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marketing chapter 1-7

Define 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

What is marketing responsible for

- Ensuring that a firm
understands its customers

•

Finding the best ways

to reach customers

•

Encouraging customers

to purchase

•

Turning customers into

brand loyalists

What is the marketing concept

The Marketing Concept is a management orientation
that focuses on identifying and satisfying consumer needs

7 ps of marketing

The mix marketing of 7 ps should work together to bring value to the customer and provide what the customer needs
The 7 Ps: Product, Price, Place, Promotion,

People, Physical Evidence, & Process

Marketing Management

setting marketing goals, the planning and excution of activities to meet these goals , and meauring progress towards their acheivements

Product

good or service that satisfys a customers need

- product quality

- packaging

- colour

- flavour

Price

amount being charged for good or service
- cost based, valued base, competitors based

- luxury pricing

- buy one get one

- customer discounts

Place

getting the good or service to the customer
- store shelf

- companys own website

- third party website such as amazon

Promotion

communicating with the customers
- advertisements

- public relations

- sponsorships

Process

flow of activities involved in providing goods, services, and ideas to the customers
- service blueprint to outline process

- supply chain

- distubution channels

- marketing research

People

the people who provide goods or services and ideas to the customer
- sutomer facing employees

- customer service representatives

- salespersons

Physical evidence

tangible elements in the place that the service or good is sold
- sinage

- uniforms

- lighting

- decor

Marketing Research

Different types of research performed
by marketers using various methods depending

on their need for information.

Gaining Customer Insight

Regular market research gives marketers
a competitive edge.


Research Questions

• Usually made to target

a specific problem

• Seek feedback from

consumers

• Can be very clear or hazy

Explarotary Research

Useful in gaining insights and ideas and is often used
to funnel broad research questions into more precise

ones

- Qualatative in nature

- open ended questions

- give feedback on consumers thoughts opinions, reasons, motivation

What is Descriptive Research?

Focuses on determining how often something occurs or how things are related to eachother
- Quantatative in nature

- ideal for quantifying feelings, attitudes, opinions of a specific population through structured set of questions

- research comes from numerical response (surveys)

What is Casual research?

Focuses on discovering the cause-and-effect relationship
between variables

- quantatative in nature

Deeper Look
at Exploratory Research

Secondary Data
- Pre-existing data found

through literature searches

or data mining


Benefits of Using Secondary Data

• Low costs

• Available immediately or almost

immediately

• Often easy to find


Primary Data

-New data that researchers

must collect


Benefits of Using Primary Data

• Tailored to a specific research question

• Variety of ways to find them

• May help research questions besides yours

in the future


Where to Find Them ...

Depth interview

Focus groups

Case analyses

Projective methods

Types Of Primary Data that mesures (Consumer Behaviour)

- Demographic (income, education, gender, shows group that is loyal to brand)
- Awareness (Knowlege of brand/products)

- Intention ( anticipated behaviours, predict future consumption)

- Motivation ( Motives of consumers, what drives behaviour)

- Attitude (feelings or beliefs about brand)

- Psychgraphic ( personality traits, opinions, lifestyle, lets markets create a persona of the ideal customer)

What is a Net Promoter Score (NPS)

- tye of survey to measure the experience customers have with their brands
calculated by subtracting the percentage of detractors form percentage of promoters= NPS

Promoters (scores of 9 and 10)

Customers who are loyal enthusiasts


Passives (scores of 7 and 8)

Customers who are satisfied but not

enthusiastic about the brand


Detractors (scores 0 through 6)

Customers who are unhappy and can

hurt your brand

Creating a survey

1. Reexamine research question ( survey is built to answer primary research question)
2. Specify what information the survey must collect (dont collect every bit of information)

3. Identify who should take the survey

4. Develop the question to ask ( what type of question? answers should you provide how may?)

5. create dummy table to show how you will use data ( a table that shows how to analzye, use and present data)

6. Devise a way to recruit people to take survey

7. Build and test survey (fix any mistakes)

8. Field survey ( make visibe to population target)

Survey Design mistakes

- Failing to build the survey around the research
question

• Failing to understand the survey population

• Forgetting to explain the purpose of your survey

Asking too many questions

• Asking too few questions

• Putting the most important questions

at the end of the survey

• Requiring participants to answer

all the questions

What is Marketing Segmentation?

The process of breaking down large groups
into smaller groups based on meaningful

characteristics and shared needs


Why divide?

Not everyone is the same.

Not everyone has the same needs.

How do we segment

Demographic (age, income,gender)
Psychographic (values, interests, lifestyle)

geographic (location, country, city/rural)

Usage Behaviour ( how often a consumer uses or how a consumer uses a product. How? When? How Often?)

