Summary Notes
Summary Notes
Core of marketing
Needs – Maslows
Wants – personalised, defined by culture.
Demands – the economic resources
Sometimes the wants don’t meet the demands- a lack of buying power = no £
Marketing orientation
This method identifies, reviews and analyses customer needs. Can be found through market
research
1. Customer orientation
2. Competitor orientation
3. Inter-functional coordination – coordination of all company activities
Pros Cons
Respond quickly to changes in market Can cost a lot to keep prod in public eye
Stronger position to meet challenges of
competitors
Confidence in launch of new prod
Product orientation
Business develops products based on what it is good at making / doing, rather than what the
customer needs
4 philosophies of marketing
Cash
Customer McDonalds
Stop hunger
Time
1. Product
Intangible or tangible
Market research to be done on life cycle of product = in demand
BCG MATRIX
2. Price
Determines firms profit
Shape the perception of your product in the consumers eye
3. Place
Good understanding of your TA=can deliver most efficient positioning and distribution
channels
4. Promotion
Advertising – paid eg- radio, print, internet
Public relations – non-paid eg- press releases, conferences, events
Word of mouth
5. People
Both TA and people directly related to your business
Through research you can find if there is enough people / demand for certain products
or services
Employees = deliver service
6. Process
The systems and processes of the organisation affect the execution of the service
Well-tailored process = minimise costs and maximise profit
7. Physical evidence
In service industries, there should be physical evidence that the service was delivered
Pertains how a business and its products are perceived I the marketplace
Brands need to manipulate customer perception so well to the point that their brands
appear first In line when consumers are choosing
Lecture 2: marketing environment and strategy
Definition:
The forces that directly and indirectly influence an organisations capability to undertake its
business
The trading forces operating in a market place over which a business has no direct control,
but shape the manner in the business function and is able to satisfy its customers.
The business environment is a marketing term and refers to factors and forces that affect a
firm's ability to build and maintain successful customer relationships.
1. Customers:
Consumer markets – buying goods for personal consumption
Business Markets – buying goods for further processing for use in their production process
Reseller markets – buying products to resell at a profit
Institutional and government – government agencies and non-for profit organisations that
buy goods for public services or transfer goods to those who need them
International Markets
2. Distributors
Help the company to promote, sell and distribute its products to final buyers
3. Suppliers
Provide the resources needed by the company to produce its good and services
4. Competitors
Those who serve a target market with similar products and services against whom a
company must gain strategic advantage. Porters 5 forces is a tool for analysing
competition of a business
-Suppliers: do they rely on
you? or you on them, do they
dictate the charge?
Strategic fit
You always have to achieve a strategic fit between your internal and external environment
where you manipulate your marketing mix according to elements in larger, uncontrollable
environment or the micro environment which is more controllable
SWOT analysis
Tool for summarising the analysis of the internal and external environment
Internal External
Strengths Weaknesses
Opportunities Threats
Market research:
Marketing research:
determines the impact of marketing strategies and tactics, in addition to collecting information on
customers, competitors, and industries to understand how to make specific marketing strategy
decisions (e.g. for pricing sales forecasting, proposition testing, and promotion research)
focuses on a specific marketing problem and involves the collection of data at one point in time from
one sample of respondents such as a customer satisfaction study or an attitude survey.
2. CONTINUOUS RESEARCH
involves conducting the same research on the same sample repeatedly to monitor the changes that
are taking place over time. This form of research plays a key role in assessing trends in the market
Describe the
research plan Will they use secondary data? It is often more efficient and
cheaper. Categories of research design:
Probability methods- more related to quantitative research- huge samples that represent whole
popultion
Simple random sampling
Systematic random
Stratified random
Non-random sampling:
Quota
Convenience
Snowball – people referring to other people when you don’t have access to them
Voluntary participation
Informed consent
No harm to the participant
Anonymity, Confidentiality
Transparency (not misleading)
Not deceiving subjects
Lecture 4: consumer and business buying behaviour
Proposition
evaluation Is it in stock? Do you have to go one step back
Proposition selection
Selecting the product
Acquisition / purchase
The action of buying
Re evaluation
Marketers needs to reinforce the positive facts
Consumer decisions
Information processing
- Perception
- Learning- conditioning (Pavlov’s dogs)
- Operant conditioning – reward for buying
- Social learning
Memory
- Recognition
- Recall
- Repeat
Personality
Consumer motivations
MASLOW
Lifestyle factors
If you lead a certain lifestyle, you are being targeted by the MM somehow.
PSYCHOGRAPHICS
Social influences
Social grading
2. Group influences
- Primary
- Secondary – professional associations
- Reference – social groups
- Aspirational
- Social networking
3. Ethnic groups
Cui proposes that in any country where there are ethnic marketing opportunities, a company has 4
options in deciding its strategic approach
Definition
The decision-making process by which formal orgs establish the need for purchased products and
services and identify, evaluate an choose amongst other brands and suppliers
3 key issues
1. The functions and processes buyers move through when purchasing products for use in
business markets
2. Strategy, where purchasing is designed to assist value creation and competitive advantage,
and to influence supply chain activities
It’s NOT just about the purchase of goods and services, it is concerned with the strategic
development of the organisation, creating value and the management of inter-organisational
relationships
Initiators
Influences
Buyers
Deciders
Gatekeepers – involved but not visible. The control the type and how much info is given to
members in the DMU
Users
Lecture 5: segmentation, targeting and positioning
Benefits:
Market segmentation
product differentiation
Product
Place
New offering New segment
Promotion
Price
market segmentation
Product
Place
New offering New segment
Promotion
Price
Process of marketing segmentation
Aims:
To identify segments where similarities exist between members within each segment – MEMBERS
HOMOGENITY
MORE SUCCESSFUL
Planned purchase or
impulse purchase
Benefits sought
Attitudes- behaviour is
different to attitude. Eg-
smoking
Organising characteristics
Targeting
You can do this for different segments to see which is the most attractive. You put the most £ and
resource into that
1. Undifferentiated
2. Differentiated
3. Focused / niche
4. Customised
Positioning
Aims to make a brand occupy a distinct position, relative to competing brands, in the mind of the
customer
Positioning strategies
1. Functional
o Product features
o Price quality – here’s what you get for what you pay
o Use – here’s what you can do with our product
2. Expressive
o User – identifying target user =messages communicated clearly
o Benefit – proclaiming benefits
o Heritage – can give long term connotations
Perceptual mapping
Repositioning strategies
1. Change the tangible attributes (size, colour, weight) and then communicate the new proposition
to the same market.
