International Business
International Business
International Business
1. Production Concept,
2. Product Concept,
3. Selling Concept,
4. Marketing Concept,
5. Societal Marketing Concept.
Production Concept
The idea of production concept – “Consumers will favor products that are
available and highly affordable”. This concept is one of the oldest Marketing
management orientations that guide sellers.
Companies adopting this orientation run a major risk of focusing too narrowly on
their own operations and losing sight of the real objective.
Most times; the production concept can lead to marketing myopia. Management
focuses on improving production and distribution efficiency.
Although;
in some situations; the production concept is still a useful philosophy.
Product Concept
The product concept holds that the consumers will favor products that offer the
most in quality, performance and innovative features.
Here; under this concept,
Marketing strategies are focused on making continuous product improvements.
Product quality and improvement are important parts of marketing strategies,
sometimes the only part. Targeting only on the company’s products could also
lead to marketing myopia.
For example;
Suppose a company makes the best quality Floppy disk. But a customer does
really need a floppy disk?
She or he needs something that can be used to store the data. It can be achieved
by a USB Flash drive, SD memory cards, portable hard disks, and etc.
So that company should not look to make the best floppy disk. They should focus
to meet the customer’s data storage needs.
Selling Concept
The selling concept holds the idea- “consumers will not buy enough of the firm’s
products unless it undertakes a large-scale selling and promotion effort”.
Here the management focuses on creating sales transactions rather than on
building long-term, profitable customer relationships.
In other words;
The aim is to sell what the company makes rather than making what the market
wants. Such aggressive selling program carries very high risks.
In selling concept the marketer assumes that customers will be coaxed into
buying the product will like it, if they don’t like it, they will possibly forget their
disappointment and buy it again later. This is usually very poor and costly
assumption.
Typically the selling concept is practiced with unsought goods. Unsought goods
are that buyers do not normally think of buying, such as insurance or blood
donations.
These industries must be good at tracking down prospects and selling them on a
product’s benefits.
Marketing Concept
Marketing and sales are both aimed at increasing revenue. They are so closely intertwined that
people often don’t realize the difference between the two. Indeed, in small organizations, the same
people typically perform both sales and marketing tasks. Nevertheless, marketing is different from sales
and as the organization grows, the roles and responsibilities become more specialized.
Marketing Sales
Definition Marketing is the A sale a transaction
systematic planning, between two
implementation and parties where the
control of business buyer receives
activities to bring goods (tangible or
together buyers and intangible), services
sellers. and/or assets in
exchange for
money.
Approach Broader range of Make customer
activities to sell demand match the
product/service, products the
client relationship company currently
etc.; determine offers.
future needs and has
Marketing Sales
a strategy in place to
meet those needs for
the long term
relationship.
Focus Overall picture to Fulfill sales
promote, distribute, volume objectives
price
products/services;
fulfill customer's
wants and needs
through products
and/or services the
company can offer.
Process Analysis of market, Usually one to one
distribution channels,
competitive products
and services; Pricing
strategies; Sales
tracking and market
share analysis;
Budget
Scope Market Once a product has
research; Advertising; been created for a
Sales; Public customer need,
relations; Customer persuade the
service and customer to
satisfaction . purchase the
product to fulfill
her needs
Horizon Longer term Short term
Marketing effectiveness
Marketing effectiveness is the measure of how effective a given marketer's go
to market strategy is toward meeting the goal of maximizing their spending to
achieve positive results in both the short- and long-term. It is also related
to marketing ROI and return on marketing investment (ROMI).
It might be more commercially useful to define marketing effectiveness
more generally as the return on marketing investment against a pre-
determined set of objectives.
This latter strategy forms an increasing part of our work as UK and international
businesses want to reduce the operational burden caused by high quantities of
low quality leads. For example, Wall Street English franchises in Russia and
Argentina both saw large, well-planned drops in lead volumes result in significant
increases in signed contracts.
