1/125
Midterm1
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No analytics yet
Send a link to your students to track their progress
Marketing (By the books)
An organizational function and a set of process for creating, capturing, communicating, and delivering value to customers and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its stakeholders
Working definition of Marketing
Anticipating and determining the needs/wants of consumers and satisfying those need through the use of the 4P's to create long term exchanges of value.
Exchange
The trade of things of value between the buyer and the seller so that each is better off as a result
Value
Reflects the relationship of benefits to costs, or what the consumer gets for what they give.
Marketing Mix
The controllable set of activates that a firm uses to respond to the wants of its target. Product, Price, Promotion, and Place.
Product - Creating Value Price - Capturing Value Promotion - Communicating Value Place - Delivering Value
How does value apply to all of the 4P's?
Product -Creating Value
Happens through a variety of offerings, including goods, services, and ideas.
Price - Capturing Value
Everything a buyer gives up in exchange for the product. Must be an amount customers are willing to pay and which gives a profit
Place - Delivering Value
All activities needed to get the product to the right customer when the customer wants it.
Promotion - Communicating Value
Informs, persuades, and reminds potential buyers about a product or service. To influence their opinions or elicit a response.
Goods
Items that can be physically touched
Services
Any intangible offering that involves a deed, performance, or effort that cannot be physically possessed. Intangible customer benefits that are produced by people or machines and cannot be separated from the producer
Ideas
Intellectual concepts - thoughts, opinions, and philosophies.
B2C(Business to consumer)
The process in which businesses sell to consumers
B2B(Business to Business)
The process of selling merchandise or services from one business to another
C2C(Consumer to Consumer)
The process in which consumers sell to other consumers
Value Cocreation
Customers act as collaborations with a manufacturer or retailer to create the product or service.
Production Orientation Era
Focus is on internal capability and technology. Key question: What does the firm do best?
Sales Orientation Era
Focus is on aggressive sales techniques. Worries more about transaction numbers Key question: how can we sell more of what we have?
Value Based Marketing Orientation
Purpose of the organization is to satisfy consumer needs/wants, while meeting organizational objectives. Key question: What does the customer want?
Make what you can sell Make what there is a demand for Make what customers want
Marketing Concept
Societal Marketing Orientation
Focus is on enhancing the benefits to society Key question: How can I meet consumer needs and benefit society?
Enriches Society Can be Entrepreneurial Expands global presence Strengthens channel relationships
Why is marketing important?
Relational Orientation
A method of building a relationship with customers based on the philosophy that buyers and sellers should develop a long term relationship
Customer Relationship Management
A business philosophy and set of strategies, programs, and systems that focus on identifying and building loyalty amount the firm's most valued customers.
Marketing Channel
The set of institutions that transfer the ownership of and move goods from the point of production to the point of consumption; consists of all institutions and marketing activities in the marketing process.
Ethics
Moral Principles and values that govern actions
Laws
Society's values which are enforceable in court
Marketing Ethics
Refers to those ethical problems that are specific to the domain of marketing
Corporate Social Responsibility
Refers to the voluntary actions taken by company to address the ethical, social, and environmental impacts of its business operations and the concerns of its stakeholders.
1: Identify Issues 2: Gather Info and Identify Stakeholders 3: Brainstorm 4: Choose a course of action
Framework for Ethical Decision Making
General Business Norms
Consumer has right to safety, to be informed, to choose, and to be hear.
Moral Idealism
If any bad occurs, then action is unethical
Utilitarianism
Balance good versus bad Make sure that the good outweighs the bad, then they are good.
Profit Responsibility
Companies are responsible only to stockholders and investors Companies have just one duty: Maximize profit with the law
Stakeholder Responsibility
Companies are responsible to owners and to customers, employees, and suppliers.
Marketing Environment
Uncontrollable elements outside of any organization that may affect its performance.
Macro - Environmental factors
Aspects of the external environment that affect a company's business, such as the culture, demographics, social issues, technological situation, and political regulatory environment.
Culture
The set of values, guiding beliefs, understandings, and ways of doing things shared by members of society.
Country Culture
Entails easy to spot visible nuances that are particular to a country, such as dress, symbols, ceremonies, language, colors, and food preferences and more subtle aspects which are trickier to identify.
Demographics
Information about the characteristics of human populations and segments especially those used to identify consumer markets such as by age, gender, income, and education.
Thrift Health and wellness concerns Greener Consumers Privacy Concerns Time poor society
Examples of Social Trends?
Generation Cohort
A group of people of the same generation - typically have similar purchase behaviors because they have shared experiences and are in some stages of life
Generation Z
Digital Natives Group of people who were born into a world that already was full of electronic gadgets and digital technologies such as the internet and social networks
Generation Y or Millennials
Generation cohort of people born between 1977 and 1995; biggest cohort since the babyboomers
Generation X
Generational cohort of people born between 1965 and 1976
Green Marketing
Involves a strategic effort by firms to supply customers with environmentally friendly merchandise
Greenwashing
Exploiting a consumer by disingenuously marketing products or services as environmentally friendly, with the goal if gaining public approval and sales.
