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What is Marketing? Chapter 1.

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Presentation on theme: "What is Marketing? Chapter 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 What is Marketing? Chapter 1

2 Definition of Marketing
Sum of all activities involved in the planning, pricing, promoting, distributing, and selling of goods and services to satisfy consumers’ needs and wants

3 Marketing Goods and Services
(1) Industrial Goods: -Raw materials -Processed goods -Finished goods (2) Consumer Goods: -intended for personal use by general public SERVICES Services can be marketed to both industrial and consumers markets

4 What is the Marketing Concept?
The marketing concept is the idea that a business or organization must consider both its potential customers and its competitors in every important business decision.

5 Three Steps of the Marketing Concept
The marketing concept requires a business to take three major steps: Identify an opportunity in a specific consumer or industrial market. Ensure that the opportunity has not already been met in the competitive market. Use appropriate marketing strategies to organize marketing plans and to sell its products or service successfully.

6 Supply and Demand Marketing is not as important when the supply of a product is low because… Low supply means higher demand, therefore the product sells itself and marketing is not necessary.

7 Supply and Demand (caveat emptor = “let the buyer beware”)

8 The Industrial Revolution
Before After Concentrated on distribution and sales, rather than advertising, packaging etc. Steam, electricity, gas and oil provided power to factories, railroads and homes Demand for products was greater than supply Factories produced huge quantities of inexpensive goods Farmers and craftspeople worked with their hands and produced limited output Railroads moved the goods across the country

9 The Industrial Revolution
After the two World Wars (1945), most businesses marketing philosophy was “whatever we make, you’ll buy” Growth from department stores (Simpson’s, Eaton’s, Hudson Bay company) Supermarket (Loblaws, Dominion, Sobeys) Mass Media (magazines, radio, billboards, television)

10 The Marketing Concept Today
In the late 1900’s, production in North America exceeded demand and customers stopped buying whatever the manufacturer made and became more selective. Marketers alter their products, their distribution, their production facilities and marketing mix to meet the needs of the customer.

11 Domestic & Global Marketing
Free trade and the World Trade Organization have helped to reduce import taxes (called tariffs); Most marketing can no longer be domestic; Canadian companies sell aboard or buy from other nations.

12 Marketing and the Organization
Companies organize their marketing divisions by: Region Country Brand Method of Distribution Combination

13 Regional Organizations
Can be within a city, a region, or a group of provinces (Atlantic, Western). Strength is that it allows a company to respond quickly to regional differences;

14 International Organizations
Sets up marketing and distribution centers in foreign markets; Foreign office analyzes buying habits and customs of local consumers and designs marketing campaigns that respond to those variables.

15 Brand Management This organizational structure assigns one or more of the company’s major brands to a marketing manager who then develops a marketing plan specifically for that brand. Kellogg’s (Corn Flakes,Rice Krispies) Procter and Gamble (Cheer,Crest, Pringles)

16 Distribution Management
Organizes marketing activities around the way that the product or service will be delivered to the customer. E.g. soft-drink companies divide marketing into supermarket, vending machines, and hotels, with each creating separate marketing plans.

17 Non-Profit Organizations
A nonprofit organization is one that does not seek profit as its primary motive, but instead raises funds for a specific goal. E.g. Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation

18 The Goal of a Not-for-Profit Organization
Not-for-profit organizations do not seek profit. They operate for the good of the community. The funds are used to improve the services offered to its members. Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation exists to advance cancer research, education diagnosis and treatment.

19 Marketing Concept for Nonprofit Organizations
Marketing is important for the existence of nonprofit organizations. When economic times are tough, the public is less likely to donate funds to nonprofit organizations, therefore they need effective marketing to increase awareness and support.

20 Consumer and Competitive Markets
Markets are composed of two parts: Consumer market: refers to all those consumers who are or may become interested in a product or service and have the means to purchase it. 2. Competitive market: all products or services that compete with one another for the consumers’ money within a specific category (Eg. Cd’s, athletic shoes, hair salons)

21 Target Market A target market is the group of consumers that marketers want to attract. Aggregate market: the target market is everybody Differentiated markets: markets are categorized in a specific way, e.g. consumers’ income, geographical location, age or gender.

22 The Marketing Mix The marketing mix is divided into four categories:

23 Marketing Strategies A strategy is the method selected to carry out a carefully devised plan of action in order to achieve a specific goal The strategies can be categorized as Brand strategies Distribution strategies

24 1.Brand Strategies This goal is to communicate the value of a product or service to the consumer Brand strategies develop and communicate the benefits of the brand, minimize costs, and encourage the consumer to set up a positive value equation

25 Value Equation Value equation adds together all of the benefits of a product, both real and imagined, and subtracts the costs involved in obtaining the product. Value Equation = Total Benefits-Total Costs See example on page 26 in textbook

26 2. Distribution Strategies
Distribution Strategies focus on best way to deliver the product or service to target market The 3 types of distribution strategies are: Push Strategy: sells product to retailers, importers, or wholesalers, and not to end-use consumers Pull Strategy: attempts to communicate to consumers directly rather than relying on retailers 3. Combination: a use of both push and pull strategies


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