Marketing Management - COMPREHENSIVE EXAM REVIEWER
Marketing Management - COMPREHENSIVE EXAM REVIEWER
Marketing Management - COMPREHENSIVE EXAM REVIEWER
Table of Contents
Additional Slides
It deals with identifying and meeting human and social needs or “meeting needs profitably”.
delivering value to customers and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit
the organization and its stakeholders. Marketing consists of actions undertaken to elicit
Is the art and science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping, and growing
customers through creating, delivering, and communicating superior customer value or the
“the art of selling products”. Peter Drucker said , “Ideally, marketing should result in a
Exchange – the core of marketing; the process of obtaining the desired product form
What is Marketed?
Goods
Who Markets?
management. Seek to influence the level, timing, and composition of demand to meet the
organization’s objectives
1. Negative demand – Consumers dislike the product and may even pay a price to
avoid it
3. Latent demand – Consumers may share a strong need that cannot be satisfied by
an existing product.
4. Declining demand – Consumers begin to buy the product less frequently or not at
all.
6. Full demand – Consumers are adequately buying all products put into the
marketplace
7. Overfull demand – More consumers would like to buy the product than can be
satisfied.
Markets – marketers often use the term market to cover various grouping of customers
Needs markets
Product markets
Demographic markets
Geographic markets
Voter markets
Consumer Markets – companies selling mass consumer goods and services spend
ensuring its availability, and backing it with engaging communication and reliable
service
Business Markets – companies selling business goods and services often face
competitive offerings
1. Business marketers must demonstrate how their products will help these buyers
Global Markets – companies selling goods and services in the global marketplace
1. Which countries to enter; how to enter each country’ how to adapt their product
and service features to each country; how to price in different countries’ how to
Marketplace – physical
Marketspace – digital
related in the minds of consumers but are spread across a diverse set of industries
dealers, service shops, auto mags, classified ads, auto sites on internet)
“marketplace isn’t what it used to be” / How business and marketing are
changing:
a. Changing technology
b. Globalization
c. Deregulation
d. Privatization
e. Customer empowerment
f. Customization
g. Heightened competition
h. Industry convergence
etrade)
Consumers will prefer products that are widely available and in inexpensive
mass distribution
Consumers will favor those products that offer the most quality, performance, or
innovative features
Consumers and businesses, if left alone, will ordinarily not buy enough of the
organization’s products
plots
Satisfying the needs of the customer by means of the product and the whole cluster
necessary
*marketing activities come in all forms; one ex. Is in terms of marketing mix:
*figure below shows the company preparing an offering mix of products and services, and
• Marketing must be embraced by the other departments; they must also “think customer”;
Core Concepts
Wants: needs become wants when they are directed to specific objects that might
Marketers do not create needs: Needs preexist marketers. Marketers, along with
“Simply giving customers what they want isn’t enough anymore – to gain an edge
1.) Stated needs 2)Real needs 3)Unstated needs 4)Delight needs
5)Secret needs
Offering will be successful if it delivers value and satisfaction to the target buyer.
Value
1. reflects the perceived tangible and intangible benefits and costs to customers
SUPPLY CHAIN
Stretching from raw materials to components to final products that are carried to final
buyers
COMPETITION
Includes all the actual and potential rival offerings and substitutes that a buyer might
consider
MARKETING ENVIRONMENT
1. Demographic environment
2. Economic environment
3. Physical environment
4. Technological environment
5. Political-legal environment
6. Social-cultural environment
FROM TO
6. Delivering value
7. Communicating value
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Developing Marketing Strategies and Plans
Marketing and Customer Value
Michael Porter proposed the value chain as a tool for identifying ways to create
performance measures)
beyond its own operations, into the value chains of suppliers, distributors,
and customers
Core Competencies
The key then is to own, and nurture the resources and competencies that make
Competitive advantage ultimately derives from how well the company has fitted
its core competencies and distinctive capabilities into tightly interlocking “activity
systems.”
