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MKT 300 Marketing

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... banking, airlines, haircuts, and hotels. And/ or. How Consumers ... luxuries, education, travel, etc. grows. Segmentation Often Based on Income ... Business ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MKT 300 Marketing


1
Marketing Analysis
2
The Marketing Process
3
Core Marketing Concepts
Products and Services
Needs, wants, and demands
Core Marketing Concepts
Markets
Value, satisfaction, and quality
Exchange, transactions, and relationships
4
What Will Satisfy ConsumersNeeds and Wants?
  • Products a good, service, or idea consisting of
    a bundle of tangible and intangible attributes
    that satisfies consumers
  • Examples automobile, iPod, printer, and
    insurance.
  • Services - activities or benefits offered for
    sale that are essentially intangible and dont
    result in the ownership of anything
  • Examples banking, airlines, haircuts, and hotels.

And/ or
5
How Consumers Choose
  • Customer Value A Cost-Benefits View

6
(No Transcript)
7
Why the Focus on Customer Satisfaction, Utility,
and Value?
8
Marketing Management Philosophies
  • Consumers favor products that are
  • available and highly affordable
  • Improve production and distribution
  • Consumers favor products that offer
  • the most quality, performance, and
  • innovative features
  • Consumers will buy products only if
  • the company promotes/ sells these
  • product
  • Focuses on needs/ wants of target
  • markets delivering satisfaction
  • better than competitors
  • Focuses on needs/ wants of target
  • markets delivering superior value
  • Societys well-being

Production Concept
Product Concept
Selling Concept
Marketing Concept/ Customer Era
Societal Marketing Concept
9
Marketing Sales Concepts Contrasted
The Selling Concept
Starting Point
Focus
Means
Ends
The Marketing Concept
10
A Philosophy of Business
  • Focus on Customer Satisfaction
  • Total Integration of Effort
  • Profit Orientation

Marketing Concept/Customer Era
11
The Marketing Concept
  • 1. Customer Satisfaction and CRM

12
The Marketing Concept
  • 2. Total Company Effort
  • Including information sharing

13
The Marketing Concept
  • 3. Profit is an objective

14
Adoption of the Marketing Concept Has Not Been
Universal

15
The Marketing Concept and Social Responsibility
  • Individual vs. Societal Needs
  • CFCs and the Ozone layer
  • Individual Rights
  • cigarettes, cocaine, marijuana, guns
  • Must all segments be served?
  • Unprofitable neighborhoods? groups?
  • Profits
  • auto safety features may cut manufacturer profits
    as consumers wont pay more

16
Marketings Role in the Corporation
HR
Global
Information Systems
Research
Legal
17
The Marketing Process
18
Overview of the Strategic Marketing Process
  • Marketing Analysis
  • Analysis of environmental factors
  • SWOT as marketing analysis tool
  • Marketing Planning
  • Market-product focus goal setting
  • Developing a marketing program
  • Marketing Implementation
  • Marketing Control

19
Micro vs. Macro Environments
Suppliers
Demographic- Economic Environment
Technological- Natural Environment


Marketing Intermediaries
Macro Environment
Macro Environment
Customers (End User Market)
Social-Cultural Environment
Political-Legal Environment
20
The Marketing Environment Internal vs. External

21
Scan and Manage
  • Environmental Scanning
  • Monitoring process
  • Environmental Management
  • Forecasting process
  • Adaptive process

22
Scanning vs. ManagementA Recent Example
  • Brita finds P G has acquired PUR, a faucet
    system (SCANNING)
  • Brita suspects P G will invest heavily in PUR
    and may steal share from Brita Pitchers
    (MANAGEMENT Forecasting)
  • Brita develops and launches its own faucet system
    to compete (MANAGEMENT Adapting to threat)

23
Micro EnvironmentCompetitor Analysis
24
Competitive Considerations
  • Number
  • Relative strength/market share
  • Potential competitor reactions
  • The value of competition
  • more innovation
  • lower prices
  • lower profits
  • BUT.more failure of individual firms

