Comprehensive Marketing Concepts and Strategies for Students

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78 Terms

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Marketing Concept (outside-in)

Start with the market and customer needs - design customer-driven strategy - build profitable relationships - profits through customer satisfaction.

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Production Concept

Consumers favor products that are available and affordable; focus on efficiency, low cost, and mass distribution.

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Product Concept

Consumers favor products with the most quality, performance, and features; risk of marketing myopia if you ignore needs.

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Societal Marketing Concept

Balance company profits, consumer wants, and society's long-run interests (e.g., sustainability, ethics).

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Types of Products (simple)

Goods, services, ideas/experiences. (Exam 1 focuses on core differences vs. services and value creation.)

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Types of Customers (microenvironment)

Consumer markets, business/reseller markets, government/nonprofit markets, international markets.

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Marketing Process Model (5 steps)

1) Understand marketplace & needs, 2) Design customer-driven strategy (STP), 3) Build integrated program (4Ps), 4) Build profitable relationships & engagement, 5) Capture value (sales, CLV, customer equity).

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Consumer Engagement Marketing

Creating ongoing brand conversations and community; invite and motivate customers to participate and share.

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Customer Loyalty & Retention (why it matters)

Retained customers buy more, cost less to serve, cross-buy, and recommend; drives CLV and customer equity.

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Customer Lifetime Value (CLV)

Present value of the future cash flows from a customer over the entire relationship.

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Customer Relationship Groups

Strangers (low loyalty/low profit), Butterflies (low loyalty/high profit short-term), True Friends (high/high), Barnacles (high loyalty/low profit).

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Customer Evangelists

Highly satisfied customers who enthusiastically recommend and advocate for the brand.

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Marketing Myopia (Levitt)

Focusing on products and company operations rather than customer needs/benefits; leads to missed opportunities.

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Law of Color (branding)

Choose brand colors that contrast with key competitors to stand out in memory and on shelf.

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Moderate Incongruity (ads)

Messages just novel/abstract enough to make viewers think without confusing them; boosts attention/recall.

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Down-Aging (positioning)

Appeals that let older consumers feel youthful/energetic through imagery and experiences.

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LOHAS Segment

Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability consumers—value eco-friendly, natural, and socially responsible brands.

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Targeting Criteria

Segment size/growth, structural attractiveness, company objectives/resources, fit with competencies.

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4Ps (Marketing Mix)

Product, Price, Place, Promotion (service marketing sometimes adds People, Process, Physical evidence).

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Channel Intermediaries vs Suppliers

Intermediaries help distribute and sell (wholesalers, retailers, shippers); Suppliers provide inputs/resources used to produce offerings.

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Marketing Environment (why important)

Forces outside and inside the firm that affect ability to serve customers; scanning helps anticipate opportunities/threats.

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Microenvironment (actors)

Company, Suppliers, Marketing Intermediaries, Competitors, Publics (financial, media, government, citizen-action, local, general, internal), Customers.

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Macroenvironment (forces)

Demographic, Economic, Natural, Technological, Political/Legal, Cultural.

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Demographic Forces (examples)

Age structure, household structure, population diversity, geographic shifts.

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Economic Forces (examples)

Income, inflation, interest rates; 'Value marketing' and 'treasure-hunter tradeoffs' (splurge + cutbacks).

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Natural Forces (examples)

Resource shortages, pollution, environmental sustainability; weather events affecting demand/supply.

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Technological Forces (examples)

Innovation pace, RFID and tracking, AI/automation; tech shapes products, pricing, and distribution.

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Political/Legal Forces (examples)

Regulation, consumer protection, privacy, antitrust (e.g., Sherman Act vs price fixing; price discrimination regulated).

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Cultural Forces (examples)

Core beliefs/values, subcultures, societal trends like 'hypertasking' and 'clanning'.

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Trend: Hypertasking

Doing multiple activities simultaneously with technology; impacts ad formats and attention.

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Trend: Clanning

People form groups with shared interests/values; brands build communities and tribes.

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Competitive Advantage (environment)

Delivering greater value or lower cost than rivals; can stem from brand, tech, relationships, operations.

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Competitor Orientation + Law of Color

Understand competitors' positions and choose distinct positioning cues (including color) to differentiate.

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Marketing Intelligence

Publicly available info about consumers, competitors, and marketplace developments (ethically gathered).

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Marketing Research (steps)

Define problem & objectives → Develop research plan → Collect data → Analyze findings → Present insights.

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Research Objectives (3 types)

Exploratory (define problems), Descriptive (describe markets/problems), Causal (test cause-effect).

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Primary vs Secondary Data

Primary: collected for specific purpose (surveys, experiments). Secondary: already exists (reports, databases).

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Research Approaches

Observational (watching behaviors), Survey (questionnaires), Experimental (manipulate variables to test causality).

