Transcript Ch 1.
Welcome to the World
of Marketing:
Create and Deliver Value
Chapter One
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice-Hall.
Chapter Objectives
Understand who marketers are, where they
work, and marketing’s role in the firm
Explain what marketing is and how it provides
value to everyone involved in the marketing
process
Explain the evolution of the marketing concept
Understand the range of services and goods
that organizations market
Understand value from the perspectives of
customers, producers, and society
Explain the basics of market planning and the
marketing mix tools we use in the marketing
process
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice-Hall.
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Real People, Real Choices:
Decision Time at Pandora.
Which option should be pursued?
• Option 1: Launch an ad campaign on
radio stations, in music magazines, and
at record stores
• Option 2: Build buzz about Pandora
through word of mouth
• Option 3: Sell the service to a large
chain of record stores, a music
magazine, or even a record label
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Welcome to “Brand You”
You are a product and have “market
value” as a person
You “position” yourself for a job
interview in a number of ways
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The Who and Where of
Marketing
Marketers:
• Come from many different
backgrounds
• Work in a variety of locations
• Maintain cross-functional relationships
within the firm
• Enjoy exciting, diverse careers
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The Value of Marketing
Definition of Marketing (AMA, 2007)
• Marketing is the activity, set of
institutions, and processes for creating,
communicating, delivering and
exchanging offerings that have value
for customers, clients, partners, and
society at large
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Marketing Meets Needs
Marketing meets the needs of diverse
stakeholders
Successful firms practice the marketing
concept
Needs, wants, and benefits
Demands and markets
The modern marketplace
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Marketing is about Creating Utility
Utility:
The sum of the benefits we receive
from using a product/service
• Form utility
• Place utility
• Time utility
• Possession utility
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Marketing is about
Exchange Relationships
An exchange occurs when something
is obtained for something else in
return—like cash for goods or services
• Buyer receives a product (an object,
service, or idea that satisfies a need)
• Seller receives something of equivalent
value
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The Evolution of Marketing
The Production Era
• Production orientation
The Sales Era
• Selling orientation
The Relationship Era
• Consumer orientation
• Total quality management
The Triple Bottom Line Era
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The Production Era
Dominated by production orientation
• A management philosophy that
emphasizes the most efficient ways to
produce and distribute products
Marketing played an insignificant role
Henry Ford’s Model T and Ivory soap
are examples of products that were
created under a production orientation
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The Sales Era
When product availability exceeds
demand, businesses may focus
on a one-time sale of goods rather
than repeat business
Dominated by selling orientation
• Managerial view of marketing is
as a sales function, or a way to
move products out of warehouses
to reduce inventory
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The Relationship Era
Focused on a customer orientation
• A management philosophy that
emphasizes satisfying customers’
needs and wants
Marketing becomes more important in
the firm
Total Quality Management (TQM) is
widely followed in the marketing
community
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The Triple Bottom Line Era: Make
Money and a Contribution
Focuses on building long-term bonds with
customers
• Triple orientation seeks to maximize the
financial, social, and environmental
bottom lines
• Marketing uses customer relationship
management (CRM) to build bonds with
consumers
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The Triple Bottom Line Era: Make
Money and a Contribution
Social marketing concept :
• Management philosophy that marketers
must satisfy customers’ needs in ways
that also benefit society and deliver
value to the firm
• Sustainability is a key trend that applies
to many aspects of business
Triple bottom line firms place a greater
focus on accountability
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What Can Be Marketed?
From “serious” goods to fun things
• Products mirror changes in popular culture
• Marketing messages often communicate
myths
Product: any good, service, or idea
• Consumer goods/services
• Business-to-business goods/services
• Not-for-profit marketing
• Idea, place, and people marketing
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The Marketing of Value
Marketing creates and communicates
the value proposition as:
• A marketplace offering that fairly and
accurately sums up the value that the
customer will realize if the consumer
purchases a product or service
Perspectives of value differ between
customers, sellers, and society
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Value from
the Customer’s Perspective
Customer perspective
• Value is the ratio of costs (price) to
benefits (utilities)
• Value proposition includes the whole
bundle of benefits the firm promises to
deliver, not just the benefits of the
product
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Value from
the Seller’s Perspective
Value for the seller takes many forms
Seller’s should build value by
marketing with customers, not to them
• Partnering with customers via
brandfests
Customers have value – it is more
expensive to attract new customers
than to retain current ones
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Value from
the Seller’s Perspective
Lifetime value of a customer
• Calculate the projected profit from a
particular customer to allow a firm to
decide which customers are “worth
keeping” vs. which should be “fired”
Creating a competitive advantage
• Identify a distinctive competency
• Turn distinctive competencies into
differential benefits
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Adding Value Through
the Value Chain
Value chain:
A series of activities involved in
designing, producing, marketing,
delivering, and supporting any product
Steps in the value chain
Measuring value
• Marketing scorecards
• Marketing metrics
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Consumer-Generated Value:
From Audience to Community
Everyday people are generating value
instead of just buying it
• Marketers need to think of consumers
as communities
• Amafessionals gain physic income
Social networking continues to grow
• Web 2.0, folksonomy, and the wisdom
of crowds
Open source business models
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Value from Society’s Perspective
Marketing transactions add or subtract
value from society:
• Stressing socially responsible and
ethical decisions is good business
• Marketing is often criticized
• Marketing’s dark side
Some
marketing activities have
detrimental effects on society
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Marketing Is a Process
Marketing planning is a major portion
of the process and it involves the
following:
• Analyzing the marketing environment
• Developing a marketing plan
• Deciding on a market segment
• Choosing the marketing mix—
product, price, promotion, and place
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Real People, Real Choices:
Decision Made at Pandora
Joe chose option 2
• Why do you think that Joe chose personal
communication and social networking to
build awareness?
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Keeping It Real: Fast-Forward to Next
Class Decision Time at First Flavor
Meet Jay of First Flavor
First Flavor markets edible film strips
that allow users to taste flavors. Other
potential uses of film strips beyond
sampling are being investigated
The decision to be made includes
whether or not to diversify into new
product categories
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written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United
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