Marketing 1000 Final Exam Study Notes: Needs/Wants/Demands
Marketing 1000 Final Exam Study Notes: Needs/Wants/Demands
Marketing 1000 Final Exam Study Notes: Needs/Wants/Demands
Needs
- States of felt deprivation, including basic physical needs for food, clothing, warmth, and safety.
Social needs for belonging and affection, individual needs for knowledge and self-expression, these
needs were not created by marketers; theyre basic part of human make up.
-ex need for shelter, food,
Wants
- Form of human needs that take as shaped by culture and individual personality
- We need food, but we want Big Macs
Demands
- Human wants that are backed by buying power
-we as consumers demand products that we believe will satisfy our wants
Marketing Concepts
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Strategic Planning
Strategic Planning the process of developing and maintaining a strategic fit between the organizations
goals and capabilities and its changing market opportunities.
-strategic planning involves adapting the firm to take advantage of opportunities in its constantly
changing environment.
Corporate Level: Defining Company Mission Setting Company Objectives and Goals Designing the
Business Portfolio
Business Unit, Product, and Market Level: Planning Marketing and Other Functional Strategies
-marketing planning occurs at the business unit, product, and market level and it supports company
strategic planning with more detailed plans for specific market opportunities.
-if you fail to plan, you are planning to fail
Strategic Business Unit (SBU) a unit of the company that has its own mission and objectives and that
can be planned independently from other company businesses.
Service-Profit Chain the chain that links service firm profits with employee and customer satisfaction.
-reaching service profits and growth begins with taking care of those who take care of customers
Five links:
1) Internal Service Quality superior employee selection and training, quality work environment, strong
support for those dealing with customerswhich results in..
2) Satisfied and Productive Service Employees which results in
3) Greater Service Value more effective and efficient customer value creation and service delivery..
which results in..
4) Satisfied and Loyal Customers which results in
5) Healthy Service Profits and Growth superior service firm performance
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Requires:
Internal Marketing marketing by a service firm to train and effectively motivate its customer-contact
employees and all the supporting service people to work as a team to provide customer satisfaction.
-must precede external marketing
Interactive Marketing marketing by a service firm that recognizes that perceived service quality
depends heavily on the quality of buyer-seller interaction.
-service companies have three major marketing tasks: competitive differentiation, service quality, and
productivity
Product Life Cycle the lifespan of a new product, from its development to its eventual decline.
- All products will pass through the PLC
Whats different is:
How long it takes between stages
How long it remains in each stage
5 Stages of the PLC:
1) Development no customers, sales=0, heavy spending
-when company finds and develops a new product idea
2) Introduction early adopter customer, slow sales growth, no profits, high launch costs
-product is introduced in the market
3) Growth early majority customers, rapid sales growth and revenues
-rapid market acceptance and increasing profits
4) Maturity late maturity customers, flat sales, declining profits
-increased marketing outlays to defend product against competition
5) Decline laggard customers, declining sales and profits, replaced by new products
Criticisms of Marketing
Customer Concerns:
-High Prices caused by unnecessary advertising
-High-Pressure Selling commission based sellers
-Deceptive Practices
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-Unsafe Products
-Planned Obsolescence holding back features then revealing them later to make older models obsolete
-Weblining discriminating against customers based on their purchase behaviour, spending habits, etc
Societys Concern:
-false wants and too much materialism
-business yields too much political power
-marketings impact on other businesses
-too few social goods
-cultural pollution
Environmentalism
Marketing Skimming Pricing setting a high price for a new product to skim maximum revenues layer by
layer from the segments willing to pay the price.
-early adopters want new products right away, regardless of the price
-introduced at the highest price marketers think consumers will pay for it
-price is then lowered in stages
Market Penetration Pricing a strategy that sets a low price for a new product to attract a segment of
buyers, then raises the price.
-goal is to attract a large number of buyers quickly and gain a large market share
-idea is that high sales volumes will reduce costs
Prestige Pricing a product that offers the buyer prestige in exchange for a high price.
-ex Ferrari
-can also work for ordinary products for example Stella Artois
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Captive-Product Pricing setting a price for products that must be purchased along with a main product.
