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Marketing Management By Philip Kotler (719 Slides)

by Hardeep Kumar on Feb 09, 2009

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Marketing Management By Philip Kotler (719 Slides) — Presentation Transcript

  1. PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley Creative Assistance by D. Carter and S. Koger 1-1 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  2. Chapter 1 Defining Marketing for the st Century 21 by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-2 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  3. Kotler on Marketing The future is not ahead of us. It has already happened. Unfortunately, it is unequally distributed among companies, industries and nations. 1-3 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  4. Chapter Objectives In this chapter we will address the following questions: What is the new economy like? What are the tasks of marketing? What are the major concepts and tools of marketing? What orientations do companies exhibit in the marketplace? How are companies and marketers responding to the new challenges? 1-4 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  5. The New Economy Substantial increase in buying power A greater variety of goods and services A greater amount of information about practically anything A greater ease in interacting and placing and receiving orders An ability to compare notes on products and services 1-5 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  6. The New Economy Websites can provide companies with powerful new information and sales channels. Companies can collect fuller and richer information about markets, customers, prospects and competitors. Companies can facilitate and speed up communications among employees. Companies can have 2-way 2- communication with customers and prospects 1-6 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  7. The New Economy Companies can send ads, coupons, samples, information to targeted customers. Companies can customize offerings and services to individual customers. The Internet can be used as a communication channel for purchasing, training, and recruiting. Companies can improve logistics and operations for cost savings while improving accuracy and service quality. 1-7 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  8. The three major challenges faced by businesses today are globalization, advances in technology, and deregulation. Which of these affords the greatest opportunity for established businesses? Which affords the greatest opportunities for new businesses? Why? 1-8 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  9. Marketing Task Ten rules of radical marketing The CEO must own the marketing function. Make sure the marketing department starts small and flat and stays small and flat. Get face to face with the people who matter most – the customers. Use market research cautiously. Hire only passionate missionaries. 1-9 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  10. Marketing Task Love and respect your customers. Create a community of consumers. Rethink the marketing mix. Celebrate common sense. Be true to the brand. Three stages of marketing practice Entrepreneurial Marketing Formulated Marketing Intrepreneurial Marketing 1-10 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  11. The Scope of Marketing Marketing: typically seen as the task of creating, promoting, and delivering goods and services to consumers and businesses. 1-11 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  12. 1. Negative A major part of the market dislikes the demand product and may even pay a price to Table 1.1 avoid it—vaccinations, dental work, it— Demand vasectomies, and gallbladder operations, for instance. Employers have States and a negative demand for ex-convicts and ex- Marketing alcoholics as employees. The marketing task is to analyze why the market Tasks dislikes the product and whether a marketing program consisting of product redesign, lower prices, and more positive promotion can change beliefs and attitudes. 2. No demand Target consumers may be unaware of or uninterested in the product. Farmers may not be interested in a new farming method, and college students may not be interested in foreign-language foreign- courses. The marketing task is to find ways to connect the benefits of the product with people’s natural needs and interests. See text for complete table 1-12 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  13. Can you name a category of products for which your negative feelings have softened? What precipitated this change? 1-13 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  14. The Scope of Marketing Places Goods Properties Services Organizations Experiences Information Events Ideas Persons 1-14 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  15. The Decisions Marketers Make Consumer Markets Business Markets Global Markets Nonprofit and Governmental Markets 1-15 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  16. Marketing Concepts and Tools Defining Marketing Marketing Marketing management Core Marketing Concepts Target Markets and Segmentation 1-16 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  17. Figure 1-1: A Simple Marketing System 1-17 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  18. Marketing Concepts and Tools Marketplace, Marketspace, and Metamarket 1-18 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  19. Marketing Concepts and Tools Marketers and Prospects Needs, Wants, and Demands Product, Offering, and Brand Value and Satisfaction Customer value triad Value Value = Benefits / Costs = (Functional benefits + Emotional benefits) / (Monetary costs + Time costs + Energy costs + Psychic costs) 1-19 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  20. Marketing Concepts and Tools Exchange and Transactions Exchange Transaction Barter Transfer Behavioral response 1-20 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  21. Marketing Concepts and Tools Relationships and Networks Relationship marketing Marketing network Marketing Channels Supply Chain Competition 1-21 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  22. Marketing Concepts and Tools Brand competition Industry competition Form competition Generic competition Marketing environment Task environment Broad environment Marketing Program Marketing program Marketing mix 1-22 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  23. Company Orientations Toward the Marketplace Production Concept Product concept Selling Concept Marketing Concept 1-23 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  24. Company Orientations Toward the Marketplace Target Market Customer Needs Stated needs Real needs Unstated needs Delight needs Secret needs 1-24 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  25. Company Orientations Toward the Marketplace Integrated Marketing External marketing Internal marketing 1-25 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  26. Company Orientations Toward the Marketplace Profitability Sales decline Slow growth Changing buying patterns Increasing competition Increasing marketing expenditures 1-26 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  27. Company Orientations Toward the Marketplace Societal Marketing Concept Cause- Cause-related marketing 1-27 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  28. Can you identify the trends that have made the marketing concept, the customer concept, and the societal marketing concept more attractive models for contemporary marketing managers? 1-28 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  29. How Business and Marketing are Changing Customers Brand manufacturers Store- Store-based retailers 1-29 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  30. How Business and Marketing are Changing Company responses and adjustments Partner- Partner-suppliers Reengineering Market- Market-centered Outsourcing Global and local E-commerce Decentralized Benchmarking Alliances 1-30 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  31. How Business and Marketing are Changing Marketer Responses and Adjustments Customer relationship Integrated marketing marketing communications Customer lifetime value Channels as partners Customer share Every employee a Target marketing marketer Customization Model- Model-based decision Customer database making 1-31 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  32. Chapter 2 Adapting Marketing To The New Economy by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-32 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  33. Kotler on Marketing The Internet will create new winners and bury the laggards. 1-33 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  34. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we will address the following questions: What are the major forces driving the New Economy? How are business and marketing practices changing as a result of the New Economy? How are marketers using the Internet, customer databases, and customer relationship management in the New Economy? 1-34 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  35. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Major Drivers of the New Economy Digitization and Connectivity Disintermediation and Reintermediation Customization and Customerization 1-35 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  36. Procter & Gamble’s Reflect.com site allows customers to design their own beauty products 1-36 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  37. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Industry Convergence How Business Practices are Changing Organize by product units to organize by customer segments Shift focus from profitable transactions to customer lifetime value Shift focus from financial scorecard to also focusing on the marketing scorecard Shift focus from shareholders to stakeholders 1-37 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  38. Table 2-1: Old Economy vs. New Economy Old Economy New Economy Organize by product units Organize by customer segments Focus on profitable transactions Focus on customer lifetime value Look primarily at financial Look also at marketing scorecard scorecard Focus on stakeholders Focus on shareholders Everyone does the marketing Marketing does the marketing Build brands through behavior Build brands through advertising Focus on customer retention and Focus on customer acquisition growth No customer satisfaction Measure customer satisfaction and measurement retention rate Overpromise, underdeliver Underpromise, overdeliver 1-38 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  39. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Everyone does the marketing Build brands through performance, not just advertising Customer retention rather than customer acquisition From none to in-depth customer in- satisfaction measurement From over-promise, under-deliver to over- under- under- under-promise, over-deliver over- The New Hybrid 1-39 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  40. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy How Marketing Practices are Changing: E-Business E- E-business E-commerce E-purchasing E-marketing Internet Domains: B2C (Business to Customer) 1-40 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  41. Customers can shop online at Calyx and Corolla or ask for a catalog and shop by phone 1-41 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  42. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Internet Domains: B2B (Business to Business) 1-42 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  43. Figure 2-1: The Supplier- Customer Relationship: Traditional and New Economy Structures 1-43 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  44. www.transora.com: global online marketplace for the consumer packaged goods industry 1-44 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  45. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Internet Domains: C2C (Consumer to Consumer) Internet Domains: C2B (Customer to Business) Pure Click vs. Brick and Click Companies Pure- Pure-click companies 1-45 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  46. CarPoint, leading metamediary for car buying, is a pure click company: It exists only on the Web. 1-46 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  47. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Brick and Click companies 1-47 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  48. Which is more important for developing an e-presence: the agility e- of a pure click company, or the well defined and readily identifiable resources of a traditional brick and mortar company? 1-48 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  49. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy How Marketing Practices are Changing: Setting Up Web Sites Designing an Attractive Website Seven elements of effective sites Context Content Community Customization Communication Connection Commerce 1-49 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  50. Would you be willing to give up one or more of the seven elements of an effective web site in order to speed the deployment of a new company e-commerce site? e- What would the expected trade-offs be trade- between an effective site and an early web presence? 1-50 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  51. Attracting and Keeping Visitors Table 2-2: 2- How can we get more prospects to know and visit our site? Setting How can we use marketing to spread word-of-mouth? word-of- Up a How can we convert visitors into repeaters? Dot- Dot-com How do we make our site more experiential and real? Presence How can we build a strong relationship with our customers? How can we build a customer community? How can we capture and exploit customer data for up-selling up- and cross-selling? cross- How much should we spend on building and marketing our site? Advertising on the Internet What are the various ways that we can advertise on the Internet? How do we choose the right sites for placing our ads or sponsorship? See text for complete table 1-51 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  52. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Context factors Content factors Getting feedback 1-52 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  53. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Placing Ads and Promotions Online Banner ads Sponsorships Microsite Interstitials Browser ads Alliances and affiliate programs Push 1-53 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  54. Infogate.com “pushes” targeted content and ads to those who are interested in a product or product category 1-54 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  55. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Building a Revenue and Profit Model Advertising income Sponsorship income Membership and subscriptions Profile income Product and service sales Transaction commission and fees Market research/information Referral income 1-55 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  56. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy How Marketing Practices are Changing: Customer Relationship Marketing Reduce rate of customer defection Increase longevity of customer relationship Enhance growth potential through cross-selling and up-selling cross- up- Make low profit customers more profitable or terminate them 1-56 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  57. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Focus disproportionate effort on high value customers 1-57 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  58. Table 2-3: Mass Marketing vs. One-to-One Marketing Mass Marketing One-to-One Marketing One-to- Average customer Individual customer Customer anonymity Customer profile Standard product Customized market offering Mass production Customized production Mass distribution Individualized distribution Mass advertising Individualized message Mass promotion Individualized incentives One- One-way message Two- Two-way messages Economies of scale Economies of scope Share of market Share of customer All customers Profitable customers Customer attraction Customer retention 1-58 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  59. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Four steps for One-to-One Marketing One-to- Don’t go after everyone, identify prospects. Define customers by their needs and their value to the company. Individual interaction with customers builds stronger relationships. Customize messages, services, and products for each customer. 1-59 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  60. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Customer Databases and Database Marketing Customer mailing list Business database 1-60 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  61. Adapting Marketing to the New Economy Data Warehouses and Data Mining Using the database To identify prospects To determine target market To deepen customer loyalty To reactivate customer purchases To avoid serious customer mistakes The Downside of Database Marketing 1-61 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  62. Chapter 3 Building Customer Satisfaction, Value, and Retention by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-62 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  63. Kotler on Marketing It is no longer enough to satisfy customers. You must delight them. 1-63 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  64. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we will address the following questions: What are customer value and satisfaction, and how can companies deliver them? What makes a high-performance business? high- How can companies both attract and retain customers? How can companies improve both customer and company profitability? How can companies deliver total quality? 1-64 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  65. Defining Customer Value and Satisfaction Customer Perceived Value (CPV) Total customer value Total customer cost 1-65 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  66. Figure 3-1: Determinants of Customer Delivered Value 1-66 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  67. Defining Customer Value and Satisfaction Total Customer Satisfaction Satisfaction Customer Expectations Delivering High Customer Value Value proposition Value- Value-delivery system Measuring Satisfaction 1-67 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  68. Table 3-1: Tools for Tracking and Measuring Customer Satisfaction A customer-centered organization makes it easy for customer- Complaint customers to register suggestions and complaints. and Some customer-centered companies-P&G, General customer- companies- suggestion Electric, Whirlpool—establish hot lines with toll-free Whirlpool— toll- systems: numbers. Companies are also using Web sites and e-mail for quick, two-way communication. two- Studies show that although customers are dissatisfied with one out of every four purchases, less than 5 Customer percent will complain. Most customers will buy less or satisfaction switch suppliers. Responsive companies measure surveys: customer satisfaction directly by conducting periodic surveys. While collecting customer satisfaction data, it is also useful to ask additional questions to measure repurchase intention and to measure the likelihood or willingness to recommend the company and brand to others. See text for complete table 1-68 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  69. Would you feel more brand loyalty for a company that tried to immediately resolve a complaint via E-mail, or a company that E- had a customer service representative call within two business days to resolve the problem over the phone? 1-69 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  70. Premier Dell.com is a special business-oriented part of the business- Dell Web site that allows customers to interact with Dell and customize all phases of doing business with Dell. 1-70 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  71. The Nature of High Performance Business High- High-performance business 1-71 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  72. Figure 3-2: The High Performance Business 1-72 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  73. The Nature of High Performance Business Stakeholders Processes Resources Core competency Distinctive capabilities Organization and Organizational Culture Organization Corporate culture Scenario analysis 1-73 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  74. Can you name a company that has changed the public’s perception of their corporate culture? Has this effectively rehabilitated that company’s image? 1-74 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  75. Delivering Customer Value and Satisfaction Value Chain Value chain 1-75 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  76. Figure 3-3: The Generic Value Chain 1-76 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  77. Delivering Customer Value and Satisfaction Benchmarks Core Business Processes The market sensing process The new offering realization process The customer acquisition process The customer relationship management process The fulfillment management process 1-77 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  78. Delivering Customer Value and Satisfaction The Value Delivery Network (Supply Chain) 1-78 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  79. Figure 3-4: Levi Strauss’s Value- Delivery Network 1-79 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  80. Attracting and Retaining Customers Partner relationship management (PRM) Customer relationship management (CRM) 1-80 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  81. Saturn has gained a customer loyalty rate of more than 60% by fundamentally changing the buyer-seller relationship. buyer- Can you think of another company that has made a change of similar magnitude? Have they had similar results? 1-81 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  82. Attracting and Retaining Customers Attracting Customers Computing the Cost of Lost Customers Customer churn Lifetime value 1-82 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  83. On the Lands’ End Web site, customers can click a button to talk with a customer service representative 1-83 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  84. Attracting and Retaining Customers The Need for Customer Retention Measuring Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) Customer Relationship Management (CRM): The Key Customer equity Three drivers of customer equity Value equity Brand equity Relationship equity 1-84 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  85. Figure 3-5: The Customer- Development Process 1-85 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  86. Attracting and Retaining Customers Five levels of investment in customer relationship building Basic marketing Reactive marketing Accountable marketing Proactive marketing Partnership marketing 1-86 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  87. Figure 3-6: Levels of Relationship Marketing 1-87 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  88. Attracting and Retaining Customers Forming Strong Customer Bonds: The Basics Cross- Cross-departmental participation Integrate the Voice of the Customer into all business decisions Create superior offering for the target market 1-88 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  89. Attracting and Retaining Customers Organize and make accessible a database of customer information Make it easy for customers to reach the appropriate personnel Reward outstanding employees Adding Financial Benefits Frequency programs (FPs) 1-89 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  90. The H.O.G. Web site presents the benefits of joining. 1-90 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  91. Attracting and Retaining Customers Adding Social Benefits 1-91 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  92. Good Things Bad Things Table 3-2: Initiate positive phone calls Make only callbacks Social Actions Make recommendations Make justifications Affecting Candor in language Accommodative language Buyer-Seller Use phone Use correspondence Relationships Show appreciation Wait for misunderstandings Make service suggestions Wait for service requests Use “we” problem-solving problem- Use “owe-us” legal language “owe- language Only respond to problems Get to problems Use long-winded long- Use jargon or shorthand communications Personality problems aired Personality problems hidden Talk of “our future together” Talk about making good on the past Routinize responses Fire drill and emergency Accept responsibility responsiveness Plan the future Shift blame Rehash the past 1-92 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  93. Attracting and Retaining Customers Adding Structural Ties Create long-term contracts long- Charge lower price to high volume customers Turn product into long- long-term service 1-93 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  94. Customer Profitability, Company Profitability, and Total Quality Management Measuring Profitability Profitable customer 1-94 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  95. Figure 3-7: Customer-Product Profitability Analysis 1-95 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  96. Figure 3-8: Allocating marketing investment according to customer value 1-96 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  97. Customer Profitability, Company Profitability, and Total Quality Management Increasing Company Profitability Competitive advantage Implementing TQM Total Quality Management Quality 1-97 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  98. Chapter 4 Winning Markets Through Market- Market-Oriented Strategic Planning by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-98 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  99. Kotler on Marketing It is more important to do what is strategically right than what is immediately profitable. 1-99 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  100. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we examine the following questions: How is strategic planning carried out at the corporate and division levels? How is planning carried out at the business unit level? What are the major steps in the marketing process? How is planning carried out at the product level? What does a marketing plan include? 1-100 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  101. Strategic Planning: Three Key Areas and Four Organization Levels Strategic marketing plan Tactical marketing plan Marketing plan 1-101 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  102. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning All corporate headquarters undertake four planning activities Defining the Corporate Mission Establishing Strategic Business Units (SBUs) Assigning resources to each SBU Planning new businesses, downsizing, or terminating older businesses 1-102 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  103. