marketing flashcards
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Definitions vary because
[a] Social science, no one right answer. [b] Observed rather than invented
[c] Definitions gained complexity as understanding has deepened.
Definitions are difficult because marketing is
[a] Not always about management
[b] Not always about profit[c] Not a single process
Good Points about Kotler's definition
[a] Involves, exchange value, needs and wants
Why so many definitions? “A social and managerial process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating and exchanging products and value with others.” (Kotler et al 2008)
V1.2
MARKETING PROCESS
Model is simplistic Useful as a learning tool
Stage 1 Understanding marketplaces
and customers
(Demands, Market offerings,
Value & Satisfaction, exchange,
relationships, markets)
Stage 2 Developing Marketing strategy
(Choosing customers,
value Proposition,
guiding philosphy)
Stage 3 Developing
programmes to deliver value
(The 4 Ps)
Stage 4 Building
relationships through delight
(CRM)
Outputs Capturing value from customers
(Customer loyalty, share,
equity)
UDDBC
Stage 1 Understanding
marketplaces andcustomers
Value and satisfaction
Exchange, transactions and relationships
Needs wants and demands
Market Offerings
Markets
VENMM
Customer Value (Kotler et al 2008)“The consumers’ assessment of the products overall capacity to satisfy his or her needs.” Customer Satisfaction (Kotler et al 2008)“The extent to which a products performance matches a buyers expectations”
Example of Different Needs Same Product. Student buys a bike to satisfy needs of transport, cost. A professor buys a bike because he is getting a bit overweight.
STAGE 1 UM&C – VALUE AND SATISFACTION
Exchange ‘The act of obtaining something that is desired by offering something in return.’ Kotler et al (2008)
Transaction ‘Marketing’s unit of measurement. A single exchange with a short beginning and end.’ Kotler et al (2008)
Customer Relationship Management “The overall process of building and maintaining profitable customer relationships by delivering superior customer value and satisfaction” Kotler et al (2008)
Transaction vs. RM. RM is different because it infers many linked exchanges over a period of time with social and financial benefits.
STAGE 1 UM&C – EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS AND RELATIONSHIPS
STAGE 1 UM&C– NEEDS WANTS AND DEMANDS
Needs: State of felt deprivation - !REMEMBER! Marketers don’t create needs they are a property of the person.
Wants: Form that a need takes when its shaped by factors such as culture, upbringing and previous experience. Unlimited wants, finite needs.
Demands: Wants backed with the money to make purchases.
Maslow (1943) Hierarchy of Needs. As you satisfy each level of need the state of felt deprivation moves to the next level. Limitations. Western orientated. (PSLES)
Marketing Myopic. (Levitt 1960) Concept: An industry is a customer-satisfying process, not
a goods-producing process. Businesses will do better in the end if they concentrate on meeting customers’ needs rather than on selling products. Example: Concentrating on Drill Bit rather than the hole.
Concept: Companies stop growing because of a failure in management, not because the market is saturated but because of MYOPIA. Example: Railroads declined because they were railroad orientated rather than transport orientated. Example. Encyclopaedia Britannia. Book. CD. Online.
Product. ‘anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption and that might satisfy a want or need’ (Kotler 2008) Can be a Good (mainly tangible), service (mainly
intangible), information or experience. A PRODUCT DOES NOT HAVE TO BE TANGIBLE THEY
LIE ON A CONTINUUM OF TANGIBLITY (Shostack 1977)
Value Proposition – (Kotler et al 2008) ‘A set of benefits that promise consumers to satisfy their needs’
STAGE 1 UM&C – MARKET OFFERINGS (MPV)
STAGE 1 UM&C – MARKETS
Markets. ‘The set of actual and potential buyers of a market offering.’ (Kotler 2008)
STAGE 2 DEVELOPING MARKETING STRATEGY CUSTOMER-DRIVEN MARKETING (SUC) Selecting Customers to
serve. (Segmenting)
Understanding the guiding philosophy
Choosing a value proposition
STAGE 2 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN MARKETING – PHILOSOPHIES (PMS PSS MIX)
Production Concept. (Making things cheap) Example. Ryanair, cutting all the corners
Product Concept. (Product improvements) Personal Example. School improvement rather than just adding features.
Selling Concept. (Convince customers) Discussion Example. Recruitment agencies
Marketing Concept. (Know Customers needs) Example. Nintendo Wii. Nintendo understood the market place, new market segments wanted a
group experience were people could move around.
Societal Marketing Concept (Balance consumer and society needs) Example. Food and drink industry needs to help out with obesity, the governments Change4Life
scheme (July 2011) suggests that the food and drink industry should pay to facilitate consumers making better making better choices.
Counter Example. Marks and Spenser Lingerie Ad (November 2011) overtly sexual and would be seen by children.
Sustainable Marketing Concept (Balance consumer and future generations) Example. Marks and Spenser Plan A sustainability plan http://plana.marksandspencer.com/ includes
180 commitments to be met by 2015 ranging from recycling hangers to educating consumers about how to cook waste free.
Organisations are likely to hold a mix of philosophies. Example. “One Child One Laptop” is a scheme to provide every child in the developing
world with a laptop, this scheme is partly sustainable (Teaching children for the future), partly societal (providing the disadvantaged a chance) partly marketing (fulfilling the education need of India) partly production (making the laptop very cheap)
STAGE 3 CONSTRUCTING AN INTEGRATED MARKETING PLAN
http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/business/marketing/marketingmixvid.shtml
http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/business/marketing/productlifecyclevid.shtml
• Product – What is it?• Discussion Example. Angel
Solutions Perspective satisfying the need for school improvement.
• Price – How much? Positioning.• Example. Angel Solutions
Perspective Pricing Strategies.• Promotion – Attracting and
Explaining.• Example. Beetles and Harris
(2004) thoughts on nudity.• Place – Where is it displayed.
Channels.• Example Angel Solutions
Perspective distribution channels
Stage 4
Building Customer Relationships (SV)
Subjective Value and Satisfaction. Perception is important. Example. Toyota Prius Example. Diary milk (The
gorilla) and Guinness adverts (Good things come to those who wait) create illusions.
Variable Relationship Depth. High Example. Tennis
Coach Low Example Call Centre.
STAGE 5 OUTCOMES CAPTURING VALUE (SELL)
Share Growth. ‘The share of the customers purchasing that a company gets in its product categories.’ (Kotler 2008) Example. Reggae-Reggae sauce rose from
nothing in 2007 to sell large quantities in retail stores and pub chains.
Equity. ‘The total lifetime values of all the companies customers.’ (Kotler 2008)
Loyalty Creation Gerpott et al (2000) work on
telecommunications treats concepts separately. (SLR)
Satisfaction. Loyalty. Retention
Lifetime value of a customer (Kotler et al 2008) “The lifetime value of the entire stream of purchases that a customer would make over a lifetime of patronage” Business Example. Angel Solutions and Cegos,
NCER, repeat customer Consumer Example. Consumers rarely change
banks.
CHANGING MARKETING LANDSCAPE
Future of marketing Example. Tesco are creating virtual shops in Korea on mobile phones. Changes
logistics, buying behaviour and so on. Electronic marketplace
Example Amazon Books store online Not For Profit Marketing.
Example UK Government Think! Don’t drink and drive Global marketplace
Example Gap sources clothes from china, which are cheaper. They also have a strategy for child labour.
Sustainability Abel and Cole and Naked Wines investing in local suppliers.
FENGS
To be strategic marketing needs to be planned.