2. Change the way a product is communicated to the original market.
3. Change the target market and deliver the same product.
4. Change both the product and the target market.
Summary:
Market Segmentation – asks customers WHAT they want and makes a MM and a product
Market Differentiation - see WHO it appeals to and market accordingly
Lecture 7: product innovation and branding
Definition
Products- anything that can be exchanged for £ that satisfies customer needs. They are bundles of
benefits. These benefits are tangible or intangible
Product bundles
Bundle of benefits:
Products
Branding
Process by which companies distinguish their product offerings from the competition
Brading for consumers = simplifies decision making as it communicates features and benefits
Brand strategies
Brand positioning
Brand name
Rebranding
Brand extensions
Co-branding
1. Development
2. Introduction (profit drops here)
3. Growth
4. Maturity
5. Decline
Linear model (depicted above) – Wilbur Schramm (1955) – basic model of mass communications,
OUTDATED
So you make your message understandable, then recipients decode your encoded
intentional message
Personal influencers
Opinion leaders
Opinion formers
Word of mouth
Differentiate
Reinforce
Inform
Persuade
WHY OUTDATED? – Sometimes we already like a brand, doesn’t always start at the beginning of the
hierarchy
AWARENESS
KWOWLEDGE
LIKING
PREFERENCE
CONVICTION
PURCHASE
Branded content - While it says nothing about the qualities of the product itself, the campaign got
the world talking eg- DOVE
Advertising:
Pretesting
Physiological
Post testing
Sales promotion – trial / sales / stock / returns
PR – press cuttings / content analysis / media evaluation
Direct Marketing – response rates / sales / reading ratios / trial
Personal Selling - performance ratios / territory analysis / customer satisfaction
Social media – followers / reviews / volume / replies / click-throughs / mentions /
transactions
Lecture 9 – Pricing decisions
Definitions
Price- the amount of money expected or required or given in payment for something
PRICE
Factors affecting price decisions
Willingness to pay
Price consciousness: eg- old people and spotify
Pricing cues: eg- 0.99
Price bundling: eg- happy meal
Pricing methods
PROMOTION
HIGH LOW
Skimming:
marketing sets a relatively high initial price for a product or service at first, then lowers the
price over time.
eg- like a phone, slow decrease in £.
Better to use this for new product when there is an unknown elasticity = better to set high
price then reduce.
Also used for where product lifestyles re expected to be short
Penetration:
Pricing policies:
Intermediaries
A person who acts as a link between people in order to try and bring about an agreement
Benefits of intermediaries
Improved efficiency
Product assortment – consumers can buy diff things in small quantities
Accessibility
Time utility – eg lawn mowers: buy seasonally
Info – service personnel
Ownership utility
Specialist services
Types of intermediaries
Balance of these
1. Economics
2. Coverage
3. Control
Indirect - Indirect distribution occurs when there are middlemen or intermediaries within the
distribution channel. The larger the number of intermediaries within the channel, the higher the
price is likely to be for the final customer. This is because of the value adding that occurs at each
step within the structure.
Multichannel- important because customers are everywhere. A single strategy among multiple
platforms – reaches a lot of people
Disintermediation – eg- net flix. Trying to cut out intermediaries. New technology – close to
customers directly.
Channel coverage
Channel management
Once we know what structure we cant to use, we want to manage our channels
SCM involves:
Activities associated with the movement and storage of products and materials from
suppliers to a factory
Movement and storage of products from a factory to customers
Retailing
1. Access
2. Search
3. Possession
4. Transaction
Direct selling
Vending machines
Telemarketing
Electronic kiosks
Internet retailing
Lecture 11 – managing relationships and services marketing
Any act or performance offered by one party to another that is essentially intangible
Consumptions pf the service does not result in any transfer of ownership
Characteristics of service
1. Variability:
marketing theory of heterogeneity
different people are involved in delivering the service and your brand promise
everyone is different
some sort of standardisation
2. Inseparability
Production and consumption are separate whereas in a service its happening at the
same time
Creating a mutual experience – giving your employees an incentive
Inter customer conflict - other customers decreasing quality of your service
Importance of service provide = need to be committed and consistent
3. Perishability
Service is over
Makes it difficult for marketers
Eg- seat not bought = money lost
4. Intangibility
A deed, performance or effort
Difficulty in evaluation – we cannot evaluate the offering or quality of offering before we
consumer it
We need tangible cues- we associate with the service
Eg- emirate = smell =distinguishable character
*remember R A T E R
Relationship marketing
Transactional marketing – where you
just sell the product at a good price
Relationship marketing
Goal is
o to cater for multiple stakeholders – anyone with interest in a company
o keep good customer perception
o orientation
o transparency
o multiple objectives
Eg- WaterAid and their campaign- how long you don’t go on your phone = x amount donated to
WaterAid