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning Defining the Corporate Mission Mission statements define which competitive scopes the company will operate in Industry scope Products and applications scope Competence scope Market- Market-segment scope Vertical scope Geographical scope 1-103 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  104. Can you name a company that has recently changed its product scope or market segment scope in a very public way? Was this an expansion or contraction of scope? 1-104 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  105. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning Establishing Strategic Business Units (SBUs) 1-105 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  106. Table 4.1: Product-Oriented versus Market-Oriented Definitions of a Business Company Product Definition Market Definition Missouri- Missouri-Pacific We run a railroad We are a people-and- people-and- Railroad goods mover Xerox We make copying We help improve office equipment productivity Standard Oil We sell gasoline We supply energy Columbia Pictures We make movies We market entertainment Encyclopaedia We sell encyclopedias We distribute Information Carrier We make air We provide climate conditioners and control in the home furnaces 1-106 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  107. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning Three characteristics of SBUs Single business or collection of related businesses that can be planned for separately Has its own set of competitors Has a manager who is responsible for strategic planning and profit 1-107 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  108. The Growth-Share Matrix Growth- Relative market share Four Cells Question Marks Stars Cash Cows Dogs SBU Strategies SBU Lifecycle 1-108 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  109. Can you give an example of a “Star” that skipped “Cash Cow”, and went straight to “Dog” status? 1-109 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  110. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning The General Electric Model 1-110 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  111. Table 4-2: Factors underlying Market Attractiveness and Competitive Position in GE Multifactor Portfolio Model: Hydraulic-Pumps Market Rating = Weight (1-5) (1- Value Overall market size 0.20 4 0.80 Annual market growth rate 0.20 5 1. Historical profit margin 0.15 4 0.60 Competitive intensity 0.15 2 0.30 Technological requirements 0.15 4 0.60 Market Inflationary vulnerability 0.05 3 0.15 Attractiveness Energy requirements 0.05 2 0.10 Environmental impact 0.05 3 0.15 Social-political- Social-political-legal Must be acceptable 1.0 3.70 Market share 0.10 4 0.40 Share growth 0.15 2 0.30 Business Product quality 0.10 4 0.40 Strength Brand reputation 0.10 5 0.50 Distribution network 0.05 4 0.20 See text for complete table 1-111 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  112. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning Critique of Portfolio Models Planning New Businesses, Downsizing Older Businesses 1-112 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  113. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning Intensive Growth 1-113 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  114. Starbucks’ home page: Customers can request a catalog of Starbucks products, subscribe to a newsletter, and shop online 1-114 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  115. Corporate and Division Strategic Planning Integrative Growth Diversification Growth Downsizing Older Businesses 1-115 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  116. Give an example of a market segment where integrative growth would be preferable to growth through diversification. Explain why one approach is better than the other. 1-116 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  117. Business Unit Strategic Planning Business Mission SWOT Analysis External Environment Analysis (Opportunity and Threat Analysis) Marketing Opportunity Buying opportunity more convenient or efficient Meet the need for more information and advice Customize an offering that was previously only available in standard form 1-117 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  118. Give some examples of companies that have grown to dominate their market segment by using technology to make buying opportunities more convenient and efficient. 1-118 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  119. Business Unit Strategic Planning Marketing Opportunity Analysis (MOA) Can the benefits be articulated to a target market? Can the target market be reached with cost- cost- effective media and trade channels? Does the company have the critical capabilities to deliver the customer benefits? Can the company deliver these benefits better than any actual or potential competitors? Will the rate of return meet the required threshold of investment? 1-119 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  120. Figure 4-7: Opportunity and Threat Matrices 1-120 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  121. Business Unit Strategic Planning Internal Environmental Analysis (Strength/Weakness Analysis) Goal Formation Strategic Formulation Strategy 1-121 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  122. Business Unit Strategic Planning Porter’s Generic Strategies Overall cost leadership Differentiation Focus 1-122 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  123. Travelocity’s Web site helps the consumer plan the whole vacation – flights, lodging, and car rental.com 1-123 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  124. Business Unit Strategic Planning Operational Effectiveness and Strategy Strategic group Strategic alliances 1-124 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  125. Business Unit Strategic Planning Marketing Alliances Product or service alliances Promotional alliances Logistical alliances Pricing collaborations Partner Relationship Management, PRM Program Formulation and Implementation 1-125 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  126. Business Unit Strategic Planning Feedback and Control 1-126 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  127. The Marketing Process Steps in the Planning Process The marketing process Analyzing Market Opportunities Developing Marketing Strategies Planning Marketing Programs Managing the Marketing Effort Annual- Annual-plan control Profitability control Strategic control 1-127 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  128. Figure 4-10: Factors Influencing Company Marketing Strategy 1-128 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  129. Product Planning: The Nature and Contents of a Marketing Plan Contents of the Marketing Plan Executive Summary Current Marketing Situation Opportunity and issue analysis Objectives Marketing strategy Action programs Financial projections Implementation controls 1-129 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  130. Product Planning: The Nature and Contents of a Marketing Plan Sample Marketing Plan: Sonic Personal Digital Assistant Current Marketing Situation Opportunity and Issue Analysis Objectives Action Programs Financial Projections 1-130 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  131. Product Planning: The Nature and Contents of a Marketing Plan Implementation Controls Marketing Strategy Positioning Product Management Pricing Distribution Marketing Communications Marketing Research 1-131 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  132. Chapter 5 Gathering Information and Measuring Market Demand by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-132 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  133. Kotler on Marketing Marketing is becoming a battle based more on information than on sales power. 1-133 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  134. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: What are the components of a modern marketing information system? What constitutes good marketing research? How can marketing decision support systems help marketing managers make better decisions? How can demand be more accurately measured and forecasted? 1-134 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  135. The Components of a Modern Marketing Information System Marketing Information System (MIS) 10 useful questions for determining the information needs of marketing managers. What decisions do you regularly make? What information do you need to make these decisions? What information do you regularly get? What special studies do you periodically request? 1-135 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  136. The Components of a Modern Marketing Information System What information would you want that you are not getting now? What information would you want daily? Weekly? Monthly? Yearly? What magazines and trade reports would you like to see on a regular basis? What topics would you like to be kept informed of? What data analysis programs would you want? What are the four most helpful improvements that could be made in the present marketing information system? 1-136 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  137. Internal Record Systems The Order-to-Payment Cycle Order-to- Sales Information Systems Databases, Data Warehouses And Data-Mining Data- 1-137 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  138. Can you name a company that uses targeted mailings to promote new products, or regional offerings? 1-138 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  139. The Marketing Intelligence System A Marketing Intelligence System is a set of procedures and sources used by managers to obtain everyday information about developments in the marketing environment. 1-139 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  140. What are some of the potential hazards a company might face by relying too heavily on distributors, retailers, or other intermediaries for market intelligence? 1-140 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  141. The Marriott Vacation Club International Web site gives interested customers the opportunity to sell themselves on the Marriott offerings 1-141 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  142. CEOExpress.com is a portal to information–a user information– clicks on a listing and is then connected to that site 1-142 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  143. Table 5-1: Secondary-Data Sources Secondary- Secondary- A. Internal Sources Data Sources Company profit-loss statements, balance profit- sheets, sales figures, sales-call reports, sales- invoices, inventory records, and prior research reports. B. Government Publications • Statistical Abstract of the United States • County and City Data Book • Industrial Outlook • Marketing Information Guide C. Periodicals and Books • Business Periodicals Index • Standard and Poor’s Industry See text for complete table 1-143 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  144. Marketing Research System Marketing Research Suppliers of Marketing Research Engaging students or professors to design and carry out projects Using the Internet Checking out rivals Syndicated- Syndicated-service research firms Custom marketing research firms Specialty- Specialty-line marketing research firms 1-144 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  145. Figure 5-1: The Marketing Research Process 1-145 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  146. Marketing Research System The Marketing Research Process Step 1: Define the Problem, the Decision Alternatives, and the Research Objectives Step 2: Develop the Research Plan Data Sources Research Approaches Observational research Focus group research 1-146 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  147. Marketing Research System Survey research Behavioral data Experimental research Research Instruments Questionnaires Psychological tools Mechanical devices Quantitative measures 1-147 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  148. Table 5-2: Types of Questions A. Closed-end Questions Closed- Name Description Example Dichotomous A question with two possible answers. In arranging this trip, did you personally phone American? Yes No Multiple Choice A question with three or more answers. With whom are you traveling on this flight? No one Children only Spouse Business associates/friends/relatives Spouse and An organized tour group children Likert scale A statement with which the respondent Small airlines generally give better service than large ones. shows the amount of agreement/ Strongly Disagree Neither agree Agree Strongly disagreement. disagree nor disagree agree 1_____ 2 _____ 3_____ 4_____ 5_____ See text for complete table 1-148 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  149. Marketing Research System Sampling Plan Sampling unit Sample size Sampling procedure 1-149 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  150. www.wansink.com is a consumer psychology Web site set up by Dr. Brian Wansink of the University of Illinois 1-150 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  151. Table 5-3: Probability and Nonprobability Samples A. Probability Sample Simple random sample Every member of the population has an equal chance of selection Stratified random The population is divided into mutually sample exclusive groups (such as age groups), and random samples are drawn from each group Cluster (area) sample The population is divided into mutually exclusive groups (such as city blocks), and the researcher draws a sample of the groups to interview Continued on next slide . . . 1-151 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  152. Table 5-3: Probability and Nonprobability Samples (Continued) B. Nonprobability Sample Convenience sample The researcher selects the most accessible population members Judgment sample The researcher selects population members who are good prospects for accurate information Quota sample The researcher finds and interviews a prescribed number of people in each of several categories 1-152 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  153. Marketing Research System Contact Methods Mail questionnaire Personal interviewing Arranged interviews Intercept interviews Online methods Click-stream Cookies Automated telephone surveys 1-153 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  154. Marketing Research System Step 3: Collect the Information Step 4: Analyze the Information Step 5: Present the Findings Step 6: Make the Decision 1-154 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  155. Table 5-4: The Seven Characteristics of Good Marketing Research 1. Scientific Effective marketing research uses the principles method of the scientific method: careful observation, formulation of hypotheses, prediction, and testing. 2. Research At its best, marketing research develops creativity innovative ways to solve a problem: a clothing company catering to teenagers gave several young men video cameras, then used the videos for focus groups held in restaurants and other places teens frequent. 3. Multiple Marketing researchers shy away from overreliance methods on any one method. They also recognize the value of using two or three methods to increase confidence in the results. See text for complete table 1-155 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  156. Marketing Research System Overcoming Barriers to the Use of Marketing Research A narrow conception of the research Uneven caliber of researchers Poor framing of the problem Late and occasionally erroneous findings Personality and presentational differences 1-156 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  157. Marketing Decision Support System Marketing Decision Support System (MDSS) Marketing and sales software programs BRANDAID CALLPLAN DETAILER GEOLINE MEDIAC PROMOTER ADCAD CONVERSTORY 1-157 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  158. Table 5-5: Quantitative Tools Used in Marketing Decision Support Systems Statistical Tools 1. Multiple A statistical technique for estimating a “best fitting” regression: equation showing how the value of a dependent variable varies with changing values in a number of independent variables. Example: A company can estimate how unit Example: sales are influenced by changes in the level of company advertising expenditures, sales force size, and price. 2. Discriminant A statistical technique for classifying an object or analysis: persons into two or more categories. Example: A large Example: retail chain store can determine the variables that discriminate between successful and unsuccessful store locations. 3. Factor A statistical technique used to determine the few analysis: underlying dimensions of a larger set of intercorrelated variables. Example: A broadcast network can reduce a Example: large set of TV programs down to a small set of basic program types. See text for complete table 1-158 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  159. Forecasting and Demand Measurement The Measures of Market Demand Figure 5-3: Ninety Types of Demand Measurement (6X5X3) 1-159 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  160. Forecasting and Demand Measurement Which Market to Measure? Market Potential market Available market Target market (severed market) Penetrated market A Vocabulary for Demand Measurement Market Demand Market share Market penetration index Share penetration index 1-160 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  161. Forecasting and Demand Measurement Figure 5-4: Market Demand Functions 1-161 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  162. Can you name a market segment with a low penetration index? A high penetration index? Can you think of a market where the high penetration index might be a misleading indicator? 1-162 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  163. Forecasting and Demand Measurement Market Forecast Market Potential Product penetration percentage Company Demand Company Sales Forecast Sales quota Sales budget Company Sales Potential 1-163 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  164. Forecasting and Demand Measurement Estimating Current demand Total Market Potential Area Market Potential Market- Market-Buildup Method 1-164 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  165. Table 5-6: Market-Buildup Method Using SIC Codes (c) Potential (a) Number Annual (b) of Lathe Sales Market Sales in Potential Millions Number of Per $1 Million SIC of $ Establishments Customer Sales (a x b x c) 2511 1 6 10 60 5 2 10 100 1 3 5 15 2521 5 1 5 25 30 200 1-165 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  166. Forecasting and Demand Measurement Multiple-Factor Index Method Brand development index (BDI) 1-166 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  167. Table 5-7: Calculating the Brand Development Index (BDI) (a) (b) Percent of Percent of U.S. Brand U.S. Category BDI (a ÷ b) x 100 Territory Sales Sales Seattle 3.09 2.71 114 Portland 6.74 10.41 65 Boston 3.49 3.85 91 Toledo .97 .81 120 Chicago 1.13 .81 140 Baltimore 3.12 3.00 104 1-167 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  168. Forecasting and Demand Measurement Industry Sales and Market Shares Estimating Future Demand Survey of Buyers’ Intentions Forecasting Purchase probability scale 1-168 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  169. Forecasting and Demand Measurement Composite of Sales Force Opinions Expert Opinion Group discussion method Pooling of individual estimates Past-Sales Analysis Time-series analysis Exponential smoothing Statistical demand analysis Econometric analysis Market-Test Method 1-169 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  170. Chapter 6 Scanning the Marketing Environment by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-170 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  171. Kotler on Marketing Today you have to run faster to stay in place. 1-171 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  172. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on two questions: What are the key methods for tracking and identifying opportunities in the macroenvironment? What are the key demographic, economic, natural, technological, political, and cultural developments? 1-172 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  173. Analyzing Needs and Trends in the Macroenvironment Trend Fad Megatrends 1-173 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  174. Given the definitions for fads, trends, and megatrends presented in the text, how would you define your online activities? Can you identify an online trend that is likely to grow into a megatrend? 1-174 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  175. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces The substantial speedup of international transportation, communication, and financial transactions, leading to the rapid growth of world trade and investment, especially tripolar trade (North America, Western Europe, Far East) The movement of manufacturing capacity and skills to lower cost countries. The rising economic power of several Asian countries in world markets. The rise of trade blocks such as the European Union and NAFTA signatories. 1-175 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  176. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces The severe debt problems of a number of countries, along with the increasing fragility of the international financial system. The increasing use of barter and countertrade to support international transactions. The move toward market economies in formerly socialist countries along with rapid privatization of publicly owned companies. The rapid dissemination of global lifestyles. The gradual opening of major new markets, namely China, India, eastern Europe, the Arab countries, and Latin America. 1-176 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  177. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces The increasing tendency of multinationals to transcend their locational and national characteristics and become transnational firms. The increasing number of cross-border corporate cross- strategic alliances–for example, MCI and British alliances– Telecom, and Texas Instruments and Hitachi. The increasing ethnic and religious conflicts in certain countries and regions. The growth of global brands in autos, food, clothing, electronics. 1-177 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  178. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces Demographic Environment Worldwide Population Growth Population Age Mix Ethnic and Other Markets 1-178 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  179. Can you identify one or more nations whose populations hold the promise of huge potential markets for consumer goods? How have pressures from potential marketers to these untapped consumer groups driven the political discussion on a national and international level? 1-179 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  180. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces Educational Groups Household Patterns Geographical Shifts in Population From a Mass Market to Micromarkets 1-180 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  181. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces Economic Environment Income Distribution Savings, Debt, and Credit Availability 1-181 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  182. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces Natural Environment Shortage of Raw Materials Increased Energy Cost Anti- Anti-Pollution Pressures Changing Role of Governments 1-182 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  183. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces Technological Environment Accelerating Pace of Change Unlimited Opportunities for Innovation 1-183 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  184. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces Varying R&D Budgets Increased Regulation of Technological Change Political- Political-Legal Environment Legislation Regulating Business Growth of Special-Interest Special- Groups Consumerist movement 1-184 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  185. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces Social- Social-Cultural Environment Views of themselves Views of others Views of organizations Views of society Views of nature Views of universe 1-185 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  186. Identifying and Responding to the Major Macroenvironment Forces High Persistence of Core Cultural Values Existence of subcultures Subcultures Shifts of Secondary Cultural Values Through Time 1-186 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  187. Chapter 7 Analyzing Consumer Markets and Buyer Behavior by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-187 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  188. Kotler on Marketing The most important thing is to forecast where customers are moving, and be in front of them. 1-188 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  189. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on two questions: How do the buyers’ characteristics – cultural, social, personal, and psychological – influence buying behavior? How does the buyer make purchasing decisions? 1-189 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  190. Influencing Buyer Behavior Consumer Behavior Cultural Factors Culture Subcultures Diversity marketing Social class 1-190 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  191. Influencing Buyer Behavior Social Factors Reference Groups Reference groups Membership groups Primary groups Secondary groups Aspirational groups Dissociative groups Opinion leader 1-191 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  192. Table 7.1: Characteristics of Major U.S. Social Classes 1. Upper Uppers The social elite who live on inherited wealth. They (less than 1%) give large sums to charity, run the debutante balls, maintain more than one home, and send their children to the finest schools. They are a market for jewelry, antiques, homes, and vacations. They often buy and dress conservatively. Although small as a group, they serve as a reference group to the extent that their consumption decisions are imitated by the other social classes. 