Types of planning The strategic plan The marketing plan
3 Types of plan
Annual plans include ‘the current situation, company objectives, the strategy for the year, the action programme, budgets and controls’ (Kotler 2008)
Long Range plans describe ‘The principle factors and forces affecting the organisation during the next several years, including long term objectives , the chief marketing strategies used to attain them and the resources required’ (Kotler 2008)
Strategic planning is ‘a plan that describes how a firm will adapt to take advantage of opportunities in its constantly changing environment, thereby maintain a strategic fit between the firms goals and capabilities and its changing marketing opportunities’ (Kotler 2008)
Planning can involve different business units or even teams.
Planning Stages (APIC)
Analysis: Understand situation Planning:
Strategic: What do business units do? Marketing: What strategies fit goals?
Implementation: Carry out plan Control: Measure, Evaluate, Adjust
Strategic plans (MSSS PG)
Mission statements Strategic objectives Strategic audits SWOT Analysis Portfolio Analysis Growth Strategies
Strategic plans: Mission Statements
Mission statements: ‘A statement of the organisations purpose – what it wants to accomplish in the wider environment’ (Kotler 2008) (CRAC) Should be Customer orientated. Levitt
(1960). Should periodically Review Ask 4 questions (ANDI)
Customer Needs Identify customers. E.g. Government and
students University customers. What are out Aims. Profit, growth, social etc? What is the Domain or niche of the business?
Mission Statements should be. Realistic, Specific, based on Core Competencies (Prahalad and Hamel 1990), motivating
Vision Statements are a more of a guide E.g. Virgin ‘Making Flying Fun’
Strategic plans:
Strategic Objectives
Market Objectives. E.g. retention percentage or sales
Competitive Position. E.g. Market share or number of relationships
Financial. E.g. Profit, ROCE Social. E.g. Helping community
Strategic Audits
External: ‘A detailed examination of the markets, competition, business and economic environments in which the firm operates’ (Kotler 2008)
Internal: ‘An evaluation of the firms entire value chain’ (Kotler 2008) Porter (1985) value chain in split in to 4
support (procurement) and 5 primary (operations) activities
Strategic plans: SWOT. ‘A distillation of the findings of the internal and external audits which draws attention to the critical organisational strengths and weaknesses and the opportunities and threats facing the company.’ (Kotler 2008)
Can be used alongside a PEST analysis to examine environment
Piercy and Giles (1989) thoughts
SWOT can fail if vague, multiple focus SWOTs required
Customer orientated model Internal strengths and weaknesses External opportunities and threats
Strategies. Move weaknesses to strengths Move threats to opportunities Matching opportunities with strengths
Weaknesses Focus on compiling lists rather than thinking. No prioritisation Limited information displayed – simplistic Hill and Westbrook (1997) ague it can harm
performance
Humphrey (1960s) developed SWOT
Piercy and Giles (1989)
A portfolio is ‘the collection of businesses and products that make up the company’ Kotler (2008)
Portfolio Analysis is ‘a tool by which management identifies and evaluates the various businesses that make up the company’ (Kotler 2008)
First step is to separate the company into SBU. SBUs include division, product, brand defined ‘units of the company that has a separate mission and objectives and that can be planned independently from other company business’ (Kotler 2008)
Portfolio Analysis Tools
Boston Box GE Grid
Limitations
1. Link between market share and profit is not assured.
2. Promotes growth, as such neglects declining markets
3. Ignores factors such as risk of entering markets with no experience.
4. Market growth can be easily misinterpreted. It is unclear if it is the growth of the market, the growth of market share or if the company can affect the growth of the market. (For example Apple ‘expanding’ the phone market by producing the smart phone at an affordable price.)
5. Difficult to define SBUs and the scales6. SBUs are assumed to be independent when
often they are not.
Boston Consulting Group (1970s)Classification
(i) the rate of growth in that market(ii) the relative market share
NB. Rate of growth is the same as market attractiveness. Size of circle indicates size of SBU
Categories
Stars. High growth and share. Require Investment. Growth will slow as they become cash cows.Cash Cows. Low growth, high share. Less investment. Produce cash to fund other SBUs.Question Marks. Low share, high growth. Need cash to maintain position. Decide if to make star by invest or to make dog and perhaps divest.Dogs. Low share, low growth. May break even limited promise.
Strategies
Invest to build market share.Invest to hold market share.Harvest for gainDivest to sell or close.
McKinsey / GE Grid (1970s)
Classification
(i) Market attractiveness(ii) SBU strength
NB. Similar to Boston Box however. More robust measure of attractiveness.NB. Size of circle indicates size of market and size of slice the SBU share.
3 Zones
Top Left: Strong attractiveness – harvest or growDiagonals: Medium attractiveness – consider investingBottom Right: Low attractiveness – consider divesting
Limitations Similar to BCG
• Difficult to define SBUs• Ignores factors such as risk• Difficult to define SBUs• Tendency towards optimism• Ignores Core Competencies (Prahalad and
Hamel 1990)• Ignores links between SBUs
Ansoff (1957) Growth Strategies grid.
Classification
(i) New or existing products(ii) New or established markets
NB. Each growth strategy has a different level of risk.
4 Zones (Me Mp Pe D)
Market Penetration. Increasing sales in current markets with current products (Manipulate the marketing mix)Product Development. New products to current markets.Market Development. New markets with existing products. E.g. Geography Diversification. New products to new customers. Can be acquisitions.
Limitations Similar to BCG
- Doesn’t include divestment strategies- Assessment of risk is immature. E.g. a
British company would probably find it easier investing in Ireland than China.
Strategic Marketing Plan For Each SBU. (EA SOS MIBC)
1. Executive summary.
2. Marketing Audit. ‘A comprehensive systematic, independent and periodic examination of a companies environment, objectives, strategies and activities to determine problem areas and oppurtunities and to recommend a plan of action to improve the companies marketing performance’ (Kotler 2008)
1. Macroenvironment (demographic/political trends)2. Task environment (market/customer)3. Marketing strategy (mission/objectives)4. Marketing organisation (structures)5. Marketing systems (planning/control)6. Productivity (Profit and cost)7. Marketing function (Marketing mix)
3. SWOT (Humphrey 1960s, Piercy and Giles 1989)
4. Objectives. SWOT should identify objectives in line with goals (social, financial)
5. Marketing Strategy. The marketing logic by which the SBU hopes to achieve its marketing objectives.
1. Segmenting, targeting, differentiation and positioning.
6. Marketing Mix. Product, Price, Promotion and Place.
7. Marketing Implementation. ‘The process that turns marketing strategies and plans into marketing actions in order to accomplish strategic marketing objectives.’ (Kotler 2008)
8. Marketing Budgets. Establishing a budget could be gauged on ‘return on market investment’
9. Marketing Controls. Measure, evaluate and correct because things can go wrong.
The Marketing Environment
Microenvironment
Macroenvironment
Marketing Function
Market environment
Marketing Environment: ‘the actors and forces that affect marketing management’s ability to develop and maintain successful relationships with its target customers.’ (Kotler 2008)
Macroenvironment ‘the larger societal forces that affect the whole microenvoronment’ (Kotler 2008)e.g. think PEST but Kotler has an alternative categorisation
Microenvironment ‘the actors close to the firm that affect its ability to serve its customers, markets, competitors and publics’ (Kotler 2008)e.g. suppliers and publics
MICROENVIRONMENT (MSC CCP) Marketing Intermediaries: ‘firms that help the company
to promote, sell and distribute its goods to final buyers.’ (Kotler 2008) Resellers, Distribution, Marketing agencies, financial
intermediaries. Suppliers: ‘Firms and individuals that provide resources’
(Kotler 2008) Company: Management, Finance, R & D, Purchasing,
Operations, Accounting.