Value Exploration
Value Creation
Value Delivery
The Central Role of Strategic Planning
2. Assessing each business’s strength by considering the market’s growth rate and the
effort
lays out the target markets and the value proposition that will be offered,
1. Mission statements –
opportunity
What will our business be? What should our business be? (Peter Drucker)
needs, and technology
opportunities)
businesses (integrative)
businesses (diversification opportunities)
customers even though the new products are technologically unrelated to its
Business Mission
SWOT analysis
Goal formulation
Strategy Formulation
Focus
Strategic Alliances
Marketing Alliance:
Promotional alliances
Logistics alliances
Pricing collaborations
Feedback and Control – track the results and monitor new developments
2. Situational analysis
Market Summary
Target Markets
Market Demographics
Geographic
Demographic
Behavior Factors
Market Needs
Market Trends
Market Growth
SWOT Analysis
Competition
Product Offering
Keys to Success
Critical Issues
3. Marketing strategy
Mission
Marketing objective
Financial objective
Target markets
Positioning
Strategies
Marketing Mix
Marketing Research
4. Financial projections
Break-even Analysis
Sales Forecast
Expense Forecast
Implementation controls
Controls
Implementation
Marketing Organization
Contingency Planning
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decision-makers
Components:
Marketing research
MIS should be a cross between what managers think they need, what managers
Companies must carefully interpret the sales data so as not to get the wrong
signals
happenings data
significance.”
durability
slow to form, and once in place, they influence us for some time – between
with strong trends rather than opposed to them, but detecting a new market
respond
6 Major Forces:
1. Demographic
2. Economic
3. Social-cultural
4. Natural
5. Technological
6. Political-legal
1. Demographic Environment
Demographic trends are highly reliable for the short and intermediate run
A growing population does not mean growing markets unless these markets
pocket syndrome”
For marketers, the most populous age groups shape the marketing environment
Within each ethnic group are consumers who are quite different from each
other
Educational Groups
professional degrees
Household Patterns
2. Economic Environment
Income distribution
3. Social-Cultural Environment
Society shapes the beliefs, values, and norms that largely define the tastes and
preference
Views of themselves
Views of others
Views of organizations
Views of society
Views of universe
Marketers have some chance of changing secondary values but little chance of
Existence of Subcultures
Groups with shared values emerging from their special life experiences or
circumstances
Anti-Pollution Pressures
6. Political-legal Environment
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The systematic design, collection, analysis, and reporting of data and findings
Syndicated-service firms
Observational research
Survey research
Behavioral data
Experimental research
Research instruments
Questionnaires
Shadowing
Behavior mapping
Consumer journey
Camera Journals
Storytelling
Unfocus groups
audiometers, gps)
Contact Methods
Mail questionnaires
Telephone interview
Personal interview
Online interview
Scientific method
Research creativity
Multiple methods
Interdependence
Healthy skepticism
Ethical marketing
Marketing Metrics
External Internal
Sales analysis
Financial analysis
Marketing-profitability analysis
scanner data, company shipment data, pricing, media, and promotion spending
Potential market
Available market
Target market
Penetrated market
Market Demand
The total volume that would be bought by a defined customer group in a defined
Market Forecast
Market Potential
Company Demand
the firms in an industry during a given period, under a given level of industry
Market-Buildup Method
Expert Opinion
Past-Sales Analysis
Market-test method
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evaluation of all the benefits and all the costs of an offering and the perceived
alternatives
functional, and psychological benefits customers expect from a given market offering
obtaining, using and disposing of the given market offering, including monetary, time,
Customer perceived value is thus based on the difference between what the
customer gets and what he or she gives for different possible choices.
