MKTG 360 Ch. 1,2,3 Book Notes PDF
MKTG 360 Ch. 1,2,3 Book Notes PDF
MKTG 360 Ch. 1,2,3 Book Notes PDF
- One-way communicator with customers has changed to "a starter of conversations and a solver of
consumers' problems"
- Marketing is no longer about "telling and selling"
What is Marketing?
- Marketing, more than any other business function, deals with customers.
- Marketing is managing profitable customer relationships.
- Goals of Marketing:
○ Attract new customers by promising superior value
○ Keep and grow current customers by delivering satisfaction
- Sound marketing is critical to the success of every organization.
○ Large for-profit firms, such as Procter & Gamble, Toyota, Target, Apple, and Marriott
○ Not-for-profit organizations such as colleges, hospitals, museums, symphony orchestras, & churches
○ Seen everywhere: shopping mall, TV, magazines, mailbox, web pages, home, school, work, play
- Behind it all is a massive network of people and activities competing for your attention and purchases.
Marketing Defined
- "selling and advertising" = "tip of iceberg" about marketing
- Satisfying customer needs
- If the marketer does the following, their products will sell easily:
○ Understands consumers needs
○ Develops products and services that provide superior customer value
○ Prices, distributes, and promotes products effectively
- Peter Drucker, "The aim of marketing is to make selling unnecessary."
- Selling and advertising are only part of a larger "marketing mix."
- "Marketing Mix" = a set of marketing tools that work together to satisfy customer needs and build
customer relationships.
- Broad Definition
○ Marketing is a social and managerial process by which individuals and organizations obtain what
they need and want through creating and exchanging value with others.
- Narrower Definition (BUSINESS CONTEXT)
○ Marketing involves building profitable, value-laden exchange relationships with customers.
- Marketing is the process by which companies create value for customers and build strong customer
relationships in order to capture value from customers in return.
- 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.
- Marketing myopia is the mistake of paying more attention to the specific products a company offers than
to the benefits and experiences produced by these products.
- Smart marketers look beyond the attributes of the products and services they sell. By orchestrating
several services and products, they create brand experiences for consumers.
Markets
- A market is the set of actual and potential buyers of a product. These buyers share a particular need or want that can be
satisfied through exchange relationships.
- Marketing means managing markets to bring about profitable customer relationships.
- Creating these relationship require work. Sellers must
○ Search for buyers
○ Identify buyers' needs
Design good market offerings
Customer Value
- Customer-perceived value is the customer's evaluation of the difference between all the benefits and all the costs of a
marketing offer relative to those of competing offers.
Customer Satisfaction
- Customer satisfaction is the extent to which a product's perceived performance matches a buyer's expectations.
Smart companies aim to delight customers by promising only what they can deliver, than delivering more than they
- Not all loyal customers are good investments. Some loyal customers can be unprofitable and some disloyal customers can
be profitable.
- "Keep the consistent big spenders and lose the erratic small spenders"
- "What about the erratic big spenders and the consistent small spenders?"
- Figure 1.5 classifies customers into one of four relationship groups, according to their profitability and projected loyalty.
○ Strangers: show low potential profitability and little projected loyalty (Companies shouldn't invest anything in them)
○ Butterflies: potentially profitable but not loyal. (Companies should use promotional blitzes to attract them, create
satisfying and profitable transactions with them, and then ease investing in them until the next time around)
○ True Friends: are both profitable and loyal. (Companies wants to make continuous relationship investments to
delight these customers and nurture, retain, and grow them.) True Friends > True Believers who tell friends about
company
○ Barnacles are highly loyal but not very profitable. (The company might be able to improve their profitability by
selling them more, raising their fees, or reducing service to them. If companies cannot be made profitable, these
customers should be "fired.")
- Different types of customers require different relationship management strategies. The goal is to build the right
relationships with the right customers.
Rapid Globalization
- In an increasingly smaller world, many marketers are now connected globally with their customers and marketing
partners.
- Mission statements should be market oriented and defined in terms of customer needs. Products and
technologies eventually become outdated, but basic market needs may last forever.
- A market-oriented mission statement defines the business in terms of satisfying basic customer needs. Ex:
Nike's mission is "to bring inspiration and innovation o every athlete"
- "Too long to remember, too vague to be meaningful, and too dull to inspire" = sound good but provide little
real guidance or inspiration.
- Once the company has classified its SBUs, the company must determine what role each will play in the future.
○ The company can invest more in the business unit in order to build its share.
○ It can invest just enough to hold the SBU's share at the current level.
○ It can harvest the SBU, milking its short-term cash flow regardless of the long-term effect.
○ Or the company can divest the SBU by selling it or phasing it out and using the resources elsewhere.