Customers. Consumer, Business, Reseller, Institutional (Hospitals), Government, International
Competitors. Direct (same product), Indirect (substitute) see Porters (1979) 5 forces
Publics. Financial, Media, Government, Citizen (e.g. environmental), Local (Neighbourhood watch), General Public, Internal
Forces that affect the profitability of the industry.
New Entrants Threat Barriers to entry (economies of scale, differentiation, capital
requirements, cost disadvantages, government policy, access to distribution )
Retaliation Buyers Bargaining Power
Powerful if. [a] Large orders [b] undifferentiated [c] what its buying doesn’t save money
Price Sensitivity Number of buyers Can drive down prices, demand higher quality
Suppliers Bargaining Power Powerful if. [a] Small number of providers [b] unique traits [c]
doesn’t content with substitutes [d] Can integrate forward [e] Supplier is not dependent on the industry
Example: Drinks companies raising prices squeezed profits for bottling companies
Supplier Concentration Substitutes Threat
Switching costs Competitor Intensity
Concentration e.g. Hirschman’s Concentration Index (1945) Large Number of firms increases rivalry Slow market growth causes firms to fight High Fixed costs results in economies of scale Storage Costs Switching costs
Limitations Underestimates Core
Competencies. (Prahalad and Hamil 1990)
Assumes no collusion in the industry
Doesn’t consider possibility of making a new market.
Could be further forces e.g. Compliments
Presents a static situation when its changing.
Simplistic Glosses over relationships
Porters (1979) 5 Forces. Industry Analysis. Should a firm enter a new industry? Can use with SWOT.
Publics. ‘Any group that has an actual or potential interest in or impact on an organisations ability to achieve its objectives’ (Kotler 2008)
Citizen-Action – Neighbourhood watch General - Everyone Government – UK Government
Financial – Banks and credit agencies Internal - Staff Local – Residents near firm. Media - BBC
CGG FILM
Macorenvironment (PC DENT - Lobbies)
Political. ‘Laws, government agencies, and pressure groups that influence or limit various organisations and individuals in a given society.’ (Kotler 2008) e.g. needed to make there systems more compatible with other MP3 players.
Cultural. ‘Institutions and other forces that affect a society’s basic values, perceptions, preferences, and behaviours’ (Kotler 2008) Cultural values manifest in individuals views. Inlcuding. Self Perception, View of
others, view of organisations (e.g. distrust in banks), view of society, view of nature, view of universe.
Demographic. ‘The study of human populations in terms of size, density, location, age, gender, race, occupation, and other statistics.’ (Kotler 2008) e.g. Population Growth, Changing age, Changing Household, Migration, Diversity (gay community tends to be wealthier)
Economic. ‘Factors that affect consumer purchasing power and spending patterns’ (Kotler 2008) e.g. Make up of EU, Income distribution (Royals Royce target affluent), spending patterns change as income rises.
Natural. ‘The natural resources that are needed as inputs by marketers or that are affected by marketing activities’ (Kotler 2008) e.g. Shortage of raw materials, increased energy costs, climate change regulation, government intervention
Technological. ‘Forces that create new technologies, creating new product and market opportunities’ (Kotler 2008). E.g. the internet, skype.
Lobby: Some companies passively accept the environment whilst others lobby for change. Example. UK has an obesity issue the Change4Life scheme (July 2011) was affected by retailers to reduce its power.
PEST Political e.g. Tax policy etc Economic. E.g. demand for
electricity Socio-Cultural e.g. Attitude to
nuclear power Technological e.g. Improving
safer technology PESTEL
Environmental e.g. climate change
Legal e.g. Employment law
Always contrast the factors, determine which are the most important.
Can be classified into opportunities and threats of a SWOT analysis.
Lesson 4
Buyer Behaviour
Consumer Buyer Behaviour. ‘The buying behaviour of final consumers – individuals and households who buy goods and services for personal consumption’ (Kotler 2008)
Marketing and Other stimuli
Marketing MixMarketing environment
Buyer’s Black Box
Buyers Characteristics(C PSP)
CulturalSocial
PersonalPsychological
Buyers Decision Process
Buyers Responses
Product ChoiceBrand ChoiceDealer Choice
Purchase TimingPurchase amount
Characteristics Affecting Buyer Behaviour – Cultural (CSS-Shift)
Culture ‘The set of basic values, perceptions, wants and behaviours learned by a member of society from family and other important institutions.’ (Kotler 2008)
Subculture. EXAMPLE: Those with French descent tend to enjoy a
glass of red.
Social class. EXAMPLE: The Irish are seen as well educated and elite :D
There can be shifts in culture EXAMPLE The Irish used to be persecuted
Characteristics Affecting Buyer Behaviour - Social. (PDF Reference)
Using EXAMPLE what wine club to join
Position within Group. Role and status. EXAMPLE. Mother sks Dad to join wine club
Decision making unit; Initiator, Influencer, Decider, Buyer, User EXAMPLE. Mother haven taken a liking for the red stuff was
the initiator, dad is the buyer, the sons are the drinkers. Family. Children can pester, Husbands and Wives can
influence each others tastes. EXAMPLE. The sons like a regular delivery
Reference groups and Opinion Leaders. Example Jamie Oliver likes Naked Wines apparently and
Healthy eating at schools.
Characteristics Affecting Buyer Behaviour- Personal: (FLOPI)
Family Life Cycle EXAMPLE. Drink more wine when the kids
come to relieve stress. Life Style (Psychographics) ‘A
technique of measuring lifestyles and developing lifestyle classifications’ (Kotler 1008) Activities. Mother likes drinking Interests. Mother is learning French Opinions. Mother thinks red is best.
Occupation EXAMPLE. Dad is a teacher and needs to
drink to relieve stress. Personality and self concept
EXAMPLE. Dad gets a bad temper when drinking so mother throws it away, Dad buys more.
Income EXAMPLE. Dad is lowly paid as a teacher and
can only afford cheap wine.
Characteristics Affecting Buyer Behaviour – Psychological (BL PM or I Learned to Perceive that motivation is about belief.)
Beliefs. ‘A descriptive thought that a person has about something’. Attitude, ‘a persons relatively consistent evaluations, feelings and tendencies toward an object or idea’ (Kotler 2008) EXAMPLE: Mother thinks new-world wines are for the masses
Learning. ‘Changes in an individuals behaviour arising from experience’ (Kotler 2008) EXAMPLE: Mother tried a new-world wine and found that it
was fruity and full of flavour. Perception. ‘The process by which people select,
organise and interpret information to form a meaningful picture of the world’ (Kotler 2008). NB selective listening, retention and distortion. EXAMPLE: Mother was told by a wine expert that not all new-
world wines were the same but she wouldn’t listen. Motivation. ‘A need that is sufficiently pressing to seek
satisfaction of the need’ (Kotler 2008) EXAMPLE: Mother needs a drink to unwind! Locke (1690) we seek pleasure and avoid pain. Freud (nd. 18?? – 19??) the unconscious plays a large role Maslow (1970) Human needs are in a hierarchy
High Involvement
Low Involvement
Significant differences between brands
Complex Buying Behaviour
Variety Seeking Buying behaviour
Few differences between brands
Dissonance reducing buying behaviour
Habitual Buying Behaviour
Involvement and Differentiation
Habitual. No searching Buying based on familiarity. EXAMPLE. We always bind the same brand of rock salt.
Dissonance. Highly involved with, infrequent or risky purchase with little perceived difference in products. Customers may encounter post purchase dissonance after a sale. EXAMPLE. Time to buy a new car.
