Marketing 2301- Exam 1
Extended Problem Solving
Exists in high-involvement purchase situations (ex. New Car)
Routine Problem Solving
Exists in low-priced cases for frequently purchased goods. (ex. Peanut Butter)
Limited Problem Solving
Exists in situations that do not require a great deal of time or effort (ex. New Toaster)
Oligopoly
Few companies control a majority of industrial sales.
Market Orientation
Focusing organizational efforts to collect and use information about customers' needs to create customer value.
The Sherman Anti Trust Act
Forbids actual monopolies.
The Clayton Act
Forbids certain actions that are likely to lessen competition.
Straight Rebuy
Reordering an existing order/product. Exactly like the time before.
Customer Value Proposition
A cluster of benefits that an organization promises customers to satisfy their needs.
New Buy
A first-time buyer of a product or service. Involves greater potential risks.
Diversification Analysis
A technique a firm uses to search for growth opportunities from among current and new products and markets.
Business Portfolio Analysis
A technique that managers use to quantify performance measures and growth targets of their firms' strategic business units.
Competitive Advantage
A unique strength relative to competitors that provides superior returns, often based on quality, time, cost or innovation.
SWOT Analysis
An acronym describing an organization's appraisal of its INTERNAL Strengths and Weaknesses and its EXTERNAL Opportunities and Threats.
Strategic Marketing Process
An approach whereby an organization allocated its marketing mix resources to reach its target markets.
Marketspace
An information-and-communication based electronic exchange environment occupied by digitized offerings.
Strategy
An organization's long-term course of action that delivers a unique customer experience while achieving its goals.
Core Competencies
An organization's special capabilities - the skills, technologies and resources - that distinguish it from other organizations.
Relationship Marketing
Linking the organization to its individual customers, employees, suppliers, and other partners for their mutual long-term benefit.
Robinson-Patman Act
Makes it unlawful to discriminate in prices charged to different purchasers of the same product.
Organizational Buyers
Manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers, and government agencies that buy products and services for their own use or for resale.
Monopolistic Competition
Many sellers compete with substitutable products within a price range.
Multicultural Marketing
Marketing programs that reflect unique aspects of different races.
Form, Place, Time, and Possession Utility
Name the 4 times of utilities:
Target Market
One or more specific groups of potential consumers toward which an organization directs its marketing program.
Aspiration Group
One that a person wished to be a member of or wishes to be identified with. (ex. professional sports team)
Dissociative Group
One that a person wishes to maintain a distance from because of differences in values to behaviors.
Associative Group
One to which a person actually belongs. (ex. Frats, Sororities, etc.)
e-marketplaces
Online trading communities that bring together buyers and supplier organizations.
Market
People with both the desire and the ability to buy a specific offering.
Market Share
Ratio of a firm's sales to the total sales of all firms in the industry.
Market Segments
Relatively homogenous groups of prospective buyers that (1) have common needs and (2) will respond similarly to a marketing action.
Modified Rebuy
Same general order, with few minor adjustments to quantity or model.
Cash Cows
Strategic Business Units (SBUs) that generate large amounts of cash, far more than they can use.
Stars
Strategic Business Units (SBUs) with a high share of high-growth markets that may need extra cash to finance their own rapid future growth.
Question Marks
Strategic Business Units (SBUs) with a low share of high-growth markets. They require large injections of cash just to maintain their market share
Dogs
Strategic Business Units (SBUs) with a low share of slow-growth markets. Although they generate enough cash to sustain themselves, they may not become real winners for an organization.
Market Penetration
Strategy to increase sales for a current product in a current market.
Market Development
Strategy to sell current products to new markets.
Diversification
Strategy to sell new products in new markets. High-risk.
Product Development
Strategy to sell new products to current markets.
Product, Price, Promotion, and Place
The 4Ps of marketing are:
Problem Recognition Information Search Alternative Evaluation Purchase Decision Post-purchase Behavior
The 5 stage purchasing decision process:
Generation Y
The 72 million Americans born between 1977 and 1994.
Consumer Behavior
The actions a person takes in purchasing and using products and services.
Marketing
The activity for creating and delivering offerings that benefit the organization, its stakeholders, and society.
Perceived Risk
The anxiety felt when a consumer cannot anticipate possible negative outcomes of a purchase.
Utility
The benefits or consumer value received by users of the product.
Marketing Mix
The controllable factors - price, promotion, price, and place - that the marketing manager can use to solve a marketing problem.
Derived Demand
The demand for industrial products and services is driven by demand for consumer products and services.
Cognitive Dissonance
The feeling of post-purchase physiological tension or anxiety.
Baby Boomers
The generation of children born between 1946 and 1964.
Generation X
The generation of people born between 1965 and 1976.
Consideration Set
The group of brands a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands in the product class of which he or she is aware.
Buying Center
The group of people in an organization that participates in the buying process.
Business Marketing
The marketing of products and services to firms, governments, or not-for-profit organizations.
Disposable Income
The money a consumer has left after paying taxes to use for necessities such as food, housing, clothing and transportation.
Discretionary Income
The money that remains after paying taxes and necessities. Used for luxury items.
Ultimate Consumers
The people who use the products and services purchased for a household.
Environmental Scanning
The process of acquiring information on events outside the organization to identify and interpret potential trends.
Profit
The reward to a for-profit organization for the risk it undertakes in marketing its offerings.
Gross Income
The total amount of money made in one year by a person.
Exchange
The trade of things of value between a buyer and a seller so that each is better off.
Environmental Forces
The uncontrollable social, economical, technological, competitive, and regulatory forces that affect the results of a marketing decision.
Societal Marketing Concept
The view that organizations should discover and satisfy the needs of customers in a way that also provides for society's well-being.
Pure Competition
There are many sellers with a similar product.
Points of Difference
Those characteristics of a product that make it superior to competitive substitutes.
(1) To discover the needs and wants of prospective customers (2)to satisfy them
To serve both buyers and sellers, marketing seeks to:
Cause Marketing
Tying the charitable contributions of a firm directly to sales produced through the promotion of one of its products.
-Two or more parties with unsatisfied needs -Desire and ability to satisfy these needs -A way for the parties to communicate -Something to exchange
What is needed for marketing to occur?