pb201 topic 5 overview of marketing
TRANSCRIPT
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
1/18
TOPIC 5
OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
[Type the abstract of the document here. The abstract is typically a short summary of the contents of
the document. Type the abstract of the document here. The abstract is typically a short summary of the
contents of the document.]
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
2/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 79
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
5.0 INTRODUCTION
Marketing is about identifying and understanding your customer and giving them
what they want. It's not just about advertising and promoting the business. Effective
marketing is a result of examining every aspect of business and how it affects the
consumer's end experience. It covers everything you'll need to do in order to deliver your
products and services to the consumer including research, planning, pricing, packaging,
promotion, selling and distribution.
5.1 DEFINITION OF MARKETING
Figure 5.1: Definition of Marketing
Marketing is a social and managerial process by which individuals and
groups obtain what they need and want through creating andexchanging product and value with others.
American MarketingAssociation
Marketing is a planningand implementationprocess of concepts,price, promotion andidea distribution,product and services toform a transaction thatsatisfy the individualand organizationobjectives.
Peter F Drucker (1954)
Marketing is not just aselling process; neitherspecific to one activityonly. It contains allbusiness activities. Theresult can be seen fromthe final result, fromthe consumerperspective. Themarketingresponsibility must beseen from all sides ofbusiness.
Kotler & Armstrong(2011)
Marketing as theprocess by whichcompanies create valuefor customers and buildstrong customerrelationship in order tocapture value fromcustomers in return.
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
3/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 80
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
5.2 CORE MARKETING CONCEPT
There are several important terms in marketing; needs, wants, and demands;
products; value, satisfaction and quality; exchange, transactions, and relationships; andmarkets. These terms are the core marketing concept. These core marketing concepts are
linked, with each concept building on the one before it.
Figure 5.2: Core Marketing Concepts
Needs
The most basic concept in marketing. A needs is a situation or a feeling of inadequacy which
is felt by an individual that requires him/her to fulfill it. A needs includes a basic physical
necessities such as food, shelter and cloth.
CoreMarketing
Concept
Value,Satisfactionand Quality
Products
Exchange,Transactions
and
Relationships
Markets
Needs,Wants &Demands
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
4/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 81
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
Wants
Wants refer to a higher level of needs. For example, a man who is hungry may want rice,
laksa or bread. Wants are needs which are translated in the form of products or services.
Humans have unlimited wants but limited resources. As a result, they have to choose the
products or services that offer the most value for every ringgit spent.
Demands
Demands are wants for specific products that are backed by an ability and willingness to buy
them. Wants become demands when supported by purchasing power.
Markets
A market is a set of actual and potential buyers who might transact with a seller
Exchange, Transactions, and Relationship
Product
A product is anything that can be offered to satisfy a need or a want.
Value, Satisfaction, and Quality
Customer value is the difference between the customer benefits from owning and/orusing a product and the costs of obtaining the product..
Customer satisfaction is perceived value delivered relative to a buyers expectations.
Quality is the totality of features and characteristics of a product or service that bear on
its ability to satisfy customer needs.
Exchange
Exchange is the act ofobtaining a desiredobject from someoneby offering somethingin return.
Transactions
A transaction ismarketings unit ofmeasurement andconsists of a trade ofvalues between two
parties
Relations Marketing
Relationshipmarketing is buildingstrong economicrelationships betweenwith social ties by
following through onpromises
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
5/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 82
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
5.3 MARKETING MIX 4 PS
Product
A product is anything that can be offered to a
market for attention, acquisition, use or
consumption that might satisfy a want or
need.
It includes physical objects, service, places,
organizations, and ideas.
Price
Price is the amount of money charged for aproduct or service, or the sum of all the
values that customers give in order to gainbenefits of having or using a product or
service. (Kotler & Armstrong, 2011)
Price can determine the success or failure ofmarketing efforts. Hence, the marketer
plays an important role to convinceconsumers that what they buy is value for
money that they are willing to let go.