Complex. Consumer may be highly involved when the product is expensive, risky, purchased infrequently and self expressive EXAMPLE. Time to buy a new house
Variety Seeking. Low involvement but significant perceived differentiation. EXAMPLE. Chocolate bars next to the counter. Dairy milk, mars and flake stand out right!
Consumer buyer Behaviour(HD CV)
Consumer Buyer Decision Process – Known Products - NIEPP
Need Recognition. Internal Stimulus e.g. Hunger. External Stimulus e.g. Smell from restaurants
Information Search. The amount of searching will vary depending upon the type of purchase. Example. What restaurants are available?
Evaluation. Form purchase intention Example. I think I fancy Fish and Chips from the Lobster pot.
Purchase Decision. Attitudes of others. No queue at the Lobster pot a little
queue at Chipmonk, Chipmonk must serve better chips. Unexpected events. Hit by a taxi crossing the road.
Post Purchase. Rats should I really have bought fish and chips they will make the office smell
Need Recognitio
n
Information
Search
Evaluationof
Alternatives
PurchaseDecision
Post PurchaseDecision
Consumer Buyer Decision Process – New Products (AIETA Movement CP) 5 stages when adopting a new product - AIETA
Awareness. Knows but lacks interest. Interest. Seeks knowledge Evaluation. Considers product Trial. Tries the product. Adoption. Full and regular use
Movement through stages (rate of adoption) affected by
Consumer readiness. Innovators, Early Adopters, Early Majority, Late Majority and laggards - IEELL
Product characteristics. Relative Characteristics, Compatibility, Complexity, Divisibility, Communicability - RCCDC
Awareness
Interest Evaluation Trial Adoption
Diffusion of innovation curve (Summarised by Rogers 1962)
Defences between business and consumer markets (Model - MNC)
Overall – Both business buyer behaviour and consumer buyer behaviour can be represented as a stimulus response model. However the influences and process are very different.
Market Structure and demand (F-DIG) Fewer larger buyers in business Business demand is derived from consumer
demand Business demand is more inelastic Business markets are more often
geographically concentrated. Nature of Buying Unit
Complex, more people involved Complexity of buying
Consumer less complex. In business markets the buyer and seller are often dependent
Business Buyer Behaviour. ‘The buying behaviour of the organisations that buy goods and services for use in the production of other products and services that are sold, rented, or supplied to others.’ (Kotler 2008)
The Environment
Marketing MixMacroenviron
ment
Buying Firm Buyer Responses
Product Choice
Supplier ChoiceOrder
QuantityDelivery terms
Service Terms
Buying Centre
Buying Decision Process
Buying Influence Strategies (Leonidou 2005) Study of Greek industrial buyers. (RELIC R)
Business EXAMPLE: Naked Wines provides expert advice to suppliers.Criticism. Naked Wines provides finance for suppliers for new suppliers although this category comes under reward, it is interesting to note that this is a lessor category in Leonidou’s work
Legalistic Coercive Reward Expert Referent Informational
All 1 1 1
Straight Rebuy
2 1 1
Modified Rebuy
1 2
New Buy Influence strategies least used in new buy situations
Participants in Buying Process – (BIDUG)
Decision making unit. ‘All the individuals and units that participate in the business decision-making process’ (Kotler 2008) Buyers
Example. Purchasing dept. of music chain suggests new technology for customers to listen to tracks in store.
Influencers Example. Staff at store
Deciders Example. Head Office
Users Example. Customers at store.
Gate Keepers. Example. Finance
Department.
Major Influences on Business Buyers (IE IO)
EXAMPLE. Buying desks for a new office
Interpersonal Authority, Status, Empathy, Persuasiveness EXAMPLE. Senior management won’t want junior management to
spend time because it’s a trivial decision. Junior management might see it as an opportunity to show that they are responsible by striking a good deal, but need to invite the supplier into the office.
Environmental Economic, Natural, Technological, Political, Competitive and
Cultural. EXAMPLE. Are the desks sourced from sustainable locations?
Individual Age, Income, Education, Job Position, Personality, Risk Attitudes EXAMPLE. Is the purchaser willing to buy desks from an untried
firm? Organisational
Objectives, Policies, Structures, Systems EXAMPLE. Do desks need to satisfy design or health and safety
requirements set forth from the company?
ProblemRecognition
Internal or external stimuli
prompts someone to recognise a
need
EXAMPLEWe have new staff where
are they going to work?
GeneralNeed
Description
Company describes the
general characteristics and quantity
needed
EXAMPLEWe need 5 work
stations
ProductSpecification
Decide what product
characteristics are needed. Might use
value analysis
EXAMPLE4 medium
quality desks1 high quality
desk5 chairs
SupplierSearch
Find the best vendors
EXAMPLE2 online vendors1 local vendor
ProposalSolicitation
Invite certain suppliers to submit bids
EXAMPLEEach vendors offer
is put forward in terms of price and
quality
SupplierSelection
Review, Select, Negotiate.
May have more than one supplier.
EXAMPLEEach offer compared
Order-routineSpecification
Buyer writes final order with
characteristics specified
EXMAPLEFinal details confirmed.
PerformanceReview
Buyer rates satisfaction with
its suppliers
EXAMPLEAre the chairs
comfy?
The Business Buying Decision Process - (PG PS PS OP)
‘The decision-making process by which business buyers establish the need for purchased products and services, and identify, evaluate and choose among alternative brands and suppliers’ (Kotler 2008)
Positioning
Segmenting
Targeting
Differentiating
Select Customers
Value Proposition
Segmentation. ‘Dividing large, heterogeneous markets into smaller segments that can be reached more efficiently and effectively’ (Kotler 2008)
Types of Segmentation (GD PB Gd)
- Geographic- Example. Mobile hairdresser only covers certain regions.
- Demographic- Age, Gender, Income- Example. Top Shop separates on age, gender and income.
- Psychographic- Social Class, Lifestyle, Personality- Example. Huggies segment on lifecycle targeting those
who want children- Behavioural
- Buying Inclination, when will they buy.- User type. Ex, potential, first time or regular - Usage. Heavy, Medium Light- Customer Loyalty
- Geo-demographic- ACORN, MOSAIC, IDACI, PIN etc
Marketers will often use multiple segmenting techniques
Additional Business Marketing Segmenting Techniques (COSP)
Operating characteristics Technology usage, user status, customer
capabilities. Example. Customers who use sage.
Purchasing Approaches Existing relationships, policies.
Situational Factors Urgency of needs, order size. Example. Agency will lease contractors or
source permanent staff depending on urgency of need or length of duration.
Company Characteristics Buyer-Seller similarities, attitudes to risk,
environment and so on. Example. Mando and Angel are both socially
responsible.
International Markets Many techniques. Religion and Prosperity.
Example car owners. Markets can be split across regions and
countries.
Effective Segmentation
Measurable. Size, profile, purchasing power.
Accessible. Segments can be reached and served.
Substantial. Large enough or make a profit.
Differentiable. Conceptually different and respond to marketing mix differently.
Actionable. Its possible to make a plan to attract and serve.
MASDA
Segmentation. ‘Segmentation is about reducing the number of entities we have to deal with, into a manageable number of groups that share well defined characteristics’ (Dexter 2002)
Challenges in segmenting business markets (VCDM)
• Coping with variation in types of business• Bigger firms have buying power• Majority of firms are small• Structure of business market is
changing• Classification – hard to find useful
techniques• Retailer and antiques shop have similar
profiles but are entirely different.• Size has issues. Consider a barrister
earning £250 grand vs. a manufacturing firm earning the same with 10 employees
• Decision Making and Attitudes - Personal vs. Organisational. Larger businesses tend to be more logical (see diagram)
• Dealing with mass and niche markets. Segmenting 200 global businesses is very different to segmenting 1000s of small businesses.
