Customer-Driven Marketing
Chapter 11
©Steve Allen/ Getty Images
©McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
©McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
1
Learning Objectives
11-1 Define marketing and describe the exchange process.
11-2 Specify the functions of marketing.
11-3 Explain the marketing concept and its implications for developing marketing strategies.
11-4 Examine the development of a marketing strategy, including market segmentation and marketing mix.
11-5 Investigate how marketers conduct marketing research and study buying behavior.
11-6 Summarize the environmental forces that influence marketing decisions.
11-7 Assess a company’s marketing plans and propose a solution for resolving its problem.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
2
Nature of Marketing 1
Marketing
A group of activities designed to expedite transactions by creating, distributing, pricing, and promoting goods, services, and ideas
Marketing activities create value
Important part of a firm’s overall strategy
Marketing is not…
Manipulating consumers to get them to buy products they don’t want
Just advertising and selling
©McGraw-Hill Education.
A vital part of any business undertaking, marketing is a group of activities designed to expedite transactions by creating, distributing, pricing, and promoting goods, services, and ideas. These activities create value by allowing individuals and organizations to obtain what they need and want. Marketing is an important part of a firm’s overall strategy. Other functional areas of the business—such as operations, finance, and all areas of management—must be coordinated with marketing decisions.
It is important to note what marketing is not: It is not manipulating consumers to get them to buy products they do not want. It is not just advertising and selling; it is a systematic approach to satisfying consumers.
3
Nature of Marketing 2
The Exchange Relationship
Each participant must be willing to give up “something of value” to receive the “something” held by the other
The tangible product itself may not be as important as the image of the benefits associated with the product
Capability gained from using a product
Image evoked by it
Brand name
©McGraw-Hill Education.
At the heart of all business is the exchange, the act of giving up one thing (money, credit, labor, goods) in return for something else (goods, services, or ideas). Businesses exchange their goods, services, or ideas for money or credit supplied by customers in a voluntary exchange relationship. For an exchange to occur, certain conditions are required. Buyers and sellers must be able to communicate about the “something of value” available to each. An exchange does not necessarily take place just because buyers and sellers have something of value to exchange. Each participant must be willing to give up his or her respective “something of value” to receive the “something” held by the other.
When you think of marketing products, you may think of tangible things—cars, smartphones, or books, for example. What most consumers want, however, is a way to get a job done, solve a problem, or gain some enjoyment. Therefore, the tangible product itself may not be as important as the image or the benefits associated with the product. This intangible “something of value” may be capability gained from using a product or the image evoked by it, or even the brand name.
4
Figure 11.1 The Exchange Process: Giving Up One Thing in Return for Another
Access the text alternative for these images.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
5
Exchange Relationships
Companies find that communicating with customers through social media sites can enhance customer relationships and create value for their brands.
©Denis Rozhnovsky/Alamy Stock Photo
©McGraw-Hill Education.
6
Nature of Marketing 3
Functions of Marketing
Buying
Selling
Transporting
Storing
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Marketing focuses on a complex set of activities that must be performed to accomplish objectives and generate exchanges. These activities include buying, selling, transporting, storing, grading, financing, marketing research, and risk taking.
Buying. Everyone who shops for products (consumers, stores, businesses, governments) decides whether and what to buy. A marketer must understand buyers’ needs and desires to determine what products to make available.
Selling. The exchange process is expedited through selling. Marketers usually view selling as a persuasive activity that is accomplished through promotion (advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, publicity, and packaging).
Transporting. Transporting is the process of moving products from the seller to the buyer. Marketers focus on transportation costs and services.
Storing. Like transporting, storing is part of the physical distribution of products and includes warehousing goods.
7
Nature of Marketing 4
Functions of Marketing continued
Grading
Financing
Marketing research
Risk taking
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Marketing focuses on a complex set of activities that must be performed to accomplish objectives and generate exchanges. These activities include buying, selling, transporting, storing, grading, financing, marketing research, and risk taking.
Grading. Grading refers to standardizing products by dividing them into subgroups and displaying and labeling them so that consumers clearly understand their nature and quality. Many products, such as meat, steel, and fruit, are graded according to a set of standards that often are established by the state or federal government.