2. Lower Uppers Persons, usually from the middle class, who have earned high income or wealth through exceptional (about 2%) ability in the professions or business. They tend to be active in social and civic affairs and to buy the symbols of status for themselves and their children. They include the nouveau riche, whose pattern of conspicuous consumption is designed to impress those below them. See text for complete table 1-192 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  193. Influencing Buyer Behavior Secondary groups Aspirational groups Dissociative groups Opinion leader 1-193 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  194. Influencing Buyer Behavior Family Family of orientation Family of procreation Roles and Statuses Role Status 1-194 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  195. With the “graying” of the American populace, marketers have begun to shift images and cultural references in advertising from things that are relevant to the twenty-somethings to twenty- images of active seniors, and soundtracks from the sixties and seventies. Can you identify any particular ad campaigns that fit this pattern? 1-195 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  196. Influencing Buyer Behavior Personal Factors Age and Stage in the Life Cycle Family life cycle Occupation and Economic Circumstances 1-196 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  197. In recent years, many organizations have “provided” televisions with limited programming access for use in K-12 classrooms. Do these K- entities have a moral obligation to avoid overt marketing to their captive audiences, or is this a valid tool for introducing offerings to future consumers? What should the responsibilities of the educators be in these situations? 1-197 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  198. Table 7.2: Stages in the Family Life Cycle 1. Bachelor stage: Few financial burdens. Fashion opinion Young, single, not living leaders. Recreation oriented. Buy: basic home equipment, furniture, cars, equipment for the at home mating game; vacations. 2. Newly married Highest purchase rate and highest average couples: purchase of durables: cars, appliances, furniture, vacations. Young, no children 3. Full nest I: Home purchasing at peak. Liquid assets low. Interested in new products, advertised Youngest child under products. Buy: washers, dryers, TV, baby food, six chest rubs and cough medicines, vitamins, dolls, wagons, sleds, skates. 4. Full nest II: Financial position better. Less influenced by advertising. Buy larger-size packages, larger- Youngest child six or multiple- multiple-unit deals. Buy: many foods, cleaning over materials, bicycles, music lessons, pianos. See text for complete table 1-198 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  199. Figure 7.2: The VALS segmentation system: An 8-part typology Groups with High Resources 1. Actualizers 2. Fulfilleds 3. Achievers 4. Experiencers Groups with Lower Resources 1. Believers 2. Strivers 3. Makers 4. Strugglers 1-199 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  200. SRI Consulting Business Intelligence’s Web site 1-200 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  201. Influencing Buyer Behavior Personality and Self-Concept Self- Personality Brand personality Sincerity Excitement Competence Sophistication Ruggedness Self- Self-concept Person’s actual self-concept self- Ideal self-concept self- Others’ self-concept self- 1-201 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  202. Influencing Buyer Behavior Psychological Factors Motivation Motive Freud’s Theory Laddering Projective techniques 1-202 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  203. Influencing Buyer Behavior Ernest Dichter’s research found: Consumers resist prunes because prunes are wrinkled looking and remind people of old age. Men smoke cigars as an adult version of thumb sucking. Women prefer vegetable shortening to animal fats because the latter arouse a sense of guilt over killing animals. Women don’t trust cake mixes unless they require adding an egg, because this helps them feel they are giving “birth.” 1-203 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  204. Influencing Buyer Behavior Maslow’s Theory Figure 7.3: Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs 1-204 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  205. Influencing Buyer Behavior Herzberg’s Theory Dissatisfiers Satisfiers 1-205 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  206. Influencing Buyer Behavior Perception Selective attention People are more likely to notice stimuli than relate to a current need People are more likely to notice stimuli than they anticipate People are more likely to notice stimuli whose deviations are large in relation to the normal size of the stimuli Selective distortion Selective retention 1-206 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  207. Influencing Buyer Behavior Learning Drive Cues Discrimination Beliefs and Attitudes Belief Spreading activation Attitude 1-207 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  208. The purchase of a product from a Company A turns out to be a positive experience. You are looking for a loosely related product, which is also offered by Company A. Do you assume that you will again have a positive experience with Company A’s offering, or do you look for the “best of breed,” regardless of which company offers it? 1-208 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  209. The Buying Decision Process Buying Roles Initiator Influencer Decider Buyer User Buying behavior 1-209 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  210. Table 7.3: Four Types of Buying Behavior High Involvement Low Involvement Significant Differences Complex buying Variety- Variety-seeking between Brands behavior buying behavior Few Differences between Dissonance- Dissonance-reducing Habitual buying Brands buying behavior behavior 1-210 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  211. The Buying Decision Process Complex Buying Behavior Dissonance- Dissonance-Reducing Buyer Behavior Habitual Buying Behavior Variety- Variety-Seeking Buying Behavior 1-211 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  212. Stages in the Buying Decision Process How marketers learn about the stages: Introspective method Retrospective method Prospective method Prescriptive method Understanding by mapping the customer’s Consumption system Customer activity cycle Customer scenario Metamarket Metamediaries 1-212 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  213. The Edmunds.com home page shows the variety of services this Web company offers those shopping for a car. 1-213 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  214. Stages of the Buying Decision Process Problem recognition Information search Personal sources Figure 7.4: Five-Stage Commercial sources Model of the Public sources Consumer Buying Experiential sources Process 1-214 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  215. Figure 7.5: Successive Sets Involved in Customer Decision Making 1-215 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  216. The Buying Decision Process Evaluation of Alternatives Potential Attributes of interest Cameras Hotels Mouthwash Tires Brand beliefs Brand image 1-216 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  217. Table 7.4: A Consumer’s Brand Beliefs about Computers Computer Attribute Memory Graphics Size and Capacity Capability Weight Price A 10 8 6 4 B 8 9 8 3 C 6 8 10 5 D 4 3 7 8 1-217 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  218. The Buying Decision Process Strategies designed to stimulate interest in a computer Redesign the computer Alter beliefs about the brand Alter beliefs about competitors’ brands Alter the importance weights Call attention to neglected attributes Shift the buyer’s ideas 1-218 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  219. The Buying Decision Process Purchase Decision Figure 7.6: Steps Between Evaluation of Alternatives and a purchase decision 1-219 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  220. The Buying Decision Process Informediaries Consumer Reports Zagats Unanticipated situational factors Perceived risk Brand decision Vendor decision Quantity decision Timing decision Payment- Payment-method decision 1-220 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  221. The Buying Decision Process Postpurchase Behavior Postpurchase Satisfaction Disappointed Satisfied Delighted Postpurchase Actions Postpurchase Use and Disposal 1-221 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  222. Figure 7.7: How Customers Dispose of Products 1-222 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  223. The Buying Decision Process Other Models of the Buying Decision Process Health Model Stages of Change Model Precontemplation Contemplation Preparation Action Maintenance Customer Activity Cycle Model Pre, during and post phases 1-223 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  224. Figure 7.8: Activity cycle for IBM customers in the global electronic networking capability market space 1-224 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  225. Figure 7.9: Value adds for IBM customers in the global electronic networking capability market space 1-225 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  226. Chapter 8 Analyzing Business Markets and Business Buying Behavior by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-226 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  227. Kotler on Marketing Many businesses are wisely turning their suppliers and distributors into valued partners. 1-227 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  228. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on six questions: What is the business market, and how does it differ from the consumer market? What buying situations do organizational buyers face? Who participates in the business buying process? What are the major influences on organizational buyers? How do business buyers make their decisions? How do institutions and government agencies do their buying? 1-228 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  229. What is Organizational Buying? Organizational buying The business market versus the consumer market Business market Fewer buyers Larger buyers Close supplier-customer relationship supplier- Geographically concentrated buyers 1-229 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  230. What is Organizational Buying? Derived demand Inelastic demand Fluctuating demand Professional purchasing 1-230 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  231. Blue Shield of California’s mylifepath 1-231 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  232. What is Organizational Buying? Several buying influences Multiple sales calls Directed purchasing Reciprocity Leasing 1-232 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  233. If you were tasked with marketing a product or service to an organization, would you attempt to initially contact the purchasing department, or potential department, users of your company’s offerings? Why? Would the product you were selling make a difference? Why? 1-233 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  234. What is Organizational Buying? Buying Situations Straight rebuy Modified rebuy New Task Systems Buying and Selling Systems buying Turnkey solution Systems selling 1-234 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  235. What are some of the benefits to an organization that can be derived from a single source solution, or a solution, systems buying arrangement with a prime contractor? What are some of the potential pitfalls? What can the company do to protect itself from these hazards? 1-235 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  236. Participants in the Business Buying Process The Buying Center Initiators Users Influencers Deciders Approvers Buyers Gatekeepers Key buying influencers Multilevel in-depth selling in- 1-236 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  237. Figure 8-1: Major Influences on Industrial Buying Behavior 1-237 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  238. Major Influences on Buying Decisions Environmental Factors Organizational Factors Purchasing- Purchasing-Department Upgrading Cross- Cross-Functional Roles Centralized Purchasing Decentralized Purchasing of Small-Ticket Small- Items Internet Purchasing 1-238 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  239. The e-hub Plastics.com home page offers buyers and e- sellers of plastics a marketplace plus news and information 1-239 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  240. Covisint’s Web site offers both services and information 1-240 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  241. Major Influences on Buying Decisions Other Organizational Factors Long- Long-Term Contracts Vendor- Vendor-managed inventory Continuous replenishment programs Purchasing- Purchasing-Performance Evaluation and Buyers’ Professional Development Improved Supply Chain Management Lean Production Just-in- Just-in-time 1-241 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  242. Major Influences on Buying Decisions Interpersonal and Individual Factors Cultural Factors France Germany Japan Korea Latin America 1-242 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  243. The Purchasing/ Procurement Process Incentive to purchase Three Company Purchasing Orientations Buying Orientation Commoditization Multisourcing Procurement Orientation Materials requirement planning (MRP) Supply Chain Management Orientation 1-243 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  244. The Purchasing/ Procurement Process Types of Purchasing Processes Routine products Leverage products Strategic products Bottleneck products 1-244 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  245. The Purchasing/ Procurement Process Stages in the Buying Process Problem Recognition General Need Description and Product Specification Product value analysis Supplier Search Vertical hubs Functional hubs Direct external links to major suppliers Buying alliances Company buying sites Request for proposals (RFPs) 1-245 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  246. Table 8.1: Buygrid Framework: Major Stages (Buyphases) of the Industrial Buying Process in Relation to Major Buying Situations (Buyclasses) Buyclasses New Modified Straight Task Rebuy Rebuy 1. Problem recognition Yes Maybe No 2. General need description Yes Maybe No 3. Product specification Yes Yes Yes Buyphases 4. Supplier search Yes Maybe No 5. Proposal solicitation Yes Maybe No 6. Supplier selection Yes Maybe No 7. Order-routine specification Order- Yes Maybe No 8. Performance review Yes Yes Yes 1-246 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  247. The Purchasing/ Procurement Process General Need Description and Product Specification Product value analysis Supplier Search Vertical hubs Functional hubs Direct extranet links to major suppliers Buying alliances Company buying sites Request for proposals (RFPs) 1-247 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  248. The Purchasing/ Procurement Process Proposal Solicitation Supplier Selection 1-248 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  249. Table 8-2: An Example of Vendor Analysis Attributes Rating Scale Importance Poor Fair Good Excellent Weights (1) (2) (3) (4) Price .30 x Supplier reputation .20 x Product reliability .30 x Service reliability .10 x Supplier Flexibility .10 x Total score: .30(4) + .20(3) + .30(4) + .10(2) + .10(3) = 3.5 1-249 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  250. The Purchasing/ Procurement Process Customer value assessment Routine- Routine-order products Procedural- Procedural-problem products Political- Political-problem products Order- Order-Routine Specification Blanket contract Stockless purchase plans Performance Review Buyflow map 1-250 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  251. Figure 8-2: Major Influences on Industrial Buying Behavior 1-251 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  252. Institutional and Government Markets Institutional market 1-252 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  253. Chapter 9 Dealing with the Competition by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-253 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  254. Kotler on Marketing Poor firms ignore their competitors; average firms copy their competitors; winning firms lead their competitors. 1-254 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  255. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on five things companies need to know about their competition: Who the primary competitors are How to ascertain their strategies, objectives, strengths and weaknesses, and reaction patterns How to design a competitive intelligence system Whether to position as market leader, challenger, follower, or nicher How to balance a customer versus competitor orientation 1-255 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  256. Competitive Forces Figure 9-1: Five Forces Determining Segment Structural Attractiveness Threat of: 1. intense segment rivalry 2. new entrants 3. substitute products buyers’ growing bargaining power suppliers’ growing bargaining power 1-256 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  257. Figure 9-2: Barriers and Profitability 1-257 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  258. GetThere.com, launched as the Internet Travel Network in 1995, was the first company to book trips over the Web 1-258 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  259. Identifying Competitors Industry Concept of Competition Industry Number of Sellers and Degree of Differentiation Pure monopoly Oligopoly Pure oligopoly Differentiated oligopoly Monopolistic competition Pure competition 1-259 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  260. Identifying Competitors Entry, Mobility, Exit Barriers Entry barriers Mobility barriers Exit barriers Cost Structure Degree of Vertical Integration Vertical integration Degree of Globalization Market Concept of Competition 1-260 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  261. Analyzing Competitors Objectives Figure 9-5: A Competitor’s Expansion Plans 1-261 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  262. Analyzing Competitors Strengths and Weaknesses Dominant Strong Favorable Tenable Weak Nonviable 1-262 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  263. Table 9-1: Customer’s Ratings of Competitors on Key Success Factors Customer Product Product Technical Selling Awareness Quality Availability Assistance Staff Competitor A E E P P G Competitor B G G E G E Competitor C F P G F F Note: E = excellent, G = good, F = fair, P = poor. 1-263 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  264. Analyzing Competitors Three Variables to Monitor When Analyzing Competitors: Share of market Share of mind Share of heart 1-264 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  265. Table 9-2: Market Share, Mind Share, and Heart Share Market Share Mind Share Heart Share 2000 2001 2002 2000 2001 2002 2000 2001 2002 Competitor A 50% 47% 44% 60% 58% 54% 45% 42% 39% Competitor B 30 34 37 30 31 35 44 47 53 Competitor C 20 19 19 10 11 11 11 11 8 1-265 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  266. Analyzing Competitors Reaction Patterns 1. If competitors are nearly identical and make their living the same way, then their competitive equilibrium is unstable. 2. If a single major factor is the critical factor, then the competitive equilibrium is unstable. 3. If multiple factors may be critical factors, then it is possible for each competitor to have some advantage and be differentially attractive to some customers. The more factors that may provide an advantage, the more competitors who can coexist. Competitors all have their segment, defined by the preference for the factor trade-offs trade- they offer. 4. The fewer the number of critical competitive variables, the fewer the number of competitors. 5. A ratio of 2 to 1 in market share between any two competitors seems to be the equilibrium point at which it is neither practical nor advantageous for either competitor to increase or decrease share. 1-266 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  267. For many years, the major national broadcast television networks shared 100% of the market, and traded market share back and forth periodically. During the last two decades, the emergence of nationally available cable programming, and the rise of rival broadcast networks like Fox, UPN, and WB have increasingly cut into the market share of the “big three.” What steps would you recommend that the “big three” networks take to stop or slow this loss of market share? 1-267 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  268. Designing The Competitive Intelligence System Four Main Steps Setting Up the System Collecting the Data Evaluating and Analyzing the Data Disseminating Information and Responding 1-268 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  269. Designing The Competitive Intelligence System Selecting Competitors Customer Value Analysis (CVA) Customer Value = Customer Benefits – Customer Costs Customer Benefits = product benefits, service benefits, personnel benefits, image benefits Customer Costs = purchase price, acquisition costs, usage costs, maintenance costs, ownership costs, disposal costs 1-269 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  270. What do you see as the potential impact of the availability of information via the Internet on the design of competitive intelligence systems? What problems could be caused by the inability of the average computer user to verify the accuracy of data from the web? What impact will emerging database technologies like text- text-based data mining have in competitive intelligence systems? 1-270 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  271. Table 9-3: Customer Cost of Three Brands A B C Price $100 $ 90 $ 80 Acquisition costs 15 25 30 Usage costs 4 7 10 Maintenance 2 3 7 costs Ownership costs 3 3 5 Disposal costs 6 5 8 Total costs $130 $135 $140 1-271 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  272. Designing The Competitive Intelligence System Major Steps in Customer Value Analysis: 1. Identify the major attributes customers value. 2. Assess the quantitative importance of the different attributes. 3. Assess the companies’ and competitors’ performances on the different customer values against their rated importance. 4. Examine how customers in a specific segment rate the company’s performance against a specific major competitor on an attribute-by- attribute-by-attribute basis. 5. Monitor customer values over time. 1-272 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  273. Designing The Competitive Intelligence System Classes of Competitors Strong versus Weak Close versus Distant “Good” versus “Bad” 1-273 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  274. Designing Competitive Strategies Figure 9-6: Hypothetical Market Structure 1-274 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  275. Designing Competitive Strategies Market- Market-Leader Strategies Expanding the Total Market New Users Market- Market-penetration strategy New- New-market segment strategy Geographical- Geographical-expansion strategy New Uses More Usage Defending Market Share 1-275 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  276. IGT’s home page focuses on customer service 1-276 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  277. Designing Competitive Strategies Defense Strategies Position Defense Flank Defense Preemptive Defense Counteroffensive Defense Mobile Defense Market broadening Principle of the objective Principle of mass Market diversification Contraction Defense Planned contraction (Strategic withdrawal) 1-277 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  278. Designing Competitive Strategies Two Case Studies: Procter & Gamble and Caterpillar Proctor & Gamble Customer knowledge Long- Long-term outlook Product innovation Quality strategy Line- Line-extension strategy 1-278 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  279. Designing Competitive Strategies Brand- Brand-extension strategy Multibrand strategy Heavy advertising and media pioneer Aggressive sales force Effective sales promotion Competitive toughness Manufacturing efficiency and cost cutting Brand- Brand-management system 1-279 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  280. Designing Competitive Strategies Market- Market-Challenger Strategies Defining the Strategic Objective and Opponent(s) It can attack the market leader It can attack firms of its own size that are not doing the job and are underfinanced It can attack small local and regional firms Choosing a General Attack Strategy 1-280 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  281. Figure 9-10: Attack Strategies 1-281 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  282. Swedish firm SCA’s www.libero.se site creates a dialogue with expectant and new parents and even allows users to send pictures, brief stories, and child wish list to family all over the world. 1-282 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  283. Designing Competitive Strategies Choosing a Specific Attack Strategy Price- Price-discount Lower price goods Prestige goods Product proliferation Product innovation Improved services Distribution innovation Manufacturing cost reduction Intensive advertising promotion 1-283 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  284. Designing Competitive Strategies Market- Market-Follower Strategies Innovative imitation (Product imitation) Product innovation Four Broad Strategies: Counterfeiter Cloner Imitator Adapter 1-284 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  285. Designing Competitive Strategies Market- Market-Nicher Strategies High margin versus high volume Nicher Specialist Roles Product- Product-feature End- End-user specialist specialist Value- Value-added reseller Job- Job-shop specialist Vertical- Vertical-level specialist Quality- Quality-price specialist Customer- Customer-size specialist Service specialist Specific- Specific-customer specialist Channel specialist Geographic specialist Product or product-line product- specialist 1-285 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  286. Balancing Customer and Competitor Orientations Competitor- Competitor-centered company Customer- Customer-centered company 1-286 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  287. Chapter 10 Identifying Market Segments and Selecting Target Markets by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans 1-287 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  288. Kotler on Marketing “Don’t buy market share. Figure out how to earn it.” 1-288 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  289. Chapter Objectives We focus on the following questions: How can a company identify the segments that make up a market? What criteria can a company use to choose the most attractive target markets? 1-289 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  290. Target Marketing Target marketing requires marketers to take three major steps: Identify and profile distinct groups of buyers who differ in their needs and preferences (market segmentation). Select one or more market segments to enter (market targeting). For each target segment, establish and communicate the key distinctive benefit(s) of the company’s market offering (market positioning). 