Targeting. ‘directing a companies marketing effort towards serving one or more groups of customers sharing common needs or characteristics’ (Kotler 2008)
Evaluating (UMA)
Up to date sales information Match segments to
capabilities and products Consider structural factors that
affect attractiveness. Porters 5 forces (1979) – strong
suppliers, aggressive competitors
Targeting Strategies. Once customers are segmented, we should decide who should be targeted and how many targets.
Targeting Strategies (UDCM)
Undifferentiated. ‘a market coverage strategy in which a firm decides to ignore market segment differences and go after the whole market with one offer’ (Kotler 2008). Focuses on what is common between customers. Appropriate for products such as water. Can be undermined by organisations targeting niches.
Differentiated. ‘a market coverage strategy in which a firm decides to target several market segments and designs separate offers for each’ Airlines. First class, Business and Economy.
Concentrated. ‘a market coverage strategy in which a firm goes after a large share or a few sub markets’ Good if resource limited, can be profitable Vulnerable
Micromarketing ‘A form of target marketing in which companies tailor their marketing programmes to the needs and wants of narrowly defined geographic, demographic, psychographic or behavioural segments’ Local Marketing. Targeting to local groups. E.g. Greggs sell stotties in the north east Individual Marketing. IPhone users can configure there phones downloading applications
Undifferentiated
(mass)Marketing
Differentiated(segmented)
Marketing
Concentrated(niche)
Marketing
Micromarketing
Local and Individual
Target Broadly Target Narrowly
Factors affecting the choice of targeting strategy (MP CCP) Market Variation. How will
customers react to marketing? If it’s the same use undifferentiated.
Product Variation. E.g. Undifferentiated for uniform products such grapefruits.
Competitors Marketing Strategies. If a competitor is using differentiated then using undifferentiated might not work.
Company Resources. E.g. Concentrated when limited
Product Life Cycle. E.g. In early stages, one version with undifferentiated of concentrated marketing.
Differentiation & Positioning. Decide on the value proposition.
Positioning ‘arranging for a product to occupy a clear, distinctive and desirable place relative to competing products in the minds of target consumers’ (Kotler 2008)
• Perceptions. Customers have limited time to evaluate so they gain perceptions about products.
• Position Map. Describes how customers perceive brands • (axis can be any 2
dimensions but typically cost vs. luxury)
Choosing Differentiation and Positioning Strategies
Identify value differences and competitive advantages. (Easy for Royals Royce its luxury. Other firms may need reorganisation) Product Differentiation Service Differentiation Channel Differentiation People Differentiation Image Differentiation
Choosing competitive Advantages. Some products have a USP others a
mix. Differentiators should be. Important, Distinctive, Superior,
Communicable, Pre-emptive, Affordable, Profitable.
Select Position Strategy Value Proposition. ‘the full mix of
benefits upon which the brand is positioned’ (Kotler 2008)
More for more More for the same Same for less Less for much less More for less
More Price
Same Price
Less Price
More Benefits
More for More
PremiumHotel
More for the
same
Naked Wines
More for less
Wii
Same Benefits
Marginal value
proposition
The same for
less
Easy jet
Less Benefits
Less for much less
Ryanair or Pound
land
Positioning Statement and Communication. ‘A statement that summaries company or brand positioning’ (Kotler 2008).
Format: To <targets> our <brand> is <concept> that <usp>
Example: To busy, mobile professionals who need to always be in the loop, Blackberry is a wireless connectivity solution that allows you to stay connected to data, people and resources while on the go, easily and reliably – more so than competing technologies.
Strong communication required to help embed positioning in the minds of customers.
LESSON 6 ------- PRODUCTS ------------
Product. ‘anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption and that might satisfy a want or need’ (Kotler 2008)
Service ‘activities, benefits, or satisfactions offered for sale that are essentially intangible and do not result in the ownership of anything’ (Kotler 2008)
Three levels of product
Core ‘the core problem solving services or benefits that consumers are really buying when they obtain a product’ e.g. Transportation.
Actual ‘a products parts, quality level, features, design, brand name, packaging, and other attributes that combine to deliver core product benefits’. E.g. Packaging
Augmented ‘additional customer services and benefits built around the core of an actual product’ e.g. Warrantee
Augmented
Core Product
Actual Product
Product Types
Consumer Products Convenience. E.g. Milk Shopping. E.g. Clothes Speciality. E.g. Legal services Unsought. E.g. Life insurance
Industrial Products Materials and parts. E.g. Oil Capital items. E.g. Manufacturing machines Supplies and services. E.g. Car repair
Unusual products Organisations. E.g. Skoda was turnaround Person Marketing. Barack Obama Place Marketing. Ireland has nice lakes Ideas. Global Warming
Product Decisions (PALP-B)
Packaging. Inner and outer, serves to help attract customers.
Attributes Quality. Defined from a customers point of view. Features. What features add value relative to cost. Style and Design. How will the customer interact. IPad
Labelling. Identifies, descries, promotes product Product-Support. Services that augment e.g.
Warrantee Brand. ‘A name, term, sign, symbol, or design, or
a combination of these, that identifies the goods or services of one seller or group and differentiates them from those of competitors’ (Kotler 2008)
Product Line Decisions. (Length and Fill)
Product Line ‘a group of products that are closely related because they function in a similar manner, are sold to the same customer groups, are marketed through the same types of outlets, or fall within given price ranges’ (Kotler 2008)
Length Decisions. Monitor the line and add or remove items to
improve profit. Cross-selling – complimentary products Protection – economic conditions change Product line stretching. Downward, Upwards
or Two-way stretch. Based on quality and price.
Line-Filling Decisions ‘increasing the product line by adding more items within the present range of the line’ (Kotler 2008) Too many products in a line can lead
customers to feel that there is no differentiation.
Product Mix Decisions (Dimensions and strategies)
Product Mix. ‘The set of all product lines and items that a particular seller offers for sale to buyers’ (Kotler 2008)
4 Dimensions (WCLD) Width. Number of product lines Length. Total number of items in product lines Depth. Number of versions in each line. Consistency. How related are the product lines,
distribution, use, etc.
Strategies New product lines widening the mix Lengthen product lines Add more versions to deepen the mix Change consistency
Example Michelin (Slightly dumbed down)
Product line. Michelin supplies tires for road cars
Product mix widening. Michelin started a new line when it started to supply tires to formulae one in 2001
Product line lengthening. Michelin improves the quality of its tires through intensive research each year.
Product depth. There are versions such as soft or hard tire.
Product line consistency. There is consistency and inconsistency in its lines. Tires for road cars and bikes use different types of rubber compound. However they are both used in the same way.
Kotler et al’s (2008) 9 stage model of New Product Development (NIIC M BP TC)
New product strategy. Gives direction to team, planning, integration, delegation.
Idea Generation ‘Systematic search for new product ideas’. (Kotler 2008) Internal and external sources.
Idea Screening. Reduce the volume of ideas to a manageable amount.
Concept Development and Testing. Producing a more established product from the concept and testing it with user groups.
Marketing Strategy Development. Creating an initial strategy split into 3 parts. Target market Short run marketing mix Long run marketing mix
Business Analysis. Similar to an investment appraisal.
Product development. Making the product
Test Marketing. Trial the product without experience of full introduction Consumers
Standard. – Small number of cities. Can be costly and open to competitors Controlled – research firms carry the product for a fee. E.g. ACNielsen’s Scantrack Simulated - shopping environment. – Customers shown adverts and allowed to shop. Less
accurate because of sample size Business
Trial usage, Trade shows, Display rooms, limited introduction
Commercialisation. ‘Introducing the new product into the market’ (Kotler 2008). When, Where, Whom, How.
