Marketing Quiz Prep
9/10/2024
What is marketing?
Organizational function and a set of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers, and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its stakeholders
This includes advertisement, and creating demand for products and services
The goal is to communicate some type of value for your specific product
You want the get a customer to make a first purchase, but the goal is also to deliver to their expectations and create long-lasting customer relationships
Delivering Value
A company may:
Develop an entirely new product that performs better than existing products (Ex. seasonal items, like pumpkin spice lattes at starbucks)
Keep a store open longer hours during a busy season (Ex. Macy’s)
Offer price reductions (Ex. coupons and discounts
Offer information that explains how a product can be used in new ways
Goods and services
Goods
Physical products purchased by consumers for personal use (Ex. phone, food, etc.)
Services
Products having nonphysical features, such as information, expertise, or an activity that can be purchased (Ex. haircut, car wash, etc.)
The external environment
PEST analysis
Framework and strategic planning tool for analyzing the external environmental factors affecting business objectives and strategies
P - political factors
Political-Legal Environment
The relationship between business and government, usually in the form of government regulation of business (Ex. A McDonalds would need to comply with food safety standards for the safety of customers)
Includes any law influencing business activity, e.g. health and safety at work, consumer protection, employee protection
E - economic factors
Economic Environment
Relevant conditions that exist in the economic system in which a company operates including factors such as gross domestic product (GDP) growth, unemployment, and inflation
S - social factors
Sociocultural Environment
The customs, mores values, and demographic characteristic of the society
Includes population size and structure, lifestyle, age groups, and education levels
T - technological factors
Technological Environment
State of the technological advancement and introduction of new technologies
9/13/2024
Purpose of Packaging
Protection
Transportation without spoiling or breaking
Convenience
Ease of use and decision making
Image
Brand awareness, product/company value
Sustainability
Reduction of environmental impact
9/17/2024
Target Marketing and Market Segmentation
Product Positioning
Process of fixing, adapting, and communicating the nature of a product
We need to figure out who our buyers and consumers are so we can target out product towards them
Target Market
Group of people who have similar wants and needs and can be expected to show interest in the same products
Ex) Students would be a target market for whiteout
Market Segmentation
Process of dividing a market into categories of customer types, or “segments”
Identifying Market Segments – variables in a segmentation strategy :
Geographic variables
Geographic units
In the US, some ways to break it down would be states, the coast, midwest, counties inside NJ, etc.
Demographic variables
Characteristics of populations
Age, race, gender, religion, etc.
*** Check chart on schoology ***
Psychographic variables
Consumer characteristics such as lifestyles, opinions, interests, and attitudes
Athletes (athletic wear, energy food/drinks health foods)
9/24/2024
Market Research
Study of what customers need and want and how best to meet those needs and wants
Research Data
Primary Data
New data collected from newly performed research
Secondary Data
Data already available from previous research
Research Methods
Observation
Obtains data by watching and recording consumer behavior (Ex. vacuum company like Roomba observing customer complaints, like vacuum not going under small places, or needing to be around when it is vacuuming)
Survey
Collecting consumer data using questionnaires, telephone calls, and face-to-face interviews
Focus Group
Using a group of people from a larger population who are asked their attitudes, opinions, and beliefs about a product in an open discussion (Benefits: people being more honest, bouncing off of other peoples’ ideas creates more diverse set of data)
Experimentation
Using a sample of potential consumers to obtain reactions to test versions of new products or variations of existing products (Ex. Starbucks CEO testing out pumpkin spice latte in only one location in NYC, and seeing what customers say there before implementing it everywhere)
9/27/2024
Strategy: The Marketing Mix
Combination of strategies used to market products
Product
Good, service, or idea that is marketed to fill consumers’ needs and wants
Product Differentiation
Creation of a product feature or product image that differs enough from existing products to attract customers
The Product Mix
Disney has become a swelling collection of media and entertainment businesses
Product Line
Group of products that are closely related because they function in a similar manner or are sold to the same customer group who will use them in similar ways
Product Mix vs. Product Line
Apple
Phones, watches, headphones, laptops – Product
Iphone 14, iPhone 15 etc… – Product line
Pricing
Process of determining the best price at which to sell a product
Place
Part of the marketing mix concerned with getting products from producers to consumers
Promotion
Aspect of the marketing mix concerned with the most effective techniques for communicating information about products
10/1/2024
QUIZ
Marketing environment - PEST
Target Market/Segmentation
Packaging
Market Research
Marketing Mix
Product
Product Life Cycle (PLC)
Series of stages in a product’s commercial life
Stages in the PLC
Introduction
ex) Commercial space flights
Starts at a loss because there are no customers to start
Growth
ex) Handheld computers and smartphones
More customers start using product
Maturity
ex) Social networking services
Peak of people using product
Decline
ex) Land-line phones
ex) Brick & Mortar DVD rental stores
Customers slowly go down
9/10/2024
What is marketing?