- SBU life cycle:
1. Start as question marks
2. Move to stars, if they succeed
3. Later becomes cash cows as market growth falls
4. Finally, die off or turn into dogs toward the end of their life cycle
- The company needs to add new products and units continuously so that some of them will become stars and
cash cows that will finance other SBUs.
1. Market penetration is a strategy for company growth by increasing sales of current products to current
Market Segmentation
- Market Segmentation is to divide a market into distinct groups of buyers who have distinct needs,
characteristics, or behavior and who might require separate products or marketing programs.
- Market segment is a group of consumers who respond in a similar way to a given set of marketing efforts.
Market Targeting
- Market Targeting is the process of evaluating each market segment's attractiveness and selecting one or more
segments to enter.
- Most companies enter a new market by serving a single segment, and if this proves successful, they add
segments.
- Marketers would do well to think through the 4 Cs first and then build the 4 Ps on that platform.
Marketing Analysis
- SWOT analysis is an overall evaluation of the company's strengths (S), weaknesses (W), opportunities (O), and
threats (T).
- Strengths include internal capabilities, resources, and positive situational factors that may help the company
to serve its customers and achieve its objectives.
- Weaknesses include internal limitations and negative situational factors that may interfere with the
company's performance.
- Opportunities are favorable factors or trends in the external environment and the company may be able to
exploit to its advantage.
- Threats are unfavorable external factors or trends that may present challenges to performance.
Marketing Implementation
- Marketing implementation is the process that turns marketing strategies and plans into marketing actions in
order to accomplish strategic marketing objectives.
- Marketing planning = what and why
- Marketing implementation = who, where, when, and how
- Implementation = "doing things right" is more than or just as important as strategy = "doing the right things"
Marketing Control
- Marketing control is the process of measuring and evaluating the results of marketing strategies and plans
and taking corrective action to ensure that objectives are achieved.
- 4 Steps of Marketing Control
1. Set specific marketing goals
2. Measure company's performance in the marketplace
3. Evaluate the causes of any differences between expected and actual performance
4. Take corrective action to close the gaps between its goals and its performance. (may change action
programs or change goals)
- Operating controlinvolves checking ongoing performance against the annual plan and taking corrective action
when necessary. Its purpose is to ensure that the company achieves the sales, profits, and other goals set out
in its plan. It also involves determining the profitability of different products, territories, markets, and
channels.
- Strategic controlinvolves looking at whether the company's basic strategies are well matched to its
opportunities.
- Marketing audit is a comprehensive, systematic, independent, and periodic examination of a company's
environment, objectives, strategies, and activities to determine problem areas and opportunities and to
recommend a plan of action to improve the company's marketing performance.
- The marketing audit covers all major marketing areas of a business. It assesses the marketing environment,
marketing strategy, marketing organization, marketing systems, marketing mix, and marketing productivity
and profitability. Management then decides which actions make sense and how and when to implement
them.
- Marketing environment is the actors and forces outside marketing that affect marketing management's ability to build and
maintain successful relationships with target customers.
- Marketers have 2 special aptitudes
○ Marketing research and marketing intelligence, for collecting information about the marketing environment
- By carefully studying the environment, marketers can adapt their strategies to meet new marketplace challenges and
opportunities.
- Microenvironment is the actors close the company that affect its ability to serve its customers - the company, suppliers,
marketing intermediaries, customer markets, competitors, and publics
- Macroenvironment is the larger societal forces that affect the microenvironment - demographic economic, natural,
technological, political, and cultural forces.
Suppliers
- Suppliers provide the resources needed by the company to produce its goods and services.
- Marketing managers must watch supply availability. Supplier problems can seriously affect marketing
○ Supply shortages / delays
○ Labor strikes
○ Other events
- These events can cost sales in the short run and damage customer satisfaction in the long run.
- Marketing managers also monitor the price trends of their key inputs. Rising supply costs may force price increases that can
harm the company's sales volume.
- Good partner relationship management results in success for the company, suppliers, and its customers.
Marketing Intermediaries
- Marketing intermediaries are firms that help the company to promote, sell, and distribute its goods to final buyers.
○ Resellers are distribution channel firms that help the company find customers or make sales to them, includes
wholesalers and retailers. Selecting and partnering with resellers is not easy. Big organizations frequently have enough
power to dictate terms or even shut smaller manufacturers out of large markets.
○ Physical distribution firms help the company to stock and move goods from their points of origin to their destinations.
(Moving the goods)
○ Marketing services agencies are the marketing research firms, advertising agencies, media firms, and marketing
consulting firms that help the company target and promote its products to the right markets.