The marketer can increase the value of the customer offering by some
The key to generating high customer loyalty is to deliver high customer value
service in the future despite situational influences and marketing efforts having the
Value–delivery system – includes all the experiences the customer will have on the
Ultimately, the company must operate on the philosophy that it is trying to deliver a
Measuring Satisfaction
High satisfaction, or delight, creates an emotional bond with the brand or company,
Seller has delivered quality whenever the seller’s product or service meets or
Conformance quality
Performance quality
Higher levels of quality result in higher levels of customer satisfaction, which support
Studies have shown a high correlation between relative product quality and company
profitability.
20-80 rule: the top 20% of the customers may generate as much as 80% of the
company’s profits
Customer Profitability
lifetime revenue stream that exceeds by an acceptable amount the company’s cost
The company estimates all revenue coming from the customer, less all costs
Marketers must segment customers into those worth pursuing versus those
potentially less lucrative customers that should receive less attention if any at all
advantages
Any competitive advantage must be seen by customers as a customer
advantage
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) – the net present value of the stream of future
Customer Equity – the total of the discounted lifetime values of all of the firm’s customers;
the more loyal the customer, the higher the customer equity
Relational equity of the firm – the cumulative value of the firm’s network of
Companies are now moving away from wasteful mass marketing to more precision
information about individual customers and carefully managing all customer “touchpoints”
(any occasion on which a customer encounters the brand and product) to maximize
customer loyalty
Market Dynamics:
period
Building Loyalty
individual customers or prospects that is current, accessible, and actionable for such
marketing purposes as lead generation, lead qualification, sale of a product or
databases and other databases (products, suppliers, resellers) for the purpose of
Datamining – useful information about individuals, trends, and segments from the
Identify prospects
Difficult to collect the right data, especially to capture all the occasions of
knowing that the company has collected that much personal information about
them
It may not be the case that it costs less to serve more loyal customers
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1. Cultural Factors
members
Tend to behave more alike than persons from two different social classes
to social class
Individuals can move up or down the social-class ladder during their lifetimes
2. Social Factors
Reference Groups – consist of all the groups that have direct (face-to-face) or
ways:
and
create pressures for conformity that may affect actual product and brand
choices
rejects
groups
People choose products that reflect and communicate their role and actual or
brands)
life
i.e. design different product for brand managers, engineers, layers, and
physicians
Product choice is greatly affected by economic circumstances: spendable
particular brand
Implication: these brands will attract persons who are high on the same
personality traits
constrained
Core values – the belief system that underlie consumer attitudes and
behaviors
Motivation
discomfort
Motive – a need that is sufficiently pressing to drive the person to act
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs – human needs are arranged from the most pressing
to the least pressing. People will try to satisfy their most important needs first
people’s behavior are largely unconscious, and that a person cannot fully understand
3 Perceptual processes:
Selective attention
Selective Distortion
Selective Retention
Learning theorist believe that learning is produced through the interplay of drives,
accordingly
Memory
node
Memory Processes:
interference effects
Buying process start when buyer recognizes a problem or need (can be triggered by
2. Information Search
Which major information sources to which the consumer will turn and relative
Personal
Commercial
Public
Experiential
their features
A company must strategize to get its brand into the prospect’s awareness set,
3. Evaluation of Alternatives
Consumer sees each product as a bundle of attributes with varying abilities for
Consumers will pay most attention to attributes that deliver the sought-after
benefits
4. Purchase Decision
for each attribute and chooses the first alternative that meets the minimum
Intervening Factors
Attitude of others
The more intense the other person’s negativism and the closer the other
person is to the consumer, the more the consumer will adjust his or her
purchase intention
5. Postpurchase Behavior
Postpurchase Actions