New Product Strategy
Idea Generatio
n
Idea Screening
Concept Development and testing
Marketing strategy
Business Analysis
Product Developm
ent
Test Marketing
Comercialisation
EXAMPLE. General Management Admission Council. (2011) Asked for ideas from students on management courses to improve the standard of education in universities. that included an outline of the marketing strategy.
Managing New Product Development (CTS)
Customer centred. ‘finding new ways to solve customer problems and create more customer-satisfying experiences’
Team based. ‘an approach to developing new product in which various company departments work closely together, overlapping the steps in the product development process to save time and increase effectiveness’
Systematic ‘is needed to facilitate in minimising the risk of new product failure, companies should install an innovation management system to collect, review, evaluate and manage new-product ideas‘
Product Life-Cycle strategies.(DIG the MD)
Product Development. No sales Introduction. Slow growth, no
profits Basic Product Building awareness Low prices
Growth. Increasing sales and profits Product extensions Warrantee
Maturity. Slower growth. Diversify Change mix
Decline. Sales drop. Phasing out weak items Cutting price and advertising
Not all products follow this cycle. Example, Angel sells products before it has made them. Example some die when introduced.
Lesson 7 Price
‘The amount of money charged for a product or the sum of all the values that consumers exchange for the benefits of having or using the product or service’
The only marketing mix element concerned with revenue.
Price is very important but not always the most important factor.
Setting Prices Ceiling and Floor
Ceiling. Customer Perception.
Other considerations. Marketing strategy, objectives and mix Nature of demand Competitors
Floor. Costs
Two models of pricing
Product Cost Price Value Customers
Customers Value Price Cost Product
Cost based Pricing
Value based Pricing ‘setting price based on buyers’ perceptions of product values rather than cost’ (Kotler 2008) Price considered at the same time as the other marketing mix variables. Customers don’t care about manufacturing costs
Two ways to measure value.
Good-value pricing ‘offering just the right combination of quality and good service at a fair price’ (Kotler 2008) e.g. every day low pricing which is less for less or high low pricing which is high prices with frequent promotions.Value –Added Pricing ‘attracting value added services to differentiate offers and thus support higher prices’ (Kotler 2008)
Company and Product Costs
Fixed, Variable, Total costs, determine the price floor.
Company should know how cost varies with production and experience
Cost reduction pricing. Looking to drive down production costs. Vulnerable to competitor
competition or technology Cost plus pricing. Cost plus
desired profit Ignores demand and competition. Simple to work out.
Breakeven pricing. Revenue = costs
Costs in the middle – What else influences price
Positioning. Marketing Mix Strategy
Profit Maximisation Customer Retention Social Pricing
Pricing department Market Type
Pure Competition Monopolistic Competition Oligopolistic Competition Pure Monopoly
Elasticity Competitor Pricing strategy External Factors e.g. Economic conditions
New Product Pricing Strategies
Market Skimming ‘setting a high price for a new product to skim maximum revenues layer by layer from the segments willing to pay the high price’ (Kotler 2008) e.g. fastest computer chip sold at very high prices.
Market Penetration ‘setting a low price for a new product in order to attract large numbers of buyers and a large market share’ (Kotler 2008)
Product Mix Pricing Strategies. Firms look to maximise profit on the mix of products rather than a single product
Product Line Pricing ‘setting the price steps between the various products in a line based on cost differences between the products, customer evaluations of different features and competitor prices’ (Kotler 2008)
Optional-product pricing ‘the pricing of optional or accessory products along with a main product’ (Kotler 2008)
Captive-product pricing. ‘setting a price for products that must be used along with a main product’ (Kotler 2008)
By Product Pricing ‘setting a price for by-products in order to make the main product’s price more competitive.’ (Kotler 2008)
Product Bundle Pricing ‘combining several products and offering the bundle at a reduced price’ (Kotler 2008)
Price Adjustment Strategies
Discount and allowance pricing Cash, Buyers who pay promptly Quantity. Buyers who buy large volumes Functional. Trade discount Seasonal. Buyers out of season. Trade-in. Promotional. Participation in a sales event
Segmented Pricing Customer Segment. Same product different prices for different customer groups. Product Form Pricing. Different versions and prices same production cost. Location Pricing.. Different price by location Time Pricing. E.g. On and Off Peak rail fare.
Psychological Pricing. The price can infer quality. Promotional Pricing. E.g. 2 for 1. Some customers will wait for offers Geographical Pricing.
Free on board pricing. Customer pays freight to destination. Uniform delivered pricing. Average cost taken Zone pricing. Prices varies with zones Basing point pricing. Designated city is case price, charges increase with
distance from the city. Freight absorption pricing. Seller absorbs
Dynamic Pricing. Price changes per customer International Pricing. Local markets taken into consideration,
competitor pricing etc
Price Changes
Initiating Price Changes Reducing. Customers may feel quality is reduced,
the price will fall further or that it’s a good deal. Increasing. Customers may feel the item has
become fashionable or that the company is greedy.
Competitors may have a view on price changes Responding to price changes
Consider adjusting price, quality or adding a new product
PROMOTION
Promotion Mix Integrated Marketing Communications Effective Communications What is communication Promotion Budget Social implications and constraints of
promotion
Promotion links with the other Ps to assist with relationship marketing
Marketing Communication System and Audiences. Companies communicate with intermediaries, customers, publics and customers communicate with each other.
Promotion Mix
Advertising. Sales Promotion. E.g. 2 for 1 Public relations. E.g. BP oil spill Personal Selling. Presentation
by the sales force for the purpose of making sales and
Direct Marketing. Cold calling
Various media used for each mix item. TV, radio, catalogue.
Other types of communication include. Product design, packaging. Price. Stores its sold in.
Integrated marketing communication ‘The concept under which a company carefully
integrates and coordinates its many marketing channels to deliver a clear, consistent and compelling message about the organisation and its brands’ (Kotler 2008)
Ensures promotion tools are coordinated and consumers see consistent messages. This is important because markets are fragmented. Technology affects fragmentation.
The Communication Process
Marketers are moving towards communication covering pre to post purchase rather than concentrating on awareness.
Technology is helping to gauge how effective communication is with customers
Sender, Encoding, Message, Media, Decoding, Receiver, Response, Feedback, Noise
Effective Communication
Identify Target Audience Objectives related to buyer readiness states
Awareness Knowledge Liking Preference Conviction Purchase Equivalent to Learn>Do>Feel rather than
Do>Feel>Learn Designing a message
AIDA. Attention, Hold Interest, Arouse Desire, Obtain Action
Message Content. 3 types of appeals Rational, Emotional, Moral
Message Structure. Weather or not to include conclusions.
Message Format. What designs, graphics or body language to use
Choosing Media. Personal Communication channels. E.g. Face to face Nonperson. E.g. Media, atmospheres and events Choosing the right face for the media e.g. a celebrity.
Collating Feedback Determining how effective the message was. Do they
remember it how they felt abo it.
4 ways to set Promotion Budget
Affordable Method. Neglects effect of promotion, simple.
Percentage of sales. Similar to affordable, implies sales
causes promotion. Competitor Parity.
Set promotion level to the same as competitors.
No basis to suggest that competitors have got it right.
Objective Task Method. Promotion budget related to goals
and promotion costs relating to achieving each goals.
Might be hard to define goals and costs.
Setting Promotion Mix
Organisations should consider using integrated marketing communications to ensure the promotion mix is consistent.