-ex razor blades (that go with razors), printer cartridges (that go with the printer)
By-Product Pricing company seeks a market for byproducts to help offset the costs of disposing of
them and to help make the price of the main product more competitive.
Bundle Pricing when marketers group more than one product together and charge a price for the set.
-ex a combo at a fast food restaurant
Consumerism
Consumerism an organized movement of citizens and government agencies to improve the rights and
power of buyers in relation to sellers.
-Consumer Association of Canada
Traditional Sellers Rights:
-right to introduce any product in any size and style
-right to charge any price for the product
-right to spend any amount to promote the product
-right to use any product message
-right to use any buying incentive schemes
Fundamental Consumer Rights:
-right to safety
-right to be informed
-right to choose
-right to be heard
-right to redress against damage
-right to consumer education
Marketing Environment
Marketing Environment all the actors and forces outside the marketing department that affect
marketing managements ability to perform its functions.
Microenvironment the actors and forces close to the company that affect its ability to serve customers
the company, suppliers, marketing intermediaries, customer markets, competitors, and publics.
Macroenvironment actors and forces in society and the world that affect the microenvironment
demographic, economic, natural, technological, political, and cultural forces.
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Marketing/Distribution Channels
Marketing Intermediaries third-party companies neither the marketer nor the customer that help
the company promote, sell, and distribute its goods to customers.
Marketing Intermediaries include:
Retailers buy merchandise from manufacturers and resell them in stores to consumers
Distributors physically stock and move goods from their point of origin
Brokers arrange for the movement of goods from their point of origin to their retailer or wholesaler,
but never physically touch or take possession of the merchandise
Marketing Services Agencies perform marketing tasks
Financial Intermediaries help finance transactions or insure against the risks associated with the
buying and selling of products
Wholesaler
-wholesaler is the company that sells the product to the retailer who sells the product to the consumer
-buy in bulk then break the lots into smaller quantities for retailers
-takes a risk by holding the product between the manufacturer and retailer
Retailer
Retailing all activities involved in selling goods or services directly to final customers for their personal
(not business) use.
-classified in terms of the amount of service they offer (self-service, limited service, full service), the
breadth and depth of their product lines, their pricing approaches, and how they are organized.
Marketing Intelligence
Marketing Intelligence - A systematic collection and analysis of publicly available information about
competitors and developments in the marketing environment.
- Is a specific branch of competitive intelligence
- Goal is to improve strategic decision making, assess and track competitors actions, and provide early
warning of opportunities and threats
- Growing use of marketing intelligence raises some ethical issues, most techniques are legal, but some
are considered questionable
-good marketing intelligence usually comes from public sources
Marketing Research
Marketing Research the systematic design, collection, analysis, and reporting of data relevant to a
specific marketing situation facing an organization.
-can hire someone to conduct research on a specific area or buy data collected by outside firms
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Research Process
-market research is about finding the answers to questions and businesses problems so that marketing
managers can make decisions
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-defining the problem and clearly stating the research objective is the hardest part
-can often begin with exploratory research to help define the problem and later follow with causal or
descriptive research
Exploratory Research
Exploratory Research marketing research to gather preliminary info that will help define problems and
suggest hypotheses.
-Formats problems more precisely, clarifying concepts, gathering explanations, gaining
insight, eliminating impractical ideas, and forming hypothesises
-Does not seek to test them, just finds them out
Descriptive Research
Descriptive Research marketing research to better describe marketing problems, situations, or
markets, such as the market potential for a product or the demographics and attitudes of consumers
who buy the product.
-Seeks to describe a product, determine how many people use the product
-Defines questions, prepares the company for required changes
Causal Research
Causal Research marketing research to test hypotheses about cause-and-effect relationships.
-Seeks to find cause and effect relationships between variables
-Accomplishes this by experiments
Types of Research
Consumer Behaviour the buying behaviour of consumers individuals who buy goods and services for
their own use and consumption.