Steps to creating a meaningful
market segment

Choose meaningful characteristics

Choose the number of characteristics to include

Determine if the segment is a desirable market segment

Choose meaningful characteristics (consumers with similar needs)
Choose the number of characteristics to include

Determine if the segment is a desirable market segment

Target markets should be...

• Identifiable (identifiable if a marketer can clearly
identify the segments and can describe the traits

or characteristics of that segment)


• Sizable ( sizable when there are enough consumers

within the group to support profitable product sales)


• Stable ( more stable if it is predictable in its

purchasing ability and behavior)


• Accessible (accessible if a marketer can reach

the consumers for marketing and for sales of the

product)


• Congruent ( aligns with the company’sobjectives and resources)

Undifferentiated Marketing

When a marketer uses only one strategy
or marketing mix for the entire market

Also known as mass marketing

Differentiated Marketing

When a company targets more than one market
segment and develops a unique marketing mix

to target each segment separately

Concentrated Marketing

When a marketer selects one target market
and customizes a marketing mix

for that target market only

The Buyer Persona

- A representation of a marketer’s market segment
- A Buyer Persona helps to give tangibles

a face to the target market

Creating a buyer persona

A good buyer persona should include enough
information to describe a real person — think

of your neighbor, one of your past instructors,

or a peer

Keep in mind: the buyer persona should be based

on real research

• Goals

• Values

• Challenges

- demographic information

- day in the life

What is positioning ?

Positioning is a strategy for defining and portraying
brands or products in ways that cause the ideal customers

to perceive them as the best solution for their needs.

- Why should I buy from you?

What is position?

the space in the market for which
a product is ideally suited

positioning statement

a succinct expression
of a product’s market position

unique selling proposition (USP)

an adaptation
of the product positioning statement for use in sales

dialogues and communications

When
consumers see

that products

are different

and better they:

• Pay more to buy them
• Develop loyalty toward

the brand

• Develop resistance to

competing product offers

• Become advocates

for the product

Positioning Strategies

Being First
- Those who are the first to accomplish something

earn awareness

- This can mean earning credit, free marketing,

or fame


Positioning as a Follower

- Any positioning for a product that is preceded

by a similar product

- Usually benefits from working with a niche market

- Finding differentiation is the most important piece

of this strategy


Repositioning

- Done when a current position no longer appeals

to a consumer base

- Done to take advantage of a competitor’s

weakness

Positioning Problems

- under-positioning: when a product has no clear
advantage or differentiation


- over-positioning: when the product has been

positioned too narrowly


- confused positioning: when a product is positioned

by claiming too many or contradictory benefits


- doubtful positioning: when the way a product

is positioned touts benefits that are simply not

believable or that are too good to be true


- irrelevant positioning: when a product claims benefits

or differentiation that no customers care about

Positioning Statement Template

For (target audience),
Product/Service is (concise description).

It is ideal for (best use or application) because

(primary benefit or differentiation).

Steps of buyer behaviour process

The Buyer Behavior Process helps marketers understand
what a customer goes through during a purchase.


- need recognition: consumer recognizes that he/she has

a need


- information search: consumer searches for information


- evaluation of alternatives: consumer looks at the different

available and viable options, then weighs the upsides and

downsides of each


- purchase: consumer decides to purchase, including

where and how to purchase


- reaction (also called “Post-purchase Behavior”):

consumer has consumed the “product,” be it a physical

product or service, and is pleased or displeased

Consumption

Using a good or service to fill a need.

Need

A gap between a consumer’s current state
and his/her desired state

Internal Cues

- Comes from within
a person

• Can be hunger or thirst

External cues

- Comes from the
environment

• Can be an advertisement

Top of Mind Awareness

The brands that a consumer first recalls
from memory

How to market in information search

- By making sure relevant information is available
and easily accessible


- By researching to find out when and where customers

are searching for information and making sure relevant

and accurate information is found there

Evaluative Criteria

The product attributes that are important
to a consumer

How to Market in Evaluation
of Alternatives

By making consumers
aware of how your

product matches the

attributes they value

Purchase Decision

The point when a consumer chooses which product
to purchase and also chooses where, when, and

how to purchase the product.

How to Market in Purchase Decision

-By assisting consumers in making the purchase decision
so that they can actually follow through on the purchase

-By offering different purchase options to the consumer

in this stage to provide further value

Reaction

After purchasing and consuming a product or service,
the customer compares the consumption experience

to his or her expectations

Where do
consumers

get their

expectations?