○ Financial intermediaries include banks, credit companies, insurance companies, and other businesses that help finance
transactions or insure against the risks associated with the buying and selling of goods.
- This is important to the value delivery system.
- The company must partner effectively with marketing intermediaries to optimize the performance of the entire system.
Sometimes, intermediaries provide more than just sell the products. Ex: Coca-Cola provides marketing research & the
beverage.
Customers
- 5 Types of Customer Markets
○ Consumer markets consist of individuals and households that buy goods and services for personal consumption.
○ Business markets buy goods and services for further processing or for use in their production process
○ Reseller markets buy goods and services to resell at a profit
Government markets are made up of government agencies that buy goods and services to produce public services or
Competitors
- Companies must gain strategic advantage by positioning their offerings strongly against competitors' offerings in the minds of
consumers. (companies need to try to show that their products are better)
- Every firm has a different good strategy.
Publics
- Public is any group that has an actual or potential interest in or impact on an organizations ability to achieve its objectives.
- 7 Types of publics
○ Financial publics influence the company's ability to obtain funds. Ex: Banks, investment houses, and stockholders
○ Media publics carry news, features, and editorial opinion. Ex: Newspapers, magazines, radio, and tv
○ Government publics. Government developments are important because marketers must often consult the company's
lawyers on issues of product safety, truth in advertising, and other matters.
○ Citizen-action publics. A company's marketing decisions may be questioned by consumer organizations, environmental
groups, minority groups, and others. Its public relations department can help it stay in touch with consumer and citizen
groups.
○ Local publics include neighborhood residents and community organizations. Large companies usually appoint a
community relations officer to deal with the community, attend meetings, answer questions, and contribute to
worthwhile causes.
○ General public. A company needs to be concerned about the general public's attitude towards its products and
activities. The public's image of the company affects its buying.
○ Internal publics. Large companies use newsletters and other means to inform and motivate their internal publics.
When employees feel good about their company, this positive attitude spills over to external publics.
Demographic Environment
- Demography is the study of human populations in terms of size, density, location, age, gender, race, occupation, and other
statistics.
- Our population is GROWING!
- China's one-child policy created a large spending on cherished child and much more needed senior education, leisure clubs,
and homes. (1 child may not be able to care for parents. Sometimes people don't want kids)
Baby Boomers
- Baby boomers are the 78 million people born during the babyboom following World War II (1946) and lasting until 1964.
- 30% of population, spend about $2.3 trillion annually, and hold three-quarters of the nation's financial assets.
- Youngest boomers = early-to-mid forties Oldest = entering their sixties
- Maturing boomers are rethinking the purpose and value of their work, responsibilities, and relationships.
- As they reach their peak earning and spending years, the boomers constitute a lucrative market for financial services, new
housing and home remodeling, travel and entertainment, eating out, health and fitness products, and just about everything
else. (BIG spenders)
- Boomers are not really aging and slow. Boomers spend $30 billion/year on anti-aging products and services. Retire later and
work more even after retirement.
Generation X
- Generation X are the 45 million people born between 1965 and 1976 in the "birth dearth" following the baby boom.
- They lie in the shadow of the boomers and lack obvious distinguishing characteristics.
- Increasing parental divorce rates and higher employment for their mothers made them the first generation of latchkey kids.
- Having grown up during times of recession and corporate downsizing, they developed a more cautious economic outlook.
- Xers care about the environment and respond favorably to socially responsible companies.
- Seeks success but Xers are less materialistic. Prize experiences and not acquisition.
- Cautious romantics who want a better quality of life and are more interested in job satisfaction than in sacrificing personal
happiness and growth for promotion. "Family first, career second."
- Hard to advertise: Xers listen to "word of mouth" and 63% research products before they consider a purchase
Millennials
- Millennials (or Generation Y) are the 83 million children of the baby boomers, born between 1977 and 2000.
- Tweens (aged 8-12), teens (13-18), young adults (twenty-something)
- The younger Millennials are just beginning to wield their buying power.
- The older ones have now graduated from college and are moving up their careers, significantly expanding both their earning
and their spending.
- Millennials = diverse meaning that 45% of Millennials describe their race as something other than white (Baby Boomers = 80%
white)
- "digital native" = Utter fluency and comfort with computer, digital, and Internet technology (Gen. X spent a lot of time in front
of the tv)
- Millennials = consumers of every imaginable means of communication: TV, radio, cellphone, Internet, video games, OFTEN
SIMULTANEOUSLY!!
- Personalization, Self-Expression
- "We want to [reach to these younger buyers] without shouting 'buy this care'" (Keep showing car in youtube, myspace, etc.)
