Analyzing The Marke0ng Environment: Chapter 4
Analyzing The Marke0ng Environment: Chapter 4
Analyzing The Marke0ng Environment: Chapter 4
the
Marke0ng
Environment
Chapter
4
Macroenvironment:
Consists of larger societal forces that affect
the microenvironment
Demographic, economic, technological, political,
natural, and cultural forces
Macroenvironment:
Consists of larger societal forces that affect
the microenvironment
Demographic, economic, technological, political,
natural, and cultural forces
Company
Compe0tors
Customer
Intermediaries
Micro-
environemnt
Suppliers
Company
Compe0tors
Customer
Intermediaries
Micro-
environemnt
Suppliers
The Microenvironment
Customers:
Companies may target any or all of the types
of markets, including:
Consumer
Business
Reseller
Government
International
Company
Compe0tors
Customer
Intermediaries
Micro-
environemnt
Suppliers
The Microenvironment
Competitors:
Marketers must seek to gain strategic
advantage against competitive organizations
Size of firm and industry position will influence
choice of strategy when competing in the
marketplace
Company
Compe0tors
Customer
Intermediaries
Micro-
environemnt
Suppliers
The Microenvironment
Publics:
Any group that has an actual or potential
interest in or impact on an organizations
ability to achieve its objectives
Seven types of publics:
Financial Publics
Media
Government
Citizen-action
General
Internal
Company
Compe0tors
Customer
Intermediaries
Micro-
environemnt
Suppliers
The Microenvironment
The Company:
Involves groups such as top management,
finance, R&D, purchasing, operations,
accounting
Affects the marketing departments planning
strategies
All departments must think consumer and
work together to provide superior customer
value and satisfaction
Company
Compe0tors
Customer
Intermediaries
Micro-
environemnt
Suppliers
The Microenvironment
Marketing intermediaries:
Help the company to promote, sell, and
distribute its goods to final buyers
Resellers
Physical distribution firms
Marketing services agencies
Company
Compe0tors
Customer
Intermediaries
Micro-
environemnt
Suppliers
The Microenvironment
Suppliers:
Provide resources needed to produce goods
and services
Important link in the overall customer value
delivery system!
Technological
Economic
Demographic
Poli0cal
Macro-
environemnt
Natural
Technological
Economic
Demographic
Poli0cal
Macro-
environemnt
Natural
Demographic Environment
Demography:
The study of human populations in terms of
size, density, location, age, gender, race,
occupation, and other statistics
Marketers track changing age and family
structures, geographic population shifts,
educational characteristics, and population
diversity
Demographic Environment
The changing age structure of the
Canadian population is the most important
demographic trend
The three largest generational groups are:
Baby Boomers
Generation X
Millennials or Generation Y
Baby Boomers
Genera0on X
Genera0on
Y/
Millennials
Born
between
47
and
66
Born
between
67
and
76
Born
between
77
and
00
Demographic Environment
The Canadian family and household are
changing:
Growing crowded nest syndrome
Fewer families have children
Average Canadian household shrank to 2.5
people
More dual-income families
Demographic Environment
Geographic shifts in population:
Rural to urban (city, suburb) migration
continues
People in different regions buy differently
Shift in where people live is changing how
they work
Demographic Environment
Increasing diversity:
16% of Canadians consider themselves
visible minorities
This group is growing fast and has huge
purchasing power
Marketers target specially designed ads, products,
and promotions at ethnic groups
Technological
Economic
Demographic
Poli0cal
Macro-
environemnt
Natural
Economic Environment
Consists of factors that affect consumer
purchasing power and spending patterns
Changes in income and spending
Recent years: consumption frenzy, record debt
Economic crisis leading to consumer frugality
Value marketing is key to success
Economic Environment
Consists of factors that affect consumer
purchasing power and spending patterns
Changes in spending patterns
Engels laws note that consumers at different
income levels have different spending patterns
Technological
Economic
Demographic
Poli0cal
Macro-
environemnt
Natural
Cultural Environment
The institutions and other forces that affect
a societys basic values, perceptions,
preferences, and behaviors
Core beliefs are passed on from parents to
children and reinforced by schools, churches,
businesses, and government
Secondary beliefs and values are more open
to change
Marketers may be able to change secondary
beliefs, but not core beliefs
Technological
Economic
Demographic
Poli0cal
Macro-
environemnt
Natural
Technological Environment
Technology changes rapidly
Creating new markets and opportunities
Increases obsolescence of products
Technological
Economic
Demographic
Poli0cal
Macro-
environemnt
Natural
Political Environment
Includes laws, government agencies, and
pressure groups that influence or limit
organizations and individuals
Marketing activities face:
Increasing legislation
Changing government agency enforcement
Increased emphasis on ethics and socially
responsible behavior
Technological
Economic
Demographic
Poli0cal
Macro-
environemnt
Natural
Natural Environment
Natural resources are needed as inputs by
marketers and are affected by marketing
Key trends include:
Shortage of raw materials
Increased pollution
Increased government intervention
Questions?