Organizational function and a set of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers, and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its stakeholders
This includes advertisement, and creating demand for products and services
The goal is to communicate some type of value for your specific product
You want the get a customer to make a first purchase, but the goal is also to deliver to their expectations and create long-lasting customer relationships
Delivering Value
A company may:
Develop an entirely new product that performs better than existing products (Ex. seasonal items, like pumpkin spice lattes at starbucks)
Keep a store open longer hours during a busy season (Ex. Macy’s)
Offer price reductions (Ex. coupons and discounts
Offer information that explains how a product can be used in new ways
Goods and services
Goods
Physical products purchased by consumers for personal use (Ex. phone, food, etc.)
Services
Products having nonphysical features, such as information, expertise, or an activity that can be purchased (Ex. haircut, car wash, etc.)
The external environment
PEST analysis
Framework and strategic planning tool for analyzing the external environmental factors affecting business objectives and strategies
P - political factors
Political-Legal Environment
The relationship between business and government, usually in the form of government regulation of business (Ex. A McDonalds would need to comply with food safety standards for the safety of customers)
Includes any law influencing business activity, e.g. health and safety at work, consumer protection, employee protection
E - economic factors
Economic Environment
Relevant conditions that exist in the economic system in which a company operates including factors such as gross domestic product (GDP) growth, unemployment, and inflation
S - social factors
Sociocultural Environment
The customs, mores values, and demographic characteristic of the society
Includes population size and structure, lifestyle, age groups, and education levels
T - technological factors
Technological Environment
State of the technological advancement and introduction of new technologies
9/13/2024
Purpose of Packaging
Protection
Transportation without spoiling or breaking
Convenience
Ease of use and decision making
Image
Brand awareness, product/company value
Sustainability
Reduction of environmental impact
9/17/2024
Target Marketing and Market Segmentation
Product Positioning
Process of fixing, adapting, and communicating the nature of a product
We need to figure out who our buyers and consumers are so we can target out product towards them
Target Market
Group of people who have similar wants and needs and can be expected to show interest in the same products
Ex) Students would be a target market for whiteout
Market Segmentation
Process of dividing a market into categories of customer types, or “segments”
Identifying Market Segments – variables in a segmentation strategy :
Geographic variables
Geographic units
In the US, some ways to break it down would be states, the coast, midwest, counties inside NJ, etc.
Demographic variables
Characteristics of populations
Age, race, gender, religion, etc.
*** Check chart on schoology ***
Psychographic variables
Consumer characteristics such as lifestyles, opinions, interests, and attitudes
Athletes (athletic wear, energy food/drinks health foods)
9/24/2024
Market Research
Study of what customers need and want and how best to meet those needs and wants
Research Data
Primary Data
New data collected from newly performed research
Secondary Data
Data already available from previous research
Research Methods
Observation
Obtains data by watching and recording consumer behavior (Ex. vacuum company like Roomba observing customer complaints, like vacuum not going under small places, or needing to be around when it is vacuuming)
Survey
Collecting consumer data using questionnaires, telephone calls, and face-to-face interviews
Focus Group
Using a group of people from a larger population who are asked their attitudes, opinions, and beliefs about a product in an open discussion (Benefits: people being more honest, bouncing off of other peoples’ ideas creates more diverse set of data)
Experimentation
Using a sample of potential consumers to obtain reactions to test versions of new products or variations of existing products (Ex. Starbucks CEO testing out pumpkin spice latte in only one location in NYC, and seeing what customers say there before implementing it everywhere)
9/27/2024
Strategy: The Marketing Mix
Combination of strategies used to market products
Product
Good, service, or idea that is marketed to fill consumers’ needs and wants
Product Differentiation
Creation of a product feature or product image that differs enough from existing products to attract customers
The Product Mix
Disney has become a swelling collection of media and entertainment businesses
Product Line
Group of products that are closely related because they function in a similar manner or are sold to the same customer group who will use them in similar ways
Product Mix vs. Product Line
Apple
Phones, watches, headphones, laptops – Product
Iphone 14, iPhone 15 etc… – Product line
Pricing
Process of determining the best price at which to sell a product
Place
Part of the marketing mix concerned with getting products from producers to consumers
Promotion
Aspect of the marketing mix concerned with the most effective techniques for communicating information about products
10/1/2024
QUIZ
Marketing environment - PEST
Target Market/Segmentation
Packaging
Market Research
Marketing Mix
Product
Product Life Cycle (PLC)
Series of stages in a product’s commercial life
Stages in the PLC
Introduction
ex) Commercial space flights
Starts at a loss because there are no customers to start
Growth
ex) Handheld computers and smartphones
More customers start using product
Maturity
ex) Social networking services
Peak of people using product
Decline
ex) Land-line phones
ex) Brick & Mortar DVD rental stores
Customers slowly go down