1-290 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  291. Levels and Patterns of Market Segmentation Levels of Market Segmentation Mass marketing Micromarketing Segment marketing Market segment Sector Flexible market offering Naked solution Discretionary options 1-291 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  292. Levels and Patterns of Market Segmentation Niche Marketing Niche Local Marketing Individual Customer Marketing Mass- Mass-customization Choiceboard Customerization Segments Individuals 1-292 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  293. Levels and Patterns of Market Segmentation Patterns for Market Segmentation Preference segments Homogeneous preferences Diffused preferences Clustered preferences Natural market segments Concentrated marketing 1-293 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  294. Levels and Patterns of Market Segmentation Market Segmentation Procedure Needs- Needs-based market segmentation approach Market partitioning Brand- Brand-dominant hierarchy Nation- Nation-dominant hierarchy 1-294 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  295. ChemStation’s Web site offers customers solutions to their problems, not just products. 1-295 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  296. Table 10-1: Steps in Segmentation Process Description 1. Needs-Based Needs- Group customers into segments based on similar Segmentation needs and benefits sought by customer in solving a particular consumption problem. 2. Segment For each needs-based segment, determine which needs- Identification demographics, lifestyles, and usage behaviors make the segment distinct and identifiable (actionable). 3. Segment Using predetermined segment attractiveness Attractiveness criteria (such as market growth, competitive intensity, and market access), determine the overall attractiveness of each segment. 4. Segment Profitability Determine segment profitability. 5. Segment Positioning For each segment, create a “value proposition” and product-price positioning strategy based on product- that segment’s unique customer needs and characteristics. See text for complete table 1-296 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  297. Levels and Patterns of Market Segmentation Effective Segmentation Measurable Substantial Accessible Differentiable Actionable 1-297 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  298. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Bases for Segmenting Consumer Markets 1-298 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  299. Table 10-2: Major Segmentation Variables for Consumer Markets Geographic Region Pacific, Mountain, West North Central, West South Central, East North Central, East South Central, South Atlantic, Middle Atlantic, New England City or metro size Under 5,000; 5,000-20,000; 20,000-50,000; 50,000- 5,000- 20,000- 50,000- 100,000; 100,000-250,000; 250,000-500,000; 100,000- 250,000- 500,000- 500,000-1,000,000; 1,000,000-4,000,000; 4,000,000 1,000,000- or over Density Urban, suburban, rural Climate Northern southern Demographic Age Under 6, 6-11, 12-19, 20-34, 35-49, 50-64, 65+ 6- 12- 20- 35- 50- Family size 1-2, 3-4, 5+ 3- See text for complete table 1-299 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  300. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Bases for Segmenting Consumer Markets Geographic Segmentation Demographic Segmentation Age and Life-Cycle Life- Stage 1-300 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  301. An easily identifiable demographic group which is often targeted by marketers is college students. Do you think this is influenced more by a common economic status of the target group, geographic concentration of a specific age group, or some other factor(s)? 1-301 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  302. Sega’s homepage: Not just games 1-302 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  303. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Life Stage Gender Income Generation The Depression Cohort The World War II Cohort The Post-War Cohort Post- Leading- Leading-Edge Baby Boomer Cohort Trailing- Trailing-Edge Baby Boomer Cohort Generation X Cohort The Generation Y Cohort 1-303 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  304. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Lifestage Analytic Matrix Lifestages Physiographics Emotional effects Socioeconomics Social Class Psychographic Segmentation Lifestyle Time- Time-constrained multitasking Money- Money-constrained 1-304 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  305. Improvements in both the average standard of living and in health care have had profound effects in the industrialized world during the last two generations. Other than an increase in the average life expectancy for both men and women, what effects has this trend toward longer and healthier lives in general had on the traditional life stage assumptions that marketers make? 1-305 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  306. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Personality “Brand personality” examples: Sincere Exciting Competent Sophisticated Rugged Values Core values 1-306 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  307. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Behavioral Segmentation Occasions Critical life events or transitions Benefits Mobil has identified five segments and their sizes Road Warriors 16% Generation F 27% True Blues 16% Home Bodies 21% Price Shoppers 20% 1-307 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  308. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets User Status Usage Rate Loyalty Status Hard- Hard-core loyals Split loyals Shifting loyals Switchers Buyer- Buyer-Readiness Stage Attitude 1-308 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  309. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Multi- Multi-Attribute Segmentation (Geoclustering) Four PRIZM clusters American Dreams Rural Industria Gray Power Country Squires Targeting Multiple Segments 1-309 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  310. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Bases For Segmenting Business Markets 1-310 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  311. Table 10-3: Major Segmentation Variables for Business Markets Demographic 1. Industry: Which industries should we serve? 2. Company size: What size companies should we serve? 3. Location: What geographical areas should we serve? Operating Variables 4. Technology: What customer technologies should we focus on? 5. User or nonuser status: Should we serve heavy users, medium users, light users, or nonusers? 6. Customer capabilities: Should we serve customers needing many or few services? Purchasing Approaches 7. Purchasing-function organization: Should we serve companies with highly centralized or decentralized purchasing organizations? 8. Power structure: Should we serve companies that are engineering dominated, financially dominated, and so on? See text for complete table 1-311 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  312. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Business buyers seek different benefit bundles based on their stage in the purchase decision process. 1. First-time prospects First- 2. Novices 3. Sophisticates 1-312 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  313. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Rangan, Moriarty, and Swartz studied a mature commodity market, steel stamping, and found four business segments 1. Program buyers 2. Relationship buyers 3. Transaction buyers 4. Bargain hunters 1-313 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  314. Segmenting Consumer and Business Markets Rackman and Vincentis proposed a segmentation scheme that classifies business buyers into three groups Price- Price-oriented customers (transactional selling) Solution- Solution-oriented customers (consultative selling) Strategic- Strategic-value customers (enterprise selling) 1-314 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  315. Market Targeting Evaluating and Selecting the Market Segments Single- Single-Segment Concentration Selective Specialization Product Specialization Market Specialization Full Market Coverage Undifferentiated marketing Differentiated marketing 1-315 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  316. Market Targeting Higher costs using differentiated marketing include: Product modification cost Manufacturing cost Administrative cost Inventory cost Promotion cost 1-316 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  317. Market Targeting Additional Considerations Ethical Choice of Market Targets Supersegment Segment-By- Segment-By-Segment Invasion Plans 1-317 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  318. Figure 10-3: Segment-by-Segment Invasion Plan 1-318 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  319. Market Targeting Intersegment Cooperation 1-319 www.bookfiesta4u.com
  320. Chapter 11 Positioning and Differentiating the Market Offering Through the Product Life Cycle by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-320
  321. Kotler on Marketing Watch the product life cycle; but more important, watch the market life cycle. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-321
  322. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: How can the firm choose and communicate an effective positioning in the market? What are the major differentiating attributes available to firms? What marketing strategies are appropriate at each stage of the product life cycle? What marketing strategies are appropriate at each stage of the market’s evolution? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-322
  323. Developing and Communicating a Positioning Strategy Positioning Value position www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-323
  324. Table 11.1: Examples of Value Propositions Demand States and Marketing Tasks Company and Target Value Product Customers Benefits Price Proposition Perdue Quality- Quality- Tenderness 10% More tender (chicken) conscious premium golden chicken at consumers of a moderate chicken premium price Volvo Safety- Safety- Durability 20% The safest, most conscious and safety premium durable wagon in (station “upscale” which your family wagon) families can ride Domino’s Convenience- Convenience- Delivery 15% A good hot pizza, (pizza) minded pizza speed and premium delivered to your lovers good quality door door within 30 minutes of ordering, at a moderate price www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-324
  325. Developing and Communicating a Positioning Strategy Positioning According to Ries and Trout Strengthen own current position Grab an unoccupied position De- De-position Re- Re-position Product ladders Positioning According to Treacy and Wiersema Value disciplines Product leader Operationally excellent firm Customer intimate firm www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-325
  326. Developing and Communicating a Positioning Strategy Treacy and Wiersema propose that a business should follow four rules for success 1. Become best at one of the three value disciplines. 2. Achieve an adequate performance level in the other two disciplines. 3. Keep improving one’s superior position in the chosen discipline so as not to lose out to a competitor. 4. Keep becoming more adequate in the other two disciplines, because competitors keep raising customers’ expectations. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-326
  327. Developing and Communicating a Positioning Strategy Positioning: How many ideas to promote? Unique selling proposition Four major positioning errors 1. Underpositioning 2. Overpositioning 3. Confused positioning 4. Doubtful positioning www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-327
  328. Can you think of any companies that market the same product or service offering to multiple segments using different strategies? Are the different segments being offered different value propositions? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-328
  329. Figure 11.1: Perceptual Map www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-329
  330. Developing and Communicating a Positioning Strategy Theme park’s positioning possibilities: Attribute positioning Benefit positioning Use or application positioning User positioning Competitor positioning Product category positioning Quality or price positioning Which Positioning to Promote? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-330
  331. Table 11.2: Method for Competitive- Advantage Selection (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Importance of Improving Affordability Standing and Speed Competitive Company Competitor Advantage Standing Standing (H-M-L)* (H- (H-M-L) (H- Technology 8 8 L L Cost 6 8 H M Quality 8 6 L L Service 4 3 H H H=high, M=medium, L=low See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-331
  332. Adding Further Differentiation Differentiation Differentiation criteria: Important Distinctive Superior Preemptive Affordable Profitable www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-332
  333. Adding Further Differentiation Exceed customer expectations with a three- three-step process 1. Defining the customer value model 2. Building the customer value hierarchy Basic Expected Desired Unanticipated 3. Deciding on the customer value package www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-333
  334. Differentiation Tools Figure 11.2: The BCG Competitive Advantage Matrix www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-334
  335. Table 11.3: Differentiation Variables Product Services Personnel Channel Image Form Ordering Competence Coverage Symbols ease Features Delivery Courtesy Expertise Media Performance Installation Credibility Performance Atmosphere Conformance Customer Reliability Events training Durability Customer Responsive consulting ness See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-335
  336. Differentiation Tools Product Differentiation Form Features www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-336
  337. Table 11.4: Measuring Customer Effectiveness Value Company Cost Customer Value Customer Value/Customer Cost Feature (a) (b) (c=b/a) Rear- Rear-window $100 $200 2 defrosting Cruise control 600 600 1 Automatic 800 2,400 3 transmission www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-337
  338. Differentiation Tools Performance Quality Conformance Quality Durability Reliability Reparability Style Design: The Integrating Force Services Differentiation Ordering Ease www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-338
  339. The home page for Peapod, the nation’s largest online grocer www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-339
  340. Differentiation Tools Delivery Quick response system Installation Customer Training Customer Consulting Maintenance and Repair HP’s online support page www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-340
  341. Many e-commerce ventures fail because e- of distribution problems in the so-called so- “last mile” (the local distribution portion of shipping of online purchases). Can a marketing plan help offset some of these potential pitfalls? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-341
  342. Differentiation Tools Miscellaneous Services Personnel Differentiation Competence Courtesy Creditability Reliability Responsiveness Communication www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-342
  343. Differentiation Tools Channel Differentiation Image Differentiation Identity Image Symbols, Colors, Slogans, Special Attributes Physical plant Events and Sponsorship Using Multiple Image-Building Techniques Image- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-343
  344. Which differentiation tool would be most useful for a dot.com startup? Why? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-344
  345. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies To say that a product has a life cycle asserts four things 1. Products have a limited life. 2. Product sales pass through distance stages, each posing different challenges, opportunities, and problems to the seller. 3. Profits rise and fall at different stages of the product life cycle. 4. Products require different marketing, financial, manufacturing, purchasing, and human resource strategies in each life-cycle stage. life- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-345
  346. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Figure 11.4: Cost Product Life-Cycle Patterns www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-346
  347. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Figure 11.5: Style, Fashion, and Fad Life Cycles www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-347
  348. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Marketing Strategies: Introduction Stage The Pioneer Advantage Inventor Product pioneer Market pioneer Figure 11.6: Long-Range Product Market Expansion Strategy (P = Product; M = Market) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-348
  349. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Marketing Strategies: Growth Stage Improve product quality and add new product features and improved styling Add new models and flanker products Enter new market segments Increase distribution coverage and enter new distribution channels Shift from product-awareness advertising to product- product- product-preference advertising Lower prices to attract next layer of price- price- sensitive buyers www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-349
  350. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Marketing Strategies: Maturity Stage Market Modification Expand number of brand users by: 1. Converting nonusers 2. Entering new market segments 3. Winning competitors’ customers Convince current users to increase usage by: 1. Using the product on more occasions 2. Using more of the product on each occasion 3. Using the product in new ways www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-350
  351. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Product modification Quality improvement Feature improvement Marketing- Marketing-Mix Modification Prices Distribution Advertising Sales promotion Personal selling Services www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-351
  352. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Marketing Strategies: Decline Stage 1. Increase firm’s investment (to dominate the market and strengthen its competitive position) 2. Maintain the firm’s investment level until the uncertainties about the industry are resolved. 3. Decrease the firm’s investment level selectively by dropping unprofitable customer groups, while simultaneously strengthening the firm’s investment in lucrative niches 4. Harvesting (“milking”) the firm’s investment to recover cash quickly 5. Divesting the business quickly by disposing of its assets as advantageously as possible. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-352
  353. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies Product Life-Cycle Concept: Critique Life- Market evolution www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-353
  354. Table 11.5: Summary of Product Life-Cycle Characteristics, Objectives, and Strategies Introduction Growth Maturity Characteristics Sales Low sales Rapidly rising Peak sales sales Costs High cost per Average cost per Low cost per customer customer customer Profits Negative Rising profits High profits Customers Few Growing Number Stable number beginning to decline See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-354
  355. Market Evolution Diffused- Diffused-preference market options A single-niche strategy single- A multiple-niche strategy multiple- A mass-market strategy mass- Growth Market- Market-growth stage options Single- Single-niche strategy Mass- Mass-market strategy Multiple- Multiple-niche strategy Maturity www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-355
  356. Market Evolution Decline An Example: The Paper-Towel Market Paper- Dynamics of Attribute Competition Customer expectations are progressive Approaches to discover new attributes: Customer- Customer-survey processes Intuitive processes Dialectical processes Needs- Needs-hierarchy process www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-356
  357. Chapter 12 Developing New Market Offerings by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-357
  358. Kotler on Marketing Who should ultimately design the product? The customer, of course. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-358
  359. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: What challenges does a company face in developing new products? What organizational structures are used to manage new-product development? new- What are the main stages in developing new products, and how can they be managed better? What factors affect the rate of diffusion and consumer adoption of newly launched products? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-359
  360. Developing New Market Offerings Six categories of new products 1. New-to-the-world products 2. New product lines 3. Additions to existing product lines 4. Improvements and revisions of existing products 5. Repositioning 6. Cost reductions www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-360
  361. Challenges in New-Product Development Incremental innovation Disruptive technologies Why do new products fail? A high-level executive pushes a favorite idea high- through in spite of negative research findings. The idea is good, but the market size is overestimated. The product is not well designed. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-361
  362. Challenges in New-Product Development The product is incorrectly positioned in the market, not advertised effectively, or overpriced. The product fails to gain sufficient distribution coverage or support. Development costs are higher than expected. Competitors fight back harder than expected. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-362
  363. Challenges in New-Product Development Factors that tend to hinder new-product new- development Shortage of important ideas in certain areas Fragmented markets Social and governmental constraints Cost of development Capital shortages Faster required development time Shorter product life cycles www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-363
  364. Organizational Arrangements New- New-product deployment requires specific criteria – one company established the following acceptance criteria The product can be introduced within five years The product has a market potential of at least $50 million and a 15 percent growth rate. The product would provide at least 30 percent return on sales and 40 percent on investment. The product would achieve technical or market leadership. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-364
  365. Organizational Arrangements Budgeting For New Product Development 3M’s approach: 15% rule Each promising idea gets an “executive champion” Expect some failures Golden Step awards handed out each year www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-365
  366. 3M online: The 3M Innovation Network www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-366
  367. Table 12.1 Finding One Successful New Product (Starting with 64 New Ideas) Number Pass Cost per Stage of Ideas Ratio Product Idea Total Cost 1. Idea screening 64 1:4 $ 1,000 $ 64,000 2. Concept testing 16 1:2 20,000 320,000 3. Product 8 1:2 200,000 1,600,000 development 4. Test marketing 4 1:2 500,000 2,000,000 5. National launch 2 1:2 5,000,000 10,000,000 $5,721,000 $13,984,000 www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-367
  368. Organizational Arrangements Organizing New-Product Development New- Product managers New- New-product managers High- High-level management committee New product department Venture teams www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-368
  369. Organizational Arrangements Stage- Stage-gate system Gatekeepers make one of four decisions: Go Kill Hold Recycle www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-369
  370. Managing the Development Process: Ideas Idea Generation Interacting with Others Sales representatives Intermediaries Product champion www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-370
  371. Managing the Development Process: Ideas Techniques for stimulating creativity in individuals and groups Attribute listing Forced relationships Morphological analysis Reverse assumption analysis New contexts Mind- Mind-mapping www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-371
  372. Managing the Development Process: Ideas Idea Screening Idea manager Idea committee Two types of errors in screening ideas DROP- DROP-error GO- GO-error www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-372
  373. Some of the most notable “drop-errors” have “drop- come from the most recognizable names in American business. Xerox saw the potential of the copy machine, IBM and Eastman Kodak did not. IBM thought the personal computer market would be miniscule. Can you think of any “drop- “drop-errors” that the company didn’t survive? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-373
  374. Table 12.2 Product-Idea Rating Device Relative Product Product Weight Score Rating Product Success Requirements (a) (b) (c = a x b) Unique or superior product .40 .8 .32 High performance to cost ratio .30 .6 .18 High marketing dollar support .20 .7 .14 Lack of strong competition .10 .5 .05 .69σ Total 1.00 σ Rating scale: .00-.30 poor; .31-.60 fair; .61-.80 good. Minimum acceptance rate: .61 .00- .31- .61- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-374
  375. Managing the Development Process: Concept to Strategy Concept Development and Testing Product idea Product concept Concept development Category concept Product– Product–positioning map Brand concept www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-375
  376. Figure 12.3: Product and Brand Positioning www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-376
  377. Sometimes a new product is developed, like the felt-tip pen and the “walkman” style felt- personal music device. Consumers weren’t clamoring for either of these products before they came to market. Most people hadn’t even conceived of such an item. Careful planning developed markets for these new lines. Can you think of more recent examples? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-377
  378. Managing the Development Process: Concept to Strategy Concept Testing Rapid prototyping Virtual reality Customer- Customer-driven engineering Questions to measure product dimensions Communicability and believability Need level Gap level Need- Need-gap score www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-378