Direct Competition
Similar or same product
Indirect Competition
Substitute items - perform the same functions
Competitive for discretionary spending
Other possible uses for the money
Need Recognition
Information Search
Alternative Evaluation
Purchase
Post Purchase
The Consumer Decision Process
Low Involvement Purchases
Low cost, standardized, not important, low risk. Routine response behavior and habitual
In store promotions Link to high involvement issue
How do marketers influence low involvement purchases?
High Involvement Purchases
Important to consumer Risk is present Consumer spends effort and time purchasing
Psychological Needs
Pertains to the personal gratification consumers associate with a product or service
Internal Search for information
Occurs when the buyer examines his or her own memory and knowledge about the product or service, gathered through past experiences
External Search for information
Occurs when the buyer seeks information outside his or her personal knowledge base to help make the buying decision
Universal Sets
Includes all possible choices for a product category
Retrieval Sets
Includes those brands or stores that the consumer can readily bring forth from memory
Evoked Sets
Comprises the alternative brands or stores that the consumer states he or she would consider when making a purchase.
Universal Sets Retrieval Sets Evoked Sets
What are the three attribute sets?
Determinant Attributes
Product or service features that are important to the buyer and on which competing brands or stores are perceived to differ
Compensatory Decision Rule
At work when the consumer is evaluating alternatives and trade offs one characteristics against another, such that good characteristics compensate for bad ones.
Non-Compensatory Decision Rule
At work when consumers choose a product or service on the basis of a one characteristics or a subset of its characteristics, regardless of the values of it other attributes.
Conversion Rate
Percentage of consumers who buy product after viewing it
Postpurchase cognitive dissonance
The psychologically uncomfortable state produced by an inconsistency between beliefs and behaviors that in turn evokes a motivation to reduce the dissonance buyers remorse.
Customer Satisfaction Postpurchase Dissonance Customer Loyalty
Three components of post purchase outcomes?
Motives
A need or want that is strong enough to cause the person to seek satisfaction
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
A paradigm for classifying people's motives. It argues that when a lower level, more basic need are fulfilled, people turn to satisfying their higher level human needs.
Physiological Safety Love Esteem Self-actualization
Maslow Hierarchy of Needs from lower levels to higher levels
Physiological Needs
Those relating to basic biological necessities of life. Food, drink, rest, and shelter
Safety Needs
Pertains to protection and physical well being
Love Needs
Needs expressed through interactions with others
Esteem Needs
Needs that enable people to fulfill inner desire
Self Actualization
Occurs when a person feels completely satisfied with their life and how they live.
Attitude
A persons enduring evaluation of his or her feelings about and behavioral tendencies toward an object or idea.
Cognitive Component Affective Component Behavioral Component
Attitude consists of what three components?
Cognitive Component
Component of attitude that reflects what a person believe to be true
Affective Component
A component of attitude that reflects what a person feels about the issue at hand. His or her like/dislike of something Involves emotion
Behavioral Component
A component of attitude that comprises the actions a person takes with regards to the issue at hand based on what they feel and know.
Perception
The process by which people select, organize, and interpret information to form a meaningful picture of the world
Our perceptual screens, exposure, attention, distortion, and retention.
Perception must be processed through...
Learning
A change in a person's thought process or behavior that arises from experience and takes place throughout the consumer decision process.
Lifestyle
A component of psychographics Refers to the way a person lives his/her life to achieve goals
Reference group
One or more persons whom on individual uses as a basis for comparison regarding beliefs, feelings, and behaviors
Consumer Socialization
We learn how to buy and what to buy from our family/parents.
By offering information Providing rewards for specific purchasing behaviors Enhancing a consumer's self image
How can reference groups affect buying decisions?
Membership Aspirational Dissociative Opinon Leaders(Oprah effect)
Types of reference groups?
Aspirational Reference Group
Refers to those others against whom one would like to compare oneself.
Dissociative Reference Group
Includes people that the individual would not like to be like.
Membership Reference Group
A group that people belong too and in agreement with regards to attitudes, norms, and behaviors.
Situational Factors
Factors affecting the consumer decision process; those that are specific that may override, or at least influence psychological and social issues.
Extended problem solving and limited problem solving
The two types of buying decisions consumers make depending on their level of involvement?
Involvement
The consumer's degree of interest in the product or service.
Extended Problem Solving
A purchase decision process during which the consumer devotes considerable time and effort to analyzing alternatives; often occurs when the consumer perceives that the purchase decision entails a lot of risk.
Limited Problem Solving
Occurs during a purchase decision that calls for, at most, a moderate amount of effort and time.
Impulse Buying
A buying decision made by customers on the spot when they see the merchandise
Habitual Decision Making
A purchase decision process in which consumers engage with little conscious effort.
Segmentation
Identifying and serving homogenous groups of consumers