Selling the Product Supply and Demand Advances in manufacturing resulted in large supplies of goods for sale. Markets had to be expanded to draw in consumers.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Price Planning Ch. 25 ME.
Advertisements

Marketing’s Role Today and Tomorrow
5 P’s.
Objective 5.02 The Price Strategy.
Chapter 1, Section 1.2 Marketing Principles
Chapter Wrap Up Lesson 1 1. Supporters of laissez-faire economics believe that government economic regulations increase costs and eventually hurt society.
REVIEW. 15 KEY TERMS FILL IN BLANKS WITH BANK MERCHANDISE PLAN - A BASIC BUDGETING TOOL THAT ASSISTS THE RETAILER OR BUYER IN MEETING DEPARTMENT OR CLASSIFICATION.
Internal Trade Business Studies Small and Large retailers Small and Large retailers Fixed Shop Large Retailers Fixed Shop Large Retailers Fixed Shop Small.
Section 1.2 Business Activities
1 Understand the role of marketing in business.. 2 Understand buying behaviors.
For use only with Perreault/Cannon/McCarthy or Perreault/McCarthy texts. © 2008 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Marketing’s.
Introduction to Business
1. Writing everything down on paper will help you visualize all the aspects of your business 2. It will help you convince banks and other potential investors.
Marketing Vocabulary. Market Advertise or promote an item or service.
Form 4 Commercial studies
Capitalism and Free Enterprise
CHAPTER 1 Understanding The Contemporary Business Environment.
The marketing concept THE CUSTOMER PROMOTION Market analysis
What is retailing? Chapter 1. Question Have you ever considered owning your own shop? What kind of shop? Do you think it would be fun? Do you think it.
Marketing and Distribution
U2 Chapter 5 Invention, Innovation and the Creative Edge BDI 3C1 Entrepreneurship.
Electronic Commerce Systems. Electronic Commerce (E-Commerce) Commerce refers to all the activities the purchase and sales of goods or services. – Marketing,
Marketing Today 1.1 What is Marketing 1.2 Businesses Need Marketing
Marketing Mix OBJECTIVES: -Discuss the 4 P’s of Marketing -Identify Marketing Mix Concepts -Create a Marketing Mix Presentation.
Chapter 14 Industrialization Section 3 Big Business.
LESSON 1.1 RETAIL BUSINESSES
Back to Table of Contents pp Chapter 22 Making Consumer Decisions.
Chapter 13 Marketing in Today’s World
The United States functions within a global marketplace, where goods and services are traded and sold. Here are some characteristics of the global economy:
Warm Up Turn to page 25 in your textbook Read “Consumer Action” What can Yolanda do to help her business be more profitable? How will she know if her price.
Shortages and Surpluses. Businesses have to figure out what price to charge consumers Also, they have to try to figure out how much of their product the.
Chapter 1 Marketing Today
Entrepreneur  There are four Ps associated with marketing:  Product  Price  Place  Promotion.
American History Chapter 5, Section 3. Early Corporations In American, the number of corporations began to increase in the 1830s because States began.
1 Ch 3 Outline 1.Introduction 2.Pricing Strategy 3.Price and Gross Margin 4.Core Prices and Discounting 5.Pricing and Competition.
The Rise of Big Business
Chapter 14, Section 3 “Big Business”. The Rise of Big Business Big business dominated ________________ Not have been possible w/out corporations Corporations:
Industrialization Big Business. Learning Targets:  Know how fixed costs and operating costs effect economies of scale and how big businesses manipulated.
Marketing Is Everywhere!!
The Rise of Big Business Click the mouse button to display the information. By 1900 big business dominated the economy of the United States.  A corporation.
Chapter 9 Section 3 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Guide to Reading After the Civil War, big business assumed.
Marketing Mr. X and Mr. Y both own grocery stores. What steps could Mr. X take to outsell Mr. Y and put him out of business?
Adriana Masnyj Raquel Flores Andrew MacDonald Christofer Russo.
III. Big Business Following the Civil War, large corporations developed Could consolidate business functions and produce goods more efficiently Retailers.
Business Management Chapter 1. All businesses engage in 3 major activities:  1. Production – the making of a product or providing a service  2. Marketing.
{ Unit 7 THE AGE OF BIG BUSINESS.  Larger pools of capital – More $$$ entrepreneurs invested a lot of money or borrowed from investors  Wider geographic.
Marketing In Today’s World Freshman Seminar - Introduction to Business Dr. Hays Freshman Seminar - Introduction to Business Dr. Hays.
What’s Marketing? Oxford Dictionary: Market : A place at which trade is conducted. Marketing: The action of buying or selling in a market.
Getting to California horizontal integration – combining many firms engaged in the same type of business into one monopoly – when a single company gains.
Distribution (Place) Strategy. Distribution Strategy  Involves how you will deliver your goods and services to your customers. o It includes movement.
Competitive Advantages BMI3C. Competitive Advantage An advantage a business has over its competitors May be Sustainable (i.e. an advantage you can maintain.
UNIT #2 – INDUSTRIALIZATION LESSON #4 - Big Business ( )
Unit 5: Developing Consumer Awareness Family and Consumer Sciences I.
Ch 5 sec 2 THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION PART 1.
Essential Standard 3.00 Understand the role of marketing in business. 1.
Target Market - Review What is a market? ◦ People who share similar needs and wants and have the ability to purchase a given product are a market What.
© Thomson/South-Western ECONOMIC EDUCATION FOR CONSUMERS Slide 1 Consumer’s Role in the Economy Objectives: By the end of class, students will be able.
Marketing in Today's World Unit 4, Chapter 13 Page
The Free Enterprise System The Corporation Before the Civil War, most American businesses were owned by individuals or by a group of partners. After the.
Chapter 12 Section 3 BIG Business By: Ashlee Kuan, Laura Guebert, and Katelyn Fix.
PRICE PLANNING PART 2 Factors
Big Business Chapter 3 Section 3.
Economic Benefits of Marketing
Mrs. Baugh US History Pgs
Supply and Demand.
“The Business of America is Business”
The Rise of Big Business
American Industry Guided Notes
Consolidating Industry
Big Busine$$ Ch 3 Lesson 3.
Presentation transcript:

Selling the Product Supply and Demand Advances in manufacturing resulted in large supplies of goods for sale. Markets had to be expanded to draw in consumers and increase demand. Advertising The need to draw in consumers led to the development of advertising companies. Large ads appeared in magazines and newspapers to attract customers to both products and to retail stores where those products were sold. Department Stores These retail stores offered many different types of goods in one large building and made shopping an activity that appealed to a wide range of consumers. Chain Stores These retail stores were owned by a single company and had multiple locations. The stores advertised through catalogs and offered goods at lower prices than department stores.

Advertising How did the development of modern manufacturing create the need for advertising and retail sales? Modern manufacturing made large numbers of products quickly, which increased the supply. This created a need to convince consumers to buy these products. Advertisements that contained both descriptions of products and locations where the products could be purchased increased demand.

Rockefeller and Carnegie What qualities enabled Carnegie and Rockefeller to become successful entrepreneurs? They were able to read the market and make the right moves at the right time to ensure that their companies were efficient and profitable. They began work as boys. They were competitive and to some, ruthless.

Entrepreneurs How do the qualities of modern-day entrepreneurs, such as Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, or Donald Trump, compare with those of the era of industrialization? Entrepreneurs today have to be computer and Internet savvy; they have to think in terms of international business. Modern entrepreneurs also may have to be more innovative than men such as Carnegie and Rockefeller were in the 1800s.

Activity Write a 5 paragraph essay about how many of the wealthiest businesspeople in modern times are not people who make steel or refine oil. The new wealthy are people who work in banking and investments. Discuss with students whether this is good or bad for a nation’s economy.