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-consumer influences are strongly influenced by cultural, social, personal, and psychological
characteristics
-tries to explain why people are driven by different needs at different times
-most pressing at bottom, least at top
-once most important need is satisfied, they move onto the next
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Segmentation
Targeting
Positioning
-develop positioning for target segments; develop a marketing mix for each segment
-a position is a place the product occupies in the mind of the potential customer, and relative to
competitors
Market Positioning arranging for a product to occupy a clear, distinctive, and desirable place relative to
competing products in the mind of the buyer.
-therefore, positions are intended to distinguish their products from competing brands and
given them the greatest strategic advantage in their target markets
-positioning ultimately exists in the mind of the individual
-first the marketer needs to establish a possible competitive advantage on which to build the position
-effective positioning begins with actual differentiating the companys marketing offer so that it
gives the consumer more than the competitor
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-once a position is chosen, the company must communicate that position to its customers
-the marketing program must support the positioning strategy
Based on four priniciples:
1. A company must establish a position in the minds of customers
2. The position should have one simple and consistent message
3. The position must set a company apart from its competitors
4. A company cannot be all things to all people it must focus its efforts
-There are many ways to segment a market, but not all segmentations are effective
-To be useful, markets segments must be:
Measureable: the size, purchasing power, profiles of the segments, can be
measured
Accessible: the segments can be effectively reached and served
Differentiable: the segments are conceptually distinguishable and respond
differently to different marketing mix elements and programs
Actionable: effective programs can be designed for attracting and serving the
segments
Differentiation Strategies
Differentiated Marketing a market-coverage strategy in which a firm decides to target several market
segments and designs separate offers for each.
-generates higher sales and a stronger position within each market segment
-more expensive
Types of differentiation:
-product -people -channels
-services -image
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Positioning Strategies
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Product Types
Consumer Products
Consumer Products product bought by individuals for person consumption.
Convenience Products consumer product that the individual usually buys frequently, immediately, and
with a minimum of comparison and buying effort. Ex soap, candy, newspapers, fast food
Shopping Products consumer product that people, in the process of selection and purchase,
characteristically compares on bases such as suitability, quality, price, and style. Ex furniture, clothing,
used cards, major appliances, hotel and airline services
Specialty Products consumer product with unique characteristics or brand identification for which a
significant group of buyers is willing to make a special purchase effort. Ex cars, high-priced photography
equipment, designer clothes, services of legal or medical specialists
Unsought Products consumer product that the consumer either does not know about or knows about
but does not normally think of buying. Ex life insurance, cemetery plots, blood donations
Industrial Products
Industrial Products product bought by individuals and organizations for further processing or for use in
conducting a business.
-materials and parts, capital items, and supplies and services
Product line
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.
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Service characteristics
7Ps Of Service
-combines the 4 Ps of marketing (product, price, place, promotion) with an additional 3 service-specific
Ps (process, physical environment, people)
Product Elements
-Service products lie at the heart of a firms marketing strategy, if its poorly designed, it wont create
meaningful value for customers
-Service products need a core product that response to the customers primary need and an array of
supplementary service elements that help use the core product effectively
Place and Time
-When delivering, it involves decisions on when and where to deliver, as well as methods
-Use the electronic or physical channels, speed and convenience of place and time have become
important determinants of effective service delivery today
Price and other user outlays
-Make sure customer sees this price as worth it, if not, go beyond this
-Make it worth it to the customer, and give the customer satisfaction
Promotion and Education
-Be sure to use marketing programs, without them, no one will know about your product
-Suppliers need to inform customers about benefits of this service, where and when to obtain it, and
how their participation can provide the best results
Process
-How a firm does things, the underlying processes, these are just as important as what it does
-Create an effective process
-Customers are often involved in these processes, as co-producers
-If its badly designed slow processes and ineffective, it leads to a disappointing experience as well
-Make sure front line staff does the best they can
Physical Environment
-Appearance of buildings, landscaping, vehicles, interior furnishing, equipment, staff uniforms, signs,
printed materials, and other visible cues are all signs of good evidence of a firms quality
-Manage physical evidence carefully
People
-No matter what, services will always require direct interaction between customers and customer-
contact personnel
-These interactions strongly influence how customers perceive service quality
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Brand Equity
-the real power of a strong brand is its ability to capture consumer preference and loyalty
-a powerful brand has high brand equity
Brand Equity the usually positive but sometimes negative differential effect that knowing the brand
name has on a customer response to the product.
