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eras of different orientations in the history of American business
simple trade
production
sales
marketing
are all companies now in the marketing era?
no; not all companies participate in mass marketing
two characteristics that define a market
desire
ability
what is marketing?
co-creating value
acquiring cash flow from customers
what is marketing not?
just selling and advertising
marketing concept
satisfying wants and desires of society while also meeting company goals
market orientation
implementing the marketing concept in a company
3 characteristics a firm needs in order to be market oriented
generate information about the market
disseminate that information back out into the firm
incentivize employees to use the information
what is value?
what you get/what you give
customer value - difference seen by the customer from an offering vs. the cost of actually getting the item
what is the unique contribution of marketing to a firm?
managing or acquiring resources from customers
ex: publix returning shopping carts
shareholder orientation
taking care of people who invest in your company
dominant business view in America
What are potential problems with a focus on shareholders?
average stockholding period = 8.3 months
makes it harder to focus on long-term investors bc people are just focusing on quarterly income
What is the macro-micro dilemma?
decisions at the micro view causes problems in the macro view
What is the Milton Friedman view of business role in the world?
business should make a profit without being bad
positive effects on society
What is an argument for why Milton Friedman was correct?
innovation
we should find ways to make things cheaper and overall competitive
3 arguments for business to engage in other causes besides seeking a profit
consumers want it
firms have alliance share of resources to take on those sources
self-interested reasons for firms to do so and can benefit the firm
stakeholder
someone who owns a percentage of the company
stakeholder orientation
a firm's obligation to improve its positive effect on society or reduce its negative effect
"do companies look beyond the consumer?"
value creation
influences potential magnitude of what the company gets back in profit
when a company tries to co-create value
value appropriation
influences the amount of advantage a single company has over others and how long they can keep it
Who are the main appropriators?
firm
society
competitors
marketing strategy
specifies a target market and a marketing mix
target market
fairly homogenous group of customers to whom a company wants to appeal
rifle approach
marketing mix
controllable variables the company puts together to satisfy the target market
shotgun approach
customer lifetime value
total stream of purchases a customer may contribute over their lifetime in the market
What do CLV and customer equity allow a firm to do?
poses the question "is it worth investing in them?" (them = specific target market)
market share
% of the market you share/own
What is the benefit of market share?
bigger market share, more money, better efficiency, more power
marketing myopia
if you define yourself based on your product, your company won't be able to expand
What happens if a firm goes too far and defines itself too broadly?
lose money
segmentation
separating prospective customers into groups based on needs/response to marketing actions
2 things that are stressed in segmentation
meaningful groups
customized marketing mix
what is the long tail?
niche products
a lot of products that sell in small quantities (tail) as compares to a small number of best selling products (head)
What is the long tail enabled by?
breaking free of the constraints of physical space
finding ways to talk to market segments economically
new distribution systems
where does the majority of potential revenue fall, in the head or the tail?
in the tail
generic approaches for segmenting product-markets
single target market
multiple target markets combined
What are the criteria in creating segments?
homogenous within the segment
heterogeneous between the segments
substantial
operational
What do you do if a segment is not profitable?
combine it with another segment
hardest variable to collect
psychographic
easiest variable to collect
geographic
most useful variables
geographic and behavioral
the goal of most marketing research
uncover unique and actionable customer and market insight
3 types of marketing research
exploratory
descriptive
casual
correlation
things tend to happen at the same time
causation
one thing causes another
What data information do companies use first?
secondary
Which data information is typically cheaper?
secondary
Which data information is timelier?
secondary
Which data information provides more accurate data?
primary
Which data information is more time consuming?
primary
contact methods for primary data collection
phone
personal
online
research approaches for primary data collection
observational
survey
panels and experiments
IT and data mining
What is the purchase decision process?
need recognition
information search
alternative evaluation
purchase decision
post-purchase
Maslow's hierarchy
self-actualization
personal needs
social needs
safety needs
physiological needs
What is an attitude?
a person's relatively consistent evaluations, feelings, and tendencies toward an object or idea
How stable is an attitude?