3 issues influencing choice of promotion mix
Nature of Promotion tools Advertising. Can reach many at low cost per customer. Its impersonal. Sales Promotion. Tend to be short lived Personal selling. Takes investment. Public relations. Can reach those who avoid advertisement if its seen as news. Direct Marketing. Takes many forms e.g. telephone. It is [a] non-public [b]
immediate [c] customisable [d] interactive. Promotion mix strategies
Push. Convincing intermediaries to take on the product and market it. Pull. Convincing consumers that they want it. Customers demand the product from
intermediaries. Contextual Factors
Consumer or Business. Pull strategies led by advertisement is generally more important in Consumer markets, whilst push strategies led by personal selling is generally more important in business markets.
Buyer Readiness stages. E.g. Advertising and public relations are good to improve awareness and knowledge. Liking, preference and conviction affected by personal selling. (NB. This is ‘guiding’ rather than fact)
Product Life Cycle. E.g. Advertising in growth stage. Sales promotion in maturity.
Social Responsible marketing
Laws and regulations exist to prevent deceptive advertisement to avoid bait and switch advertisement.
Place (Marketing Channels)
Value Delivery Network. ‘A network made up of the company, suppliers, distributers, and customers who partner with each other to improve the performance of the entire system’ . (Kotler 2008)
These systems are often complex with numerous interacting parties
Examples Abel and Cole and NakedWines have relationships with there customers (Downstream) and they invest in their suppliers (Upstream).
How Channel Members Add Value Economies can occur if a member can
take products from multiple suppliers. Intermediaries act as a buffer between
customers who want small batches and produces who produce large batches.
Important Functions. Information, promotion, contact, marketing, negotiation, physical distribution, financing, risk taking.
Example Ikea
How many Channel Members should there be? Complexity is proportional to the number of
levels. Direct marking has no intermediary levels
Channel Behaviour. Firms should cooperate because they have a common interest. However firms may act in the own interest. Chanel Conflict. ‘disagreement amongst
marketing channel members on goals and roles, who should do what for what rewards’ (Kotler 2008)
Horizontal. Firms at the same level. Vertical. Conflict. Firms at different levels.
Channel Organisation. Firms may be organised informational or there may be a defined structure, there may be dominant members. Conventional Marketing System Vertical Marketing System
Corporate Vertical Marketing System. Single ownership of multiple levels established through common ownership.
Contractual Vertical marketing system. Contractual ties E.g. Franchise
Administered Vertical Marketing System. Ownership through power and size. E.g. Tesco
Horizontal marketing System. ‘A channel arrangement in which two or more companies at one level join together to follow a new marketing opportunity’ (Kotler 2008) EXAMPLE: Apple and Starbucks 2007
Multichannel distribution System. ‘A distribution system in which a single firm sets up two or more marketing channels to reach one or more customer segments’ (Kotler 2008) EXAMPLE Tesco has retail outlets and an online presence
Disintermediation. Technology is helping producers to remove levels from the chain. Example Amazon Books
Channel Design Decisions
Analysing Company Needs. Feasibility of Cost. Setting Channel Objectives. Stated in terms of
targeted customer service level. Identifying Major alternatives.
Types of channel alternatives. Sales Force Agencies Retailers. ‘all the activities involved in selling products or
services directly to final consumers for their personal, non-business use’ (Kotler 2008) retailers vary in size and service level. E.g. Supermarket vs. Corner shop
Intermediaries ‘distribution channel firms that help the company make sales to them, including wholesalers and retailers that buy and resell goods’ (Kotler 2008) e.g. Wholesalers
Merchant. Independently owned Broker. Brings buyers and sellers together Agent. Represents buyers or sellers
Number of Marketing intermediaries Responsibilities of Channel members. Terms include
Price, Territory and Roles Evaluating the main channel alternatives
Economic. Number of sales etc Control. Can the company regain control. Adaptive. Can the channel change if required.
Channel Management
Selecting Chanel Members. Some companies may have few members to choose between, criteria should be determined.
Motivating. Partnerships are important
Evaluating. Criteria may include sales quotas or average inventory levels.
Logistics. ‘the tasks involved in planning, implementing and controlling the physical flow of goods, services, and related information from points of origin to points of consumption to meet customer requirements at a profit’ (Kotler 2008)
Logistic types Outbound. Products to customer. Inbound. Inputs from suppliers Reverse. Defective products
Goal. Cost and specified customer value. Logistic Functions.
Warehousing. Movement towards automation Inventory Management. Buffer vs. JIT Transportation. Road, rail, water, pipelines, air,
internet Integrated Logistic Management. ‘A logistics
concept that emphasizes teamwork, both inside the company and among all the marketing channel organisations. To maximise the performance of the entire distribution system.’ (Kotler 2008) Improve their own logistics. Ensure strategy and improvements happen across
the chain. Example IKEA supplier standards Consider outsourcing logistics Example Amazon
uses various carriers such as Royal Mail and DHL
Services vs. Goods
- Variable. Quality depends on who carries it out- Intangible. Service can’t be seen or smelt.
Customers look for other indicators of quality.- Perishable. Difficult is demand fluctuates Inseparable. The machines or people must be
present to carry them out. ‘The customer themselves affects the process’ Berry
(1984). EXAMPLE. Some restaurants have dress codes.
More Ps
Person. Training is important. Customers gather opinions from the staff. Treating staff like customers may improve customer service.
Physical Evidence. The more intangible the product the more need for physical queues of quality. EXAMPLE Entrance to a restaurant.
Process. The process the customer goes through is important. INDIRECT EXAMPLE. Rollersigns (Featured on dragons
den) shows advertisements to customers whilst queuing.
Criticism of 4 Ps
McCarthy (1960) 4 Ps Boom and Bitner (1981) 7 Ps for services Rafiq and Ahmed (1996) survey of UK and
Eurpean academics 7 Ps should be replace the 4ps to provide the
generic marketing mix 7 Ps Positives Comprehensive, refined and
detailed. Additional important variables People, Process, Physical Evidence.
7 Ps Negatives. Complex 4 Ps Negatives considered inadequate for
services. Not for profit and industrial marketing. Generally not broad enough, lack of relationship marketing.
4 Ps Positives simple, good introduction to marketing.
Webster (1984) 4ps not suited to industrial products
Levitt (1981) ‘everybody sells intagibles in the market place no matter what is produced in the factory’
Shostack (1977) Products are on a tangible, intangible continuum.
Brunner’s 4Cs (1989) – similar to 4ps (Concept, Costs, Channels, Communications). However Brunner’s Cs are not generally under the control of the marketer, e.g. Information gathering.
Relationship Marketing. Background
Organisations must be customer centric Total customer value ‘the total of the entire product, services,
personnel and images that a buyer receives from a marketing offer’ (Kotler 2008)
Buyers measure product value on 4 axis. Product Services Image Personnel
Total customer costs ‘the total of all the monetary, time , energy and psychic costs associated with a marketing offer’ (Kotler 2008)
Customer Delivered value. ‘The difference between total customer value and total customer cost of a marketing offer – “profit” to the customer’ (Kotler 2008)
The greater the difference the higher the probability of purchase
Satisfaction depends upon product performance relative to buyers expectations, which are formed by past experience, opinions of friends ad so on. Delight comes from exceeding expectations by a long way.
Tracking Customer satisfaction and dissatisfaction
Complaint suggestion system. Example suggestion box.
Customer Satisfaction surveys. Example, Software Consumers gain points towards Microsoft Partnership if they complete surveys.
Ghost Shoppers. Example, my boss will often contact the complain desk.
Lost Customer Analysis. Exit interviews.
