0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views34 pages

Today's Agenda: Introductions Review Syllabus Review The Final Project Outline Video Case Study Break Into Teams

The document outlines an agenda for a marketing class that includes introductions, a syllabus review, a final project outline, a lecture, a video case study, and breaking into teams to choose a product or service. The lecture covers strategic planning, customer relationships, marketing definitions and purpose, the marketing flow, setting objectives and strategy, segmentation, targeting, positioning, value and satisfaction, marketing orientations, missions, CRM, lifetime value, organizational challenges, and research evaluation. Students then break into groups to begin working on their final projects.

Uploaded by

mthuajai217
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views34 pages

Today's Agenda: Introductions Review Syllabus Review The Final Project Outline Video Case Study Break Into Teams

The document outlines an agenda for a marketing class that includes introductions, a syllabus review, a final project outline, a lecture, a video case study, and breaking into teams to choose a product or service. The lecture covers strategic planning, customer relationships, marketing definitions and purpose, the marketing flow, setting objectives and strategy, segmentation, targeting, positioning, value and satisfaction, marketing orientations, missions, CRM, lifetime value, organizational challenges, and research evaluation. Students then break into groups to begin working on their final projects.

Uploaded by

mthuajai217
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 34

Today’s Agenda

 Introductions
 Review Syllabus
 Review the final project outline
 Lecture
 Video Case Study
 Break into teams
Choose product/service by end of class

1
Introductions

 Name
 15 - 30 second resume
 Position and responsibilities
 Next or Ideal position
 Objectives for the course
 How to help you accomplish your objectives

2
“Marketing Insights”

Your name

What: Brief description of marketing piece

Marketing strategy: Brief description of what you think the


marketers’ strategy is

Effectiveness: Tell how effective you think the


strategy is and why

3
Lecture One
Chapter 1 & 2
Strategic Planning and Customer
Relationships

4
Today’s Lecture Objectives

 Basic overview of the marketing flow


 Setting objectives and strategic planning
 Understanding the customer relationship

Note: relationship to final project


5
Marketing Definition vs. Purpose

 The process of building profitable


customer relationships by creating value
for customers and capturing value in
return

 Bringing a product or service to the


marketplace

6
Marketing Flow

 Develop Strategy
 Conduct Research
 Decide on Targeting and Positioning
 Product Management
 Marketing Communications (marcom)
 Measurement

7
Setting Objectives &
Strategy

8
Business Objective

•Segmentation
Marketing Strategy •Targeting
•Positioning

Tactics

The four ‘P’s: Product, Price, Promotion and Place


9
The four C’s
Bus. Objective and Mark. Strategy

 Keeps core competency in focus


Sets boundaries for business expansion
 New products and acquisitions
 Puts definition around business portfolio
 Frames day to day operations
 Gives Wall Street short and long term vision
 Helps define strengths/weaknesses
 Brands or divisions that are ‘failing’
 Those that are under-valued and can grow

10
Strategy

11
What is a Strategy?

 The “roadmap” or “game plan” on how you


are to achieve your objective

 It is an integrated set of actions aimed at


securing a sustainable, advantageous and
competitive position

12
What is a Strategy?

 A strategy should:
 Create a unique and valuable position
 Measurable
 Definitive
 Should have a clear fit within organization
 Choose what and what not to do
 Clear and realistic timeline
 Distinctive
 Shouldn’t imitate anyone

13
Strategy is the Tough Part

 Force tough decisions


 Cannot be all things to all people
 Unique = sustainable and competitive
 Fit within the organization
 Play off your strengths
 Interact and reinforce broader mission/efforts
 Trade-offs
 Delivering value to one set of customers means
ignoring another set of customers

The most difficult decision is what we will not be. 14


Creating A Strategy

 A strategy position can come from three


distinct sources:
 Serving the few needs of many customers
 Jiffy Lube
 Serving the broad needs of few customers
 J.P. Morgan’s Private Banking
 Serving the broad needs of many customers in
a narrow market
 Ikea

15
Creating A Strategy
 Identify the implicit assumptions about your
product/service and the existing choices about
how you are to compete.

