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MARKETING STRATEGIES: PLANNING AND RESEARCH

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Consumers will favor products that are widely available and low in cost. ... Consumers favor products that offer the most quality or performance. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MARKETING STRATEGIES: PLANNING AND RESEARCH


1
MARKETING STRATEGIESPLANNING AND RESEARCH
  • January 23, 2001
  • Northeast Center for Food Entrepreneurship

2
My Role
  • Processing Apple Industry
  • Marketing Research
  • New Products
  • New Markets
  • Strategic Analysis

3
Overview
  • Marketing Approach
  • Marketing Research
  • My Research
  • Consumer Motivators
  • Mature Markets

4
Production Concept
  • Consumers will favor products that are widely
    available and low in cost.
  • Managers of production-oriented organizations
    concentrate on achieving high production
    efficiency and wide distribution coverage.

5
Product Concept
  • Consumers favor products that offer the most
    quality or performance.
  • Managers focus energy on making good products and
    improving them.

6
Selling Concept
  • Consumers, if left alone, will ordinarily not buy
    enough of the organizations products. The
    organization must therefore undertake an
    aggressive selling and promotion effort.

7
Marketing Concept
  • There will always, one can assume, be need for
    some selling. But the aim of marketing is to
    make selling superfluous. The aim of marketing
    is to know and understand the customer so well
    that the product or service fits him and sells
    itself. Ideally, marketing should result in a
    customer who is ready to buy. All that should be
    needed then is to make the product or service
    available
  • - Peter Drucker

8
Marketing Concept
  • The key to achieving organizational goals
    consists in determining the needs and wants of
    target markets and delivering the desired
    satisfactions more effectively and efficiently
    than competitors.

9
Marketing Concept
  • Find wants and fill them.
  • Move what will sell instead of trying to sell
    what you can make.
  • Love the customer, not the product.
  • Have it your way.

10
Marketing Concept
  • Selling focuses on the needs of the seller
    marketing on the needs of the buyer. Selling is
    preoccupied with the sellers need to convert his
    product into cash marketing with the idea of
    satisfying the needs of the customer by means of
    the product and the whole cluster of things
    associated with creating, delivering, and finally
    consuming it.
  • - Theodore Levitt

11
Marketing Concept
  • Market Focus
  • Customer Orientation
  • Coordinated Marketing
  • Profitability

12
Marketing Research
  • Stage 1 Opportunity Identification
  • Seek holes in market
  • Customers source of information

13
Marketing Research
  • Stage 2Concept Screening
  • Test the idea
  • Would you buy this product?

14
Marketing Research
  • Stage 3 Marketing Strategy Development
  • Define the marketing mix (4Ps)
  • Product
  • Price
  • Place
  • Promotion

15
Marketing Research
  • Stage 4 Product Development
  • Create the physical product
  • Test performance and consumer reactions

16
Marketing Research
  • Stage 5 Market Testing
  • Last check
  • Evaluate advertising, awareness, and usage (AAU)

17
Marketing Research
  • Stage 6 Product Introduction
  • Test distribution

18
Marketing Research
  • Tradeoff
  • Risk of product failure
  • vs.
  • Cost of Market Research
  • Costs include not only money, but also time
  • Goal Learn how to delight the customer by
    studying their needs and behaviors

19
Qualitative vs. Quantitative
  • Qualitative
  • Concept testing
  • Fast input needed
  • Limited budget
  • Client observation
  • Probe behavior deeply
  • Quantitative
  • Snapshot of market
  • Representative data
  • Participants are geographically dispersed or
    difficult to reach
  • Large amount of information needed from each
    participant

20
Marketing Research Consultants
  • Referrals
  • Client list/references
  • Clearly define research goals
  • Dont overqualify sample
  • Expensive

21
Marketing Research Consultants Costs
  • Focus groups (2) 3,000 - 10,000
  • Telephone interview 7,000-20,000
  • Mall intercept (300) 16,000 - 25,000
  • Product placement (50) 9,000 - 12,000

22
Inexpensive Marketing Research
  • Customer feedback
  • Interviews
  • Surveys (300)
  • Comment cards
  • Competitor activity
  • Scan shelves
  • Advertisements
  • Other categories
  • Publicly available data
  • Cornell Libraries
  • Internet
  • Trade publications
  • US Census
  • Trade associations
  • Chambers of Commerce

23
Resources Books
  • AMA Complete Guide to Marketing Research for
    Small Business by Holly Edmunds (1996)
  • Handbook for Focus Group Research by Thomas
    Greenbaum (1993)
  • Practical Marketing Research by Jeffrey Pope
    (1981)

24
Resources Internet Sites
  • American Demographics www.americandemographics.co
    m
  • USDA www.usda.gov (see NASS and ERS)
  • US Census www.census.gov
  • Trade Associations example www.bestapples.com
  • www.beverageworld.com
  • www.foodonline.com
  • www.beverageonline.com

25
Resources Cornell Libraries
  • Kalorama (Networked Resource)
  • Choices II

26
My Research Story
  • Secondary research
  • Interviews
  • Strategic analysis
  • Research goals
  • Research plan
  • New Products Workshop (handout)

27
My Research Story (cont.)
Primary research
  • Quantitative
  • Telephone survey
  • School foodservice mail survey
  • Two packaging design surveys
  • Qualitative
  • Focus groups
  • Consumers
  • Foodservice
  • Foodservice telephone interviews

28
My Research Story (cont.)
  • Surveys to follow-up on focus groups
  • Product design
  • Promotion
  • Ethnic marketing
  • Secondary research
  • Eco-labels
  • Ethnic markets

29
Mature Markets
  • Slow/no growth
  • Competition intensifies
  • Price competition
  • Advertising and promotion increases
  • Product improvements and line extensions
  • Private label growth
  • Profit erosion

30
Mature Markets
  • Structure Dominant firms (high volume/low cost)
    and Niche firms (higher margin)
  • Niche firms must differentiate to be successful
  • Service
  • Focus
  • Quality
  • Innovation
  • Biggest reason for market failure me-too
    products (6.7 innovative in 1999)

31
Conclusion
  • Mistakes
  • lack of marketing approach
  • failure to use research
  • failure to define market research goals
  • lack of innovation
  • Marketing research
  • learn how to delight your customer
  • tradeoffs

32
Resource Smart Marketing
  • www.cals.cornell.edu/dept/
  • arme/hortmgt/pubs/
  • Click on Smart Marketing Series
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