25
Types of Competitive Strategies
  • Linear
  • INTEL decide to move from memory to
    processing based on industry analysis
  • Strong competition
  • Commodity-like product
  • Few profits
  • Non-linear
  • INTEL decided to NOT license its processors to
    vendors
  • Controlled technology
  • Controlled pricing
  • Controlled image
  • Avoided commoditization (INTEL PENTIUM inside)

26
Components of Competition Avoiding Market Myopia
  • Competition from
  • DELL competes with Compaq
  • Potential competition from
  • Pharmaceutical companies battle generics and new
    brands when patents expire
  • Competition from
  • Wow chips a substitute for pretzels (Frito Lay
    and Cannibalization)
  • Competition from
  • Retailers create PLBs to compete with national
    brands
  • Retailer is a customer in this case

27
The Macro Environment
28
Micro vs. Macro Environments
Suppliers
Demographic- Economic Environment
Technological- Natural Environment
Competitors
Company (Marketer)
Marketing Intermediaries
Macro Environment
Macro Environment
Customers (End User Market)
Social-Cultural Environment
Political-Legal Environment
29
Economic Environment
30
Drivers of consumer spending patterns
  • Wants Needs - infinite!!!!
  • Confidence about the future
  • Employment
  • Income
  • Inflation
  • Interest Rates

31
U.S. UnemploymentHistorical Trends
Year UR 1965 4.5 1970 4.9 1975 8.5 1980
7.1 1985 7.2 1990 5.5 1991 6.7 1992 7.4 19
93 6.8 1994 6.1 1995 5.6
32
Current Situation
Year UR July 00 4.0 July 01 4.5 June
02 5.9 June 03 6.4 June 04 Dec 04
July 05
33
INCOME
  • Distribution
  • Discretionary Income and Engels Law
  • Inflation Effects on Real Income

34
Income Distribution (2001)
KNOW
35
Engels LawCategory Spending Varies by Income
Level
  • As a Familys Income Increases, spent on
  • ______ decreases
  • housing and clothing holds stead
  • luxuries, education, travel, etc. grows
  • Segmentation Often Based on Income

36
Discretionary Income
  • Absolute versus Discretionary
  • Life-cycle effects
  • Young singles
  • Full nesters
  • Empty nesters

37
Inflation Effects
  • Inflation reduces real income by increasing
    nominal prices
  • Real income spending power
  • 5 percent inflation
  • 35,000 nominal in 2004
  • 33,250 real in 2005

38
Inflation in U.S.
  • 11-14 1979-1981
  • 4-5 during most of the 80s
  • 2-3 during most of the 90s
  • 2-3 during early 2000s
  • July 2004 2.99
  • Nov 2004
  • July 2005

39
A Global View
  • Inflation in Japan means
  • Higher nominal prices (Yen)
  • Hence possible demand effects
  • Plus.
  • Foreign currency exposure by holding Yen
  • Hedging as a strategy

40
A Global View
  • Some High Inflation Countries Mid 90s (D. Digit
    )
  • Mexico
  • Brazil
  • Poland
  • Some Low Inflation Countries Mid 90s (S. Digit)
  • Germany
  • France
  • UK
  • NOTE EU membership requires reasonable and
    stable economic conditions including inflation

41
Consumer Confidence Index
  • 5,000 households surveyed monthly
  • Conducted by NFO for The Conference Board (NYC)
  • A ______________ of economic activity

42
CCI is Positively and Significantly Correlated
with
  • Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
  • Dow-Jones Industrial Average
  • Total Retail Sales
  • Housing Sales
  • Auto Sales
  • Clothing Sales
  • Entertainment Travel Expenditures

43
Consumer Confidence
Year CCI 1985 100.0 1989 116.8 1991
68.5 1992 61.6 1993 65.9 1994
90.6 1995 101.0 1999 135.3
These werent great years economically!
Incredibly high particularly December- So were
retail holiday sales!!!
44
Current CCI
  • Jan 2000 144.7
  • July 2001 116.3
  • July 2002 97
  • July 2003 76.6
  • July 2004 106.1 (4th consecutive ? month)
  • Dec 2004
  • July 2005

45
CCI
  • Causes of downturns??
  • Causes of upswings??
  • Jobs and job expectations
  • Economy rebounding
  • International stability