• Previous experience
• Advertisements

• Online reviews

• Friends’ recommendations

• Promises from salespeople

Search

Word of Mouth

A recommendation about a product or service
from a satisfied customer

How to Market in Reaction

-Marketers can find ways to increase word of mouth

-A marketer can work to decrease the possibility

of buyer’s remorse after a purchase by continuing

to provide marketing after the sale has occurred

Product attributes

The characteristics by which products are
identified and differentiated

Levels of attributes

- core benefit: the main benefit a consumer gets from a
product

• expected attributes: the basic attributes necessary

for delivering benefits or that have become expected

• add-on attributes: unexpected extra attributes

Four Product Categories

- convenience products: purchased frequently, widely
available, priced affordably


- shopping products: consumers spend more time

thinking about and purchasing a shopping product


- specialty products: have unique attributes


- unsought products: products that the consumers have

no awareness of until an external cue

Product Life Cycle

The typical pattern that a successful new product
takes, from development to the end of its life


1.Product Development

(The product is still being developed and tested)


- During this product development stage, it’s

important for a marketer to do any preliminary

marketing research to determine customer needs



2. Introduction

(The product is first offered for sale commercially)


- Marketing should focus on increasing brand

awareness by informing and educating consumers

about the product


3. Growth

(Here sales increase and profits rise)


- The marketing strategy here is to communicate

to consumers why that they should buy your

product


Maturity

(Product sales have leveled off and profits are

beginning to decrease)


-The marketing strategy here shifts from gaining

market share to maintaining it, and the promotion

focuses on reminding customers about the product


Decline

(In the decline stage, profits are dropping off

dramatically, and companies are exiting the market)


- No further money is invested into product

development or advertising.

product class:

a group of products that are generally
considered as substitutes for one another

product form:

smaller segment of the product class
- It refers to the different types of products or variations

within the product class.

Services Marketing

The process of planning, delivering, and then
improving the individual service acts

and performances that create memorable experiences when satisfying a buyer’s needs

Characteristics of serivices

Intangibility
- Services aren’t difficult to copy

• Displaying services and communicating about them

is difficult

• Pricing services is challenging

• Consumers perceive greater risk in services

• Many services are difficult to evaluate

Intangibility


Marketing for Intangibility

• Convey the benefits of the service

• Set consumer expectations


Purchasibility

• Businesses cannot hold services in inventory

• Balancing supply and demand is difficult

• Consumers can’t return services


Marketing for Perishability

• Companies should invest in resources and

personnel to deliver services at the appointed time

Perishability


Varibility

• Mass producing services that humans must

deliver isn’t possible

• Managing customer satisfaction is harder

• Achieving consistent service performance

is difficult


Marketing for Variability

• Train staff well

• Have precise performance standards

• Measure service outcomes to determine

customer satisfaction


Inseparability

• Customers impact other customers

• Employees impact the outcome

• Customer involvement is a must


Marketing for Inseparability

• The service, service provider, and customer

are intertwined

• This causes an opportunity to create a unique

and memorable experience for customers

Pre purchase vs Post purchase

Pre-purchase(evauate before buying)
• Rarely available

with services

• Tangible characteristics


Post Purchase (evauate after puchasing)

• Comparisons to

expectations and

alternatives

• Most common

with services

Customer Journey Map

A visual representation of every encounter and
experience a typical customer can have


Customer Journey Maps

Are effective when they...

• Are built from the customer’s perspective

• Include all points of contact between a customer

and a provider (touchpoints), digital and physical

• Span the full customer relationship lifecycle

- The heart of services marketing is consistently

providing superior customer experiences

Customer Lifetime Value

The total profit associated with a customer for the
duration of their relationship with the brand

Service Blueprint

A diagram that depicts a service process
and the relationships between elements

of the service and how they relate to the

touchpoints in the customer journey

Elements of a Service Blueprint

• People
• Physical evidence

• Technology

• Sequence

Blueprint Tangibles

• Ads and other marketing communications
• Exterior signage and the general exterior of shop,

such as landscaping

• Employees, the interior waiting area, and other aspects

of the waiting area such as furniture and magazines

• Employees, the service operation area, and materials

used in service delivery such as styling products and

equipment

Blueprint Failure Points

• Are used to identify areas where possible failures
may occur

• Are from the perspective of a customer

• May lead to a service recovery paradox

Service Recovery Paradox

A paradox that occurs when a failure and great
recovery results in a customer being

more satisfied than if there were no failure

in the first place

Service Provider Errors

• Task errors: performing the service process or task
incorrectly

• Treatment errors: failing to treat the customer properly

during an encounter

• Tangibles errors: problems with the tangibles

or physical artifacts associated with the service

Customer Errors

• Preparation errors: customer readiness issues
or failures

• Encounter errors: interaction problems between

customer and employee(s)

• Resolution errors: failure to report problems or take

proper post-encounter actions

• Preparation errors: customer readiness issues

or failures

• Encounter errors: interaction problems between

customer and employee(s)

• Resolution errors: failure to report problems or take

proper post-encounter actions

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