-measure of a brands equity is the extent to which people are willing to pay more for the brand
-the fundamental asset underlying brand equity is customer equity the value of the customer
relationships that the brand creates
- The development of original products, new brands, and product improvement and
modifications, through the firms own research and development (R&D) efforts
- Firm can obtain a new product in two ways:
1.Acquisition:
-By buying a whole company, patent, or a licence to produce someone elses product
2. New product development:
-Development of original products, new brands, and product improvements and modifications
through the firms own research and development efforts
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
5. Business Analysis
- A review of the sales, cost, and profit projections for a new product to determine whether the
companys objectives will be met
6. Product Development and Testing
-Developing the product concept into a real working version of the product and subjecting it to a variety
of tests
-All new products must pass through the product development and testing phase
7. Test Marketing
- Testing the product and marketing program in real, but limited market conditions
8. Commercialization
- The full-scale introduction of the new product into the market
Marketing Mix
Price Elasticity
Types of Retailers
-can be classified in terms of amount of service offered, breadth and depth of product lines, the relative
prices they charge, and how they are organized
-self-service retailers (ex supermarkets and future shop) vs limited-service retailers (ex Sears) vs full-
service retailers (ex specialty stores and first-class department stores)
Product line
Specialty Store a retail store that carries a narrow product line with a deep assortment within that line.
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Department Store a retail organization that carries a wide variety of product lines typically clothing,
home furnishings, and household goods; each line is operated as a separate department managed by
specialist buyers or merchandisers.
Supermarket large, low-cost, low-margin, high-volume, self-service store that carries a wide variety of
food, laundry, and household products.
Convenience Stores a small store located near a residential area that is open long hours seven days a
week and carries a limited line of high-turnover convenience goods.
Superstores a store much larger than a regular supermarket that carries a large assortment of
routinely purchased food and nonfood items and offers services such as dry cleaning, post offices, photo
finishing, cheque cashing, bill paying, lunch counters, car care, and pet care.
Category Killer giant specialty store that carries a very deep assortment of a particular line and is
staffed by knowledgeable employees.
Service Retailers retailers that sell services rather than goods. Ex hotels and universities.
Relative Prices
Discount Store a retail institution that sells standard merchandise at lower prices by accepting lower
margins and selling at a higher volume. Ex Walmart.
Off-Price Retailers retailer that buys at below wholesale prices and sells at less than retail. Ex factory
outlets, independents, warehouse clubs.
Independent Off-Price Retailers off-price retailer that is either owned and run by
entrepreneurs or is a division of a larger retail corporation. Ex Winners.
Factory Outlets off-price retailing operation that is owned and operated by a manufacturer
and that normally carries the manufacturers surplus, discounted, or irregular goods.
Warehouse Clubs off-price retailer that sells a limited selection of brand-name grocery items,
appliances, clothing, and a hodgepodge of other goods at deep discounts to members who pay annual
membership fees. Ex Costco.
Retail Organizations
-four major types: corporate chains, voluntary chains and retailer cooperatives, franchise organizations,
and merchandising conglomerates
Chain Stores two or more outlets that are owned and controlled in common, have central buying and
merchandising, and sell similar lines of merchandise. Ex LCBO
Voluntary Chain a wholesale-sponsored group of independent retailers that engages in group buying
and common merchandising. EX IGA
Retailer Cooperative independent retailers banded together for central buying and promotion. Ex Ace
Hardware
Merchandising Conglomerate a free-form corporation that combines several diversified retailers under
central ownership. Ex The Venator Group Northern Reflections, Northern Getaway, etc.
Franchise a contractual association between a manufacturer, wholesaler, or service organization (a
franchiser) and independent businesspeople (franchisees) who buy the right to own and operate one or
more units in the franchise system. Ex Canadian Tire
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Marketing Communications Mix the specific blend of advertising, sales promotion, public relations,
personal selling, and direct marketing tools a company uses to pursue its advertising and marketing
objectives.
