Marketing Lecture 1 Student Notes
Marketing Lecture 1 Student Notes
Marketing Lecture 1 Student Notes
through marketing
▧ Definition of marketing
▧ The marketing process
▧ Understanding the marketplace and customer needs
▧ Designing a customer-driven marketing strategy
▧ Building customer relationships
▧ Capturing value from customers
▧ The changing marketing landscape
Customer Human
Support Resource
Management
Manufacturing
Finance
and Logistics
Board of
Directors
Business and
Information
Research
Development System
Brand,
Marketing,
Sales and
Retail
External influencing elements
Ownership, Alliances, Partnerships and Relationships
Policy +
Regulatory
Organisational:
Board of Technological
directors,
Shareholders
Societal
Economical:
Competitions,
Environmental Suppliers +
Other
Customers organisations
(Users, End-
users,
Advocates +
Deterrents)
What warrant marketing activities?
Market demands
and/or gaps
▧ Unmet, ▧ In-demand
unsatisfied needs A marketplace for
communication exchange
platform
Source: https://keydifferences.com/difference-between-customer-and-consumer.html
The marketing process (What to do?)
By creating value for customers, companies in return capture value from customers
in the form of sales, profits, market shares and long-term customer equity.
Capture
Understand Build
Design a value from
the Construct an profitable
customer- customers to
marketplace integrated relationships
driven create
and marketing and create
marketing profits and
customer programme customer
strategy customer
needs delight
equity
Each party in the system adds value for the next tier. A company’s success is
dependent on not only its own actions, products/services but also on how well the
entire ecosystem serves the needs of the final customers/consumers.
Company
(Marketer)
Marketing Customers
Suppliers Intermediaries Consumers
Competitors
Exchanges and relationships
▧ Need ▧ Want
Market offerings
Whole Population
Propensity to spend
Potential
Customers Potential
Consumers
Customer value and satisfaction
Customers’ value,
satisfaction and
expectations.
Marketing efforts
to set the right level
of product/service
expectations.
Product
Product
benefits, Offer
attributes
experiences superior
Look beyond and existing to and
and customer
customer
customer value
wants
needs
4.
Designing a customer-centric
marketing strategy
Differentiating
product/service
Value from
proposition: competitors “Why should I
Product/service buy your brand
benefits that Comprises of Answers over a
satisfy customer competitor?’
needs
Positioning the
product/service
Value proposition
Product concept
Customers favour products that offer the most quality, performance,
features and continuous product improvements.
Selling concept
Customers will not buy high quantity of products except for large scale sales
or promotional effort.
Marketing concept
Organisational goals are dependent on understanding the needs of the
target market and serving customers better than competitors.
Societal marketing
Good marketing decisions based on customer needs and long-term
interests, organisation's business requirements and society’s long-run
interests.
Source: https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo-production-concept-64424560.html
Reaching the right target audience
Mass Fashionista
▧ Basic casual ▧ Special designer collections
▧ Wide varieties ▧ Limited edition
Customer Satisfaction
Satisfaction depends on the product’s perceived performance relative to a
buyer’s expectations.
Customer
Perceived value of
marketing offer
Partner relationship management
External:
Internal:
o Suppliers
o Finance
o Distributors
o Accounting Types of partners o Advertising
o Manufacturing
agencies
o Customer care
o Affiliated
o Retail
industries
Customer relationship management
Today’s companies are building more direct and lasting relationships with fewer and
carefully selected profitable customers with attractive offers to earn their loyalty.
New digital technologies and social network tools have changed how people relate to
one another, affecting how customers relate to companies and their products/services.
Customer lifetime value is the projected total economic value a customer brings
to the business over their ‘lifetime’. (The duration of time they will spend with
the organisation, from first interaction to final purchase).
Source: https://www.pixelunion.net/blog/customer-lifetime-value-the-only-metric-you-need/
Customer loyalty and retention
Not all customers are good investments. Some loyal customers can be unprofitable
as compared to disloyal irregular customers.
r upt iv e Innovation
Dis
Digital Age
Rapid
Globalisation
Ethics and
Social
Responsibility
Non-profit
Marketing
Research customers and Select customers to Product and service Customer relationship Create satisfied loyal
the marketplace serve: Market design to build strong management: Build customers
segmentation and brand strong relationship with
Manage marketing targeting selected customers Capture customer
information and Pricing to create real lifetime value
customer data Decide on a value value Partner relationship
proposition: management: Build Increase share of
Differentiation and Distribution to mange strong relationships with market, share of
positioning demand and supply marketing partners customer
chain
Promotion to
communicate the value
proposition
Harness marketing technology Manage global markets Ensure ethical and social responsibility
Create value for customers and build customer relationships Capture value from customers in return