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Contact Methods: Mail

Pros: low cost, no interviewer bias; Cons: slow, low flexibility/response, potential credibility issues.

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Contact Methods: Phone

Pros: fast, can clarify; Cons: interviewer bias, lower cooperation than in-person.

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Contact Methods: In-person

Pros: most flexible, rich data; Cons: costly, interviewer effects.

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Contact Methods: Online

Pros: fast, inexpensive, easy to reach; Cons: sample/control issues, response quality varies.

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Focus Groups (classification)

Primary, descriptive research; qualitative insights into attitudes/motivations.

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Experiments (classification)

Causal research; manipulate independent variable under controlled conditions to infer cause-effect.

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Consumer Behavior (definition)

The study of how individuals/groups select, buy, use, and dispose of goods/services to satisfy needs/wants.

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Cultural Factors

Culture (basic values), subculture (Hispanic, Asian American, African American), social class influence preferences.

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Subculture: Hispanic Consumers

Shopping often a family affair; higher brand loyalty; strong word-of-mouth.

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Subculture: Asian American Consumers

High purchasing power; enjoy shopping; early adopters; quality-focused.

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Subculture: African American Consumers

Strong influence on music/fashion trends; brand-conscious segments.

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Social Factors

Reference groups, family/household, roles and status; opinion leaders and influencers shape attitudes.

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Personal Factors

Age/lifecycle stage, occupation, economic situation, lifestyle (activities, interests, opinions), personality/self-concept.

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VALS Framework

Primary motivations: Ideals (guided by knowledge/principles), Achievement (success/status), Self-Expression (social/experiential).

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Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

Physiological → Safety → Social (belonging) → Esteem → Self-Actualization.

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Cognitive Dissonance (post-purchase)

Discomfort from conflicting attitudes/behaviors after purchase; managed by reassurance, warranties, follow-up.

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Buyer Decision Process (5 steps)

Need recognition → Info search → Evaluation of alternatives → Purchase → Post-purchase.

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Baby Boomers (exam traits)

Most affluent; stay physically active; focus on wealth management; quality and service oriented.

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Generation X (exam traits)

Skeptical, pragmatic; value experiences and authenticity; research before buying; cautious spenders.

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Millennials / Gen Y (exam traits)

Now-oriented; multitaskers; maker/creator mindset; value experiences and purpose; heavy digital/social use.

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Generation Z (exam traits)

Digital DNA; crave sensory-rich content; expect personalization; privacy wary (distrust sites with personal info); 'makers' not 'sharers'.

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Publics (types)

Any group with interest in or impact on organization: financial, media, government, citizen-action, local, general, internal.

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Sherman Antitrust Act (exam)

U.S. law prohibiting monopolization and price-fixing agreements; promotes competition.

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Price Discrimination (policy)

Charging different prices to similar buyers without cost justification; regulated under U.S. law (e.g., Robinson-Patman).

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Scenario: Coupon-loyal but low spending customer

Likely a Barnacle—high loyalty but low profitability; manage or re-target to increase share of wallet.

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Scenario: New tech using RFID in logistics

Technological macroenvironment force; impacts Place (logistics) and Product (tracking features).

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Scenario: Choose school for party atmosphere & sports

Cultural macroenvironment force (values/lifestyle).

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Scenario: Lexus family ad (status/identity)

Consumer behavior factors: family, roles/status, aspirational reference groups.

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Scenario: Tiger ad uses moderate incongruity

Ad is slightly abstract yet understandable—grabs attention and recall.

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Scenario: Coca-Cola 'peace & harmony'

VALS motivation = Ideals (principle-driven, harmony/values cues).

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Scenario: Focus group on teens' attitudes

Primary, descriptive research (qualitative).

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Scenario: Experiment to test ad version effect

Causal research; manipulate ad version; measure purchase intent.

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Scenario: Party cuts to afford concert ticket

Treasure-hunter tradeoffs (economic force); may also trigger post-purchase dissonance.

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Mail survey (pros/cons)

Low cost/no interviewer bias, but slow, low flexibility, lower response/credibility.

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Telephone survey (pros/cons)

Fast and can clarify; risk of interviewer effects and limited depth vs in-person.

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Face-to-face survey (pros/cons)

Most flexible, rich data; costly and subject to interviewer bias.

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Online survey (pros/cons)

Fast, inexpensive, scalable; sample quality/representativeness can vary; response depth depends on design.

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Intermediaries vs Suppliers vs Customers

Intermediaries help company promote/sell/distribute; Suppliers provide resources/inputs; Customers are end users (not intermediaries).

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Micro vs Macro Examples

Micro: suppliers, intermediaries, competitors, publics, customers. Macro: economic (inflation), cultural (values), political (regulation), technological (RFID), natural (resource scarcity), demographic (age structure).

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4Ps vs 'People'

'People' is part of 7Ps for services, but not one of the classic 4Ps (Product, Price, Place, Promotion).