Generational Marketing
- Split baby boomers: leadign boomers, core boomers, and trailing boomers
- Split Millennials: tweens, teens, young adults
- Marketers need to form more precise age-specific segments within each group. Segment people by lifestyle, life stage, or the
common values they seek in the products they buy.
- More divorce / separation, not marrying, marrying later, or marrying without planning to have kids
- Marketers must increasingly consider the special needs of nontraditional households.
- More women working, 57% of married couples have both husband and wife work (child day care increased & women
spending increased)
- More stay-at-home dads (taking care of kids, help with housework, while wife goes to work)
- Busy parents = Peapod
Increasing Diversity
- Countries vary in their ethnic and racial makeup.
- U.S. have become like a "salad bowl" in which various groups have mixed together but have maintained their diversity by
retaining and valuing important ethnic and cultural differences.
- Marketers are facing increasingly diverse markets, both at home and abroad as their operations become more international in
scope.
- Allstate slogan was changed for Chinese Americans, "Turn to our hands, relax your heart, and be free of worry." Insurance
doubled in 6 months.
- Gay and Lesbian population are abundant in professional work, college-degrees, and spending.
- Marketers are becoming open to gay and lesbian and doing advertisements on the LOGO (Dell, eBay, Sears, etc.) p. 76
- Disabilities (54 million), grand evangelists (tell a lot of people about the product that they love)
- As the population in the United States grows more diverse, successful marketers will continue to diversify their marketing
programs to take advantage of opportunities in fast-growing segments.
Economic Environment
- The economic environment consists of factors that affect consumers buying power and spending patterns.
- Some countries have subsistence economies which is to consume most of their own agricultural and industrial output. These
countries offer few market opportunities.
- Other countries are industrial economies, which constitute rich markets for many different kinds of goods.
Changes in Income
- Throughout the 1990s, American consumers fell into a consumption frenzy, fueled by income growth, a boom in the stock
market, rapid increases in housing values, and other economic good fortune. They bought and bought without caution,
amassing record levels of debt.
- 2000s: recession
- Now: "squeezed consumer"
- Consumers now face repaying debts acquired during earlier spending splurges, increased household and family expenses, and
saving ahead for children's college tuition payments and retirement. Thus, spend more carefully.
- Value marketing has become the watchword for many marketers. (right value = right price)
- Marketers need to watch for income distribution and average income.
- Income distribution is very skewed.
○ At the top are upper-class consumers, whose spending patterns are not affected by current economic events and who
are a major market for luxury goods.
○ There is a comfortable middle class that is somewhat careful about its spending but can still afford the good life some of
the time.
○ The working class must stick close to the basics of food, clothing, and shelter, and must try hard to save.
○ The underclass (persons on welfare and many retirees) must count their pennies when making even the most basic
purchases.
- The rich got richer. The middle class shrunk. The poor got poorer.
Natural Environment
- The natural environment involves natural resources that are needed as inputs by marketers or that are affected by marketing
activities.
- Marketers should be aware of several trends in the natural environment
○ Shortages of raw materials
○ Increased pollution
○ Increased government intervention (right now gov't have little funds & little will)
- U.S. Law: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was created in 1970 to set and enforce pollution standards and to conduct
pollution research. Instead of opposing regulation, marketers should help develop solutions to the material and energy
Technological Environment
- Technological environment is the forces that create new technologies, creating new product and market opportunities.
- New technology replace old, so good & bad business will happen.
- Inventions are by research & not by sole inventors.
- The challenge is to make practical, affordable versions of products. (3D tv, space colonies, etc.)
- As products and technology become more complex, the public needs to know that these are safe. Gov't agencies investigate
and ban potentially unsafe products.
- The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has set up complex regulations for testing new drugs.
- The Consumer Product Safety Commission sets safety standards for consumer products and penalizes companies that fail to
meet the standards.
Political Environment
- Political environment consists of laws, government agencies, and pressure groups that influence and limit various
organizations and individuals in a given society.
Increasing Legislation
- Business legislation has been enacted for a number of reasons:
○ Protect companies from each other (prevent unfair competition)
○ Protect consumers from unfair business practices (prevent lies in advertising & bad products)
○ Protect the interests of society against unrestrained business behavior (companies must take responsibility for their
social costs)
Case-Related Marketing
- To exercise their social responsibility and build more positive images, many companies are now linking themselves to
worthwhile causes. (corporate giving, ex: buy Easy button at Staples, Staples will donate $5 to Boys & Girls club of America)
- Companies using cause-related marketing might find themselves walking a fine line between increased sales and an improved
image, and facing charges of exploitation.
- If handled well, cause-related marketing can greatly benefit both the company and the cause.
Cultural Environment
- Cultural environment is made up of institutions and other factors that affect society's basic values, perceptions, preferences,
and behaviors.