  379. Managing the Development Process: Concept to Strategy Perceived value Purchase intention User targets, purchase occasions, purchasing frequency Conjoint Analysis Example: five design elements Three package designs Three brand names Three prices Possible Good Housekeeping seal Possible money-back guarantee money- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-379
  380. Managing the Development Process: Concept to Strategy Marketing Strategy Business Analysis Estimating Total Sales www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-380
  381. Managing the Development Process: Concept to Strategy Survival- Survival-age distribution Estimating Cost and Profits www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-381
  382. Table 12.3 Projected Five-Year-Cash-Flow Statement (in thousands of dollars) Year 0 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 1. Sales revenue $ 0 $11,889 $15,381 $19,654 2. Cost of goods sold 0 3,981 5,150 6,581 3. Gross margin 0 7,908 10,231 13,073 4. Development costs -3,500 0 0 0 5. Marketing costs 0 8,000 6,460 8,255 6. Allocated overhead 0 1,189 1,538 1,965 See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-382
  383. Managing the Development Process: Concept to Strategy Break- Break-even analysis Risk analysis www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-383
  384. Managing The Development Process: Development to Commercialization Product Development Quality Function Deployment (QFD) Customer attributes (CAs) Engineering attributes (EAs) Lands’ End Japan Web site www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-384
  385. Managing The Development Process: Development to Commercialization Customer tests Alpha testing Beta testing Consumer preference measures Rank- Rank-order Paired- Paired-comparison Monadic- Monadic-rating www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-385
  386. Managing The Development Process: Development to Commercialization Market Testing Consumer- Consumer-Goods Market Testing Seeks to estimate four variables Trial First repeat Adoption Purchase frequency Sales wave research www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-386
  387. Managing The Development Process: Development to Commercialization Simulated Test Marketing Controlled Test Marketing Test Markets How many test cities? Which cities? Length of test? What information? What action to take? Business- Business-Goods Market Testing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-387
  388. Managing The Development Process: Development to Commercialization Commercialization When (Timing) 1. First entry 2. Parallel entry Philips’ Pronto Web site 3. Late entry Where (Geographic Strategy) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-388
  389. Managing The Development Process: Development to Commercialization To Whom (Target-Market Prospects) (Target- How (Introductory Market Strategy) Critical path scheduling (CPS) The iMac, launched with a dramatic countdown campaign www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-389
  390. The Consumer-Adoption Process Adoption Consumer- Consumer-adoption process Consumer- Consumer-loyalty process Mass- Mass-market approach Heavy- Heavy-usage target marketing Stages in the Adoption Process Innovation Innovation diffusion process www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-390
  391. The Consumer-Adoption Process Adopters of new products move through five stages Awareness Interest Evaluation Trial Adoption Factors Influencing the Adoption Process Readiness to Try New Products and Personal Influence www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-391
  392. Figure 12.7: Adopter Categorization on the Basis of Relative Time of Adoption of Innovation www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-392
  393. The Consumer-Adoption Process Personal influence Characteristics of the Innovation Relative advantage Compatibility Complexity Divisibility Communicability Organizations’ Readiness to Adopt Innovations www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-393
  394. Chapter 13 Designing Global Market Offerings by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-394
  395. Kotler on Marketing Your company does not belong in markets where it cannot be the best. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-395
  396. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: What factors should a company review before deciding to go abroad? How can companies evaluate and select foreign markets to enter? What are the major ways of entering a foreign market? To what extent must the company adapt its products and marketing program to each foreign country? How should the company manage and organize its international activities? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-396
  397. Competing on a Global Basis Global industry Global firm Figure 13.1: Major Decisions in International Marketing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-397
  398. Deciding Whether To Go Abroad Factors drawing companies into the international arena: Global firms offering better products or lower prices can attack the company’s domestic market. The company discovers that some foreign markets present higher profit opportunities than the domestic market. The company needs a larger customer base to achieve economies of scale. The company wants to reduce its dependence on any one market. The company’s customers are going abroad and need servicing. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-398
  399. Deciding Whether To Go Abroad Before going abroad, the company must weigh several risk: The company might not understand foreign customer preferences and fail to offer a competitively attractive product. The company might not understand the foreign country’s business culture or know how to deal effectively with foreign nationals. The company might underestimate foreign regulations and incur unexpected costs. The company might realize that it lacks managers with international experience. The foreign country might change its commercial laws, devalue its currency, or undergo a political revolution and expropriate property. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-399
  400. Table 13.1: Blunders in International Marketing Hallmark cards failed when they were introduced in France. The French dislike syrupy sentiment and prefer writing their own cards. Philips began to earn a profit in Japan only after it had reduced the size of its coffeemakers to fit into smaller Japanese kitchens and its shavers to fit smaller Japanese hands. Coca- Coca-Cola had to withdraw its two-liter bottle in Spain after discovering two- that few Spaniards owned refrigerators with large enough compartments to accommodate it. General Foods’ Tang initially failed in France because it was positioned as a substitute for orange juice at breakfast. The French drink little orange juice and almost none at breakfast. Kellogg’s Pop-Tarts failed in Britain because the percentage of British Pop- homes with toasters was significantly lower than in the United States and the product was too sweet for British tastes. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-400
  401. In the early 20th century, the Trans-AtlanticTrans- cable allowed for the transmission of photographs in near real time. Still images went to press soon after news of events in Europe arrived here in the States. Are there any emerging communication technologies today that show similar potential? How can these be harnessed to improve a company’s global offerings? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-401
  402. Deciding Which Markets to Enter How many markets to enter Ayal and Zif contend that a company should enter fewer countries when: Market entry and market costs are high Product and communication costs are high Population and income size and growth are high in the initial countries chosen Dominant foreign firms can establish high barriers to entry www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-402
  403. Deciding Which Markets to Enter Regional free trade zones The European Union NAFTA MERCOSUL APEC Evaluating potential markets Psychic proximity www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-403
  404. Regional free trade zones offer many potential benefits to companies expanding their offerings abroad. Clearly defined national import/export policies are just one potential benefit. Can you think of any others? What marketing challenges will not be eased by such agreements? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-404
  405. Deciding How to Enter the Market Figure 13.2: Five Modes of Entry into Foreign Markets www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-405
  406. Deciding How to Enter the Market Indirect and direct export Occasional exporting Active exporting Indirect exporting Domestic- Domestic-based export merchants Domestic- Domestic-based export agents Cooperative organizations Export- Export-management companies www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-406
  407. Deciding How to Enter the Market Companies can carry on direct exporting in several ways Domestic- Domestic-based export department or division Overseas sales branch or subsidiary Traveling export sales representatives Foreign- Foreign-based distributors or agents www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-407
  408. Deciding How to Enter the Market Licensing Management contracts Contract manufacturing Franchising www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-408
  409. Deciding How to Enter the Market Joint ventures Direct investment The Internationalization Process Johanson and Wiedersheim-Paul identified Wiedersheim- four stages in the internationalization process: No regular export activities Export via independent representatives (agents) Establishment of one or more sales subsidiaries Establishment of production facilities abroad www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-409
  410. Deciding on the Marketing Program Standardized marketing mix Adapted marketing mix www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-410
  411. McDonald’s around the world: Hungary www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-411
  412. Deciding on the Marketing Program Product Straight extension www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-412
  413. Figure 13.3: Five International Product and Promotion Strategies www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-413
  414. Deciding on the Marketing Program Product adaptation Product invention Backward invention Forward invention Promotion Communication adaptation Dual adaptation www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-414
  415. Carlsberg’s global Web site www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-415
  416. Deciding on the Marketing Program Price Price escalation Companies have three choices Set a uniform price everywhere Set a market-based price in each country market- Set a cost-based price in each country cost- Transfer price Dumping Arm’s- Arm’s-length price Gray market www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-416
  417. Deciding on the Marketing Program Place (distribution channels) Seller’s international marketing headquarters Channels between nations Channels within foreign nations Figure 13.4: Whole-Channel Concept for International Marketing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-417
  418. One of the most profound political changes in the late 20th century was the fall of the “iron curtain” and the subsequent opening of markets in Eastern Europe. Has this potential marketplace been fully exploited by American companies? European companies? Why or why not? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-418
  419. Deciding on the Marketing Organization Export department International division Geographical organizations World product groups International subsidiaries www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-419
  420. Deciding on the Marketing Organization Global organization Bartlett and Ghoshal distinguish three organizational strategies: A global strategy treats the world as a single market. A multinational strategy treats the world as a portfolio of national opportunities. A “glocal” strategy standardizes certain core elements and localizes other elements. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-420
  421. Chapter 14 Setting the Product and Branding Strategy by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-421
  422. Kotler on Marketing The best way to hold customers is to constantly figure out how to give them more for less. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-422
  423. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: What are the characteristics of products? How can a company build and manage its product mix and product lines? How can a company make better brand decisions? How can packaging and labeling be used as marketing tools? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-423
  424. The Product and the Product Mix Product Figure 14.1: Components of the Market Offering Physical goods Services Experiences Events Persons Places Properties Organizations Information Ideas www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-424
  425. The Product and the Product Mix Product levels Figure 14.2: Five Customer value Product Levels hierarchy Core benefit Basic product Expected product Augmented product www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-425
  426. BabyCenter is not just an online merchant, it’s a metamediary www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-426
  427. The Product and the Product Mix Consumption system Potential product General Mills’ Mycereal.com Product hierarchy Web site Need family Product family Product class Product line Product type Item www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-427
  428. The Product and the Product Mix Product system Product mix Product classifications Durability and Tangibility Classification: Nondurable goods Durable goods Services www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-428
  429. The Product and the Product Mix Consumer- Consumer-Goods Classification: Convenience goods Staples Impulse goods Emergency goods Shopping goods Homogeneous shopping goods Heterogeneous shopping goods Specialty goods Unsought goods www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-429
  430. The Product and the Product Mix Industrial- Industrial-Goods Classification Materials and parts Farm products Natural products Manufactured materials and parts Component materials Component parts Capital items Installations Equipment www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-430
  431. The Product and the Product Mix Supplies and business services Maintenance and repair items Operating supplies Maintenance and repair services Business advisory services www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-431
  432. The Product and the Product Mix Product mix (Product assortment) Product mix has a certain: Width Length Depth Consistency www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-432
  433. Table 14.1: Product-Mix Width and Product-Line Length for Proctor& Gamble Products Product- Product-Mix Width Disposable Paper Detergents Toothpaste Bar Soap Diapers Tissue Ivory Snow Gleem (1952) Ivory Pampers Charmin (1930) (1879) (1961) (1928) Crest (1955) PRODUCT- PRODUCT- Dreft Kirk’s Luvs Puffs LINE (1933) (1885) (1976) (1960) LENGTH Tide Lava Banner (1946) (1893) (1982) Cheer Camay Summit (1950) (1926) (1992) See text for complete table 11-433 www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com
  434. The Product and the Product Mix Product- Product-line decisions Product- Product-line analysis Sales and Profits Four types of product classes: Core product Staples Specialties Convenience items www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-434
  435. The Product and the Product Mix Market profile Figure 14.4: Product Map for a Paper-Product Line www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-435
  436. The Product and the Product Mix Product- Product-line length Line Stretching Downmarket Stretch The company may notice strong growth opportunities as mass retailers attract a growing number of shoppers The company may wish to tie up lower-end competitors lower- who might otherwise try to move upmarket The company may find that the middle market is stagnating or declining Upmarket Stretch Two- Two-Way Stretch www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-436
  437. Kmart has entered into branding and distribution agreements with celebrities like Kate Smith for women’s apparel and Martha Stewart in house wares, gardening supplies, etc. Is this an upmarket stretch, a downmarket stretch or a two-way stretch two- for Kmart? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-437
  438. The Product and the Product Mix Brand decisions Line Filling Just- Just-noticeable What is brand? difference Attributes Line Modernization, Benefits featuring, and Values pruning Culture Personality User www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-438
  439. The Product and the Product Mix Commonly used research approaches to determine brand meaning: Word associations Personifying the brand Laddering up the brand essence Brand essence Laddering up www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-439
  440. The Product and the Product Mix Building Brand Identity Brand bonding Brands are not built by advertising but by the brand experience Everyone in the company lives the brand Three ways to carry on internal branding – Employees must Understand Desire, and Deliver on the brand promise www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-440
  441. The Product and the Product Mix Building Brands in the new economy Heidi and Don Schultz urge companies to: Clarify the corporation’s basic values and build the corporate brand. Use brand managers to carry out the tactical work. Develop a more comprehensive brand-building plan. brand- Define the brand’s basic essence to be delivered wherever it is sold. Use the brand-value proposition as the key driver of the company’s brand- strategy, operations, services, and product development. Measure their brand-building effectiveness, not by the old measures brand- of awareness, recognition, and recall, but by a more comprehensive set of measures including customer-perceived value, customer customer- satisfaction, customer share of wallet, customer retention, and customer advocacy. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-441
  442. The Product and the Product Mix Brand Equity Brand awareness Brand acceptability Brand preference Aaker’s five levels of customer attitude: The customer will change brands, especially for price reasons. No brand loyalty. Customer is satisfied. No reason to change brands. Customer is satisfied and would incur cost by changing brand. Customer values the brand and sees it as a friend. Customer is devoted to the brand. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-442
  443. The Product and the Product Mix Value of Brand Equity Brand valuation Competitive advantages of high brand equity: The company will have more leverage in bargaining with distributors and retailers because customers expect them to carry the brand. The company can charge a higher price than its competitors because the brand has higher perceived quality. The company can more easily launch extensions because the brand name carries high credibility. The brand offers some defense against price competition. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-443
  444. The Product and the Product Mix Managing Brand Equity Branding Challenges Branding Decision: To Brand or Not to Brand? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-444
  445. When is a brand more than just a brand? Have you ever based a purchasing decision primarily on the brand? Was it because of some perceived quality difference, or was it based on the expectation of how others would see or treat you? Have you ever seen someone buying a given brand of an item in an attempt to be seen as “cool”? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-445
  446. The Product and the Product Mix Branding gives the seller several advantages: Brand name makes it easier for the seller to process orders and track down problems Seller’s brand name and trademark provide legal protection of unique product features Branding gives the seller the opportunity to attract a loyal and profitable set of customers. Branding helps the seller segment markets. Strong brands help build corporate image, making it easier to launch new brands and gain acceptance by distributors and consumers. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-446
  447. The Product and the Product Mix Brand- Brand-Sponsor Decisions Manufacturer brand Distributor brand Licensed brand name Slotting fee Brand ladder Brand parity www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-447
  448. The Product and the Product Mix Brand- Brand-Name Decision Four available strategies: Individual names Blanket family names Separate family names for all products Corporate name combined with individual product names www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-448
  449. The Product and the Product Mix Desirable qualities for a brand name It should suggest something about the product’s benefits It should suggest the product or service category It should suggest concrete, “high imagery” qualities It should be easy to spell, pronounce, recognize, and remember It should be distinctive It should not carry poor meanings in other countries and languages www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-449
  450. The Product and the Product Mix Brand building tools Public facilities Public relations and press releases Social cause marketing Sponsorships High value for Clubs and consumer the money communities Founder’s or a Factory visits celebrity personality Trade shows Mobile phone Event marketing marketing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-450
  451. Nike’s arrangement with Michael Jordan has provided an excellent example of a celebrity endorsement. Can you think of an endorsement campaign that backfired? What did it cost the company in the short term? What, if any, have been the lasting effects? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-451
  452. The Product and the Product Mix Brand Strategy Decision Functional brand Image brand Experimental brands Line Extensions Branded variants Brand extensions Brand dilution www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-452
  453. The Product and the Product Mix Multibrands, New Brands, and Co-Brands Co- Multibrand Flanker Bands Co-branding (Dual branding) Co- Ingredient co-branding co- Same- Same-company co-branding co- Joint venture co-branding co- Multisponsor co-branding co- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-453
  454. The Product and the Product Mix Brand Asset Management Brand Auditing and Repositioning Brand report card www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-454
  455. The Product and the Product Mix Packaging and Labeling Packaging Package Primary Package Secondary Package Shipping Package Factors which have contributed to the growing use of packaging as a marketing tool Self- Self-Service Consumer affluence Company and brand image Innovation opportunity www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-455
  456. The Product and the Product Mix Labeling Functions Identification Grading Description Consumerists have lobbied for: Open dating Unit pricing Grade labeling Percentage labeling www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-456
  457. Chapter 15 Designing and Managing Services by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-457
  458. Kotler on Marketing Every business is a service business. Does your service put a smile on the customer’s face? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-458
  459. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: How are services defined and classified? How do services differ from goods? How can service firms improve their differentiation, quality, and productivity? How can goods-producing companies goods- improve their customer support services? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-459
  460. The Nature of Services Government sector Private non-profit non- sector Keen.com is a virtual Business advice marketplace sector Manufacturing sector Service www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-460
  461. The Nature of Services Categories of Service Mix Pure tangible good Tangible good with accompanying services Hybrid Major service with accompanying minor goods and services Pure service www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-461
  462. The Nature of Services Characteristics of Services and Their Marketing Implications Intangibility Service positioning strategy can be made tangible through: Place People Equipment Communication material Symbols Price www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-462
  463. Online companies that provide services are often directly impacted by the quality of a customer’s computer or the customer’s Internet connection. Can you think of another service sector that has so little control over the environment in which their services are provided? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-463
  464. The Nature of Services Carbone and Haeckel purpose the following for customer experience engineering Performance and context clues Humanics Mechanics Experience blueprint www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-464
  465. The Nature of Services Inseparability Variability Quality control by: Good hiring and training procedures Service blueprint Monitoring customer satisfaction www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-465
  466. The Nature of Services Perishability Strategies for better matching between demand and supply in a service business Differential pricing Nonpeak demand Complementary services Reservation systems Part- Part-time employees Peak- Peak-time efficiency Increased consumer participation Shared services Facilities for future expansion www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-466
  467. Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Three Additional Ps People Physical evidence presentation Process www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-467
  468. Figure 15.3: Three Types of Marketing in Service Industries www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-468
  469. Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Service Companies face three tasks: Competitive differentiation Service quality Productivity Managing differentiation Offering Primary service package Secondary service features www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-469
  470. Kaiser Permanente Online has over 30,000 registered users www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-470
  471. Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Faster and Better Delivery Reliability Resilience Innovativeness Image Managing Service Quality Perceived service Expected service www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-471