-each element requires its own delivery medium (method through which members of the target market
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
PUSH STRATEGY
Push Strategy a promotion strategy that calls for using the sales force and trade promotion to push the
product through the channels.
-producer markets to retailers to carry and promote the product, who will then market the product to
consumers
-generally used in B2B markets
PULL STRATEGY
Pull Strategy a promotion strategy that calls for using advertising and consumer promotion to build
consumer demand.
-idea is to get consumers asking retailers for the product, who will ask the company to produce it
-generally used in consumer products companies
Tangible:
1.People Processing
-services directed at peoples bodies: passenger transportation, health care, lodging, beauty salons,
physical therapy, etc.
2.Possession Processing
-services directed at physical possessions: freight transportation, repair and maintenance,
warehousing/storage, laundry and dry cleaning, landscaping/gardening, etc.
Intangible:
3.Mental-Stimulus Processing
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-firms with relatively undifferentiated services need to monitor what competitors are charging and
should try to price accordingly
Price competition intensifies with:
-increasing number of competitors
-increasing number of substituting offers
-wider distribution of competitor and/or substitution offers
-increasing surplus capacity in the industry
Circumstances that reduce price competition:
-non-price-related costs of using competing alternatives are high
-personal relationships matter
-switching costs are high
-time and location specificity reduce choice
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-managers should take into account entire cost to customers of each competitive offering, including all
related financial and non-monetary costs, plus potential switching costs, and then compare this total
with that of the providers own service
-importance of understanding the monetary worth of the incremental value created by a service
-when customers purchase a service, they are weighing the perceived benefits obtained from the service
against the perceived costs they will incur
-four broad expressions of value:
-value is low price
-value is whatever I want in a product
-value Is the quality I get for the price I pay
-value is what I get for what I give
-aka Net Value the sum of all perceived benefits (gross value) minus the sum of all the
perceived costs of service. The greater the positive difference, the greater the net value
Consumer Surplus the difference between the price customers pay and the amount they would
actually have been willing to pay to obtain the desired benefits offered by a specific product.
-four distinct categories for capturing and communicating the value of a service:
-uncertainty reduction
-relationship enhancement
-low-cost leadership
-value perception management
-uncertainty can be reduces by: a) benefit-driven pricing pricing the aspect of the service that directly
benefits customers; b) flat-rate pricing quoting a fixed price in advance of service delivery so as to
avoid surprises for users
-a strategy is relationship pricing, to discount prices for large purchases which can often be profitable for
both parties, or giving a discount when two or more services are purchased together
-cost leadership is an effective strategy
-must manage the perception of value to ensure customers know what value they have received
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
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Service Attributes
Search Attributes product characteristics that consumers can readily evaluate prior to service.
-tangible characteristics such as style, colour, texture, taste, and sound
Experience Attributes product performance features that customers can only evaluate during service
delivery.
-ex. Vacations, live entertainment performances, sporting events
Credence Attributes product characteristics that consumers may not be able to evaluate even after
purchase and consumption.
-ex. Counseling, legal advice, surgery, financial investment, planning services and consulting
services
-ex the cleanliness in a restaurants kitchen after eating there
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-caused by two sub-gaps: internal communications gap and overpromise gap (then
interpretation gap)
Gap 5: The Perceptions Gap
-difference between what is actually delivered and what customers feel they have received
Gap 6: Service Quality Gap
-difference between what the customers expect to receive and their perceptions of the service
that is actually delivered
Service Employees
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-attributes that differentiate services are not always the most important ones
Determinant Attributes those that actually determine buyers choices between competing alternatives.
-consumers focus on attributes that are different between competing alternatives
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
-customers can often be segmented according to their willingness to give up some level of service for a
lower price
-price-insensitive customers are willing to pay a relatively high price to obtain high levels of service on all
attributes that are important to them
-price-sensitive customers will look for an inexpensive service that offers relatively low levels of
performance on many key attributes
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Fall 2011 MCS 1000 Notes
Wheel of Loyalty
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