Financing. For many products, especially large items such as automobiles, refrigerators, and new homes, the marketer arranges credit to expedite the purchase.
Marketing Research. Through research, marketers ascertain the need for new goods and services. By gathering information regularly, marketers can detect new trends and changes in consumer tastes.
Risk Taking. Risk is the chance of loss associated with marketing decisions. Developing a new product creates a chance of loss if consumers do not like it enough to buy it.
8
Nature of Marketing 5
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Value is an important element of managing long-term customer relationships and implementing the marking concept. We view value as a customer’s subjective assessment of benefits relative to costs in determining the worth of a product (customer value = customer benefits − customer costs).
Customer benefits include anything a buyer receives in an exchange. Hotels and motels, for example, basically provide a room with a bed and bathroom, but each firm provides a different level of service, amenities, and atmosphere to satisfy its guests.
Customer costs include anything a buyer must give up to obtain the benefits the product provides. The most obvious cost is the monetary price of the product, but nonmonetary costs can be equally important in a customer’s determination of value. Two nonmonetary costs are the time and effort customers expend to find and purchase desired products.
In developing marketing activities, it is important to recognize that customers receive benefits based on their experiences.
9
Nature of Marketing 6
The Marketing Concept
Idea that an organization should try to satisfy customers’ needs through coordinated activities that also allow it to achieve its own goals
Businesses must:
Find out what consumers desire
Develop the good, service, or idea to satisfy that want
Get the product to the customer
Continually alter, adapt, and add products to keep pace with changing customer demands
©McGraw-Hill Education.
A basic philosophy that guides all marketing activities is the marketing concept, the idea that an organization should try to satisfy customers’ needs through coordinated activities that also allow it to achieve its own goals.
According to the marketing concept, a business must find out what consumers desire and then develop the good, service, or idea that fulfills their needs or wants. The business must then get the product to the customer. In addition, the business must continually alter, adapt, and develop products to keep pace with changing consumer needs and wants.
10
Nature of Marketing 7
The Marketing Concept continued
Determining customer needs is difficult
While customer satisfaction is the goal, businesses must achieve their own objectives
To implement the marketing concept, a business must:
Have good information about what consumers want
Adopt a customer orientation
Coordinate its efforts throughout the entire organization
Make the customer’s perception of value the focus
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Trying to determine customers’ true needs is increasingly difficult because no one fully understands what motivates people to buy things. Although customer satisfaction is the goal of the marketing concept, a business must also achieve its own objectives, such as boosting productivity, reducing costs, or achieving a percentage of a specific market.
To implement the marketing concept, a firm must have good information about what consumers want, adopt a consumer orientation, and coordinate its efforts throughout the entire organization; otherwise, it may be awash with goods, services, and ideas that consumers do not want or need. Successfully implementing the marketing concept requires that a business view the customer’s perception of value as the ultimate measure of work performance and improving value, and the rate at which this is done, as the measure of success.
11
POLLING QUESTION
Marketing is not just advertising and promotion. Marketing also includes product/service design, establishing pricing strategies, and _____.
Selling
Distribution/Place
Innovation
Manufacturing
©McGraw-Hill Education.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Answer: B. Distribution/Place
It is important for students to understand that marketing is not just advertising and sales promotions. Marketing is about developing the product /service, creating a pricing strategy, determining the distribution process, and store placement.
12
The Marketing Concept
Drones provide an example of a product that is based on advanced technology but is finding many uses from being a toy or recreational product to commercial uses. The marketing concept is based on the philosophy that consumers purchase the satisfaction and value they derive from a product not the product itself.
©Stock Image/Shutterstock
©McGraw-Hill Education.
13
Nature of Marketing 8
Evolution of the Marketing Concept
The production orientation
Second half of 19th century
Industrial Revolution
Manufacturing efficiency
The sales orientation
Early 20th century
Supply exceeds demand
A need to “sell” products
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Our society and economic system have changed over time, and marketing has become more important as markets have become more competitive.
