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Introduction to eMarketing

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Title: Introduction to eMarketing


1
Introduction to e-Marketing
  • Gary Akehurst

2
e-Marketing
  • Definition
  • E-marketing is the use of information technology
    in the processes of creating, communicating, and
    delivering value to customers, and for managing
    customer relationships in ways that benefit the
    organization and its stakeholders
  • Strauss, El-Ansary and Frost (2006 3)

3
e-Marketing
  • e-marketing is used as well as traditional
    channels to develop positive, long-term customer
    relationships (whether online or offline)
  • and create a competitive advantage for the firm
    by allowing it to charge a higher price for
    products or services than its competitors can
    charge

4
e-Marketing
  • E-marketing
  • increases the effectiveness and efficiency of
    traditional marketing functions
  • the technology transforms marketing strategies
  • opens new global markets and international
    partnerships
  • it results in new business models that add
    customer value and increases profitability

5
e-Marketing
  • But e-marketing is more than just using the
    internet
  • converging technologies enhance customer
    relationship management, database management and
    supply chain management
  • but in time the e of e-marketing will be
    dropped electronic business will be all
    pervasive

6
e-Marketing
  • The Internet
  • provides content
  • communicates
  • sells
  • offers a network function

7
e-Marketing
  • marketers use websites to communicate with
    customers
  • the goal is to create a strong relationship with
    the customer
  • the Internet is used as a direct channel to sell
    services and products
  • some websites provide purely digital information
  • led to new electronic services facilitated by
    networked computers and mobile devices

8
e-Marketing
  • the transition to the information and knowledge
    age is profound (still in its early stages)
  • rapid advances in technology with convergence on
    digital electronic technology
  • escalating global competition
  • rising consumer expectations for quality, speed
    of response and customisation (individualism)

9
e-Marketing
  • the current web is crude in capabilities and
    functionality
  • it is a rather chaotic test bed for companies
  • consumers are learning new modes of interaction
    and consumption
  • eases time and place constraints on consumers
  • no longer will goods and services be offered
    primarily at the sellers convenience (power
    shifts from sellers to buyers)
  • anytime and anywhere purchasing and consumption
    will be common
  • talk of a web 2.0 (private subscriber networks
    with downloads of software, music and other
    content)

10
e-Marketing
  • communication bandwidths will rapidly rise
  • terminal equipment will be more powerful,
    smarter, easier to use, affordable, portable,
    cheaper, smaller
  • the cost of digital storage is falling rapidly

11
e-Marketing
  • once hardware and an telecommunications
    infrastructure is in place, an enormous range of
    services can be exchanged at nominal incremental
    cost
  • location-independent shopping and banking
  • computer-mediated education and training
  • on-line professional consultations
  • informational, entertainment and leisure services

12
e-Marketing
  • as consumer behaviour changes, the marketing
    function needs to change dramatically
  • argued that marketing will be at the centre of
    change
  • marketing will become increasingly decentralised
    and fully integrated into business operations
  • opportunities to lose as well as gain

13
e-Marketing
  • successful marketing in this new environment
    involves
  • monocasting, pointcasting and podcasting of
    communications
  • mass customisation of all marketing mix elements
  • high degree of customer involvement and control
  • a more efficient utilisation of marketing
    resources
  • attempts to reduce customer alienation from
    mis-directed marketing stimuli
  • increased pressure to deliver greater value
  • intense jostling for loyalties of desirable
    customers

14
e-Marketing
  • Evolving technology and consumer behaviour
  • production technology (CAD-CAM, just-in-time
    production, flexible manufacturing systems)
  • distribution technology (computer-assisted
    logistics, scanner, product identification and
    tracking technologies, electronic data
    interchange, point of sale terminals linked to
    vendors, satellite-based locational systems,
    automated retail and warehouse ordering)
  • personal use technologies (huge gains in
    price-performance) with the mobile phone at the
    centre of rapid changes

15
e-Marketing
  • As the power and pervasiveness of technologies
    grow
  • consumers are in a unique, unaccustomed position,
    i.e. not passive
  • they have greater control of information flows
    between buyers and sellers

16
e-Marketing
  • future consumers will be dramatically different
    from past and even present consumers
  • they will be more demanding, more time-driven,
    more information intensive, highly
    individualistic
  • targeted interactive digital media allowing
    advertisers to mass customise messages allowing
    user interaction and input

17
e-Marketing
  • consumers will in most cases have more
    information about product providers than
    providers will have about consumers
  • consumers will dictate the timing and mode of
    communications
  • they will determine the time and place of
    resulting transactions

18
e-Marketing
  • Lifestyle and Demographic Changes
  • rising median age in developed countries
  • households progressively more time poor but money
    rich (consumers are redesigning time-consuming
    tasks, and embracing time-saving and
    time-shifting technologies)
  • consumers are demanding hassle-free, get it
    right first time service on demand
  • increased stress (blurring of traditional family
    roles, increase in autonomy)

19
e-Marketing
  • Lifestyle and Demographic Changes
  • greater concern for privacy (previous social
    norms of a homogeneous society giving way to
    pluralistic and diverse values)
  • legal rights of individuals will be emphasised
  • emphasis on safety and security (ageing
    population, greater numbers living alone,
    feelings of vulnerability)
  • personal entrepreneurship (opportunities provided
    by new technologies and rise of niche markets)