Getting outcomes like these requires careful planning and total alignment
between marketing and sales, which in turn requires a content driven marketing
strategy backed by a consultative approach to sales.
1. Being able to set clear, unambiguous objectives (ideally in less than 100
words).
3. Knowing how to evaluate feedback from the market and how to act on it.
4. Having the flexibility to change course quickly and decisively if the evidence
tells you to do so.
6. Being patient and thinking for the long as well as the short term. Marketing
is about engagement and the greater the level of engagement you get from
target audiences, the more effective your marketing will be. It may be that
many of the prospects you engage will take time to decide when they want
to buy from you. This process can take weeks, months and in some B2B
markets, years.
The fact that prospects who engage with your brand don’t turn into leads
immediately does not mean your marketing is ineffective. On the contrary, it
means your marketing is engaging and nurturing prospects in exactly the way it
should if it's to create long-term value.
So, if you want your marketing to be effective, first look at ALL the ways
marketing can help your business and then engage an agency that knows how to
work with evidence, emotion and complex commercial environments in which
your marketing has to create value.
4. Selection of the best strategy or the course of action from among the
alternative strategies to achieve the objectives.
Planning is the first and the foremost function of management. Planning precedes
all the functions. Marketing planning is the starting point of all marketing and
business activities of an enterprise. Because of the dynamism of the environment,
the role of marketing planning has increased a lot.
Every company must look ahead and determine when it wants to go and how to
get there. Its future should not be left to chance. To meet this need, companies
use two systems — a strategic planning system and marketing planning system.
Strategic planning provides the route map for the firm. Strategic planning serves
as the hedge against risk and uncertainty.
Marketing Planning – Scope: Long Term and Short Term Marketing Planning
The activities of marketing planning are generally divided into two divisions
according to time—(a) Long term Marketing Planning; and (b) Short term or
annual Marketing Planning.
Long run planning may involve a time horizontal of two or more years, although it
uses even a longer horizon of five to twenty years. Long range planning is done by
the top management with the help of specialised planning authorities.
Philip Kotler has pointed out that while preparing long term marketing plan the
following situations should be considered:
(i) Diagnosis:
The planning process begins with an attempt by the company to size up the
present market situation and the factors responsible for it. In short, diagnosis
consists of where the company stands and why. The size up requires developing
data on absolute levels of company sales and market shares and their receive
trends, by product, territory and other breakdowns.
Supplementary data on marketing costs, plant utilisation, profit levels and other
variables are also required. Plans must be taken to make a careful analysis of the
recent trends instead of being relying simply of impressions.
(ii) Prognosis:
In addition to diagnosing its present position, the company must also estimate
where but is likely to go if present market trend continues. What sales and profits
can the company make in the long period.
(iii) Objectives:
If the prognosis indicates that the company has no future, then the company
should decide upon fresh objectives as to the amount of sales.
(iv) Strategy:
Strategy lays down the broad principles which the company hopes to secure an
advantage over competition attractiveness to buyers and a full exploitation of
company resources.
There may be several alternatives of the strategy. The company should carefully
study these alternatives and choose the best possible alternative strategy under
the circumstances.
The control section of a long range plan should contain performance targets. They
should be checked periodically. In short, control is necessary. If at any stage the
variations are not favourable the underlying causes are discovered and then
changes are introduced to remedy the shortfalls and profits in the changed
circumstances.
(v) Tactics:
Tactics suggest how to use the company’s strategies to achieve its objectives. In
other words tactics are the methods for carrying out the strategies. Philip Kotler
has very interestingly distinguished objectives, strategies, and tactics in the
following words—”The objectives of a company indicate where it wants to be, the
strategy indicates the intended route; the tactical decisions are not primary, they
nevertheless are very important.”