The Production Orientation. During the second half of the 19th century, the Industrial Revolution was well under way in the United States. New technologies, such as electricity, railroads, internal combustion engines, and mass-production techniques, made it possible to manufacture goods with ever increasing efficiency. Together with new management ideas and ways of using labor, products poured into the marketplace, where demand for manufactured goods was strong.
The Sales Orientation. By the early part of the 20th century, supply caught up with and then exceeded demand, and businesspeople began to realize they would have to “sell” products to buyers. During the first half of the 20th century, businesspeople viewed sales as the primary means of increasing profits in what has become known as a sales orientation.
14
Nature of Marketing 9
Evolution of the Marketing Concept continued
The market orientation
Began in the 1950s
Requires organizations to:
Gather information about customers’ needs
Share the information throughout the firm
Use the information to build long-term relationships with customers
Customer relationship management
©McGraw-Hill Education.
By the 1950s, some businesspeople began to recognize that even efficient production and extensive promotion did not guarantee sales. These businesses, and many others since, found that they must first determine what customers want and then produce it, rather than making the products first and then trying to persuade customers that they need them.
A market orientation requires organizations to gather information about customer needs, share that information throughout the entire firm, and use it to help build long-term relationships with customers.
Although it might be easy to dismiss customer relationship management as time-consuming and expensive, this mistake could destroy a company. Customer relationship management (CRM) is important in a market orientation because it can result in loyal and profitable customers. Without loyal customers, businesses would not survive; therefore, achieving the full profit potential of each customer relationship should be the goal of every marketing strategy.
15
Developing a Marketing Strategy 1
Marketing strategy
A plan of action for developing, pricing, distributing, and promoting products that meet the needs of specific customers
Selecting a Target Market
Market
Target market
Business-to-business (B2B) marketing
Business-to-consumer (B2C) marketing
©McGraw-Hill Education.
To implement the marketing concept and customer relationship management, a business needs to develop and maintain a marketing strategy, a plan of action for developing, pricing, distributing, and promoting products that meet the needs of specific customers. This definition has two major components: selecting a target market and developing an appropriate marketing mix to satisfy that target market.
A market is a group of people who have a need, purchasing power, and the desire and authority to spend money on goods, services, and ideas. A target market is a more specific group of consumers on whose needs and wants a company focuses its marketing efforts. Target markets can be further segmented into business markets and consumer markets.
Business-to-business marketing (B2B) involves marketing products to customers who will use the product for resale, direct use in daily operations, or direct use in making other products. Most people, however, tend to think of business-to-consumer marketing (B2C), or marketing directly to the end consumer. Sometimes products are used by both types of markets. For example, Glo Skin Beauty sells its cosmetics and skin care products wholesale to salons and spas as well as to consumers directly via its website.
16
Developing a Marketing Strategy 2
Total-market approach
Firm try to appeal to everyone and assumes all buyers have similar needs and wants
Also referred to as mass marketing
Market segmentation
Dividing the total market into groups that have relatively similar product needs
Market segment
A collection of individuals, groups, or organizations who share one or more characteristics and thus have relatively similar product needs and desires
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Some firms use a total-market approach, in which they try to appeal to everyone and assume that all buyers have similar needs and wants. Sellers of salt, sugar, and many agricultural products use a total-market approach because everyone is a potential consumer of these products. This approach is also referred to as mass marketing. Most firms, though, use market segmentation and divide the total market into groups of people. A market segment is a collection of individuals, groups, or organizations who share one or more characteristics and thus have relatively similar product needs and desires.
17
Developing a Marketing Strategy 3
Market Segmentation Approaches
Concentration approach
Company develops one marketing strategy for a single market segment
Allows a firm to specialize
Multisegment approach
Marketing efforts are aimed at two or more segments with a marketing strategy for each
Niche marketing
Narrow market segment with unique needs
©McGraw-Hill Education.
In the concentration approach, a company develops one marketing strategy for a single market segment. The concentration approach allows a firm to specialize, focusing all its efforts on the one market segment.
In the multisegment approach, the marketer aims its marketing efforts at two or more segments, developing a marketing strategy for each. Many firms use a multisegment approach that includes different advertising messages for different segments.
Niche marketing is a narrow market segment focus when efforts are on one small, well-defined group that has a unique, specific set of needs.
