mkt243 chapter 1
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MKT243Fundamentals of Marketing
Chapter 1An Overview of Marketing
What is Marketing?• Television commercials, direct mail offers, sales call
and internet pitches ..etc
Is this marketing?
• Many people think of marketing only as selling and advertising.
• Or is buying marketing?• Or increase in production cost and sales?
• Marketing is not “telling and selling” – but satisfying customer needs and wants.
• Marketing involves in developing product that provides superior value, and prices, distributes and promotes them effectively.
• Advertising and selling are only part of a larger marketing mix- a set of tools that work together to satisfy customer needs and build customer relationship.
What Is Marketing?• Marketing is a philosophy or a management
orientation that stresses the importance of customer satisfaction, as well as the set of activities used to implement this philosophy
• The American Marketing Association definition of marketing:– Marketing is the process of planning and executing
the conception, pricing, promotion, and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organizational goals.
The Concept of Exchange
• The concept of exchange means that people give up something in order to receive something that they would rather have.
• The usual medium of exchange is money. Exchange can also be through barter or trade of items or services.
• Five conditions must be satisfied for an exchange to take place:– There must be at least two parties.– Each party has something that might be of value to the other party.– Each party is capable of communication and delivery.– Each party is free to accept or reject the exchange offer.– Each party believes it is appropriate or desirable to deal with the
other party.• Exchange may not take place even if all of these conditions
exist, but these conditions are necessary for exchange to be possible
Marketing Management Philosophies
• Five competing philosophies strongly influence an organization’s marketing activities. These philosophies are commonly referred to as production, product, sales, marketing, and societal orientations.
• Production Orientation– The production orientation focuses on internal capabilities of the
firm rather than on the desires and needs of the marketplace. The firm is concerned with what it does best, based on its resources and experience, rather than with what consumers want.
• Product Orientation– Consumers favor products that offer the most quality,
performance, and innovative features
• Sales Orientation– A sales orientation assumes that more goods and
services will be purchased if aggressive sales techniques are used and that high sales result in high profits.
• Market Orientation– The marketing concept states that the social and
economic justification for an organization's existence is the satisfaction of customer wants and needs while meeting organizational objectives.
• The marketing concept involves:– Focusing on customer wants and needs so the
organization can differentiate its product(s) from competitors' offerings
– Integrating all the organization's activities, including production, to satisfy these wants and needs
– Achieving long-term goals for the organization by satisfying customer wants and needs legally and responsibly
• A market orientation involves obtaining information about customers, competitors, and markets; examining the information from a total business perspective; determining how to deliver superior customer value; and implementing actions to provide value to customers.
• Understanding your competitive arena and competitor's strengths and weaknesses is a critical component of market orientation.
• Market-oriented companies are successful in getting all business functions together to deliver customer value.
• Societal Marketing Orientation– The philosophy called a societal marketing
orientation states that an organization exists not only to satisfy customer wants and needs and to meet organizational but also to preserve or enhance individuals’ and society's long-term best interests.
– This orientation extends the marketing concept to serve three bodies rather than two: customers, the organization itself, and society as a whole.
Society(Human Welfare)
Society(Human Welfare)
Consumers(Wants)
Consumers(Wants)
Company(Profits)
Company(Profits)
SocietalMarketingConcept
SocietalMarketingConcept
Differences between Sales and Market OrientationsSales Orientation Market Orientation
The Organization’s Focus
Inward-looking. Focus on satisfying their own needs.
External focus. Focus on satisfying customers.
The Firm's Business Defines its business in terms of the goods and services it offers
Defines its business based on the benefits customers seek.
Those to Whom the Product Is Directed
Targets its products at "everybody" or "the average customer."
Recognizes that different customer groups have different wants. Targets specific subgroups of customers. Designs special products and marketing programs for these groups.
Tools the Organization Uses to Achieve Its Goal
Seek to generate sales volume through intensive promotional activities, mainly personal selling and advertising.
Recognize that promotion is only one of the four basic tools that comprise the marketing mix.
FactoryExistingProducts
Sellingand
Promoting
ProfitsthroughVolume
MarketCustomer
NeedsIntegratedMarketing
Profitsthrough
Satisfaction
The Selling ConceptThe Selling Concept
The Marketing ConceptThe Marketing Concept
StartingPoint
Focus Means Ends
Marketing & Sales Concepts Contrasted
Marketing & Sales Concepts Contrasted
Customer value
• Customer value is the ratio of benefits to the sacrifice necessary to obtain those benefits.
• Creating customer value is a core business strategy of many successful firms.
• Marketers interested in customer value– Offer products that perform– Give consumers more than they expect– Avoid unrealistic pricing– Give the buyer facts– Offer organization-wide commitment in service and after-sales
support– Customer Satisfaction“Customer satisfaction is the feeling that a product has met or exceeded
the customer's expectations. The organizational culture focuses on delighting customers rather than on selling products.”
Building Relationship
• Relationship marketing is a strategy that entails forging long-term partnerships with customers and contributing to their success.
• The Internet is an effective tool for generating relationships with customers.
• Customers benefit from stable relationships with suppliers.
• A sense of well-being occurs when one establishes an ongoing relationship with provider
The Marketing Process
Marketing managers are responsible for a variety of activities in the marketing process:
– Understanding the organization’s mission and vision, and the role marketing plays.
– Setting marketing objectives
– Gathering, analyzing, and interpreting information about the organization’s situation, including its strengths and weaknesses, as well as opportunities and threats in the environment.
– Developing marketing strategy by deciding exactly which wants and whose wants the organization will try to satisfy, and by developing appropriate marketing activities to satisfy the desires of selected target markets.
– Implementing the marketing strategy
– Designing performance measures
– Periodically evaluating marketing efforts and making changes if needed.
Why Study Marketing?
• Marketing Plays an important Role in Society
• Marketing is important to Business
• Marketing Offers Outstanding career opportunities
• Marketing Affects Your Life Every Day
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