(vi) Control:
The long range plan represents the best vision of management at the time of
planning of a proper set of objectives, strategies and tactics. It is based on a
detailed set of assumptions and expectation whose validity will be revealed only
in the course of time. More often, then not new events will occur that challenge
some of the basic assumptions in the plan.
This means two things- first the plan must include a control section that specifies
the type of monitoring that will go on to check the plan’s effectiveness; second
the company might prepare one or more contingency plans to meet new
challenges.
A long range plan is necessary if the short range plans are not to be chaotic series
of expedient solution to short run crisis. Sometimes annual plans only reflect over
reactions to previous year’s result and next year’s problems rather than the
progressive implementations of long range plan.
In other companies, “marketing plan” is used to describe the section within the
larger business plan that deals specifically with marketing issues and strategies, in
contrast to the financial and manufacturing sections of the same plan.
Because of these varying usages, the term “marketing plan” may not be a useful
as a more specific designation of the particular type of plan being discussed.
7. Pricing Plan:
Pricing is theoretically the single most important instrument of competition in a
market economy. The firms have to consider different pricing policies, strategies,
legal constraints relating to pricing and so on.
Another segmentation program also uses cluster analysis but in addition produces
the results as a bar chart. Market research by a South African insurance company
indicated a number of different segments.
One segment prefers to buy from a well-known company, preferably a company
that is personally recommended. The insurance company labeled this segment
‘Security Seekers’. A different segment was primarily interested in price and was
called ‘Economy’.
Using this information, the insurance company was able to develop two different
marketing propositions. It targeted the Security Seekers with an advertising
campaign emphasizing its history and track record, and introducing ‘recommend a
friend’ incentives. The Economy segment was targeted with a new ‘no frills’
product and direct mailings were used to communicate the value-for-money
message.
A word of warning- marketing software is a decision support tool, not a decision
substitute. In the words of one experienced planner – The problem is not
“garbage in, garbage out”; it’s when you start to believe the garbage because it
comes out of a computer. We call this “garbage in, gospel out.”
Market potential is the valuation of the sales revenue from all the supplying
channels in a market. Market potential is the population that is interested in the
product/ service that is being made or offered by an organization. In other words,
market potential is the potential money making capability of a firm if it capitalizes
all advantages and everything goes its way.
Importance of Market Potential
It is very important for a new business to know and determine the market
potential of the product of service being offered. If the market potential is very
low then there is no point spending a lot of money on the product. One of the
most important aspects of market potential is the amount of business a product
can generate in future as compared to today. Companies can also evaluate
the market share of companies in the market. The most relevant question is the
target market growing for the offering. Market potential helps business plan
better and launch their products and services with better preparation. Depending
upon the overall market potential, companies can identify the sales potential, or
the amount of sales they would be doing in that identified market.
Determination of Market Potential
It is a subset of the total population, where market potential is the population, all
of whom can be potential consumers of the product or service. Market potential
is the maximum population which would be interested in the product / service,
and gives a good insight on the growth possibility as well.
Total market potential can be calculated in terms of units or money.
Factors for calculating Market Potential
There are various factors which are important for knowing the actual market
potential:
1. Total Size of the Market : This means the total value of customers or clients for
the particular offering. higher the number better it is.
2. Return on Investment : This would mean is the market profitable to invest in? A
market which would give a good return on the costs incurred would only lead to
good business today as well as in future.
3. Growth Rate of the Market : A target market may be good today in terms of
size and ROI but is it going to be rising in future as well? Hence the growth rate
and trends are very important for determining the market potential
4. Category Competition : How many and how big are the competitors for our
product/service?
5. Entry Barriers : Are there any real barriers to entry into the existing market?
e.g. Very high licence cost can be an issue
6. Political Environment : In international markets, the political environment
forms a very important factor in determining the market potential.
7. Internal Environment : Overall the market potential may be very good but the
question arises that are we strong enough to compete in the market with suitable
offering, cost, competition.
Hence, this concludes the definition of Market Potential along with its overview.