Introduction To Marketing

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Introduction To Marketing Marketing Functions Utility Marketing Concept

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Introduction To Marketing . Marketing Functions Utility Marketing Concept. The process of developing, promoting, and distributing products to satisfy customers’ needs and wants. . What Is Marketing?. Products – goods and services that have monetary value. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Introduction To Marketing

Page 1: Introduction To Marketing

Introduction To Marketing

Marketing FunctionsUtility

Marketing Concept

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The process of developing, promoting, and distributing products to satisfy

customers’ needs and wants.

What Is Marketing?

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Products – goods and services that have monetary value

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Goods – things you can touch or hold

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Services – you can’t physically touch – tasks performed for a customer

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Marketing is based on Exchange

Marketing connects business’ to their customers.

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ExchangeAn exchange

takes place every time something is sold in the marketplace.

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EXCHANGEWhen the producer is someone other than the consumer, some form of exchange takes place.

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Foundations of Marketing

Business, Management, EntrepreneurshipCommunication and Interpersonal SkillsEconomicsProfessional Development

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Functions of Marketing

Activities that work together to get goods and services from producers to consumers

Each is essential

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Distribution

Deciding where and to whom products need to be sold to reach the final users.

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Financing

Getting the money necessary to operate a business

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Marketing Information Management

Getting information to make sound business decisions. Usually obtained through marketing research

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For example, after a stay at a luxury hotel, you fill out a form rating the service and accommodations.

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Pricing

How much to charge to maximize profits

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Product Service Management

Obtaining, developing, maintaining, and improving a product or a product mix in response to market opportunities.

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Promotion

Communicating with potential customers to inform, persuade, or remind them about a business’s products

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Selling

Planned, personalized communication that influences purchasing decisions

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The Marketing Concept

Businesses must satisfy customers’ needs and wants in order to make a profit

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Click on the Model T Ford to see Henry Ford’s thoughts about car color in the early 1900’s.

When Henry Ford first created the Model T, he was the only one mass producing cars. He didn’t have to think about “The Marketing Concept.” But, as more and more producers started making cars, they had to think about what customers need and want in order to stay in business.

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Imagine if, in today’s world, you could only buy black. Many customers would not be

very happy!

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The Marketing Concept

If automobile manufactures do not give their customers a choice (what they want), they will not stay in business.

That concept is true for all businesses.You must give the customer what they need and

want.

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The Marketing Concept

Businesses must satisfy customers’ needs and wants in order to make a profit

That is what we mean by The Marketing Concept

Businesses must know their customers . . .

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Economic Benefits of Marketing

Marketing bridges the gap between you and the maker or seller of an item

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Lower Prices – marketing activities add value and increase demand. When demand is high, manufacturers can produce at a lower price. They can sell at a lower price but increase the quantity sold. Thus, profits are higher even though prices are low.

Economic Benefits of Marketing

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Economic Benefits of Marketing

It adds VALUE

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Added Value = Utility

In economic terms, utility does not mean your closet or the electric company.

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There are five types of Utility:

Attributes of a product or service that make it capable of satisfying consumers’ wants and needs.

Added Value = Utility

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Form UtilityChanging raw materials or putting parts together to make them more useful – making and producing things.

• Sand into glass• Wood into paper• Silk into fabric

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Place UtilityHaving a product where customers can buy it.

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It Involves

Location – may be through a catalog or at a retailer (actual store) – or, Internet.

Transporting the product to the location.

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Time Utility

Having a product available at a certain time of year or a convenient time of day.

• Planning and ordering• Time of day and week• Time of year: holidays and seasons

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The exchange of a product for some monetary value.

Possession Utility

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Payment may be made by

CashPersonal checksCredit cards Installments (layaway)

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Which types of utility are related to marketing?

Form utility is a function of production, NOT marketing

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Market – all potential customers who have the ability and willingness to buy

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Consumer MarketsConsist of

consumers who purchase goods and services for personal use.

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Industrial MarketsBusiness-to-business (B-to B) markets

include all businesses that buy products for use in their operations.

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Market ShareA company’s percentage of the total sales

volume generated by all companies that compete in a given market.

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Target Marketing

Focusing all decisions on a very specific group of people who you want to reach.

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Customer Profile

To develop a clear picture of their target market, businesses create a customer profile.

It lists information about the target market, such as age, income level, occupation, attitudes, lifestyle, and geographic residence

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Customers –

people who buy the product

Consumers – people who actually use the product

Is mom the customer or the consumer? The kids?

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Marketing Mix

Basic marketing strategies – the four P’s

ProductPlacePricePromotion

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Product Strategies What product to make How to package it What brand name to use What image to project

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Place Strategies How and where a

product will be distributed.

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Price Strategies Reflect what customers are willing and able to pay.

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Promotion StrategiesHow potential customers will be told

about the new productWhat the message will beWhen and where it will be deliveredWhat inducements are there to buy

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The Marketing Mix

The elements are interconnected

ProductPlace

Price

Promotion

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The Marketing Mix – The 4 P’s

Contains countless alternatives.Management must select a combination of

marketing mix decisions that will satisfy target markets and achieve organizational goals.

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Analyzing Markets

Market segmentation is a way of analyzing a market by specific characteristics in order to create a target market

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Types of Segmentation:

DemographicsPsychographicsGeographicsBehavioral

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Demographics – statistics that describe a population in terms of personal characteristics.

AgeBaby Boom GenerationGeneration X Generation Y

Gender

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IncomeDisposable income –

money left after taking out taxes

Discretionary income – money left after paying for basic living necessities such as food, shelter, and clothing

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Marital Status

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Psychographics

Involves grouping people with similar lifestyles, as well as shared attitudes, values, and opinions. Activities Attitudes Personality & Values

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Geographics – Segmentation based on where people live

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Behavioral SegmentationLooking at the benefits desired by

consumers, shopping patterns, and usage rate. Market benefits, not just the physical characteristics of a product

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Behavioral Segmentation

Many businesses find that the 80/20 rule applies.

80 % of a company’s sales are generated by 20 % of its loyal customers.

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Mass Marketing Vs Segmentation

Mass marketing not as popular as it once was.Niche marketing (the current trend) – markets

are narrowed down and defined with extreme precision.