circumstances
brand switching occurs for the sake of variety rather than dissatisfaction
Heuristics can come into play when consumers forecast the likelihood of
comes to mind
additional information
Mental Accounting
industrial product can make the sum of the parts seem greater than
the whole)
Prospective method – locate consumers who plan to buy the product and ask
them to think out loud about going through the busying process
Prescriptive method – ask consumers to describe the ideal way to buy the
product
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Analyzing Business Markets
What is Organizational Buying? – the decision-making process by which formal
organizations establish the need for purchased products and services and indentify,
Business Market – consists of all the organizations that acquire goods and services
used in the production of other products or services that are sold, rented, or supplied
to others
Professional purchasing
Derived demand – the demand for business goods is ultimately derived from the
Inelastic demand – the total demand for many business goods and services is
Especially inelastic in the short run because producers cannot make quick
Demand is also inelastic for business goods that represent a small percentage of
cause as much as 200% rise in business demand in the next period; 10% fall in
the problem being solved, newness of the buying requirement, number of people involved,
Straight Rebuy
Modified Rebuy
New Task
Systems contracting
The Buying Center – composed of all those individuals and groups who participate
in the purchasing decision-making process, who share some common goals and the
Includes all members of the organization who play any of seven roles in purchase
decision process:
Initiators
Users
Influencers
Deciders
Approvers
Buyers
Gatekeepers
Usually include several participants with differing interests, authority, status, and
persuasiveness
Business buyers respond to many influences when they make their decision
People are not buying “products,” they are buying solutions to two problems:
org’s economic and strategic problem and their own personal “problem” of obtaining
respond to arguments about lower total cost or more dependable supply or service
In principle, business buyers seek to obtain the highest benefit package (economical,
Purchasing Orientations
Buying orientation – purchase’s focus is short term and tactical; buyers are
rewarded on their ability to obtain the lowest price form suppliers for the given level
contracts
seamless supply chain management system from the purchase of raw materials to
Routine products
Leverage products
Strategic products
Bottleneck products
Bare bones
Contractual transaction
Customer supply
Cooperative systems
Collaborative
Mutually adaptive
Customer is king
Study: the closest relationships between customers and suppliers arose when the
supply was important to the customer and when there were procurement obstacles
The greater vertical coordination between buyer and seller through information
Vertical coordination can facilitate stronger customer-seller ties but at the same time
may increase the risk to the customer’s and supplier’s specific investments
Transaction theory: because investments are partially sunk, they lock in the firms
When buyers cannot easily monitor supplier performance, the supplier might shrink
explicit contract
other institutions that must provide goods and services to people in their care
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Mass marketing – engages in the mass production, mass distribution ,and mass
Argument for mass marketing is that it creates the largest potential market, which
leads to the lowest costs, which in turn can lead to lower prices or higher margins
Segment Marketing
Marketer does not create the segments; the marketer’s task is to identify the
Naked solution – containing the product and service elements that all segment
members value
Characterized as follows:
Customer have distinct set of needs; will pay a premium to the firm that best
Niche marketers presumably understands their customer’s needs so well that the
Local Marketing – leading to marketing programs tailored to the needs and wants of local
customer groups
Experiential marketing
marketing in a way that empowers consumers to design the product and service offering of
their choice
Geographic Segmentation
Calls for dividing the market into different geographical units such as nations, state,
Company can operate in one or a few areas, or operate in all but pay attention to
local variations
Demographic Segmentation
Market is divided into groups on the basis of variables such as age, family size,
family life cycle, gender, income, occupation, education, religion, race, generation,
Consumer needs, wants and usage rates and product and brand preference
Age and Life-Cycle Stages – consumer wants and abilities change with age