  472. FedEx and UPS have taken over much of the US Postal Service’s business, mostly through flexibility and innovation that the USPS can’t match. Can you think of another governmental service (anywhere in the world) where a private company has been able to take the profitable segment of a service, and leave the less profitable or more risky segment for a government agency? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-472
  473. Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Five gaps that cause unsuccessful delivery Gap between consumer expectation and management perception Gap between management perception and service-quality service- specification Gap between service-quality service- specification and service delivery Gap between service delivery and external communications Gap between perceived service and expected service www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-473
  474. Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Five determinants of service quality Reliability Responsiveness Assurance Empathy Tangibles Strategic Concept Top- Top-Management Commitment High Standards Self- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com Self-Service Technologies (SSTS) 11-474
  475. Myalert.com provides access to services that users can perform themselves www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-475
  476. Table 15.1 Customer Importance and Performance Ratings for an Auto Dealership Mean Mean Attribute Importance Performance Number Attribute Description Rating Rating 1 Job done right the first time 3.83 2.63 2 Fast action on complaints 3.63 2.73 3 Prompt warranty work 3.60 3.15 4 Able to do any job needed 3.56 3.00 See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-476
  477. Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Satisfying Customer Complaints Satisfying Employees As Well As Customers Managing Productivity Seven approaches to improving service productivity: Have service providers work more skillfully Increase the quantity of service by surrendering some quality “Industrialize the service” by adding equipment and standardizing production Reduce or make obsolete the need for a service by inventing a product solution Design a more effective service Present customers with incentives to substitute their own labor for company labor Harness the power of technology to give customers access to better service and make service workers more productive www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-477
  478. Managing Product Support Services Customers have three worries Reliability and failure frequency Downtime duration Out-of- Out-of-pocket costs of maintenance and repair Life- Life-cycle cost www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-478
  479. Managing Product Support Services To provide the best support for expensive equipment, firms offer: Facilitating services Value- Value-augmenting services Herman Miller Office Furniture Company offers: Five- Five-year product warranties Quality audits after installation Guaranteed move-in dates move- Trade- Trade-in allowances on systems products www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-479
  480. Managing Product Support Services Postsale Service Strategy Major trends in product support service Lele has noted the following: Equipment manufacturers are building more reliable and more easily fixable equipment Customers are becoming more sophisticated about buying product support services “Service unbundling” www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-480
  481. Managing Product Support Services Customers dislike dealing with multiple service providers handling different types of equipment Third- Third-party service organizations Service contracts (extended warranties) may diminish in importance Customer service choices are increasing rapidly– rapidly–this is holding down prices and profits Companies are increasing the quality of their call centers and their customer service representatives (CSRs) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-481
  482. Chapter 16 Developing Price Strategies and Programs by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-482
  483. Kotler on Marketing Sell value, not price. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-483
  484. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on three questions: How should a price be set on a product or service for the first time? How should the price be adapted to meet varying circumstances and opportunities? When should the company initiate a price change, and how should it respond to a competitor’s price change? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-484
  485. Figure 16.1: Nine Price-Quality Strategies www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-485
  486. Figure 16.2: Price Should Align with Value www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-486
  487. Setting the Price Step 1: Selecting the pricing objective Survival Maximize current profits Maximize their market share Market- Market-penetration pricing Best when: Market is highly price-sensitive, and a low price price- stimulates market growth, Production and distribution costs fall within accumulated production experience, and Low price discourages actual and potential competition www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-487
  488. Many companies engage in “market skimming,” offering new products at whatever price the market will bear, then over time decreasing the price in order to gain the maximum profit from each market segment. Can you think of any products that wouldn’t fit this pricing model? Why not? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-488
  489. Maytag’s homepage presents its “corporate family of brands” www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-489
  490. Setting the Price Step 2: Determining Demand Price sensitivity Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-490
  491. Setting the Price Tom Nagle offers this list of factors associated with lower price sensitivity The product is more distinctive Buyers are less aware of substitutes Buyers cannot easily compare the quality of substitutes The expenditure is a smaller part of the buyer’s total income The expenditure is small compared to the total cost of the end product Part of the cost is borne by another party The product is used in conjunction with assets previously bought The product is assumed to have more quality, prestige, or exclusiveness Buyers cannot store the product www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-491
  492. Setting the Price Estimating Demand Curves Price Elasticity of Demand Inelastic Elastic Price indifference band www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-492
  493. Setting the Price Step 3: Estimating Cost Types of Cost and Levels of Production Fixed costs (overhead) Variable cost Total cost Average cost Accumulated Production Experience curve (Learning curve) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-493
  494. Setting the Price Differentiated Marketing Offers Activity- Activity-based cost (ABC) accounting Target costing Step 4: Analyzing Competitors’ Cost, Prices, and Offers www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-494
  495. Setting the Price Step 5: Selecting a Pricing Method Markup Pricing Unit Cost = variable cost + (fixed cost/unit sales) Markup price Markup price= unit cost/ (1 – desired return on sales) Target- Target-Return Pricing Target- Target-return price = unit cost + (desired return X investment capital)/unit sales www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-495
  496. Setting the Price Break- Break-even volume Break- Break-even volume = fixed cost / (price – variable cost) Perceived- Perceived-Value Pricing Perceived value Price buyers Figure 16.8: Break-Even Chart for Determining Target-Return Price and Value buyers Break-Even Volume Loyal buyers Value-in- Value-in-use price www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-496
  497. Setting the Price Value Pricing Everyday low pricing (EDLP) High- High-low pricing Going- Going-Rate Pricing Auction- Auction-Type Pricing English auctions (ascending bids) Dutch auctions (descending bids) Sealed- Sealed-bid auctions Group Pricing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-497
  498. Table 16.1: Effect of Different Bids on Expected Profit Probability of Getting Company’s Company’s Award with Bid Profit This Bid Expected (Assumed) Profit $ 9,500 $ 100 0.81 $ 81 10,000 600 0.36 216 10,500 1,100 0.09 99 11,000 1,600 0.01 16 www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-498
  499. volumebuy.com: group or pool pricing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-499
  500. Some large entities, both public and private, currently bid online for many products and services. Do you think there will be a market for consumers to bid on electrical power, like major corporate electricity users do? What about oil for heating? Can you think of any other products or services with a potential online auction market for home users? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-500
  501. Setting the Price Step 6: Selecting the Final Price Psychological Pricing Reference price Gain-and-Risk- Gain-and-Risk-Sharing Pricing Influence of the Other Marketing Elements Brands with average relative quality but high relative advertising budgets charged premium prices Brands with high relative quality and high relative advertising budgets obtained the highest prices The positive relationship between high advertising budgets and high prices held most strongly in the later stages of the product life cycle for market leaders www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-501
  502. Setting the Price Brands with average relative quality but high relative advertising budgets charged premium prices Brands with high relative quality and high relative advertising budgets obtained the highest prices The positive relationship between high advertising budgets and high prices held most strongly in the later stages of the product life cycle for market leaders Company Pricing Policies Impact of Price on Other Parties www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-502
  503. Adapting the Price Geographical Pricing (Cash, Countertrade, Barter) Countertrade Barter Compensation deal Buyback arrangement Offset Price Discounts and Allowances www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-503
  504. Table 16.2: Price Discounts and Allowances Cash Discount: A price reduction to buyers who pay bills promptly. A typical example is “2/10, net 30,” which means that payment is due within 30 days and that the buyer can deduct 2 percent by paying the bill within 10 days. Quantity Discount: A price reduction to those who buy large volumes. A typical example is “$10 per unit for less than 100 units; $9 per unit for 100 or more units.” Quantity discounts must be offered equally to all customers and must not exceed the cost savings to the seller. They can be offered on each order placed or on the number of units ordered over a given period. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-504
  505. Adapting the Price Promotional Pricing Loss- Loss-leader pricing Special- Special-event pricing Cash rebates Low- Low-interest financing Longer payment terms Warranties and service contracts Psychological discounting www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-505
  506. Adapting the Price Discriminatory Pricing Customer segment pricing Product- Product-form pricing Image pricing Channel pricing Location pricing Time pricing Yield pricing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-506
  507. Adapting the Price Product- Product-mix pricing Product- Product-Line Pricing Optional- Optional-Feature Pricing Captive- Captive-Product Pricing Captive products Two- Two-Part Pricing By-Product Pricing By- Product- Product-Bundling Pricing Pure bundling Mixed bundling www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-507
  508. personify.com provides software that helps Web merchants find target customers www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-508
  509. Initiating and Responding to Price Changes Initiating Price Cuts Drive to dominate the market through lower costs Low quality trap Fragile-market- Fragile-market-share trap Shallow- Shallow-pockets trap www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-509
  510. Table 16.3: Marketing-Mix Alternatives Strategic Options Reasoning Consequences 1. Maintain price and Firm has higher Smaller market share. perceived quality. customer loyalty. It is Lowered profitability. Engage in selective willing to lose poorer customer pruning. customers to competitors. 2. Raise price and Raise price to cover Smaller market share. perceived quality. rising costs. Improve Maintained quality to justify higher profitability. prices. It is cheaper to Smaller market share. 3. Maintain price and maintain price and Short- Short-term decline in raise perceived raise perceived quality. profitability. Long-term Long- quality. increase in profitability. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-510
  511. Initiating and Responding to Price Changes Table 16.4: Profits Before and After a Price Increase Before After Price $ 10 $10.10 (a 1 percent price increase) Units sold 100 100 Revenue $1000 $1010 Costs -970 -970 Profit $ 30 $ 40 (a 33 1/3 percent profit increase) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-511
  512. Initiating and Responding to Price Changes Initiating Price Increases Cost inflation Anticipatory pricing Overdemand Delayed quotation pricing Escalator clauses Unbundling Reduction of discounts www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-512
  513. Initiating and Responding to Price Changes Possible responses to higher costs or overhead without raising prices include: Shrinking the amount of product instead of raising the price Substituting less expensive materials or ingredients Reducing or removing product features Removing or reducing product services, such as installation or free delivery Using less expensive packaging material or larger package sizes Reducing the number of sizes and models offered Creating new economy brands www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-513
  514. Initiating and Responding to Price Changes Reactions to Price Changes Customer Reactions Competitor Reactions Responding to Competitors’ Price Changes Maintain price Maintain price and add value Reduce price Increase price and improve quality Launch a low-price fighter line low- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-514
  515. Chapter 17 Designing and Managing Value Networks and Marketing Channels by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-515
  516. Kotler on Marketing Establish channels for different target markets and aim for efficiency, control, and adaptability. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-516
  517. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following channel questions from the viewpoint of the manufacturers: What is the value network and marketing channel system? What work is performed by marketing channels? What decisions do companies face in designing, managing, evaluating, and modifying their channels? What trends are taking place in channel dynamics? How can channel conflict be managed? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-517
  518. What is a Value Network and Marketing-Channel System? Value Network Marketing channel www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-518
  519. Oracle’s home page www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-519
  520. What is a Value Network and Marketing-Channel System? “Go-to- “Go-to-market” or hybrid channels IBM’s sales force sells to large accounts, outbound telemarketing sells to medium-sized accounts, direct mail medium- sells to small accounts, retailers sell to still smaller accounts, and the Internet to sell specialty items Charles Schwab enables its customers to do transactions in branch offices, over the phone, or via the Internet Staples markets through traditional retail, direct-response direct- Internet site, virtual malls, and 30,000 linked affiliated sites www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-520
  521. What is a Value Network and Marketing-Channel System? Channel integration characteristics: Ability to order a product online, and pick it up at a convenient retail location Ability to return an online-ordered online- product to a nearby store Right to receive discounts based on total of online and off-line purchases off- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-521
  522. What Work is Performed by Marketing Channels? Many producers lack the financial resources to carry out direct marketing In some cases direct marketing simply is not feasible Producers who do establish their own channels can often earn a greater return by increasing their investment in their main business. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-522
  523. Figure 17.1: How a Distributor Effects an Economy of Effort www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-523
  524. As more retailers develop a web presence, they often move from a “brick-and-mortar” to a “brick-and- “click-and- “click-and-mortar” business model where customers expect channel integration. Can you identify any potential problems for these companies? Can you identify any unique marketing opportunities that such a change would offer these companies? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-524
  525. What Work is Performed by Marketing Channels? Channel Functions and Flows Key functions include: Gather information about potential and current customers, competitors, and others Develop and disseminate persuasive communications to stimulate purchasing Reach agreements on price and other terms so that transfer of ownership or possession can be effected Place orders with manufacturers www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-525
  526. What Work is Performed by Marketing Channels? Acquire funds to finance inventories at different levels in the marketing channel Assume risk connected with carrying out channel work Provide for the successive storage and movement of physical products Provide for buyers’ payment of their bills through banks and other financial institutions Oversee actual transfer of ownership from one organization or person to another www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-526
  527. Figure 17.2: Five Marketing Flows in the Marketing Channel for Forklift Trucks www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-527
  528. What Work is Performed by Marketing Channels? Forward flow Backward flow www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-528
  529. What Work is Performed by Marketing Channels? Channel levels Zero- Zero-level channel (a.k.a. direct-marketing direct- channel) One- One-level channel Two- Two-level channel Three- Three-level channel Reverse- Reverse-flow channel Service Sector Channels Information Highway Channels www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-529
  530. The advent of print media, the telephone, radio, television, and the Internet have all provided new ways for marketers to get their message to their intended audience. As various technologies advance, these information channels offer more precise delivery of a message. Can you identify an emerging information distribution channel? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-530
  531. The People’s Bank Internet site www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-531
  532. Channel-Design Decisions Push strategy Pull strategy Designing a channel system involves four steps: Analyzing customer needs Establishing channel objectives Identifying major channel alternatives Evaluating major channel alternatives www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-532
  533. Channel-Design Decisions Analyze Customers’ Desired Service Output Levels Lot size Waiting time Spatial convenience Product variety Service backup www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-533
  534. Channel-Design Decisions Establish Objectives and Constraints Identify Major Channel Alternatives Types of Intermediaries Number of Intermediaries Exclusive distribution Exclusive dealing Selective distribution Intensive distribution www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-534
  535. Channel-Design Decisions Terms and Responsibilities of Channel Members Price policy Conditions of sale Distributors’ territorial rights Evaluate the Major Alternatives Economic Criteria www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-535
  536. Figure 17.4: The Value-Adds versus Costs of Different Channels www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-536
  537. Channel-Design Decisions Channel advantage Control and Adaptive Criteria Figure 17.5: Break-even Cost Chart www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-537
  538. Channel-Management Decisions Selecting Channel Members Training Channel Members Motivating Channel Members Producers can use: Coercive power Reward power Legitimate power Expert power Referent power www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-538
  539. Channel-Management Decisions Distribution programming Distributor- Distributor-relations planning Evaluating Channel Members Modifying Channel Arrangements www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-539
  540. Channel Dynamics Vertical Marketing Systems Conventional marketing channel Vertical marketing systems (VMS) Corporate and Administered VMS Corporate VMS Administered VMS www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-540
  541. Channel Dynamics Contractual VMS Wholesaler- Wholesaler-sponsored voluntary chains Retailer cooperatives Franchise organizations Manufacturer- Manufacturer-sponsored retailer franchise Manufacturer- Manufacturer-sponsored wholesaler franchise Service-firm- Service-firm-sponsored retailer franchise www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-541
  542. Channel Dynamics The New Competition in Retailing Horizontal Marketing Systems Multichannel Marketing Systems www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-542
  543. Channel Dynamics Roles of Individual Firms Insiders Strivers Complementers Transients Outside innovators www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-543
  544. Channel Dynamics Conflict, Cooperation, and Competition Types of Conflict and Competition Vertical channel conflict Horizontal channel conflict Multichannel conflict Causes of Channel Conflict Goal incompatibility Unclear roles and rights Differences in perception www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-544
  545. Channel Dynamics By adding new channels, a company faces the possibility of channel conflict which may include: Conflict between the national account managers and field sales force Conflict between the field sales force and the telemarketers Conflict between the field sales force and the dealers www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-545
  546. Channel Dynamics Managing Channel Conflict Diplomacy Mediation Arbitration Legal and Ethical Issues in Channel Distribution Exclusive distribution Exclusive dealing Tying agreements www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-546
  547. Chapter 18 Managing Retailing, Wholesaling, and Market Logistics by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-547
  548. Kotler on Marketing Successful “go-to- market” strategies require integrating retailers, wholesalers, and logistical organizations. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-548
  549. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions about each marketing intermediary: What major types of organizations occupy this sector? What marketing decisions do organizations in this sector make? What are the major trends in this sector? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-549
  550. Retailing Types of Retailers Retail life cycle www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-550
  551. Table 18.1: Major Retailer Types Specialty Store: Narrow product line with a deep assortment. A clothing store would be a single-line store; a men’s clothing store would be a limited-line single- limited- store; and a men’s custom-shirt store would be a superspecialty store. custom- Examples: Athlete’s Foot, Tall Men, The Limited, The Body Shop. Department Store: Several product lines—typically clothing, home lines— furnishings, and household goods—with each line operated as a separate goods— department managed by specialist buyers or merchandisers. Examples: Examples: Sears, JCPenney, Nordstrom, Bloomingdale’s. Supermarket: Relatively large, low-cost, low-margin, high volume, self- low- low- self- service operation designed to serve total needs for food, laundry, and household products. Examples: Kroger, Food Emporium, Jewel. Examples: Convenience Store: Relatively small store located near residential area, open long hours, seven days a week, and carrying a limited line of high- high- turnover convenience products at slightly higher prices, plus takeout sandwiches, coffee, soft drinks. Examples: 7-Eleven, Circle K. Examples: 7- See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-551
  552. Retailing Levels of Service Wheel-of- Wheel-of-retailing Four levels of service: Self- Self-service Self- Self-selection Limited service Full service www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-552
  553. Figure 18.1: Retail Positioning Map www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-553
  554. Retailing Nonstore retailing Categories of nonstore retailing Direct selling Direct marketing Telemarketing Television direct-response marketing direct- Electronic shopping Automatic vending Buying service Corporate Retailing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-554
  555. Table 18.2: Major Types of Retail Organizations Corporate Chain Store: Two or more outlets commonly owned and controlled, employing central buying and merchandising, and selling similar lines of merchandise. Their size allows them to buy in large quantities at lower prices, and they can afford to hire corporate specialists to deal with pricing, promotion, merchandising, inventory control, and sales forecasting. Examples: Examples: Tower Records, GAP, Pottery Barn. Voluntary Chain: A wholesaler-sponsored group of independent retailers wholesaler- engaged in bulk buying and common merchandising. Examples: Independent Examples: Grovers Alliance (IGA), True Value Hardware. Retailer Cooperative: Independent retailers who set up a central buying organization and conduct joint promotion efforts. Examples: Associated Examples: Grocers, ACE Hardware. Consumer Cooperative: A retail firm owned by its customers. In consumer Cooperative: coops residents contribute money to open their own store, vote on its policies, elect a group to manage it, and receive patronage dividends. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-555