 Utilize research about your customer’s needs,


competitors’ offerings and value propositions

 Identify your options and choose a path to


success

 Above all should be customer centric


16
Customer- Centric Marketing Strategy

 Key elements in customer identification:

Segmentation

Targeting

Positioning
17
Segmentation

Groups of consumers who respond in


similar ways to marketing efforts.
Geographic
Demographic
Psychographic
Behavioral

18
Targeting

 After segments are identified:


Evaluate worth and profitability
Short and long term opportunities
Potential barriers
Single or multi-segment target?

19
Positioning

 The place a product occupies in the


mind of a consumer
Relative to other products in and
outside of the category
Should be distinct
• What’s the competitive advantage?
Should be desirable
Should be clear and focused
20
Customer Relationships

21
The Customer Relationship

 Marketing: The process of building


profitable customer relationships by
creating value for customers and capturing
value in return

 Understanding their demand for value


 Creating demand for value
 Fulfilling that demand
22
Needs, Wants and Demand

 Key marketplace drivers:


Needs
 State of felt deprivation
 Basic physical, social and individual needs
Wants
 Needs shaped by culture/personality
Demands
 Wants turn into marketplace buying power

23
Value and Satisfaction

 To fulfill want/demand, provide:


 Value
 Expectations and understanding of product/service
 Satisfaction
 Fulfillment of this satisfaction

Value Satisfaction
Positive = lead to a sale Positive = relationship
Negative = no consideration Negative = lost customer or
word of mouth
24
Value and Satisfaction
 How do you adequately set expectations
with consumers?
Value Proposition
 Benefits or values you promise to customers to
satisfy their needs.
 Simple formula
• Customer need + product/service experience = benefit
• Ex. You driving our car = The ultimate driving experience
• Ex. You using our software = Realize your potential

 Turns the rational offerings of a product/service


into an emotionally fulfilling experience
25
Customer Satisfaction

 Depends on the product’s perceived


performance relative to buyers
expectations
HIGH
Dissatisfaction Satisfaction

Dissatisfaction Satisfaction

Dissatisfaction Satisfaction

LOW 26
Marketing Management Orientations

 How do you create a marketing strategy


that balances what a company wants and
what a customer wants?
 How far do you cater to marketplace
demand?

27
Marketing Orientation vs. Mission

 How is a marketing management


orientation different than a company
mission?
 Review – mission is a reason the company
exists – i.e. in the business of X
 Marketing orientation is how they go about
accomplishing that
 Push product into the marketplace
 Or develop products based on marketplace demand

28
Mission statements
 Walt Disney: “ To make people happy”
 WalMart: "Wal-Mart’s mission is to help people
save money so they can live better.“
 Starbucks: “Our mission: to inspire and nurture
the human spirit – one person, one cup and one
neighborhood at a time.”
 Microsoft: At Microsoft, we work to help people
and businesses throughout the world realize
their full potential.
How do each go about accomplishing their mission? 29
New Directions

 CRM
 Keeping loyalty
 Gathering data
 Managing data
 Lifetime Value
 Get them in and keep them in

Customer relationship management is the overall process of


building and maintaining profitable customer relationships by
delivering superior customer value and satisfaction –
acquiring, keeping and growing customers. 30
55% of marketers cannot measure ROI

31
Organizational Challenges

 Selling within a strategy


 Building consensus
 Successful marketing = think different
 Being an advocate
 Remove the risk
 Measurement
 The market will speak --- listen

32
Next Class

 Evaluating the environment through research


 Competitors
 Potential targets / customer segments
 Deciding on a position
 Confirming or changing your strategy
 How to turn customer research into an insight

33
Final project groups

1. 2. 3.
• Tom • Angelica • Ryan
• Marta • Daniel • Tammy
• Melinda • Abbey P • Mary
• Abbie R • Rob • Pat
• Wiles • Kristin • Gretchen

34

You might also like