Life Stage – defines a person’s major concern, such as going through a divorce,
Present opportunities for marketers who can help people cope with their major
concerns
Gender – men and women tend to have different attitudinal and behavioral
Income -… income does not always predict the best customers for a given product
up – the music, movies, politics, and defining events of that period –cohorts
Members of a cohort share the same major cultural, political, and economic
experiences
Social class
Psychographic Segmentation
Psychographic – the science of using psychology and demographics to better
understand consumers
People within the same demographic group can exhibit very different
psychographic profiles
Innovators
Thinkers
Achievers
Experiences
Strivers
Makers
Survivors
Behavioral Segmentation
Buyers are divided into groups on the basis of their knowledge of, attitude toward,
1. Initiator
2. Influencer
3. Decider
4. Buyer
5. User
Behavioral Variables
Behavioral Segmentation Breakdown Example
Benefits (they seek)
Buyer-readiness state
Loyalty status
Hard-core loyals
Split loyals
Shifting loyals
Switchers
Attitude
Business markets can be segmented with some of the same variables used in
customer capabilities)
(US: Small businesses have become a holy grail for business marketers; accounting
for 50% of GNP, growing 11% annually – 3% higher than growth of large companies)
Sequential Segmentation
Macrosegmentation> Microsegmentation
First-time prospects
Novices
Sophisticates
Market Targeting
Once the firm has identified its market-segment opportunities, it has to decide how
1. Needs- Based: group customers into segments based on similar needs and benefits
demographics, lifestyles, and usage behaviors make the segment distinct and
identifiable (actionable)
(such as market growth, competitive intensity, and market access), determine the
price positioning strategy based on that segment’s unique customer needs and
characteristics
6. Segment “Acid-Test”: Create “segment storyboards” to test the attractiveness of
Effective Segmentation Criteria – To be useful, market segments must rate favorably
Measurable
Substantial
Accessible
Differentiable
Actionable
In evaluating different market segments, the firm must look at two factors:
Single-Segment Concentration
Selective Specialization
customer group
Manufacturing costs
Administrative costs
Inventory costs
Promotion costs
Additional Considerations
segment at a time; competitor must not know to what segment(s) the firm will move
next
Example: PepsiCo – first attacked Coca-cola in grocery market, then vendo, then fast-food
market
Toyota – first gain a foothold in a market (introduced small cars), then enter new segments
(midsize,
Megamarketing
Market partitioning
Socially responsible marketing calls for targeting that serves not only the
to identify the goods or services of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate
Branding – a means to distinguish the goods of one producer from those of another
Role of Brands
branded
Consumers learn about brands through past experiences with the product and its
marketing program
For consumers: Brands’ ability to simplify decision making and reduce risk
Brand offers the firm legal protection for unique features or aspects of the
product; ensures that firm can safely invest in the brand and reap benefits of a
valuable asset
demand for the firm and creates barriers to entry that make it difficult for
advantage
can:
Stays relevant
Positioned properly
Supported by organization
Branding – endowing products and services with the power of brand; all about
creating differences
Key to branding: consumers must not think that all brands in the category are the
same
Branding can be applied virtually anywhere a consumer has a choice:
Reflected in how consumers think, feel, and act with respect to the brand, as well
as prices, market share, and profitability that the brand commands for the firm
An important intangible asset that has psychological and financial value to the
firm
The power of a brand lies in the minds of existing or potential customers and what
brand
Greater loyalty
Larger margins
Inelastic consumer response to price increases
Licensing opportunities
All marketing dollars spent each year on the products and services should be
Brand Promise – the marketer’s vision of what the brand must be and do for
consumers
True value and future prospects of a brand rest with consumers, their knowledge
about the brand, and their likely response to marketing activity as a result of this
knowledge
Brand Equity Models:
Knowledge
examining the relationships among these four dimensions reveals much about its
current & future status
Aaker Model (by David Aaker)
Views brand equity as a set of 5 categories of brand assets and
liabilities linked to a brand that add or subtract from the value provided by a
product or service to a firm and/or to that firm’s customers
