Marketing Mix
Marketing Mix
Marketing Mix
Price
Price
• Pricing Strategy
• Importance of:
– elasticity
– keeping an eye
on rivals
Product
– Extension strategies
– Specialised versions
– New editions
– Changed packaging
– Technology, etc.
Promotion
• Strategies
to make the consumer aware of the existence of a product
or service
Place
• The means by which products and services get from producer
to consumer and where they can be accessed by the consumer
– The more places to buy the product and the easier it is made to
buy it, the better for the business (and the consumer?)
People
Process
• How do people consume services?
– Contact
– Reminders
– Registration
– Subscription
– Form filling
– Degree of technology
Physical Environment
– Smart/shabby?
– Trendy/retro/modern/old fashioned?
– Light/dark/bright/subdued?
– Romantic/chic/loud?
– Clean/dirty/unkempt/neat?
– Music?
– Smell?
• Blend of the mix depends upon:
• Marketing objectives
• Type of product
• Target market
• Market structure
• Rivals’ behaviour
• Marketing position
• Product portfolio
– Product lifecycle
– Boston Matrix
Marketing-mix planning
Positioning
Product
Product development
The first marketing-mix element is the product, which refers to
the offering or group of offerings that will be made available
to customers. In the case of a physical product, such as a car,
a company will gather information about the features and
benefits desired by a target market. Before assembling a
product, the marketer's role is to communicate customer desires
to the engineers who design the product or service. This is in
contrast to past practice, when engineers designed a product
based on their own preferences, interests, or expertise and then
expected marketers to find as many customers as possible to buy
this product. Contemporary thinking calls for products to be
designed based on customer input and not solely on engineers'
ideas.
Price
Place
Promotion
Promotion, the fourth marketing-mix element, consists of several
methods of communicating with and influencing customers. The
major tools are sales force, advertising, sales promotion, and
public relations.
Sales force
Sales representatives are the most expensive means of promotion,
because they require income, expenses, and supplementary
benefits. Their ability to personalize the promotion process
makes salespeople most effective at selling complex goods, big-
ticket items, and highly personal goods—forexample, those
related to religion or insurance. Salespeople aretrained to make
presentations, answer objections, gain commitments to purchase,
and manage account growth. Some companies have successfully
reduced their sales-force costs byreplacing certain functions
(for example, finding new customers) with less expensive methods
(such as direct mail and telemarketing).
Advertising
Advertising includes all forms of paid, non personal
communication and promotion of products, services, or ideas by a
specified sponsor. Advertising appears in such media as print
(newspapers, magazines, billboards, flyers) or broadcast (radio,
television). Print advertisements typically consist of a
picture, a headline, information about the product, and
occasionally a response coupon. Broadcast advertisements consist
of an audio or video narrative that can range from short 15-
second spots to longer segments known as infomercials, which
generally last 30or 60 minutes.
Sales promotion
While advertising presents a reason to buy a product, sales
promotion offers a short-term incentive to purchase. Sales
promotions often attract brand switchers (those who are not
loyal to a specific brand) who are looking primarily for low
price and good value. Thus, especially in markets where brands
are highly similar, sales promotions can cause a short-term
increase in sales but little permanent gain in market share.
Alternatively, in markets where brands are quite dissimilar,
sales promotions can alter market shares more permanently. The
use of promotions has risen considerably during the late 20th
century. This is due to a number of factors within companies,
including an increased sophistication in sales promotion
techniques and greater pressure to increase sales. Several
market factors also have fostered this increase, including a
rise in the number of brands (especially similar ones) and a
decrease in the efficiency of traditional advertising due to
increasingly fractionated consumer markets.
Public relations