Promotion
Used to inform, persuade and remind theconsumer about the existence of a product.
Promotion Mix: Advertising, PersonalSelling, Sales promotion, Public Relations
and Direct Marketing
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
6/18
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
7/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 84
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
5.4 FUNCTIONS OF MARKETING
From the marketing definition, we can determine the marketing process roles and its
importance.
Monitor the external factors (economics andcompetitors) and data collection to solve a marketingspecific issues.
Environment Analysis& Marketing Research
Investigate the consumer characteristics, their needsand buying process.
Consumer Analysis
Product development and improvement, productdiversity, product placing, brand name and choice, toend the production of certain product.
Product Planning(Product, Service &
Ideas)
Create a networking, physical distribution, inventorymanagement, warehousing, transportation, product
placing, wholesaler and retailer.
Planning Distribution
Combination of advertising, publicity, personal sales,sales promotion, public relation and other form ofcommunication
Promotion Planning
Management process (planning and implementation)of marketing strategy, which are the product, price,place and promotion through business transactionsthat can maximize consumer satisfaction.
MarketingManagement
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
8/18
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
9/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 86
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
For most companies, the micro environmental components are: the company,
suppliers, marketing channel firms (intermediaries), customers markets, competitors and
publics which combine to make up the companys value deliverysystem (Figure 5.5).
The macro environmental components are thought to be: demographic, economic,
natural, technological, political, and cultural (Figure 5.6). The wise marketing manager
knows that he or she cannot always affect environmental forces. However, smart managers
can take a proactive, rather than reactive, approach to the marketing environment.
As marketing management collects and processes data on these environments, they
must be ever vigilant in their efforts to apply what they learn to developing opportunities
and dealing with threats. Studies have shown that excellent companies not only have a keen
sense of customer but an appreciation of the environmental forces swirling around them.
By constantly looking at the dynamic changes that are occurring in the
aforementioned environments, companies are better prepared to adapt to change, prepare
long-range strategy, meet the needs of todays and tomorrows customers, and compete
with the intense competition present in the global marketplace. All firms are encouraged to
adopt an environmental management perspective in the new millennium. A
companysmarketing environment consists of the actors and forces outside marketing that
affect marketing managements ability to develop and maintain successful relationships
with its target customers.
Figure 5.5: Companys Micro Environment Components
CompanysMicro
Environment
The Company
Suppliers
MarketingIntermediaries
CustomersMarkets
Competitors
Publics
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
10/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 87
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
5.5.1 The Companys MicroEnvironment
As discussed earlier the companys microenvironment consists of six forces that
affect its ability to serve its customers.
a. The Company
The first force is the company itself and the role it plays in the microenvironment.
This could be deemed the internal environment.
b. Suppliers
Suppliers are firms and individuals that provide the resources needed by the
company and its competitors to produce goods and services. They are an important link in
the companys overall customer value delivery system.
c. Marketing Intermediaries
Marketing intermediaries are firms that help the company to promote, sell, and
distribute its goods to final buyers. Resellers are distribution channel firms that help the
company find customers or make sales to them. These include wholesalers and retailers who
buy and resell merchandise.
Top management is responsible for
setting the companys mission,objectives, broad strategies, and policies.
Marketing managers must make
decisions within the parametersestablished by top management.
Marketing managers must also workclosely with other company departments.Areas such as finance, R&D, purchasing,
manufacturing, and accounting allproduce better results when aligned by
common objectives and goals.
All departments must think consumerif the firm is to be successful. The goal isto provide superior customer value and
satisfaction.
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
11/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 88
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
Resellers often perform important functions more cheaply than the company can
perform itself. However, seeking and working with resellers is not easy because of the
power that some demand and use.
Physical distribution firms help the company to stock and move goods from their
points of origin to their destinations. Examples would be warehouses (that store and
protect goods before they move to the next destination).