20
e-Marketing
Location-free
Digital commerce
Time-free
Time-bound
Gravitational commerce
Location-bound
21
e-Marketing
  • move from time-bound and location-bound marketing
  • to time-free and location-free marketing
  • if a consumer is unable to transact at times and
    locations convenient for them the transaction
    will either not occur or will occur with a
    different supplier (e.g. banking)
  • advertising and other forms of information will
    be received on demand

22
e-Marketing
consumer behaviour trends
Automation of consumption
Disintermediation and reintermediation
Personalisation and reaggregation
Power shift to consumers
Shopping on demand
Blurring of consumer and business markets
Greater value consciousness
Consumers as co-producers
23
e-Marketing
  • Intermediaries
  • current marketing practice depends heavily on
    multiple intermediaries in the supply chain
  • they add time and place utilities to the
    products functional quality
  • they provide broader and more convenient access
    to products for a wide range of customers
  • they serve as informational conduits
  • building an adequate distribution channel is
    often a hurdle in entering a market

24
e-Marketing
  • Intermediaries
  • electronics mean a high level of accessibility
    almost immediately
  • establishes a two-way information flow
  • numerous administration tasks can be automated
  • huge numbers of customers can be served
    efficiently and effectively
  • inventories can be reduced
  • leads to growth in support services (e.g. small
    package shipping, orders consolidation)

25
e-Marketing
  • Personalisation
  • the mass market is splintering into ever smaller
    segments (mass customisation)
  • but customers are not always looking for
    customised products may be content with
    well-designed standardised products
  • customers may pool purchases (buying consortia)
    to gain better terms and prices

26
e-Marketing
  • Consumers as co-producers
  • consumers will take on increasingly active roles
    (e.g. designing and customising products
    purchased)
  • while consumers take more control over some
    commercial relationships, they will relinquish
    control in other areas (insourcing to outsourcing)

27
e-Marketing
  • Greater value consciousness
  • consumers will expect to pay less for most
    products (or pay more where perceived additional
    value)
  • time is a more valuable currency than money for
    some consumers (trade-offs)
  • convenience and simplicity
  • ability to easily locate the best price (via
    price scraping websites)
  • consumers will not keep large stocks but want the
    advantages of large-scale buying

28
e-Marketing
  • Blurring between consumer and business markets
  • lines between home and workplace are rapidly
    blurring
  • movement of home-based services to business and
    vice versa is observed with dual-purpose
    applications (e.g. DVD shopping, travel planning,
    legal advice, on-line databases)

29
e-Marketing
  • Power shift from marketers to consumers
  • savvy consumers will make great use of
    information tools knowledgeable and demanding
    drivers of marketing activity
  • marketers will have to show greater respect for
    consumers (who are increasingly immune to
    marketing hype)
  • transactions will be in the context of a complex
    relationship revolving around lifestyle issues

30
e-Marketing
  • Power shift from marketers to consumers
  • marketing management thus becomes demand
    management (and customer equity management)
  • the task of influencing the timing, the level and
    composition of demand in a way that helps the
    organisation achieve its objectives
  • customer knowledge becomes the capstone of
    effective marketing (a highly valued corporate
    resource)
  • real time interactive relationship marketing
    becomes the norm

31
e-Marketing
  • The concept of the personal marketplace
  • a repository where participating companies
    prepare and market customised offerings directly
    to a consumer
  • these are categorised by product or service as
    specified by the consumer
  • by selecting a particular category, the consumer
    alerts companies that they are a potential
    customer, and offers flow in
  • the customer voluntarily provides as much
    customising information as needed
  • participating companies agree not to sell the
    data they collect outside the personal
    marketplace, and not to use it to market in any
    other channel

32
e-Marketing
  • How marketing should respond to these changes
  • must simultaneously get smaller and bigger (role
    will grow but numbers of marketers may decrease)
  • need to be more technology savvy (including just
    in time capabilities, on-line transaction
    processing, voice recognition, efficient
    downloading services and logistics)
  • learn how to retain customer loyalty (primary
    focus shifts from customer acquisition to
    relationship management)

33
e-Marketing
  • How marketing should respond to these changes
  • develop cross-functional teams organised around
    customer needs
  • practice interactive one-to-one marketing (far
    beyond current database marketing)
  • interactions may take several forms
  • person to person (marketer interacts with
    customer)
  • person to system (marketer interacts with
    customers agent)
  • system to person (marketers agent interacts
    with customer)
  • system to system (marketers agent interacts with
    customers agent)

34
e-Marketing
  • Chaffey, D., Mayer, R., Johnston, K. and F.
    Ellis-Chadwick (2003) Internet marketing, (2nd
    edition) Harlow Pearson, Financial Times
    Prentice Hall, chapter 1 An introduction to
    internet marketing (2006 3rd edition)
  • Strauss, J., El-Ansary, A. and R. Frost (2006)
    E-marketing, (4th edition), Upper Saddle River
    NJ Pearson Prentice Hall, chapter 1 E-marketing
    in context
  • Laudon, K.C. and C.G. Traver (2003) E-commerce,
    Boston Pearson Addison Wesley, chapters 1 to 3,
    The revolution is just beginning E-commerce
    business models and concepts The internet and
    world wide web E-commerce infrastructure
  • Smith, P.R. and D. Chaffey (2002) e-marketing
    e-xcellence, Oxford Butterworth Heinemann,
    chapter 1 Introduction to e-marketing
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