  556. Retailing Marketing Decisions Target Market Product Assortment and Procurement Breadth Depth www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-556
  557. Retailing Product- Product-differentiation Strategy Possibilities Feature exclusive national brands that are not available at competing retailers Feature mostly private branded merchandise Feature blockbuster distinctive merchandise events Feature surprise or ever-changing merchandise ever- Feature the latest or newest merchandise first Offer merchandise customizing services Offer a highly targeted assortment www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-557
  558. Wal- Wal-Mart has for the first time moved into the number one position on Fortune magazine’s “Fortune 500” list, passing up such companies as GM and Exxon. How has their target market identification helped put them into this position? What can Wal- Wal-Mart’s chief rivals, K-Mart and Target, do to try to close the gap? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-558
  559. Retailing Merchandise managers Direct product profitability (DPP) Services and Store Atmosphere Prepurchase services include accepting telephone and mail orders, etc. Postpurchase services include shipping and delivery, etc. Ancillary services include general information, check cashing, parking, etc. Price Decision High- High-markup, lower volume Low- Low-markup, high volume www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-559
  560. Retailing Promotion Decision Place Decision General business districts Regional shopping centers Community centers Strip malls (a.k.a. shopping strips) A location within a larger store www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-560
  561. Retailing Trends in Retailing 1. New retail forms and combinations 2. Growth of intertype competition 3. Growth of giant retailers 4. Growing investment in technology 5. Global presence of major retailers 6. Selling an experience, not just goods 7. Competition between store-based store- and non-store-based retailing non-store- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-561
  562. How have the “television age,” the “information age,” and the emergence of a world consumer culture affected market targeting decisions of retailers? What effect do you think trade entities like NAFTA and the European Union have had on retailing? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-562
  563. Wholesaling Wholesalers’ functions: Selling and promoting Buying and assortment building Bulk breaking Warehousing Transportation Financing Risk bearing Market information Management services and counseling The Growth and Types of Wholesaling www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-563
  564. Table 18.3: Major Wholesaler Types Merchant Wholesalers: Independently owned businesses that take title to the merchandise they handle. They are called jobbers, distributors, distributors, or mill supply houses and fall into two categories: full service and limited service. Full- Full-Service Wholesalers: Carry stock, maintain a sales force, offer Wholesalers: credit, make deliveries, and provide management assistance. There are two types of full-service wholesalers: (1) Wholesale merchants full- sell primarily to retailers and provide a full range of services. General- General- merchandise wholesalers carry several merchandise lines. General-General- line wholesalers carry one or two lines. Specialty wholesalers carry only part of a line. (2) Industrial distributors sell to manufacturers rather than to retailers and provide several services—carrying stock, services— offering credit, and providing delivery. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-564
  565. Wholesaling Wholesaler Marketing Decisions Target Market Product Assortment and Services Price Decision Promotion Decision Place Decision www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-565
  566. McKesson offers online supply management www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-566
  567. Wholesaling Trends in Wholesaling Narus and Anderson identified four ways to strengthen relationships with manufacturers Sought clear agreement about their expected function in the marketing channel Gained insight into the manufacturers’ requirements by visiting their plants Fulfilled commitments by meeting volume targets Identified and offered value-added value- services to help their suppliers www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-567
  568. Market Logistics Supply chain management (SCM) Value network Demand chain planning Market logistics Market logistics planning has four steps: Deciding on the company’s value proposition to its customers Deciding on the best channel design and network strategy for reaching the customers Developing operational excellence in sales forecasting, warehouse management, transportation management, and materials management Implementing the solution with the best information systems, equipment, policies, and procedures Integrated logistics systems (ILS) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-568
  569. The IKEA-USA home page IKEA- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-569
  570. Market Logistics Market- Market-logistics Objectives Market- Market-logistics Decisions Order Processing Order-to- Order-to-payment cycle Warehousing Storage warehouses Distribution warehouses Automated warehouses www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-570
  571. Market Logistics Inventory Inventory cost increases at an accelerating rate as the customer service level approaches 100% Order (reorder) point Order- Order-processing costs Inventory- Inventory-carrying costs www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-571
  572. Figure 18.2: Determining Optimal Order Quantity www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-572
  573. Market Logistics Just-In- Just-In-Time production (JIT) Transportation Containerization Piggyback Fishyback Trainship Airtruck Private carrier Contract carrier Common carrier www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-573
  574. The 1-800-Flowers begin_of_the_skype_highlighting            1-800-Flowers      end_of_the_skype_highlighting.com site makes 1-800- online ordering easy www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-574
  575. Market Logistics Organizational Lessons Companies should appoint a senior vice president of logistics to be the single point of contact for all logistical elements The senior vice president of logistics should hold periodic meetings with sales and operations people to review inventory, etc. New software and systems are the key to achieving competitively superior logistics performance in the future www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-575
  576. Chapter 19 Managing Integrated Marketing Communications by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-576
  577. Kotler on Marketing Integrated marketing communications is a way of looking at the whole marketing process from the viewpoint of the customer. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-577
  578. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on three major questions: How does communication work? What are the major steps in developing an integrated marketing communications program? Who should be responsible for marketing communication planning? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-578
  579. Marketing Communications Mix Advertising Sales Promotion Public Relations and Publicity Personal Selling Direct and Interactive Marketing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-579
  580. The Communication Process Table 19.1: Common Communication Platforms Advertising Sales Public Personal Direct Promotion Relations Selling Marketing Print and Contests, Press kits Sales Catalogs broadcast ads games, presentation sweepstakes, lotteries Packaging- Packaging- Premiums and Speeches Sales Mailings outer gifts meetings Packaging Sampling Seminars Incentive Telemarketing inserts programs Motion Fairs and Annual reports Samples Electronic pictures trade shows shopping See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-580
  581. Figure 19.1: Elements in the Communication Process www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-581
  582. The Communication Process Target audience may not receive the intended message for any of three reasons: Selective attention Selective distortion Selective retention www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-582
  583. The Communication Process Fiske and Hartley have outlined factors that influence communication: The greater the influence of the communication source, the greater the effect on the recipient Communication effects are greatest when they are in line with existing opinions, beliefs, and dispositions www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-583
  584. The Communication Process Communication can produce the most effective shifts on unfamiliar, lightly felt, peripheral issues that do not lie at the core of the recipient’s value system. Communication is more likely to be effective if the source is believed to have expertise, high status, objectivity, or likeability, but particularly if the source has power and can be identified with. The social context, group, or reflective group will mediate the communication and influence whether or not the communication is accepted. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-584
  585. Figure 19.2: Steps in Developing Effective Communication www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-585
  586. Developing Effective Communications Identify the Target Audience Image analysis Familiarity scale Never Heard of Know a Know a Fair Know Heard of Only Little Bit Amount Very Well Favorability scale Very Somewhat Indifferent Somewhat Very Unfavorable Unfavorable Favorable favorable www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-586
  587. Some companies spend a significant portion of their advertising budget on a single high profile event. In recent years, commercial time during the Superbowl broadcast has become such an occasion. While some companies have used such events to launch successful, long-running campaigns, others long- have seen little benefit from these ads. Can you remember the name of the firm whose critically acclaimed Superbowl ad featured cowboys herding cats? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-587
  588. Figure 19.3: Familiarity-Favorability Analysis www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-588
  589. Developing Effective Communications Semantic differential Developing a set of relevant dimensions Reducing the set of relevant dimensions Administering the instrument to a sample of respondents Averaging the results Checking on the image variance www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-589
  590. Developing Effective Communications Determine the Communication Objective Cognitive Affective Behavioral Response- Response-hierarchy models www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-590
  591. Figure 19.5: Response Hierarchy Models www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-591
  592. Developing Effective Communications Hierarchy- Hierarchy-of effects model Awareness Knowledge Liking Preference Conviction Purchase www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-592
  593. Developing Effective Communications Design the Message AIDA model Gain attention Hold interest Arouse desire Elicit action Message Content Rational appeals Emotional appeals Moral appeals www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-593
  594. Developing Effective Communications Message Structure Message Format Message Source Factors underlying source credibility Expertise Trustworthiness Principle of congruity www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-594
  595. bmwfilms.com bmwfilms.com www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-595
  596. Developing Effective Communications Select the Communication Channels Personal Communication Channels Advocate channels Expert channels Social channels www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-596
  597. Developing Effective Communications Steps to stimulate personal influence channels to work on the companies’ behalf Devote extra effort to influential individuals and companies Create opinion leaders by providing the product at attractive terms to certain people Work through community influentials such as local disk jockeys, class presidents, and presidents of women’s organizations Use influential or believable people in testimonial advertising Develop advertising with high “conversation value” www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-597
  598. Developing Effective Communications Develop word-of-mouth referral channels to build word-of- business Establish an electronic forum Use viral marketing Nonpersonal Communication Channels Media Atmospheres Events Social- Social-structure view of interpersonal communication Liaison Bridge www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-598
  599. Developing Effective Communications Establish the Total Marketing Communications budget Affordable Method Percentage-of- Percentage-of-Sales Method Competitive- Competitive-Parity Method www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-599
  600. Developing Effective Communications Objective-and- Objective-and-Task Method Establish the market-share goal market- Determine the percentage of the market that should be reached by advertising Determine the percentage of aware prospects that should be persuaded to try the brand Determine the number of advertising impressions per 1 percent trial rate Determine the number of gross rating points that would have to be purchased Determine the necessary advertising budget on the basis of the average cost of buying a gross rating point www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-600
  601. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix The Promotional tools Advertising General Qualities: Public presentation Pervasiveness Amplified expressiveness Impersonality Sales Promotion Benefits: Communication Incentive Invitation www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-601
  602. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Public Relations and Publicity Distinctive qualities: High credibility Ability to catch buyers off guard Dramatization Personal Selling Distinctive qualities: Personal confrontation Cultivation Response www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-602
  603. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Direct Marketing Distinctive qualities: Nonpublic Customized Up-to-date Up-to- Interactive www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-603
  604. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Factors in setting the Marketing Communications Mix Type of Product Market Advertising’s role in business markets: Advertising can provide an introduction to the company and its products If the product embodies new features, advertising can explain them Reminder advertising is more economical than sales calls www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-604
  605. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Advertisements offering brochures and carrying the company’s phone number are an effective way to generate leads for sales representatives. Sales representatives can use tear sheets of the company’s ads to legitimize their company and products. Advertising can remind customers of how to use the product and reassure them about their purchase. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-605
  606. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Levitt found that: Corporate advertising that can build up the company’s reputation will help the sales representatives Sales representatives from well-known firms well- have an edge, but a highly effective presentation from a lesser known company’s rep can overcome that edge Company reputation helps most when the product is complex www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-606
  607. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Gary Lilien found that: The average industrial company sets its marketing budget at 7 percent of sales Industrial companies spent a higher-than- higher-than- average amount on advertising if their products had higher quality, uniqueness, or purchase frequency, or if there was customer growth Industrial companies set a higher-than-average higher-than- marketing budget when their customers were more dispersed or the customer growth rate was higher www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-607
  608. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Effectively trained consumer sales force can make four important contributions: Increased stock position Enthusiasm building Missionary selling Key account management Buyer- Buyer-Readiness Stage www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-608
  609. Figure 19.6: Cost-Effectiveness of Different Promotional Tools www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-609
  610. Deciding on the Marketing Communications Mix Product Life-Cycle Stage Life- Measure the Communications’ Result www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-610
  611. While traditional communication methods make measurement of results difficult, Internet communications offer different, more immediate measures. How can analysis of web site visitors’ behavior be used to evaluate the effectiveness of a company’s marketing communications strategy? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-611
  612. Managing the Integrated Marketing Communications Process Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-612
  613. Chapter 20 Managing Advertising, Sales Promotion, Public Relations, and Direct Marketing by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-613
  614. Kotler on Marketing The best advertising is done by satisfied customers. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-614
  615. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: What steps are involved in developing an advertising program? What explains the growing use of sales promotion, and how are sales-promotion sales- decisions made? How can companies exploit the potential of public relations and publicity? How can companies use integrated direct marketing for competitive advantage? How can companies do effective e-marketing? e- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-615
  616. Developing and Managing an Advertising Program Setting the Advertising Objectives Advertising goal (Objective) Figure 20.1: The Five Ms of Advertising www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-616
  617. Developing and Managing an Advertising Program Advertising objectives at different stages in Hierarchy of Effects Informative advertising Persuasive advertising Reminder advertising Reinforcement advertising Brand equity www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-617
  618. Developing and Managing an Advertising Program Deciding on the Advertising Budget Five factors to consider when setting the advertising budget: Stage in the product life cycle Market share and consumer base Competition and clutter Advertising frequency Product substitutability www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-618
  619. Developing and Managing an Advertising Program Choosing the Advertising Message Message generation Message execution Rational positioning Message evaluation Emotional positioning and selection Social responsibility Twedt rates messages on: review Desirability Exclusiveness Believability Creative brief Positioning statement www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-619
  620. Ethical Funds’ homepage www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-620
  621. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Deciding on Reach, Frequency, and Impact Media selection How many exposures, E*, will produce audience awareness A* depends on the exposures’: Reach (R) Frequency (F) Impact (I) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-621
  622. Figure 20.2: Relationship Among Trial, Awareness, and the Exposure Function www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-622
  623. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Total Number of Exposures (E) E=RxF where R = reach, F = frequency Known as Gross Rating Points (GRP) Weighted Number of Exposures (WE) WE = R x F x I where R = reach, F = frequency, I = average impact www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-623
  624. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Choosing Among Major Media Types Table 20.1: Profiles of Media Types Medium Advantages Limitations Newspapers Flexibility; timeliness; good Short life; poor reproduction local market coverage; broad quality; small “passalong” acceptance; high believability audience Television Combines sight, sound, and High absolute cost; high motion; appealing to the clutter; fleeting exposure; senses; high attention; high less audience selectivity reach Direct mail Audience selectivity; flexibility; Relatively high cost; “junk no ad competition within the mail” image same medium; personalization See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-624
  625. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Media planners consider: Target- Target-audience media habits Product characteristics Message characteristics Cost New Media Advertorials Infomercials www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-625
  626. More manufacturers are using new technologies to move toward “mass customization” in their product offerings. Have you seen a similar move among marketers? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-626
  627. Earthlink: High-speed Internet Service High- Provider www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-627
  628. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Allocating the Budget Audience size measures: Circulation Audience Effective audience Effective ad-exposed audience ad- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-628
  629. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Deciding on Media Timing Carryover Habitual behavior Figure 20.3: Classification of Advertising Timing Patterns www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-629
  630. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Buyer turnover Purchase frequency Forgetting rate Continuity Concentration Flighting Pulsing Deciding on Geographical Allocation Areas of dominant influence (ADIs) or designated marketing areas (DMAs) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-630
  631. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Evaluating Advertising Effectiveness Communication- Communication-Effect Research Copy testing Consumer feedback method Example questions: What is the main message you get from this ad? What do you think they want you to know, believe, or do? How likely is it that this ad will influence you to undertake the implied action? What works well in the ad and what works poorly? How does the ad make you feel? Where is the best place to reach you with this message? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-631
  632. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Portfolio test Laboratory test Table 20.2: Advertising Research Techniques For Print Ads. Starch and Gallup & Robinson, Inc. are two widely used print pretesting services. Test ads are placed in magazines, which are then circulated to consumers. These consumers are contacted later and interviewed. Recall and recognition tests are used to determine advertising effectiveness. For Broadcast Ads. In-home tests: A videotape is taken into the In- tests: homes of target consumers, who then view the commercials. Trailer test: In a trailer in a shopping center, shoppers are shown the test: products and given an opportunity to select a series of brands. They then view commercials and are given coupons to be used in the shopping center. Redemption rates indicate commercials’ influence on purchase behavior. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-632
  633. Deciding on Media and Measuring Effectiveness Sales- Sales-Effect Research Share of advertising expenditures Share of voice Share of consumers’ minds and hearts Share of market Historical approach Figure 20.4: Experimental design Formula for Measuring Sales Impact of Advertising www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-633
  634. Sales Promotion Promotion offers incentive to buy Consumer promotion Trade promotion Sales- Sales-force promotion Purpose of Sales Promotion www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-634
  635. Many companies offer free samples as part of a promotional campaign. This approach extends beyond the grocery store or retail outlet into large organizations like universities. Can you identify any products or services that are provided to students or faculty at your school as part of a promotional campaign? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-635
  636. Sales Promotion Major Decisions in Sales Promotion Establishing Objectives Selecting Consumer-Promotion Tools Consumer- Manufacturer promotions Retailer promotions www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-636
  637. Table 20.3: Major Consumer-Promotion Tools Samples: Offer of a free amount of a product or service delivered door to door, sent in the mail, picked up in a store, attached to another product, or featured in an advertising offer. Coupons: Certificates entitling the bearer to a stated saving on the purchase of a specific product: mailed, enclosed in other products or attached to them, or inserted in magazines and newspaper ads. Cash Refund Offers (rebates): Provide a price reduction after purchase rather than at the retail shop: consumer sends a specified “proof of purchase” to the manufacturer who “refunds” part of the purchase price by mail. Price Packs (cents-off deals): Offers to consumers of savings off the (cents- regular price of a product, flagged on the label or package. A reduced-price reduced- pack is a single package sold at a reduced price (such as two for the price of one). A banded pack is two related products banded together (such as a toothbrush and toothpaste). See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-637
  638. Coolsavings.com’s home page www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-638
  639. Sales Promotion Selecting Trade-Promotion Tools Trade- Table 20.4: Major Trade-Promotion Tools Price-Off(off- Price-Off(off-invoice or off-list): A straight discount off the list price on each off- case purchased during a stated time period. Allowance: An amount offered in return for the retailer’s agreeing to feature the manufacturer’s products in some way. An advertising allowance compensates retailers for advertising the manufacturer’s product. A display allowance compensates them for carrying a special product display. Free Goods: Offers of extra cases of merchandise to intermediaries who buy a certain quantity or who feature a certain flavor or size. Source: For more information, see Betsy Spethman, “Trade Promotion Redefined,” Brandweek, March 13, 1995, pp. 25-32. 25- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-639