Marketing Information
To build and maintain profitable
relationships with customers, companies
need information about :
Customers needs
Marketing environment
Competition
Customer Insights
Customer insights:
Fresh understanding of customers and the
marketplace derived from marketing
information that become the basis for creating
customer value and relationships
Used to develop competitive advantage
Customer insight teams are replacing traditional
market research departments
Internal Databases
Internal databases are electronic
collections of consumer and market
information obtained from data sources
within the company network (e.g.
customer databases)
Include information on demographics, sales
transactions, website visits
Marketing Intelligence
Competitive marketing intelligence: a
collection and analysis of publicly available
information about consumers, competitors,
and developments in the marketing
environment
For example: annual reports; brand discussions on
blogs or social media, the census
Marketing intelligence can help a marketer
understand what customers say about their brand
Market Research
Market research is the systematic design,
collection, analysis and reporting of
relevant data for specific situations
Gives insight into:
Customer motivations
Customer purchase behavior
Customer satisfaction
Market Research
Market research occurs in 4 Stages:
Identifying the Problem and Research
Objectives
Planning and Developing the Research
Collecting and Analyzing Data
Interpreting and Reporting Findings
Developing the
Research Plan
The research plan outlines:
Sources of data (primary vs. secondary)
Specific research approaches
Contact methods and sampling plans
Instruments for data collection
Gathering Secondary
Data
Secondary data:
Information that already exists somewhere
which has been collected for another purpose
Common sources of secondary data:
Internal databases
Commercial data services
Government sources (Stats Canada, the Census)
Secondary Data
Advantages of secondary data:
Available more quickly and cheaper than
primary data
Can provide data individual firm cannot collect
on its own
Primary Data
Collection
Secondary data rarely provides all
necessary information, requiring firms to
collect primary data
Primary data:
Consists of information collected for the
specific purpose at hand
Must be relevant, accurate, current, and
unbiased
Observational
Research
Gathering primary data by observing
relevant people, actions, and situations
Obtains information that people are unwilling
or unable to provide
Best method for exploratory research
Observational
Research
Limitations:
Cannot observe feelings, attitudes, motives,
or long-term or infrequent behavior
May not be possible to observe long-term or
infrequent behavior
Ethnographic research yields richer
understanding of consumers:
Trained observers watch and interact with
consumers in their natural habitat
Observational
Research
Ethnographic Research:
A form of observational research in which
trained observers watch and interact with
consumers in their natural habitat
Yields richer understanding of consumers
allows companies to zero in on their customers
unarticulated desires
Survey Research
Survey research:
Gathers primary data by asking people
questions about their knowledge, attitudes,
preferences, and buying behavior
Most widely used method for primary data
collection
Best method for gathering descriptive
information
Can ask directly about attitudes, expectations etc
Experimental
Research
Experimental research:
Gathers primary data by selecting matched
groups of subjects, giving them different
treatments, controlling related factors, and
checking for differences in group responses
Best method for explaining cause-and-effect
(causal) relationships
Sampling Plan
Sample:
Segment of the population selected to
represent the population as a whole
Need to determine:
Who to survey (sampling unit)
How many people to survey (sample size)
How to chose the people in the sample
(sampling procedure)
Research
Instruments
Questionnaire decisions:
What questions to ask
Form of each question; closed or open-end
Wording and ordering of questions
Mechanical instruments:
Monitor consumer behaviour
Includes people metres, checkout scanners,
eye tracking devices, neuro marketing
Implementing the
Research Plan
Collecting the data:
Most expensive phase
Subject to error
Interpreting and
Reporting Findings
Interpret the findings
Draw conclusions
Report to management:
Present findings and conclusions that will be
most helpful to decision making