18
Figure 11.2 Target Market Strategies
Access the text alternative for these images.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
19
Developing a Marketing Strategy 4
Requirements for a successful concentration or multisegment marketing approach include:
Consumers’ needs for the product must be heterogeneous.
The segments must be identifiable and divisible.
The total market must be divided in a way that allows estimated sales potential, cost, and profits of the segments to be compared.
At least one segment must have enough profit potential to justify developing and maintaining a special marketing strategy.
The firm must be able to reach the chosen market segment with a particular market strategy.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
For a firm to successfully use a concentration or multisegment approach to market segmentation, several requirements must be met:
1. Consumers’ needs for the product must be heterogeneous.
2. The segments must be identifiable and divisible.
3. The total market must be divided in a way that allows estimated sales potential, cost, and profits of the segments to be compared.
4. At least one segment must have enough profit potential to justify developing and maintaining a special marketing strategy.
5. The firm must be able to reach the chosen market segment with a particular market strategy.
20
Developing a Marketing Strategy 5
Bases for Segmenting Markets
Demographic
Geographic
Psychographic
Behavioristic
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Companies segment markets on the basis of several variables:
1. Demographic—age, sex, race, ethnicity, income, education, occupation, family size, religion, social class. These characteristics are often closely related to customers’ product needs and purchasing behavior, and they can be readily measured. For example, deodorants are often segmented by sex: Secret and Soft n’ Dri for women; Old Spice and Mennen for men.
2. Geographic—climate, terrain, natural resources, population density, subcultural values. These influence consumer needs and product usage. Climate, for example, influences consumer purchases of clothing, automobiles, heating and air conditioning equipment, and leisure activity equipment.
3. Psychographic—personality characteristics, motives, lifestyles. Soft-drink marketers provide their products in several types of packaging, including two-liter bottles and cases of cans, to satisfy different lifestyles and motives.
4. Behavioristic—some characteristic of the consumer’s behavior toward the product. These characteristics commonly involve some aspect of product use. Benefit segmentation is also a type of behavioristic segmentation. For instance, low-fat, low-carb food.
21
POLLING QUESTION
Alberta, head of Einstein University’s marketing department, was asked to determine the best way to segment the market to encourage the brightest young minds of America to apply for acceptance. In your opinion, on which segment should she focus?
Demographic
Geographic
Psychographic
Behavioristic
©McGraw-Hill Education.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Student answers will vary. Students should discuss the benefits to all four of the segmentation methods. What most students will realize is that, if possible, it is beneficial to use more than one segmentation method. Students should consider the following points.
A. Demographic
It is easy to research.
B. Geographic
It is easier to establish a reputation with the local community.
C. Psychographic
It will allow the University to focus on prospective students who are like-minded in their goals.
D. Behavioristic
The University can focus on students who are looking for similar benefits from attending college.
22
Developing a Marketing Strategy 6
Developing a Marketing Mix
The marketing mix refers to four marketing activities
Product
Price
Distribution
Promotion
Firm tries to control these activities to achieve specific goals
©McGraw-Hill Education.
The second step in developing a marketing strategy is to create and maintain a satisfying marketing mix. The marketing mix refers to four marketing activities— product, price, distribution, and promotion—that the firm can control to achieve specific goals within a dynamic marketing environment.
23
Figure 11.3 The Marketing Mix: Product, Price, Promotion, and Distribution
Access the text alternative for these images.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
24
Developing a Marketing Strategy 7
Product
A complex mix of tangible and intangible attributes that provide satisfaction and benefits
Good – A physical entity you can touch (a car, computer, or adopted kitten)
Service – The application of human and mechanical efforts to people or objects to provide intangible benefits to customers (air travel, dry cleaning, or haircuts)
Idea – Can be a concept, philosophy, image, or issue (attorney advice or political parties)
©McGraw-Hill Education.
A product—whether a good, a service, an idea, or some combination—is a complex mix of tangible and intangible attributes that provide satisfaction and benefits. A good is a physical entity you can touch. A service is the application of human and mechanical efforts to people or objects to provide intangible benefits to customers. include concepts, philosophies, images, and issues.