MP_CHAPTER 1
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Transcript MP_CHAPTER 1
Chapter 1
Marketing in a Changing World:
Creating Customer Value and
Satisfaction
1
What is Marketing?
Process by which individuals and
groups obtain what they need and
want through creating and
exchanging products and value
with others.
Simply put: Marketing is the delivery
of customer satisfaction at a profit.
2
Core Marketing Concepts
(Fig. 1-1)
Needs, wants,
and demands
Markets
Exchange,
transactions,
and relationships
Products
and services
Value,
satisfaction,
and quality
3
What are Consumer’s Needs,
Wants and Demands?
Needs - state of felt deprivation for basic items
such as food and clothing and complex needs
such as for belonging. i.e. I am hungry.
Wants - form that a human need takes as
shaped by culture and individual personality.
i.e. I want a hamburger, French fries, and a soft
drink.
Demands - human wants backed by buying
power. i.e. I have money to buy this meal.
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What Will Satisfy Consumer’s
Needs and Wants?
Products
Anything that can be Offered to a Market to Satisfy a Need or Want
Experiences
Persons
Organizations
Information
Places
Ideas
Services
Activities or Benefits Offered for Sale That Are Essentially
Intangible and Don’t Result in the Ownership of Anything
5
How Do Consumers Choose
Choose Among Products and
Services?
Value Gained From Owning a Product and
Costs of Obtaining the Product is
Customer Value
Product’s Perceived Performance in Delivering Value
Relative to Buyer’s Expectations is
Customer Satisfaction
Total Quality Management Involves Improving the
Quality of Products, Services, and
Marketing Processes
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How Do Consumers Obtain
Products and Services?
Exchanges
Transactions
Relationships
Building a Marketing
Network Consisting of
The Company and All
Its Supporting
Stakeholders
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Who Purchases Products and
Services?
Resources to
Exchange
Willingness to
Exchange
Market –
Ethical
Buyers who
share a
particular need
or want that
can be satisfied
Attitudes
through
of
exchange
Others or
relationships.
Unexpected
Situational
Factors
People Who
Exhibit Need
Actual
Buyers
Potential
Buyers
8
Modern Marketing System
(Fig. 1-3)
Suppliers
Company
(Marketer)
Marketing
Intermediaries
Environment
Environment
Competitors
End User
Market
9
Discussion Connections
In your own words, what is marketing?
What does marketing mean to you?
Form small groups, and select a brand of athletic
shoes that a group member has purchased
recently.
What Customer Value did the group member
expect?
Did the member experience Customer Satisfaction?
Why or why not?
Marketing Management
Marketing
Management
Demand
Management
Implementing
programs
to create
exchanges
with target
buyers
to achieve
organizational
goals
Finding and
increasing
demand, also
changing or
reducing
demand such
as in
Demarketing
Profitable
Customer
Relationships
Attracting new
customers and
retaining and
building
relationships
with current
customers
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Marketing Management
Practice
Stage 1. Entrepreneurial Marketing
Stage 2. Formulated Marketing
Stage 3. Entrepreneurial Marketing
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Marketing Management
Philosophies
Production Concept
•Consumers favor products that are
available and highly affordable.
•Improve production and distribution.
Product Concept
•Consumers favor products that offer
the most quality, performance, and
innovative features.
Selling Concept
•Consumers will buy products only if
the company promotes/ sells these
products.
Marketing Concept
Societal Marketing Concept
•Focuses on needs/ wants of target
markets & delivering satisfaction
better than competitors.
•Focuses on needs/ wants of target
markets & delivering superior value.
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Marketing and Sales
Concepts Contrasted
Starting
Point
Focus
Factory
Existing
Products
Means
Ends
Profits
through
Volume
Selling
and
Promoting
The Selling Concept
Market
Customer
Needs
Integrated
Marketing
Profits
through
Satisfaction
The Marketing Concept
14
Societal Marketing Concept
Society
(Human Welfare)
Societal
Marketing
Concept
Consumers
(Want Satisfaction)
Company
(Profits)
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Marketing Challenges in the
New “Connected” Millennium
Connecting
Technologies
Computer
Information
Communication
Transportation
Connections with Customers
Connecting more selectively
Connecting for life
Connecting Directly
Connections with
Marketing Partners
Text page 23
•Connecting with other
company departments
•Connecting with suppliers
and distributors
•Connecting through
strategic alliances
Connections
with the world
around us
•Global Connections
•Connections with
values and
responsibilities
•Broadened
connections
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Technologies for Connecting
Create Products &
Services Tailored to
Meet Customer Needs
Learn About &
Track Customers
With Databases
Connecting Technologies in
Computers,
Telecommunications,
Information, & Transportation
Help To:
Communicate With
Customers in Groups
Or One-on-One
Text page 26
What aspects of
the Internet
make it a good
forum for
marketing?
How do Web
companies
compete with
brick and mortar
companies?
Distribute Products
More Efficiently &
Effectively
Click or press spacebar to return
17
The Internet
The Internet has been hailed as the technology
behind a new model for doing business.
New applications include:
Internet – connecting with customers,
Intranets – connecting with others in the company,
and
Extranets – connecting with strategic partners,
suppliers, and dealers.
Purchasing will be over $1.4 trillion in 2003.
400,000 companies are now using the Internet
to do business.
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Connections With Customers
Most marketers are targeting
fewer, potentially more
profitable customers.
Asking:
What value does the customer
bring to the organization?
Are they worth pursuing?
Focus has shifted to:
keeping current customers, and
building lasting relationships
based on superior satisfaction
and value.
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Direct Connections With
Customers
Many companies use technologies to let them
connect more directly with their customers.
Products available via telephone, mail-order catalogs,
kiosks and e-commerce.
Some firms sell only via direct channels (i.e. Dell
Computer, www.Amazon.com), others use a
combination.
Direct marketing is redefining the buyer’s role in
connecting with sellers.
Buyers are active participants in shaping the marketing
offer and process; some buyers design their own
products online such as at www.LandsEnd.com.
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Connections With
Marketing’s Partners
Connecting Inside the
Company
Every employee must be
customer-focused
Teams coordinate efforts
toward customers
Connecting With
Outside Partners
Supply Chain
Management
Strategic Alliances
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Connections With the World
Around Us
Global
Connections
Broadening
Connections
Values
Connections
Social Responsibility
Connections
22
Review of Concept
Connections
Define what marketing is and discuss its core
concepts.
Explain the relationships between customer value,
satisfaction, and quality.
Define marketing management and examine how
marketers manage demand and build profitable
customer relationships.
Compare the five marketing management
philosophies.
Analyze the major challenges facing marketers
heading into the next millennium.
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