Marketing service agencies (such as marketing research firms, advertising agencies,
media firms, etc.) help the company target and promote its products. Financial
intermediaries (such as banks, credit companies, insurance companies, etc.) help finance
transactions and insure against risks.
d. CustomersThe company must study its customer markets closely since each market has its own
special characteristics. These markets normally include:
Individuals and households that buy goods andservices for personal consumption
Consumer Markets
Buy goods and services for further processing
or for use in their production processBusiness Markets
Buy goods and services in order to resell themat a profit
Reseller Markets
Agencies that buy goods and services in orderto produce public services or transfer them tothose that need them.
Government Markets
Buyers of all types in foreign countriesInternational Markets
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
12/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 89
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
e. Competitors
Every company faces a wide range of competitors. A company must secure a
strategic advantage over competitors by positioning their offerings to be successful in the
marketplace. No single competitive strategy is best for all companies.
f. Publics
A public is any group that has an actual or potential interest in or impact on an
organizations ability to achieve its objectives. A company should prepare a marketing plan
for all of their major publics as well as their customer markets.
Generally, publics can be identified as being:
Financial Publics influence the companys ability to obtain funds
Media Publics carry news, features, and editorial opinion
GovernmentPublics
take developments into account
Citizen-actionPublics
a companys decisions are often questioned byconsumer organizations.
Local Publics includes neighborhood residents and community
organizations
General Publicsa company must be concerned about the general
publics attitude toward its products and services.
Internal Publicsworkers, managers, volunteers, and the board of
directors
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
13/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 90
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
5.5.2 The Companys Macro Environment
The company and all of the other actors operate in a larger macro environment of
forces that shape opportunities and pose threats to the company (Figure 5.6).
a. Demographic Environment
Demography is the study of human populations in terms of size, density, location,
age, sex, race, occupation, and other statistics. It is of major interest to marketers because it
involves people and people make up markets. Demographic trends are constantly changing.
Some more interesting ones are.
The worlds population (though not all countries) rate is growing at an explosive rate
that will soon exceed food supply and ability to adequately service the population. The
greatest danger is in the poorest countries where poverty contributes to the difficulties.Emerging markets such as China are receiving increased attention from global marketers.
The most important trend is the changing age structure of the population. The
population is aging because of a slowdown in the birth rate (in this country) and life
expectancy is increasing. The baby boomers following World War II have produced a huge
bulge in our populations age distribution. The new prime market is the middle age group
(in the future it will be the senior citizen group).
There are many subdivisions of this group.
a) Generation X--this group lies in the shadow of the boomers and lack obvious
distinguishing characteristics. They are a very cynical group because of all the difficulties that
have surrounded and impacted their group.
b) Echo boomers (baby boomlets) are the large growing kid and teen market. This group
is used to affluence on the part of their parents (as different from the Gen Xers). One
distinguishing characteristic is their utter fluency and comfort with computer, digital, and
Internet technology (sometimes called Net-Gens).
c) Generational marketing is possible, however, caution must be used to avoid
generational alienation. Many in the modern family now telecommute--work at home or in
a remote office and conduct their business using fax, cell phones, modem, or the Internet In
general, the population is becoming better educated. The work force is be-coming more
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
14/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 91
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
white-collar. Products such as books and education services appeal to groups following this
trend.
Technical skills (such as in computers) will be a must in the future. The final
demographic trend is the increasing ethnic and racial diversity of the population. Diversity is
a force that must be recognized in the next decade. However, companies must recognize
that diversity goes beyond ethnic heritage. One the important markets of the future are that
disabled people (a market larger any of our ethnic minority groups).
Figure 5.6: Companys Macro Environment Components
CompanysMacro
Environment
Demographic
Economic
Natural
Technological
Political
Cultural
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
15/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 92
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
b. Economic Environment
The economic environment includes those factors that affect consumer purchasingpower and spending patterns. Major economic trends in the United States include:
c. Natural Environment
The natural environment involves natural resources that are needed as inputs bymarketers or that are affected by marketing activities. During the past two decadesenvironmental concerns have steadily grown. Some trend analysts labeled the specific areasof concern were:
Shortages of raw materials.