stable until something happens (major life event or pivotal point)
Customer Value Hierarchy
Core Benefit
Basic Product
Expected Product
Augmented Product
Potential Product
What happens over time to augmented features?
differentiation arises and competition increases
What happens over time as products gain more expected and augmented features?
as come companies raise their prices for augmented product, others offer a stripped-down version for less - catering to clients who just want the basic product
durable good
tangible
survives many uses
requires more personal selling and guarantees
non-durable good
tangible
consumed within a few uses
purchased frequently
available in many locations
charge small markup
heavy advertising
service good
intangible
require quality control, supplier credibility, and adaptability
convenience good
purchased frequently & with minimal effort
impulse buys
shopping good
consumer compares suitability, quality, price and style
similar in quality but different in price
specialty good
unique characteristics or brand identification for which buyers are willing to make a special purchasing effort
buyers reach out first
unsought good
those that customers dont think about buying
product
anything that can be offered to a market to satisfy a want or need
product line
group of related products
sold to the same customer groups, marketed through same outlets, and fall into same price range
product mix
set of all products and items a particular seller offers for sale
product mix length
total number of items in the mix
product mix width
how many different product lines a seller produces
product mix depth
how many variants are offered in each product line
In what ways can a product line be stretched?
down-market
up-market
two-way
What is a brand?
a name, term, symbol, design or combination of these items that are intended to identify and differentiate a seller or seller's product info from competitors
consumer-based brand equity
power of a brand
differential effect of brand knowledge on consumer responses to marketing
Brand Resonance Pyramid
Brand Salience
Brand Performance
Brand Imagery
Brand Judgements
Brand Feelings
Brand Resonance
What does Chevrolet, Levis, and and Coca-Cola tell us about creating a powerful brand?
changing a brand isnt bad, but it must be consistent and not all over the place
What does the Pepsi Taste Challenge tell us about the power of branding?
branding can re-wire peoples brains in response to the product
corporate branding
umbrella branding
put your brand on everything
separate branding
developing separate brand meaning and identities for each one
reducing the risk of corporate brands
very expensive
sub-branding
cross between corporate and separate branding
associations from corporate will spill over onto the others while separating the brands
positive outcomes of brand extensions
improve the odds of a new products success
empowers and strengthens brand
negative outcomes of brand extensions
brand dilution
What determines if a brand extension works?
fit (product and brand have to make sense)
strength of brand (stronger brand, more likely to be extended)
amount of successful extensions (the more success you have, people get used to the brand being extended and give it the benefit of the doubt)
parts of the communication process
sender
encoding
message
media
decoding
receiver
response
feedback
noise
How does the communication process translate into marketing promotions?
For the message to be effective, the senders encoding process must mesh with the receiver's decoding process.
The more the sender's field of experience overlaps with that of the receiver, the more effective the message is likely to be.
What must marketers understand to communicate with customers?
identify a target audience
determine the communication objectives
design a message
choose the media outlet to send the message
select the message source
collect feedback
5 main categories of promotion
advertising
salespromotion
personal selling
public relations
direct and digital marketing
What is IMC?
Integrated Marketing Communications
carefully integrating and coordinating the company's many communication channels to deliver a clear, consistent, and compelling message, about the organization and its products
2 things that ICM helps a firm to obtain
clarity
synergy
What does advertising spending fluctuate with?
overall economic growth
What does advertising spending fluctuation tell us about a firm's actions on spending?
as the economy moves, it changes how companies advertise
if the economy dips, companies withdraw ads
What are the different types of advertising appeals?
rational
moral
emotional
sex
What happens if fear, humor, and sex appeals do not have a link with why someone buys a product?
it won't encourage purchase within a short time frame afterward
Can appeals such as fear, humor, or sex go too far?
no, just avoid corniness
reach
number of different people exposed to an ad
frequency
average number of times a person is exposed to an ad
What is CPM?
cost per 1000 impressions
How do you calculate CPM?
cost of ad/audience size x 1000
Is the Super Bowl considered a good buy?
yes, for large companies who can afford it