Marketing Seminar Notes
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Transcript Marketing Seminar Notes
An Introduction to
Marketing
SHAD Memorial 2011
What is Marketing?
“A
total system of business activities
designed to plan, price, promote and
distribute need satisfying products
or services to target markets in
order to achieve organizational
objectives”
So in other words…
Marketing
is designed to meet the
needs of customers through its
marketing mix
In
fact, a market is defined as having a
group of individuals with needs to satisfy,
money to spend and a willingness to spend it
The Marketing What?
The
traditional marketing mix is
composed of the 4 P’s:
Product
Price
Place
(distribution)
Promotion
Evolution of Marketing Thinking
Product
=> Sales => Customer interest =>
Customer Service => Customer Relationship
Firms
now realize that customer
satisfaction is very important for repeat
business, thus they wish to develop
relationships with their customers
Implications?
This
has led to a “value” driven mentality,
whereby firms must be concerned with their
value proposition
In
sync with the evolution of marketing thinking,
delivering exceptional value means exceeding
customer expectations
Only
through the ongoing provision of value to
its customers can a company achieve high levels
of customer satisfaction, retention and loyalty
The Four R’s
This
marks the birth of the four R’s:
Retention
Relationships
Referrals
Recovery
Environmental Influences
The
operational environment influences the
organization’s operations
External
Macro-environment (PESTEL)
Internal non-marketing
Environmental
Scanning / SWOT Analysis
Buying - Decision Process
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Need Recognition
Choice of Involvement Level
Identification of alternatives
Evaluation of alternatives
Purchase and related decisions
Post-purchase behaviour
The
firm must work to reduce / eliminate
the cognitive dissonance felt by a consumer
after buying a product.
This
serves as part of CRM - Customer
Relationship Management
You
continue to look after the customer even after
the transaction
Selecting a Target Market
A
company has to aim its marketing
efforts at someone / some group
This
means you have to consider the
characteristics of various market segments,
and their potential
Rough segmentation may be done based on
demographics, geographics, psychographics or
the behaviour towards the product or service
Profiling
This
involves developing a profile of
your target segments
The
more detail the better as the more
you know about your customers, the
better you can hope to meet / exceed
their needs and expectations
Positioning
This
is the place your company /
product occupies in the mind of your
consumers
You can’t be all things to all people…
Marketers
market is:
Three
must determine who their target
main approaches:
Market
Aggregation
Single - segment strategy
Multiple - segment strategy
B2C / B2B
Selling
to a personal consumer differs
from selling to a business
Characteristics
Companies
of B2B:
are making less and buying more
Firms are under intense quality and time pressure
To get what they need, firms are concentrating their
purchases with fewer suppliers and developing longterm “partnering” relationships
Market Research
The
process of specifying, assembling and
analyzing information used to identify and
define marketing opportunities and
problems
Approaches:
Qualitative
Quantitative
Observational
Experimental
Qualitative Research
Used
when research is intended to probe
more deeply into opinions and attitudes
Use
of:
Individual depth interviews
Focus group interviews
While
no quantifiable results are gathered,
valuable insight is gained into how
consumers feel about certain concepts and
why they make the decisions they do
Quantitative Research
Involves
measurement of concepts
using standard numeric measures
Quantitative research has the
advantage of using numbers that allow
for statistical calculations and
comparisons (benchmark)
Generally use surveys to gather data
Observational Method
Data
are collected by observing some
action of the respondent
Personal
Observation
Ex.
Mystery shopper
Ex.
Electric cord on highway
Mechanical
Observation
Experimental Method
Researcher
may view results of
changing one variable while holding all
else constant
Testing
may occur in a loboratory or
field (test marketing)
Conducting Marketing Research
Define research objectives
Conduct an investigation
Analyze data
Report data (did you meet your objectives)
Consumer vs Business Product
Consumer
Product: A product intended for
use by household consumers for nonbusiness purposes
Business
Product: A product intended for
purchase and use in producing other
products or in rendering services in a
business
Criteria for new products…
1.
2.
There must be adequate market demand
The product must satisfy key financial
criteria
1.
2.
3.
3.
4.
Is adequate financing available?
Will the new item reduce seasonal and cyclical
fluctuations in the company’s sales?
Can we make sufficient profit from the product?
The product must be compatible with
environmental standards
The product must fit into the company’s
present marketing structure
Importance of Services
North
America has become a true
service economy
In
2001, 74.4% of the Canadian labour
force, and over 70% of the country’s
GDP were accounted for by services
Growth
in number and variety of
both personal and business services
Characteristics of Services
Intangibility
Impossible
to sample a service before buying it,
as a result there is a degree of risk involved
with the decision
Inseparability
We
cannot separate service production from
consumption
Characteristics of Services
Heterogeneity
It
is impossible for a service company to
standardize output
Perishability
Services
and Fluctuating Demand
cannot be stored, and their
market fluctuates considerably
Service Failure and Recovery
No
matter how diligent a company’s employees
and how well designed its service processes,
service failure is inevitable
An
important issue relating to customer
satisfaction is how a company responds when
service fails. The process or dealing with
service failure to make amends with customers
is called service recovery
The Importance of Branding
Brand
Equity: The value a brand adds to a
product
Brand Loyalty: The situation in which a
customer buys a certain brand on a regular
basis because of its performance and
appeal
A brand can add value to a product in the
mind of the consumer, hence it can provide
differential advantage or serve as a
barrier to entry
Selecting a good brand
5 Desirable Brand Characteristics:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Suggest something about the product’s
characteristics (it’s benefits, use, or action)
Be easy to pronounce, spell and remember
Be distinctive
Be adaptable to new products that may be added to
the product line
Be capable of being registered and legally
protected under the Trade-marks Act and other
statutory or common laws
Marketing Communications
Marketing
communications serves
three essential roles: it informs,
persuades, and reminds prospective
customers about a company and its
products
Reach
& Frequency!
