SM131 Week 7
SM131 Week 7
Lecture Readings:
Chapter 13: Helping Buyers Buy
Marketing: the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating ,
delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and
societies at large.
- Innovation, research, analytics
Evolution of marketing:
Four eras
● Production
○ 1900s
○ “Produce as much as you can because there is a limitless market for it”
● Selling
○ 1920s- to persuade customers to buy
■ Intro to credit influence
● Marketing concept
○ 1945, baby boom
○ Boom in spending
■ Customer orientation
■ Service orientation - same objectives
■ Profit orientation
● Customer relationship
○ 1990s and 2000s
○ Customer relationship management crm
■ Learning as much as possible about present customers to satisfy the,
● New era; Mobile & on demand marketing (digital age)
■ Now: consumers want to interact anywhere, anytime
■ Can I: create value
■ For me: personalized experiences
■ Simple: easy interactions
The 4 Ps in Marketing
● Product; designing a satisfying product
○ Any physical good, service or idea that satisfies a want or need
○ Brand, quality, style, etc.
● Price; setting a price
○ Appropriate to the products you are selling
● Place;
○ putting goods where people will buy it
● Promotion
○ Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC)
○ Strategy
■ advertising , personal selling, public relations, publicity , word of
mouth , coupons, samples, rebates
Target market: the people you will persuade to buy your product
Testing marketing: the process of testing products among potential users
Brand name: the differentiation of goods and services from competitors
Marketing research: The analysis of markets to determine opportunities and challenges and to
find the information needed to make good decisions.
Focus group: A small group of people who meet under the direction of a discussion leader to
communicate their opinions about an organization, its products or other given issues
Environmental scanning: the process of identifying factors that can affect marketing success
● growth of technology
● Consumer databases
● Population growth
The markets:
● The consumer market; the individuals or households that want goods and services for
personal consumption
● Market segmentation; dividing the total market into groups with similar characteristics
● Business to business (b2b) the individuals and organizations that want goods and
services to use in producing other goods and services or to sell, rent, or supply goods to
others
Types of segmentation
● Geographic; dividing a market by cities, countries, states or regions
● Demographic
● Psychographic: targeting a specific group’s lifestyle
● Benefit: determining what benefits to talk about
● Volume: segmentation by usage
● Niche: creating products for a small market
● One to one: mix of goods and services for each individual customer
Mass marketing: developing products and promotions to please large groups of people`
Relationship: goal of keeping individual customers over time
Trademark: a brand that has exclusive legal protection for its brand and design
1. McDondald’s golden arch
Brand categories
● Manufacturers brands
○ Ones that distribute products nationally
● Dealer brands
○ Carry a retailer’s name (house brands)
■ Great Value, Up & Up
● Generic goods: non branded products
● Knockoff brands illegal copies of national brand name goods
Branding
● Brand equity is the value of the brand name and associated symbols
○ Shifts the demand curve
● Brand loyalty the degree to which customers are satisfied
● Brand awareness how quickly a name comes to mind in a product category
○ Phone: Apple
○ Soda: Pepsi
● Brand association: linking brands to others
○ Beyonce being the face of Pepsi in 2012
● Brand manager: someone who has direct responsibility for one brand or one product
line
Lecture videos:
Marketing example:
Segway
● Went on the market for almost $5,000
● No one bought it at this price, so they later sold it for $3,950
● Segway missed their target by focusing on engineering without an understanding of the
market
○ Ended production in 2020
CASE STUDY
Warby Parker:
● Neil Blumenthal
● Wanted to innovate the eyewear industry because of the costs of eyeglasses
○ Luxottica controlled 80% of eyewear brands
● How? Customers could try on glasses for free at their home
● GQ magazine helped launch their brand
● Cut out the middlemen by controlling the vertical system
○ Designed frames
○ Sourced their own raw materials
● Prioritizes the customer experience
Paradox of choice: having too many options to choose from is overwhelming and stressful
for the customer.
Marketing is about creating and delivering value for customers and the world.
Discussion 2:
Chapter 16 Using Effective Promotions
Online advertising
● Companies can see customer engagement
○ How long someone stays on the ad
○ Number of shares
○ Celebrities #ad
Global advertising
● Advertising in foregin countries
● Make sure words and terms translate appropriately
● Understand foreign culture and market
CASE STUDY
Beats by Dr. Dre
Hear What You Want campaign featuring Kevin Garnett
● In the ad, Garnett is essentially blocking out the hate as I’m The Man by Aloe Blacc
plays
● Makes for a cultural talking point
In class discussion:
There are two fundamental questions
- Who is the target?
- What is the message?
3 Fundamental Goals
1. Inform
2. Persuade
3. Remind
Modes:
Awareness
Consideration
Preference
Action
Loyalty