interaction is a pleasurable
experience
Customer service and attention focused
Loyalty cards
1980s onwards
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Business orientations (6)
Societal marketing
Ethics
driven
Considers needs of society as a whole
Government pressure
Pressure groups
1990s onwards
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Marketing as an interface
Need to consider
Future
customer needs
Competition
Relationships
External environment
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Marketing management’s
responsibilities
To identify customer needs
To meet them using the “marketing
mix”
Product/Price/Place/Promotion
Physical
Process
People
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evidence
Strategic vision
Look to the future
Make well informed decisions
Marketing myopia
Organisation
describes itself in
PRODUCT rather MARKET terms
Making slide rules?
Creating a competitive edge
Look at the “mission statement”!
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Market segmentation
Categorising overall market for
products or services
Consumer market segments
Industrial/commercial market
segments
HOW do we categorise?
WHAT are the key features of the
segments?
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Consumer markets (1)
Demographic variables
Age
Sex
Family
size
Stage in family life cycle (DINKY, SAGA)
Social class (A, B, C1, C2, D, E)
Weight and size
Income
etc!
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Consumer markets (2)
Geodemographic
Residential
neighbourhoods
ACORN (Groups & types - see L & M)
Pan-European (Hot chocolate - see B & P!)
– Moderns, go-betweens, traditionals
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Consumer markets (3)
Psychographic
Activities
Interests
Attitudes,
beliefs & opinions
Education (Terminal Education Age?)
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Consumer markets (4)
Behaviour segmentation
Benefit
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sought (see MARVEL example in
L&M)
End use (Soup?)
Loyalty status (Hard-core, soft-core,
shifters, switchers)
Usage rate
Attitude
Buyer readiness (Awareness, Interest,
Desire, Action)
Consumer markets (5)
Geographical
Religious
Cultural
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McCarthy’s four P’s
Product McCarthy E. J., “Organisation for new
product development?” in: Product
Price
Strategy & Management (Libery &
Place
Stuchman eds.) 1963
Promotion
Marketing planning needs to integrate
ALL these!
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Marketing planning
Analyse the environment
Consider capabilities
Decide on target markets
Adapt marketing mix
Meet customer needs
Gain competitive advantage
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Planning stages
Where are we now?
How did we get there?
Where are we going?
Where would we like to be?
How might we get there? Choose a way?
What will it be like? Will it be worth it?
How will we know when we’re there?
Are we on course?
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Marketing Audit
Monitors internal & external
environment
First three stages of planning
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External Audit checklist
Macroenvironment
Social,
Technological, Economic,
Political,Legal, Physical
The market
size,
customers (who, when, what, why, how,
where) image, market segments, distribution
Competitors
Who
are they? Objectives? Strengths &
weaknesses? Market share? Size? Entry
barriers?
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Internal audit checklist
Sales, market share, profit margins, costs
Analysis of competitive position,
portfolio analysis
Effectiveness of existing marketing mix
Internal structures
organisation,
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communications, training
Marketing information, control and
planning systems
SWOT analysis
Evaluates strategic position of the
business
Strengths
(MATCH to opportunities)
Weaknesses (turn into strengths?)
Opportunities
Threats (minimise or turn into
opportunities)
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RELATIVE to competitors!
Setting marketing objectives
Provide direction - WHAT are we
trying to achieve?
Set in terms of products
Development
of new or related
Or markets
Penetration
of existing, new/related
markets
Or both
Diversification/divestment/realignment
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Marketing strategy
HOW objectives will be achieved
Which
target markets to enter/develop
How will competitors be targeted?
Competitive advantage?
– Better, faster, closer….
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Product development
Tutorial task
Look at your own organisation.
What business orientation do you think it
has?
What evidence is there of this?
Tell us about your mission statement
Tell us about your product/service
Tell us about your customer focus
Be prepared to discuss your answers next
week.
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Further reading
Brassington F & Pettitt S (2003),
Essentials of Marketing, Pearson
education Chapters 1, 5, 7-19 and 21
CIM website
http://www.cim.co.uk/home.aspx
Marketing law website
http://www.marketinglaw.co.uk/
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