Marketing Management 11
Marketing Management 11
Marketing Management 11
offer to a group of consumers and also making decisions about customer service, brand
name, packaging, labeling, product life cycles and new product development. The pricing
strategy deals with the methods of setting profitable and justifiable prices. Marketers
develop place (distribution) strategy to ensure that consumers find their products
available in the proper quantities at the right times and places. Place-related decisions
involve the distribution functions and marketing intermediaries (channel members). In
the promotional strategy, marketers blend together the various elements of promotion to
communicate most effectively with their target market. Many firms use an approach
called Integrate Marketing Communications (IMC) to coordinate all promotional
activities so that the consumer receives a unified, consistent and effective message.
Marketers do not make decisions about target markets and marketing mix
variables in a vacuum. They must take into account the dynamic nature of the five
marketing environmental dimensions as shown in Figure 1.1.1 – competitive, political-
legal, economic, technological and social-cultural dimensions. Marketers compete for the
same consumers. So the developments in the competitive environment will have lot of
repercussions. The political-legal environment includes the governing and regulatory
bodies who impose guidelines to the marketers. Adherence to the law of the land is an
imperative for a marketer to be a good and responsible corporate citizen. The economic
environment dictates the mood in the target market who take decisions such as to buy or
save, to buy now or later. The technological environment can spell life or death for a
marketer with break-through technologies. Marketers often leap forward or get left
behind owing to the changes in the technological environment. The social-cultural
environment offers cues for the marketers to ‘connect’ well with the target market.
Failure on part of the marketer to understand the social-cultural environment will have
serious consequences. A marketers can not afford to rub a society/culture on the wrong
side!
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Extending the Traditional Boundaries of Marketing
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With the growth of the services sector, marketers realized that services cannot be
marketed in the same way as the products. Certain characteristics of services posed
serious problems for marketers who realized that services marketing must be done
differently and not with the same marketing mix (4 Ps) variables. Service characteristics
like intangibility (service firms don’t sell a tangible thing, but a promise) inseparability
(production and consumption of services take place at about the same time),
heterogeneity (the problem due to the fact that no two service providers are like, nor are
the service consumers) and perishability (service providers cannot maintain inventories of
their products). To cope with these challenges, service marketers suggest additional 3 Ps
– process, physical evidence and people. The process is aimed at solving the
heterogeneity or variability problem associated with the services by providing a service
blueprint. The physical evidence solves some of the problems associated with the
intangible nature of services. The physical evidence in terms of service environment,
equipment, personnel and so on attempts to tangibilize the intangible. The final P –
People – gives lot of attention to the service providers because they are, strictly speaking,
part of the service provided. They can influence the perceived service quality in a big
way.
With the world becoming a global village, marketers started targeting global
audience for their products and services. International marketers implement the basic
marketing framework discussed earlier. However transactions that cross national
boundaries encounter an additional set of environmental factors. For example, differences
in laws, economic conditions, cultural and business norms and consumer preferences
other demand variations in marketing strategies. The biggest challenge in international
marketing is managing the international business environment. With many
uncontrollable factors, sharing complex relationships among them, the international
marketer faces the dilemma of whether to standardize or differentiate his marketing mix.
Non-profit organizations encounter a special set of characteristics that influence
their marketing activities. Like for-profit firms, non-profit firms may market tangible
goods and/or intangible services and operate in B2C and B2B markets. An important
distinction is that profit-seeking businesses tend to focus their marketing on just one
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public – their customers. Non-profit businesses however must often market to multiple
publics (say, their clients and sponsors), which complicates decision making regarding
the markets to target. Also a customer or service user may wield less control over the
organization’s destiny than would be true for customers of a profit-seeking firm. As a
result, non-profit marketing must fine tune its marketing variables to adjust to these
conditions.
Activity 1.1.4
Match the following:
Functions of Marketing
Firms must spend money to create time, place and ownership utilities as discussed
earlier. Several studies have been made to measure marketing costs in relation to overall
product costs and service costs and most estimates have ranged between 40-60 percent.
These costs are not associated with raw materials or any of the other production functions
necessary for creating form utility. What then does the consumer receive in return for this
proportion of marketing cost? This question is answered by understanding the functions
performed by marketing.
In the following table, marketing is responsible for the performance of 8 universal
functions: buying, selling, transporting, storing, standardizing and grading, financing, risk
taking and securing marketing information. Some functions are performed by
manufacturers, others by marketing intermediaries like wholesalers and retailers. Buying
and selling, the first two functions represent exchange functions. Transporting and storing
are physical distribution functions. The final four marketing functions – standardizing
and grading, financing, risk taking and securing market information – are often called
facilitating functions because they assist the marketer in performing the exchange and
physical distribution functions.
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Table 1.1.3 Functions of Marketing
Amazon.com could well go down in history as a love child born of the heady fling
that the stockmarket had with dotcoms in the late 1990s. But the company, founded by
Jeff Bezos in July 1995 when the internet was still an untested business medium, is a
survivor-par-excellence. It floundered a bit in the swirl of the dotcom bust, but unlike
thousands that were swept away, Amazon.com reinvented itself and emerged stronger.
The 40-year old Bezos, a computer science grad from Princeton University, is the pioneer
of Internet Retailing. His compelling vision introduced a new paradigm for retail, the
click-and-buy model; buy goods from a website instead of a physical store, from
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