1. Brand loyalty
2. Brand awareness
3. Perceived quality
4. Brand associations
5. Other proprietary assets such as patents, trademarks, and channel
relationships
Brand Identity – the unique set of brand associations that represent what the
brand stands for and promises to customers
1. Brand-as product (product scope, attributes, quality/value, uses, users,
country of origin)
2. Brand-as-organization (org attributes, local vs. global)
3. Brand-as-person (brand personality, bran-customer relationships
4. Brand-as-symbol (visual imagery/metaphors and brand heritage)
BRANDZ (Millward Brown and WPP)
Brand building involves a sequential series of steps, where each step is
contingent upon successfully accomplishing the previous step
Studies show that bonded consumers (at top level of pyramid( build stronger
relationships with the brand and spend more of their category expenditures
on the brand than those at lower levels of pyramid
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Positioning – the act of designing the company’s offering and image to occupy a
product. Positioning is what you do to the mind of the prospect. That is, you
brand, positively evaluate, and believe that they could not find to the same extent with a
competitive brand
Point-of-Parity (POPs) – associations that are not necessarily unique to the brand but may
2. Comparing to exemplars
Relevance
Distinctiveness
Believability
Feasibility
Communicability
Sustainability
Many attributes or benefits that make up the POP and POD are negatively
correlated. Examples:
Present Separately
Product Differentiation
Product form
Features
Performance
Conformance
Durability
Reliability
Reparability
Style
Design
Ordering ease
Delivery
Installation
Customer training
Customer consulting
Maintenance
Personnel Differentiation
Channel Differentiation
Image Differentiation
Identifying Competitors
the range of a company’s actual and potential competitors can be much broader
by current competitors
Pure monopoly
Oligopoly
Monopolistic competition
Pure competition
Cost Structure – each industry has a certain cost burden that shapes much of its
strategic conduct
Company can manipulate prices and costs in different parts of the value chain to
The market concept of competition reveals a broader set of actual and potential
competitors
Analyzing Competitors
Once a company identifies its primary competitors, it must ascertain their strategies,
Strategies
Strategic group – a group of firms following the same strategy in a given target
market
Objectives
What is each competitor seeking in the marketplace? What drives each competitor’s
behavior?
leadership
Share of mind – % of customer who named the competitor in: “Name the first
Name the company from which you would prefer to buy the product.”
Companies that make steady gains in the mind share and heart share will inevitably
Selecting Competitors
Market leader
Market challenger
Market follower
Market nichers
Expanding the Total Market (The dominant firm normally gains the most when the total
market expands)
Anticipative Marketer – looks ahead into what needs customers may have in the
near future
Creative Marketer – discovers and produces solutions customers did not ask for but
6 Defense strategies:
Position Defense
Flank Defense
Preemptive Defense
Counteroffensive Defense
Mobile Defense
Contraction Defense
Market-Challenger Strategies
it can attact firms of its own size that are not doing the job and are
underfinanced
Frontal attack – attacker matches its opponent’s product, advertising, price, and
distribution
Flank attack
underperforming
gaps to develop, then rushing in to fill the gaps and develop them into strong
segments
Encirclement Attack – attempt to capture a wide slice of the enemy’s territory
Bypass Attack – most indirect assault; bypassing the enemy and attacking easier
Price discounts
Lower-priced goods
Value-priced goods
Prestige goods
Product proliferation
Product innovation
Improved services
Distribution innovation
Manufacturing-cost reduction
Market-Follower Strategies
Counterfeiter
Cloner – emulates the leader’s products, name, and packaging, with slight variations
Imitator – copies some thins from the leader but maintains differentiation in terms of
Firms with low shares of the total market can be highly profitable through smart
niching
Tend to offer high value, charge a premium price, achieve lower manufacturing
Market nicher ends up knowing the target customers so well that it meets their
3 tasks of nichers:
Create niches
Expand niches
Protect niches
Competitor Centered
Customer Centered
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Market Profile – review how the line is positioned against competitors’ lines
Product line – shows which competitors’ items are competing againt company’s
items
Product-Line Length
Line Stretching – occurs when a company lengthens its product line beyond its