46
Technological Environment
Pace of Change
R D Budgets
Issues in the Technological Environment
Incremental vs. Major Improvements
Regulation
47
Technology Teams
  • Companies often utilize research teams
  • FYI, Thomas Edison had research teams
  • The electric light bulb required hundreds of
    researchers and considerable external financing
    to achieve
  • But 3M and bootlegging suggests power of
    individual in the process

48
Some hot industries now?
  • E-commerce
  • Bubble is over but trends are strong
  • Vacation Cruise Lines
  • confluence of tech and demographics
  • Bio-technology/Genetic Engineering
  • Pharmaceutical Products for Seniors
  • Phizer, etc. poised for aging boomers
  • Electronic Sensors on Everything
  • Britas smart pitchers/Navistar, etc.
  • Personal Communications
  • Wireless, phone/palm/camera combos, etc.

49
Technology does ...
  • improve current customer service
  • better demand forecasting by Lands End
  • lower prices
  • telephone service, computers
  • improve existing products
  • safer automobiles, geo-mapping
  • new products - goods services
  • electronic mail didnt exist a decade ago!
  • make products obsolete
  • slide rules, gas lamps, desktop computers?

50
Political Environment
Laws, Government Agencies, etc. that affect and
control The actions of Organizations
Individuals in Society
Increasing Legislation
Changing Government Agency Enforcement
Increased Emphasis on Ethics Socially Responsibl
e Actions
51
Political-Legal Issues
  • Local vs. National vs. Global
  • Political Agendas and Enforcement
  • International Trade

52
U.S. Government Regulation
  • Competition
  • Consumers
  • Specific Industries
  • International Trade

53
Regulating Competition
  • Sherman Act (1890) - Conspiracy to control a
    market
  • Clayton Act (1914) Price discrimination and
    tying agreements

54
Protecting Consumers
  • Federal Trade Commission Act (1914) - Deceptive
    ads or selling practices
  • Federal Food and Drug Act (1906) adulturation
    and misbranding of food and drugs in interstate
    commerce
  • Child Protection Act (1966) Hazardous toys and
    articles, child-resistant packaging
  • Childrens Television Act (1990) Amount of
    Advertising shown during childrens TV programs
  • Nutrition Labeling and Education Act (1990)
    nutrition labeling requirements

55
Specific Industries
  • Airline Deregulation Act (1978) more control to
    airlines in setting fees and choosing routes
  • Motor Carrier Act (1980) permit firms to
    negotiate fees, routes, and services
  • Telecomm Act (1996) deregulated telecom
    industry by removing barriers to local and
    long-distance phone and cable competition

56
International Trade
  • NAFTA (1993) International trade agreement
    between Canada, Mexico, and the US, to facilitate
    trade by removing tariffs, and other trade
    barriers
  • The European Union
  • OPEC International Petroleum Cartel Price
    fixing, control of supply regional cartel but
    global impact

57
A Global View
At Least Four Political-Legal Factors Should be
Considered in Deciding Whether to do Business in
a Given Country
Business Regulations
Attitudes Toward International Buying
Government Bureaucracy
Political Stability
58
Socio-Cultural Factors
  • Gender Roles
  • Women in work force
  • Stay at home dads
  • Time Pressures
  • Work habits
  • Eating habits
  • Electronic Shopping
  • Embracing Technology
  • Multiculturalism

59
Multi-Culturalism
Increasing Diversity in U.S. 70 Caucasian, 13
Hispanic, 12 African-American 4 Asian
Increasing Global Culture Overlap Global Teen
Market/Brands China/India/Europe/U.S. Bollywood
Source Marketing News, July 22, 2002
60
Multiculturalism One Sub-Trend
  • The Hispanic Market Subculture
  • Second largest Ethic Subculture (and growing)
  • 13 of population and 600B in purchase power
  • Expected 25 of population by 2050
  • Spanish-language media on the rise still only
    3.2 of major advertiser spending
  • Different culture and values challenge marketers
  • e.g., Got Milk not funny to many Hispanic women
  • Spanish-language media
  • Generational issues
  • And, challenging market to target due to
    fragmentation
  • Country of Origin (Mexico vs. Cuba vs. Puerto
    Rico)
  • Region of Country (CA, FL, NYC)
  • Language

Source Marketing News, July 22, 2002, page 20
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