Marketing Communications Methods
Personal
selling
selling
using sales reps
Advertising
non-personal,
mass communication
Sales
promotion
Public
relations
demand
stimulating activity
efforts
to contribute to generally favorable attitudes
and opinions toward an organization
Publicity
creating
news stories, editorials or announcements
about an organization
Factors Influencing the
Marketing Communications Mix
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The Target Market
The objective of the communications effort
The nature of the product or service being
promoted
The stage in the life cycle of the product
The amount of money available for marketing
communications
Marketing Communications Budget
Percentage
of sales
All available funds
Follow the competition
Task or objective
Developing an Advertising
Campaign
Defining
Objectives
Establishing a budget
Creating a message
Selecting Media
Evaluating the advertising effort
Want
to achieve desired reach and
frequency!
Channel of Distribution /
Supply Chain
Direct
Distribution: A channel consisting
only of producer and final customer, with
no intermediaries providing assistance
Indirect
Distribution: A channel consisting
of producer, final customer and at least
one level of intermediary
Choice of Channel
Depends
Market
upon:
considerations
Product considerations
Channel member considerations
Company considerations
Price and Value
Price:
The amount of money and/or other
resources needed to acquire some
combination of a product and its
accompanying services
Value:
The ratio of perceived benefits of a
product/service to perceived costs,
including price and other incurred costs
The Importance of Price
Price
epitomizes and makes tangible
the notion of value
Price
sensitivity: Extent to which the
market or a segment, will respond to
price changes
Pricing Objectives
Profit
oriented
Achieve a target
Maximize profit
Market
return
oriented
Achieve an image or position
Increase sales volume
Maintain / Increase market share
Status
quo oriented
Stabilize prices
To meet competition
Break-Even Analysis
TFC
/ Unit contribution to overhead
TFC
/ (selling price - AVC)
Market Skimming / Penetration
Pricing
Skimming:
A pricing strategy in which the
initial price is set high in the target
market’s range of expected prices
Penetration:
A pricing strategy in which a
low initial price is set to reach the mass
market immediately
Now that you think you know it all….
HERE IS HOW MARKETING
IS CHANGING…
Web 2.0
More
options – need to be relevant
Social networking is changing things
E-marketing on the rise…
E-mail
Search
advertising
Banner ads
Product placement
How do your customers want to
communicate?
Messaging Preferences by Age Group (% of Age Group)
Age
Instant
SMS
Messaging
(Texting)
15-17
16%
42%
18-24
19
34
25-34
8
21
35-44
5
10
45-54
5
6
55-64
2
3
65+
0
0
Source: ExactTarget, October 2008
Email
27%
34
58
78
80
87
88
Disconnect in Media
Consumption vs Spend
Forrester Research 2008
Approximate Customer Acquisition Cost Across Various Channels
$80
$70
$60
$60
$50
$40
$20
$20
$8.5
$0
Direct mail
Email
Online display ads
Source: Piper Jaffray: “The New eCommerce Decade: The Age of Micro Targeting,” Oct 2006
Yellow Pages
Search
Basic Blog Stats
January 2004 - 1 million blogs
January 2005 – 8 million blogs
January 2006 – 30 million blogs
July 2006 – 50 million blogs
40,000 new blogs per day
Even if 99.9% are off point – 40
new ones per day could be talking
about your business
THE FUTURE (eMarketer 2008)
Blog Readers
2007: 94.1 million (50%)
2012: 145.3 million (67%)
Bloggers
2007: 22.6 million (12%)
2012: 34.7 million (16%)
Blog Advertising
2007: $283 million
2012: $746 million
Social Media Revolution
Facebook:
750m users
Twitter: 200m users
LinkedIn: 119m users
Google +: 10m users (in 2 weeks)
Foursquare: 10m users
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzZyUaQvpdc
The next generation
Tweens
5%
(8-12)
access the internet from their mobile phones each
month
41%
while commuting or traveling (to school for example)
26% while at friends house
17% while at social events
35%
have a mobile phone
20% use text messaging
58% of those who download or watch TV on mobile do so
at home
Neilson Media 2007
Resources
http://www.unb.ca/jhsc/resourcectr
/TME_courses/tme3113/marketing/
What’s needed for the plan…
Product
description – USP (PRODUCT)
ID Target Markets
Enviro Scan and SWOT
Description of key competitors
Analysis of competitive position
Pricing Strategy (PRICE)
Promotion Strategy (PROMOTION)
Distribution Strategy (PLACE)
The Problem…
Help
Vibrant Communities, a community driven
effort to reduce poverty in Canada
Their
finances have taken a hit
Its public profile is low
You
need to develop a fundraiser to help bankroll
its operations and increase public awareness of
the cause
Determine
group
the 4 P’s for your event, and share with the