current range
Down-Market Stretch
Up-Market Stretch
Two-Way Stretch
Product-Mix Pricing
Product-line pricing
Optional-feature pricing
Captive-product pricing
Two-part pricing
By-product pricing
Product-bundling
brands are combined into a joint product and/or marketed together in some fashion
All activties of designing and producing the containter for a product (primary,
secondary, shipping)
The buyers’s first encounter with the product and is capable of turning the buyer on
or off
Sef-service – effective package must perform many of the sales tasks: attract
to pay a little more for the convenience, appearance, dependability, and prestige
of better packages
company or brand
Packaging objectives:
Identify the brand
Labeling
Functions of labels:
manufacturer
Guarantees – reduces buyer’s perceived risk; suggest that the product is of high
quality and that the company and its service performance are dependable
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Government sector
Manufacturing sector
Retail sector
Service – any act or performance that one party can offer to another that is
essentially intangible and does not result in the ownership of anything; may or not be
maintenance
Major service with accompanying minor goods and services – e.g. airline
Service Distinctions
Service processes
Intangibility
Services cannot be seen, tasted, felt, heard, or smelled before they are bought
Performance clue
Context clues
Variability – services will depend on who provides them and when and where they
are provided
So services is not uniformly bad for all customers (i.e. big spenders get special
customers well
Customer Expectations
If perceived service falls below the expected service, customers are disappointed
If perceived service meets or exceeds their expectations, they are apt to use the
provider again
Successful companies add benefits to their offering that not only satisfy customers
expectations
3. Assurance – knowledge and courtesy of employees and their ability to convey trust
and confidence
communication materials
Strategic Concept
Top-Management Commitment
High Standards
Self-Service Technologies (SSTS)
Monitoring Systems
Satisfying Employees
Differentiating Services
Devising Branding Strategy (consider developing brand hierarchy and brand portfolio
Customer worries:
Failure frequency
Out-of-pocket costs
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Failure to vary price by product item, market segment, distribution channels, and
purchase occasion
Consumer Psychology and Pricing – purchase decisions are based on how consumers
perceive prices and what they consider to be the current actual price – not the marketer’s
stated price
Reference prices
Price-quality inferences
rounding
Demand was actually increased 1/3 by raising the price from $34 to $39, but
demand was unchanged when the price was increased from $34 to $44.
Prices that end with “0” or “5” are also common in the marketplace – thought to
“Sale” signs next to prices have been shown to spur demand, but only if not
overused
Total category sales are highest when some, but not all, items in a category
have sale signs; past a certain point, use of additional sale signs will cause
Survival
Product-quality leadership
Other objectives
Step 2: Determining Demand
Price sensitivity
Accumulated production
Target Costing
Markup pricing
Markup pricing works only if the marked-up price actually brings in the expected
level of sales
Target-return pricing
Perceived-value pricing
The key to perceived-value pricing is to deliver more value than the competitor
Value pricing
Going-rate pricing
Auction-type pricing
Sealed-bid auctions
arrangement, Offset
Allowance
Promotional Pricing
Loss-leader pricing
Special-event pricing
Cash rebates
Low-interest financing
Psychological discounting
Differentiated Pricing
Price discrimination – company sells a product or service at two or more prices that do not
2nd degree price discrimination – seller charges less to buyers who buy a larger
volume
classes of buyers:
Image pricing – price the same product at two different levels based on image
differences (perfume)
though the cost of offering at each location is the same (e.g. theater)
Time pricing – prices are varied by season, day, or hour (e.g. hotels)
Possible traps:
Fragile-market-share trap – low price buys market share but not market loyalty;
Shallow-pockets trap – higher-priced competitors may cut their prices and may
Delayed quotation pricing – company does not set a final price until the product
is finished or delivered
Escalator clauses – company requires the customer to pay today’s price and all
Unbundling – company maintains its price but removes or prices separately one
or more elements that were part of the former offer, such as free delivery or
installation
Reduction of discounts – company instructs its sales force not to offer its
Customer Reactions
Competitor Reactions
