The Marketing Concept
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Transcript The Marketing Concept
Chapter 1
Introduction: Consumer
rule
1-1
Objectives of One-to-One
Marketing
• To attain customers
• Sell them more products
• Make a profit
1-2
Digital Revolution in the
Marketplace
• Allows customization of products, services,
and promotional messages like never before
• Enhances relationships with customers
more effectively and efficiently
1-3
Consumer Behavior
The behavior that consumers display
in searching for, purchasing, using,
evaluating, and disposing of products
and services that they expect will
satisfy their needs.
1-4
Personal Consumer
The individual who buys goods and
services for his or her own use, for
household use, for the use of a family
member, or for a friend.
1-5
Organizational Consumer
A business, government agency, or
other institution (profit or nonprofit)
that buys the goods, services, and/or
equipment necessary for the
organization to function.
1-6
Development of the Marketing
Concept
Production
Concept
Product Concept
Selling Concept
Marketing
Concept
1-7
The Production Concept
• Assumes that consumers are interested
primarily in product availability at low
prices
• Marketing objectives:
– Cheap, efficient production
– Intensive distribution
– Market expansion
1-8
The Product Concept
• Assumes that consumers will buy the
product that offers them the highest quality,
the best performance, and the most features
• Marketing objectives:
– Quality improvement
– Addition of features
• Tendency toward Marketing Myopia
1-9
The Selling Concept
• Assumes that consumers are unlikely to buy
a product unless they are aggressively
persuaded to do so
• Marketing objectives:
– Sell, sell, sell
• Lack of concern for customer needs and
satisfaction
1-10
The Marketing Concept
• Assumes that to be successful, a company
must determine the needs and wants of
specific target markets and deliver the
desired satisfactions better than the
competition
• Marketing objectives:
– Profits through customer satisfaction
1-11
The Marketing Concept
A consumer-oriented philosophy that
suggests that satisfaction of consumer
needs provides the focus for product
development and marketing strategy to
enable the firm to meet its own
organizational goals.
1-12
Implementing the Marketing
Concept
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1-13
Consumer Research
Segmentation
Targeting
Positioning
Consumer Research
• The process and tools used to study
consumer behavior.
• Two perspectives:
– Qualitative research
– Quantitative research
1-14
Segmentation, Targeting, and
Positioning
• Segmentation: process of dividing the
market into subsets of consumers with
common needs or characteristics
• Targeting: selecting one ore more of the
segments to pursue
• Positioning: developing a distinct image for
the product in the mind of the consumer
1-15
Successful Positioning
• Communicating the
benefits of the
product, rather than
its features
1-16
• Communicating a
Unique Selling
Proposition for the
product
The Marketing Mix
•
•
•
•
1-17
Product: features, brands and packaging
Price: list price, discounts, allowances.
Place: distribution through specific store
Promotion: advt; sales promotion, public
relation, demands,
Successful Relationships
Customer
Value
Customer
Satisfaction
1-18
Customer
Retention
Customer value
• It can be thought of as the ratio between the
consumers perceived benefits and the
resources use to obtain those benefits.
1-19
Customer satisfaction
• It is the individual consumer’s perception of
the product or services in relation to his/her
expectation.
1-20
Customer retention
• The strategy designed to make it in the best
interest of customer to stay with a company
rather than switch to another company.
• Why????
•
•
•
•
1-21
1. loyal customer buy more products
2.they are less price sensitive
3.product offer to loyal customer are more cheaper
4. they have positive word of mouth
Types of Customers
• Loyalists
• Apostles
• Defectors
1-22
• Terrorists
• Hostages
• Mercenaries
Societal Marketing Concept
A revision of the traditional marketing
concept that suggests that marketers touch
to principles of social responsibility in the
marketing of their goods and services; that
is, they must make an effort to satisfy the
needs and wants of their target markets in
ways that preserve and enhance the wellbeing of consumers and society as a whole.
1-23
The Societal Marketing Concept
• All companies prosper when society
prospers.
• Companies, as well as individuals, would be
better off if social responsibility was an
integral component of every marketing
decision.
• Requires all marketers adhere to
principles of social responsibility.
1-24
External Influence
Input
Firm’s Marketing Efforts
1. Product
2. Promotion
3. Price
4. Channels of distribution
Need
Recognition
Process
Prepurchase
Search
Evaluation of
Alternatives
Output
Purchase
1. Trial
2. Repeat purchase
Postpurchase Evaluation
1-25
Sociocultural Environment
1. Family
2. Informal sources
3. Other noncommercial
sources
4. Social class
5. Subculture and culture
Psychological Field
1. Motivation
2. Perception
3. Learning
4. Personality
5. Attitudes
Experience
Figure 1-1:
A Model of
Consumer
Decision
Making