Delivering customer value and satisfaction
Two frameworks to conceptualise user value Value Chain Total Quality Management
Porter’s (1985) Value Chain ‘Major tool for identifying customer value’ (Kotler 2008)
9 cost bases that create value. The value is not the same as the cost nor is it always proportional
5 primary activities IS OMO 4 support activities HP FT
Comparing each activity with customers can reveal competitive advantages.
Coordinating areas can help to maximise value,
• 4 areas of coordination (PICO)• Product development processes• Inventory Management• Customer service• Order-to-Payment
Looking at the areas across organisations can help to maximise value.
Margin is related to profit.
Total Quality Management (Rooted in work by Deming 1950s)‘programmes designed to constantly improve the quality of products, services and marketing processes’ (Kotler 2008). All members of the organisation pitch in to improve value for the customer.
Six Sigma. Defect reduction DMAIC (Define, Measure, Act, Improve, Control)
Quality ‘The totality of features and characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs’
Performance Quality. Level at which a product performs.
Conformance Quality. Freedom from defects and the consistency with which a product delivers a specified level of performance.
Value of customers
Profitable customer ‘A person, household or company whose revenues over time exceed, by an acceptable amount, the companies cost of attracting, selling and servicing that customer’ (Kotler 2008)
Lifetime values. Retention, identify and mitigate.
Treat staff like customers
Relationship Management
‘The process of creating, maintaining and enhancing strong value-laden relationships with customers and other stakeholders’
Relationship levels Basic (No follow up) Reactive (Customer can contact) Accountable (Contact after purchase) Proactive (Periodic Contact) Partnership (Regular Contact)
Practicality of managing Data Data is kept in a customer
relationships management system such as ACT (http://www.act.com/)
Common Value Building Approaches
• Financial Benefits• Social Benefits• Structural ties
Kotler's Recommended Approach
• Identify key customers• Assign relationship manager• Developing job descriptions• Having plans drawn up for each• Appointing overall manager
Selective Relationships
Sleeping Giants. Lots of profit, the best customers.
Power Traders. High revenue, high maintenance.
Pets. Low revenue, low maintenance. Delinquents. Low revenue, high
maintenance.
Low Relationship Cost
HighRelationship Cost
High Revenue Sleeping Giants Power Traders
Low Revenue Pets Delinquents
8 Cs Competitive Domain Framework
Highlights a range of relationships that an organisation may have. Competitors Challengers. Acquiring small companies Collaborators Commodities. E.g. Oil Components Customers Consumers
Limitations. Ignores organisation – staff relationships Ignores Governments, Regulatory bodies, Publics
Möller and Halinen (2000) Relationship marketing has two roots that act as a
continuum for markets to lie within Market based, consumer orientation (Simple relationships)
Many customers Market perspective Switching easy
Network based - Inter organisation orientation (complex relationships e.g. more actors)
Fewer potential partners Network perspective Switching hard
Four Areas Service Marketing Database and Direct Marketing Marketing Channels Business marketing
They see relationship marketing as a disjoint collection of theories and practices, rather than a grand theory.
They examine the roots to test their hypothesis. They see relationship marketing as a complement to
traditional Grönroos (1994) argues mainstream marketing ignores
that longer term relationships with customers. And that it is transaction based rather than buyer-sellor relationship
WORK BY HARRIS Customer: Harris (2008) in interviews with shop floor staff
about customer returns and how customers defraud, Harris found some evidence that customers wishing to defraud may enter at closing time because staff are more likely to go home or on a Saturday because staff are the most busy, another interview reveals that staff are more likely to accept returns if the customer is assertive but not rude.
Promotion: Beetles and Harris (2004) on their work about the acceptability of nudity in promotion, reveal Images are deemed more acceptable when the picture contains
the opposite sex of the viewer Images are deemed more acceptable by men, gay women and
gay men, and least acceptable by straight women. Images are deemed more acceptable if you can the models face
with the face looking toward the camera Market Orientation: Harris (pub 1999 written 1998) in
his work on organisational structure blocking a market orientated view finds empirical evidence for a number of factors being favourable for a market orientated approach. Including Connectedness, Centralisation and Formalisation Service and Cost focus Communication systems, Integration devices and marketing
function controlled devices.
Authors Ansoff (1957) Growth Strategies grid. McCarthy (1960) 4 Ps Levitt (1960) Marketing Myopia Humphrey (1960s) - SWOT inventor Rogers (1962) Diffusion of innovation curve Shostack (1977) Tangible-Intagible continuum Porters (1979) 5 Forces. Industry Analysis. Boom and Bitner (1981) 7 Ps for services Levitt (1981) Everyone sells intangibles Berry (1984) The customer affects the process Webster (1984) 4ps not suited to industrial products Piercy and Giles (1989) - SWOT refiner Brunner’s 4Cs (1989) – similar to 4ps (Concept, Costs, Channels,
Communications). Prahalad and Hamel ( 1990) Core Competencies Rafiq and Ahmed (1996) survey of UK and Eurpean academics -
7ps should replace 4ps Hill and Westbrook (1997) - SWOT criticizer Gerpott et al (2000) work on telecommunications Dexter (2002) Challenges in segmenting business markets Leonidou (2005) Buying Influence Strategies - Study of Greek
industrial buyers. RELIC R Kotler et al (2008)
Beautiful Examples http://one.laptop.org/ amazing scheme
Bizarre Examples: Hotmail & Gmail
Free service with advertisement for revenue. Personalisation directing advertisement to certain demographics.
BMW Celebrities and Film makers. A series of eight high-cost, high-production short films released on BMW’s website. The films were produced and directed by such
acclaimed filmmakers as David Fincher and Guy Richie and starred actors such as Don Cheadle, Clive Owen, and even Madonna. Within the first four months of release, the films attracted over 11 million views and sent BMW sells up 12% in 2001 alone. The success of the BMW series has prompted many other car manufacturers such as Nissan to adopt a similar internet-based strategy.
Wii Case. Understanding customer needs and wants. Expanding the market to create a segment, older users and women. First time users
Burberry Segment the market into men's, women's Burberry check is a brand.
Blendtec ‘will it blend’ campaign Use of high profile goods campaign
Naked Wines – Customer Choice – Customer Perceived value Instead of sending bottles every month that the customer has not chosen, customer s can choose their wine by building up money in
an account. Unethical advertisement. A large minority of customers did not wish to pay 20 a month and were upset to see money coming from
their account. Dairy Milk (2007) Phil Collins Dairy Milk advert
Example of brand preference. YouGov indicated that 20% more people looked favourably on the brand after the campaign that saw 6 million views on YouTube and more on TV.
Example of joint companies. Amended version shown at Rugby world cup Honda. (2008) Released a video live with sky divers spelling out their name. The ‘exclusivity’ of the live advertisement
creating brand favour. Viral Form of Advertisement
Office Max. (2007) Sells office furniture and stationary. http://www.officemax.com/ Example. They published ‘elf yourself’ a video where you could change the faces of your characters to you and your friends to whom you would send it,
doing the advertisement work for them. Clover field (2008) Film didn’t say the name of the film in the advertisement it just showed the website, fictional characters and
companies had their own myspace pages created. Lonely Island (2008) Jizz in my pants. Featured on Saturday night live (US TV show) and youtube with millions of views. They
managed to sell over 80000 copies of their CD The best Job In the world. (Australian Government) Generated tourism for Australia (Example is about none product
none …) Tesco - Loyalty card Virgin -Points Myopia. C programming language was all about speed. Java was all about productivity.
Command words http://www.bized.co.uk/reference/studyskills/command.htm
Angel Solutions Segmentation. Targeting Differentiation Pricing
Primary Secondary Children Centre
Myopia (Also marketing Focus) Product focus adding new features, rather than looking
at customer needs. Relationship depth with the NCER Life time value of a customer school (huge)