Maintain price
Reduce price
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Importance of Channels
a firm
Chief role: to convert potential buyers into profitable orders; not just serve
The channel hosen affect all other marketing decisions (i.e. price, promotion)
Push strategy – involves the manufacturer using its sales force and trade promotion
money to induce intermediaries to carry, promote, and sell the product to end users
Appropriate where there is low brand loyalty in a category
persuade consumers to ask intermediaries for the product, thus inducing the
intermediaries to order
Appropriate when there is high brand loyalty and high involvement in the
category:
When people perceive differences between brands, and when people choose
Channel Development
Deciding on the best channel might not be a problem; the problem might be
Value Networks
A system of partnerships and alliances that a firm creates to source, augment, and
Company should first think of the target market and then design the supply chain
Emphasizes what solutions consumers are looking for, not what product we are
Many producers lack the financial resources to carry out direct marketing
Producers who do establish their own channels can often earn a greater return
Backward flow of activity – customers to the company (i.e. ordering and payment)
Channel Levels
Producers of services and ideas also face the problem of making their output
Channel-Design Decision
5 service outputs:
Lot size
Spatial convenience – degree to which the marketing channel makes it easy for
Product variety
Service backup
Bulky products, such as building materials, require channels that minimize the
Channel design must take into account the strengths and weaknesses of different
types of intermediaries
3 Strategies:
Used when the producer wants to maintain control over the service level
Selective distribution – use of more than a few but less than all of the
Company can gain adequate market coverage with more control and less
Generally used for items such as tobacco products, soap, snack foods,
and gum, products for which the consumer requires a great deal of
location convenience
“trade-relation mix”
Price policy
Conditions of sale
Economic Criteria – each channel alternative will produce a different level of sales
and costs
a channel advantage
Channel power – the ability to alter channel members’ behavior so that they take actions
Coercive power
Reward power
Legitimate power
Expert power
Referent power
Franchise organizations
The new competition in retailing – many independent retailers that have not
joined VMSs have developed specialty stores that serve special market
segments
Two or more unrelated companies put together resources or programs to exploit and
Occurs when a single firm uses two or more marketing channels to reach one or
By adding more channels, companies can gain three important benefits: increased
Multichannel conflict
Goal incompatibility
Difference in perception
Managing Conflict
another organization by including them in the advisory councils, BOD, and the
like
Diplomacy
Mediation
Arbitration
Pure-Click Companies
Brick-and-Click Companies
Table of Contents
Includes all activities involved in selling goods or services directly to final consumers
Types of Retailers
Levels of Service
Self-service
Self-selection
Limited service
Full service
Direct marketing
Automatic vending
Corporate Retailing
Showcase store
Marketing Decisions
Target market – until the target market is defined and profile, the retailer cannot
Services and Store Atmosphere – the services mix is a key tool for differentiating
Store must embody a planned atmosphere that suits the target market and draws
experience (see, touch, test products, real-life customer service, no delivery lag
Price Decision
Prices are key positioning factor and must be decided in relation to the target
Communication Decision
Each retailer must use communications that support and reinforce its image
positioning
Strip malls
Trends in Retailing
Private Labels
House brands
competitors
The growing power of store brands is not the only factor weakening national brands
Wholesaling
Includes all activities involved in selling goods or services to those who buy for
they are dealing with business customers rather than final consumers
Wholesalers are used when they are more efficient in performing one or more of the
following functions:
Bulk breaking
Warehousing
Transportation
Financing
Risk bearing
Market information
Price Decision
Promotion Decision
Place Decision
Trends in Wholesaling
Market Logistics
Market-Logistics Objectives
cost
Market-Logistics Decisions
Order Processing
Warehousing
Inventory
Transportation
Organizational Lessons
1. Companies should appoint a senior VP for logistics to be the single point of contact
production schedules
3. New software and systems are the key to achieving competitively superior logistics