  640. Sales Promotion Selecting Business-and Business- Sales-Force- Sales-Force-Promotion Tools Table 20.5: Major Business-and Sales-Force-Promotion Tools Trade Shows and Conventions: Industry associations organize annual trade shows and conventions. Business marketers may spend as much as 35 percent of their annual promotion budget on trade shows. Over 5,600 trade shows take place every year, drawing approximately 80 million attendees. Trade show attendance can range from a few thousand people to over 70,000 for large shows held by the restaurant or hotel-motel industries. Participating hotel- vendors expect several benefits, including generating new sales leads, maintaining customer contacts, introducing new products, meeting new customers, selling more to present customers, and educating customers with publications, videos, and other audiovisual materials. Sales Contests: A sales contest aims at inducing the sales force or dealers to increase their sales results over a stated period, with prizes (money, trips, gifts, or points) going to those who succeed. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-640
  641. Sales Promotion Developing the Program Incentive Considerations Size of incentive Conditions for participation Duration of promotion Distribution vehicle Presenting, Implementing, Controlling, and Evaluating the Program Lead time Sell- Sell-in time www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-641
  642. Public Relations Public Public Relations Public Relations Department Functions Include: Press relations Product publicity Corporate communication Lobbying Counseling www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-642
  643. Public Relations Marketing Public Relations (MPR) Publicity vs. MPR MPR assists in the following tasks: Assisting in the launch of new products Assisting in repositioning a mature product Building interest in a product category Influencing specific target groups Defending products that have encountered public problems Building the corporate image in a way that reflects favorably on its products www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-643
  644. Public Relations Major Decisions in Marketing PR Table 20.6: Major Tools in Marketing PR Publications: Companies rely extensively on published materials to reach and influence their target markets. These include annual reports, brochures, articles, company newsletters and magazines, and audiovisual materials. Events: Companies can draw attention to new products or other company activities by arranging special events like news conferences, seminars, outings, trade shows, exhibits, contests and competitions, and anniversaries that will reach the target publics. Sponsorships: Companies can promote their brands and corporate name by sponsoring sport and cultural events and highly regarded causes. News: One of the major tasks of PR professionals is to find or create favorable news about the company, its products, and its people, and get the media to accept press releases and attend press conferences. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-644
  645. Public Relations Establishing the Marketing Objectives MPR can: Build awareness Build creditability Hold down promotional cost www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-645
  646. Public Relations Thomas L. Harris offers the following suggestions: Build marketplace excitement before media advertising breaks Build a core customer base Build a one-to-one relationship with consumers one-to- Turn satisfied customers into advocates Influence the influentials Choosing Messages and Vehicles Event Creation Implementing the Plan and Evaluating Results www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-646
  647. Direct Marketing Direct- Direct-Order Marketing Customer Relationship Marketing The Growth of Direct Marketing Market Demassification The Benefits of Direct Marketing Integrated Direct Marketing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-647
  648. Direct Marketing Major Channels for Direct Marketing Face-To- Face-To-Face Selling Direct Mail New Forms of Mail Delivery Fax mail E-mail Voice mail www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-648
  649. Direct Marketing Direct marketing has passed through a number of stages: Carpet bombing Database marketing Interactive marketing Real- Real-time personalized marketing Lifetime value marketing Constructing a Direct-Mail Campaign Direct- Objectives Target Markets and Prospects Offer Elements Testing Elements Measuring Campaign Success: Lifetime Value www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-649
  650. Direct Marketing Catalog Marketing Telemarketing and M-Commerce M- Inbound telemarketing Outbound telemarketing Four types of telemarketing: Telesales Telecoverage Teleprospecting Customer service and technical support www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-650
  651. Direct Marketing Other Media for Direct-Response Marketing Direct- Direct- Direct-response advertising At- At-home shopping channels Videotext and interactive TV Kiosk Marketing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-651
  652. Direct Marketing E-Marketing Permission Marketing Levels of Permission Marketing: No permission level Low permission level Medium permission level High permission level Transaction level E-Marketing Guidelines Give the customer a reason to respond Personalize the content of your e-mails e- Offer something the customer could not get via direct mail Make it easy for the customer to “unsubscribe” www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-652
  653. Chapter 21 Managing The Sales Force by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-653
  654. Kotler on Marketing The successful salesperson cares first for the customer, second for the products. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-654
  655. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we answer the following questions: What decisions do companies face in designing a sales force? How do companies recruit, select, train, supervise, motivate, and evaluate a sales force? How can salespeople improve their skills in selling, negotiation, and carrying on relationship marketing? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-655
  656. Sales Representative Robert McMurry’s sales representative types: Deliverer Order taker Missionary Technician Demand creator Solution vendor www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-656
  657. Designing the Sales Force Sales- Sales-Force Objectives and Strategy Common tasks for salespeople Prospecting Targeting Communicating Selling Information gathering Allocating www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-657
  658. Designing the Sales Force Leveraged sales force Direct (company) sales force Contractual sales force Sales- Sales-Force Structure www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-658
  659. Table 21.1: Sales-Force Structures Territorial: Each sales representative is assigned an exclusive territory. This sales structure results in a clear definition of responsibilities. It increases the rep’s incentive to cultivate local business and personal ties. Travel expenses are relatively low because each rep travels within a small area. Territory size: Territories can be designed to provide equal sales potential or equal workload. Territories of equal potential provide each rep with the same income opportunities and provide the company with a means to evaluate performance. Territories can also be designed to equalize the sales workload so that each rep can cover the territory adequately. Territory shape: Territories are formed by combining smaller units, such as counties or states, until they add up to a territory of a given potential or workload. Companies can use computer programs to design territories that optimize such criteria as compactness, equalization of workload or sales potential, and minimal travel time. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-659
  660. Designing the Sales Force Sales- Sales-Force Size Workload approach: Customers are grouped into size classes Desirable call frequencies are established for each class The number of accounts in each size class is multiplied by the corresponding call frequency The average number of calls a sales representative can make per year is determined The total number of sales representatives needed is determined www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-660
  661. The Internet has allowed many companies to shift sales support for small accounts to e-commerce sites e- and away from sales personnel. Additionally, many regularly occurring functions have become automated, allowing customers with any size organization to use web-based systems to place orders web- and submit warranty requests. Can you think of any other areas where Internet-based Internet- technologies could change the way a sales force interacts with their customers? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-661
  662. Designing the Sales Force Sales- Sales-Force Compensation Four Components: Fixed amount Variable amount Expense allowances Benefits www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-662
  663. Managing the Sales Force Recruiting and Selecting Reps Training Sales Reps www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-663
  664. Managing the Sales Force Training Programs Have Several Goals Sales representatives need to: Know and identify with the company Know the company’s products Know customers’ and competitors’ characteristics Know how to make effective sales presentations Understand field procedures and responsibilities www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-664
  665. Managing the Sales Force Supervising Sales Reps Norms for Customer Calls Norms for Prospect Calls Using Sales Time Efficiently www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-665
  666. DAA Solutions’ home page describes its Design-to- Design-to-Order® Software application www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-666
  667. Managing the Sales Force Time-and- Time-and-duty analysis Preparation Travel Food and breaks Waiting Selling Administration www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-667
  668. Company Web site as a prospecting tool www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-668
  669. Managing the Sales Force Motivating Sales Reps Churchill, Ford, & Walker Motivation Model: Sales managers must be able to convince salespeople that they can sell more by working harder or being trained to work smarter Sales managers must be able to convince salespeople that the rewards for better performance are worth the extra effort www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-669
  670. Managing the Sales Force Sales Quotas Supplementary Motivators Sales meetings Sales contests Evaluating Sales Representatives Sources of Information Formal Evaluation www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-670
  671. Table 21.2: Form for Evaluating Sales Representative’s Performance Territory: Midland Sales Representative: John Smith 1999 2000 2001 2002 1. Net sales product A $251,300 $253,200 $270,000 $263,100 2. Net sales product B 423,200 439,200 553,900 561,900 3. Net sales total 674,500 692,400 823,900 825,000 4. Percent of quota product A 95.6 92.0 88.0 84.7 5. Percent of quota product B 120.4 122.3 134.9 130.8 6. Gross profits product A $50,260 $50,640 $54,000 $52,620 7. Gross profits product B 42,320 43,920 55,390 56,190 8. Gross profits total 92,580 94,560 109,390 108,810 See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-671
  672. Principles of Personal Selling Figure 21.3: Managing the Sales Force: Improving Effectiveness www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-672
  673. Principles of Personal Selling Professionalism Sales- Sales-oriented approach Customer- Customer-oriented approach Rackham’s questions for prospects Situation questions Problem questions Implication questions Need- Need-payoff questions www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-673
  674. Figure 21.4: Major Steps in Effective Selling www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-674
  675. Principles of Personal Selling Major Steps in an Effective Sales Process: Prospecting and Qualifying Preapproach Approach Presentation and Demonstration Overcoming Objections Closing Follow- Follow-up and Maintenance www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-675
  676. iPhysicianNet’s home page shows a video detailing session www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-676
  677. Principles of Personal Selling Negotiation When to negotiate When factors bear not only on price, but also on quality of service When business risk cannot be accurately predetermined When a long period of time is required to produce the items purchased When production is interrupted frequently because of numerous change orders www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-677
  678. Figure 21.5: The Zone Agreement www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-678
  679. Principles of Personal Selling Formulating a Negotiation Strategy www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-679
  680. Table 21.3: Classic Bargaining Tactics Acting Crazy Put on a good show by visibly demonstrating your emotional commitment to your position. This increases your credibility and may give the opponent a justification to settle on your terms. Big Pot Leave yourself a lot of room to negotiate. Make high demands at the beginning. After making concessions, you will still end up with a larger payoff than if you started too low. Get a Prestigious The ally can be a person or a project that is Ally prestigious. You try to get the opponent to accept less because the person/object he or she will be involved with is prestigious. The Well Is Dry Take a stand and tell the opponent you have no more concessions to make. See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-680
  681. Principles of Personal Selling Relationship Marketing www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-681
  682. For many organizations, relationship marketing is more important than any individual transaction, because these long-term relationships can yield long- greater overall profitability. Would it be easier to convince a company to enter into a long term supplier- supplier-customer relationship if you offered them savings through vertical integration of product offerings, or ease of use offerings, derived from a broad range of product offerings? offerings? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-682
  683. Chapter 22 Managing the Total Marketing Effort by PowerPoint by Milton M. Pressley University of New Orleans www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-683
  684. Kotler on Marketing The marketing organization will have to redefine its role from managing customer interactions to integrating and managing all the company’s customer- customer- facing processes. www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-684
  685. Chapter Objectives In this chapter, we focus on the following questions: What are the trends in company organization? How are marketing and sales organized in companies? What steps can a company take to build a stronger customer focused culture? How can a company improve its marketing- marketing- implementation skills? What tools are available to help companies monitor and improve their marketing activities? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-685
  686. Trends in Company Organization Main responses of companies to a changing environment Reengineering Merging Outsourcing Globalizing Benchmarking Flattening Supplier partnering Focusing Customer partnering Empowering www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-686
  687. Outsourcing can save companies money by passing on to another firm the overhead involved with maintaining specialized staff positions, or eliminating the need to maintain specialized equipment that does not directly support their core business. What are the potential risks associated with outsourcing? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-687
  688. Marketing Organization The Evolution of the Marketing Department Figure 22.1: Stages in the Evolution of the Marketing Department www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-688
  689. Marketing Organization Simple Sales Department Sales Department With Ancillary Marketing Functions Separate Marketing Department Modern Marketing Department / Effective Marketing Company Process- Process-And Outcome-Based Company Outcome- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-689
  690. Marketing Organization Organizing the Marketing Department Functional Organization Field sales Customer service Product management Geographic Organization Area market specialist www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-690
  691. Organizing a marketing organization geographically can allow marketing managers to focus on regional and cultural differences in their market segments. What are the reasons why geographical segmentation might be a bad idea? What could be done to minimize these problems in geographically organized marketing departments? www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-691
  692. Krispy Kreme’s Web site promotes new store openings www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-692
  693. Marketing Organization Product- Brand- Product- or Brand-Management Organization Product and brand managers have these tasks: Develop a long-range and competitive strategy for the long- product Preparing an annual marketing plan and sales forecast Working with advertising and merchandising agencies to develop copy, programs, and campaigns Stimulating support of the product among the sales force and distributors Gathering continuous intelligence on the product’s performance, customer and dealer attitudes, and new problems and opportunities Initiating product improvements to meet changing market needs www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-693
  694. Figure 22.3: The Product Manager’s Interactions www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-694
  695. Marketing Organization Pearson and Wilson’s five steps to make the product- product-management system work better Clearly delineate the limits of manager’s role Build a strategy-development-and-review process strategy-development-and- Take into account areas of potential conflict Set up a formal process that forces to the top all conflict-of-interest situations conflict-of- Establish a system for measuring results www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-695
  696. Marketing Organization A Second Alternative is to switch from product managers to product teams Vertical product team Triangular product team Horizontal product team Third Alternative: Brand Asset Management Team (BAMT) www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-696
  697. Figure 22.5: Managing Through Teams at Kraft www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-697
  698. Marketing Organization Market- Market-Management/Customer Management Organization Market- Market-management Organization Markets manager Customer- Customer-management Organization Product- Product-Management/ Market- Market-Management Organization www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-698
  699. Marketing Organization Corporate- Corporate-Divisional Organization No corporate marketing Moderate marketing Strong corporate marketing Marketing Relations With Other Departments R&D Engineering and Purchasing Manufacturing and Operations Finance Accounting and Credit www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-699
  700. Marketing Organization Building a Companywide Marketing Orientation Transforming into a true market-driven market- firm requires: Developing a companywide passion for customers Organizing around customer segments instead of around products Developing a deep understanding of customers through qualitative and quantitative research www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-700
  701. Marketing Organization What steps can a CEO take to create a market and customer focused company? 1. Convince senior management of the need 2. Appoint a senior marketing officer and a marketing task force 3. Get outside help and guidance 4. Change the company’s reward measurement and system 5. Hire strong marketing talent 6. Develop strong in-house marketing training programs in- 7. Install a modern marketing planning system 8. Establish an annual marketing excellence recognition program 9. Shift from a department focus to a process- process-outcome focus 10. Empower the employees www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-701
  702. Marketing Organization Injecting More Creativity Into the Organization Strategic innovation resource: Brighthouse www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-702
  703. Marketing Implementation Thomas Bonoma’s four sets of skills for implementing marketing programs Diagnostic skills Identification of company level Implementation skills Evaluation skills Aprimo helps companies “manage the business of marketing” www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-703
  704. Evaluation and Control Table 22.1: Types of Marketing Control Type of Prime Purpose Of Control Responsibility Control Approaches I. Annual-plan Annual- Top management To examine Sales analysis control whether the Middle Market- Market-share planned results management analysis are being Sales-to- Sales-to-expense achieved ratios Financial analysis Market- Market-based scorecard analysis See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-704
  705. Evaluation and Control Annual- Annual-Plan Control Sales Analysis Sales variance analysis Microsales analysis Figure 22.7: The Control Process www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-705
  706. Evaluation and Control Market- Market-Share Analysis Overall market share Served market share Relative market share Marketing Expense-To-Sales Analysis Expense-To- www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-706
  707. Evaluation and Control Financial Analysis www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-707
  708. Evaluation and Control Market- Market-Based Scorecard Analysis Customer- Customer-performance scorecard Stakeholder- Stakeholder-performance scorecard Profitability Control Marketing- Marketing-Profitability Analysis www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-708
  709. Table 22.2: A Simplified Profit-and-Loss Statement Sales $60,000 Cost of goods sold 39,000 Gross margin $21,000 Expenses Salaries $9,300 Rent 3,000 Supplies 3,500 15,800 Net profit $5,200 www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-709
  710. Evaluation and Control Step 1: Identifying Functional Expenses Table 22.3: Mapping Natural Expenses into Functional Expenses Natural Packing and Billing and Accounts Total Selling Advertising Delivery Collecting Salaries $9,300 $5,100 $1,200 $1,400 $1,600 Rent 3,000 — 400 2,000 600 Supplies 3,500 400 1,500 1,400 200 $15,800 $5,500 $3,100 $4,800 $2,400 www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-710
  711. Evaluation and Control Step 2: Assigning Functional Expenses to Marketing Entities Table 22.4: Bases for Allocating Functional Expenses to Channels Packing and Billing and Channel Type Selling Advertising Delivery Collecting Hardware 200 50 50 50 Garden Supply 65 20 21 21 Department stores 10 30 9 9 275 100 80 80 Functional expense $5,500 $3,100 $4,800 $2,400 % No. of Units 275 100 80 80 Equals $ 20 $ 31 $ 60 $ 30 www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-711
  712. Evaluation and Control Step 3: Preparing a Profit-and-Loss Statement Profit-and- for Each Marketing Entity Table 22.5: Profit-and-Loss Statements for Channels Garden Dept. Whole Hardware Supply Stores Company Sales $30,000 $10,000 $20,000 $60,000 Cost of goods sold 19,500 6,500 13,000 39,000 Gross margin $10,500 $ 3,500 $ 7,000 $21,000 Expenses Selling ($20 per call) $ 4,000 $ 1,300 $ 200 $ 5,500 Advertising ($31 per advertisement) 1,550 620 930 3,100 See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-712
  713. Evaluation and Control Determine Corrective Action Direct Versus Full Costing Direct costs Traceable common costs Nontraceable common cost Activity- Activity-based Cost Accounting (ABC) Efficiency control Marketing Controller Sales- Sales-Force Efficiency Advertising Efficiency Sales- Sales-Promotion Efficiency Distribution Efficiency www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-713
  714. Evaluation and Control Strategic control The Marketing Effectiveness Review The Marketing Audit Marketing audit’s four characteristics: Comprehensive Systematic Independent Periodic www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-714
  715. Table 22.6: Components of a Marketing Audit Part I. Marketing Environment Audit Macroenvironment A. Demographic What major demographic developments and trends pose opportunities or threats to this company? What actions has the company taken in response to these developments and trends? B. Economic What major developments in income, prices, savings, and credit will affect the company? What actions has the company been taking in response to these developments and trends? C. Environmental What is the outlook for the cost and availability of natural resources and energy needed by the company? What concerns have been expressed about the company’s role in pollution and conservation, and what steps has the company taken? See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-715
  716. Evaluation and Control The Marketing Excellence Review www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-716
  717. Table 22.7: The Marketing Excellence Review: Best Practices Poor Good Excellent Product- Product-Driven Market-Driven Market- Market-Driven Market- Mass-Market Oriented Mass- Segment Oriented Niche Oriented and Customer Oriented Product Offer Augmented Product Offer Oriented Average Product Quality Better Than Average Customer Solutions Offer Average Service Quality Better Than Average Legendary End- End-Product Oriented Core-Product Oriented Core- Legendary See text for complete table www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-717
  718. Evaluation and Control The Ethical and Social Responsibility Review www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-718
  719. Loads of Management Stuff at www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com www.bookfiesta4u.blogspot.com 11-719
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