Personal Consumption(along with personal debt) has gone up (1980s) andthe early 1990s brought recession that has caused adjustments both
personally and corporately in this country. Today, consumers are morecareful shoppers.
Value Marketing (trying to offer the consumer greater value for theirdollar) is a very serious strategy in the 1990s. Real income is on the rise
again but is being carefully guarded by a value-conscious consumer.
Income Distribution is still very skewed in the U. S. and all classes have notshared in prosperity. In addition, spending patterns show that food,
housing, and transportation still account for the majority of consumer
dollars. It is also of note that distribution of income has created a two-tiered market where there are those that are affluent and less affluent.Marketers must carefully monitor economic changes so they will be able to
prosper with the trend, not suffer from it.
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
16/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 93
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
Staples such as air, water, and wood products have been seriously damaged and non-renewable such as oil, coal, and various minerals have been seriously depleted duringindustrial expansion.
Increased pollution
A worldwide problem. Industrial damage to the environment is very serious. Far-sightedcompanies are becoming environmentally friendly and are producing environmentallysafe and recyclable or biodegradable goods. The public response to these companies iscouraging. However, lack of adequate funding, especially in third world countries, is a majorbarrier.
Government intervention
In natural resource management has caused environmental concerns to be more
practical and necessary in business and industry. Leadership, not punishment, seems to bethe best policy for long-term results. Instead of opposing regulation, marketers should helpdevelop solutions to the material and energy problems facing the world.
Environmentally sustainable strategies.
The so-called green movement has encouraged or even demanded that firms producestrategies that are not only environmentally friendly but are also environmentally proactive.Firms are beginning to recognize the link between a healthy economy and a healthyenvironment.
d. Technological Environment
The technological environment includes forces that create new technologies, creatingnew product and market opportunities.
Technology is perhaps themost dramatic force shaping
our destiny
New technologies create new
markets and opportunities
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
17/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 94
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
The following trends are worth watching:
e. Political Environment
The political environment includes laws, government agencies, and pressure groupsthat influence and limit various organizations and individuals in a given society. Various
forms of legislation regulate business.
Governments develop public policy to guide commerce--sets of laws and regulationslimiting business for the good of society as a whole. Almost every marketing activity issubject to a wide range of laws and regulations. Some trends in the political environmentinclude:
1) Increasing legislation to:
a) Protect companiesfrom each other.
b)
Protecting consumersfrom unfair business practices.c) Protecting interests of societyagainst unrestrained business behavior.
Faster pace of technological change.Products are being technologicallyoutdated at a rapid pace.
There seems to be almost unlimited
opportunities being developed daily.Consider the expanding fields of healthcare, the space shuttle, robotics, and
biogenetic industries.
The challenge is not only technical butalso commercial--to make practical,
affordable versions of products.
Increased regulation. Marketers shouldbe aware of the regulations concerningproduct safety, individual privacy, andother areas that affect technological
changes. They must also be alert to anypossible negative aspects of an
innovation that might harm users orarouse opposition.
-
8/9/2019 PB201 Topic 5 Overview of Marketing
18/18
PB 201 Entrepreneurship 95
TOPIC 5 OVERVIEW OF MARKETING
2) Changing government agency enforcement. New laws and their enforcement willcontinue or increase.
3) Increased emphasis on ethics and socially responsible actions. Socially responsiblefirms actively seek out ways to protect the long-run interests of their consumers and the
environment.
f. Cultural Environment
The cultural environment, defined as institutions and other forces that affect asocieties basic values, perceptions, preferences, and behaviors, is one of the many forces
that affect marketing management's ability to build and maintain successful relationships
with target customers.
Enlightened companiesencourage their
managers to look beyond
regulation and do theright thing.
Recent scandals haveincreased concern about
ethics and socialresponsibility.
The boom in e-commerceand Internet marketinghas created a new set ofsocial and ethical issues.
Concerns are Privacy,Security, Access by
vulnerable orunauthorized groups.