IBM 3012 Exam 1 Study Guide
Currently, females account for what percentage of all consumer purchases in the United States?
85%
Which of the following is most likely a low-involvement purchase?
A bottle of shampoo
licensing
A legal process in which one firm pays to use or distribute another firm's resources, including products, trademarks, patents, intellectual property, or other proprietary knowledge. risk: 1) licensee might used information and rights in the future 2) licensor may be creating future competitor 3) the licensee could potentially misuse trademarks
indirect competition
A process in which products provide alternative solutions to the same market
quota sampling
A type of sampling in which a certain number of participants is picked based on selection criteria such as demographics
snowball sampling
A type of sampling in which a set of participants is selected based on the referral of other participants who know they have some knowledge of the subject in question
European Union (EU)
An economic, political, and monetary union among 28 European nations that created a single European market by reducing barriers to the free trade of goods, services, and finances
World Trade Organization (WTO)
An international organization that regulates trade among participating countries and helps importers and exporters conduct their businesses
When U.S. domestic firms attempt to take their business global, one of the biggest mistakes they make is to
Believe that foreign consumers want exactly the same products that are sold in the U.S and want them marketed in the same way
Compare the following product offerings. Which is an example of indirect competition?
Burger King and Subway
Before deciding on a new promotional campaign, Jeffrey's Muffins looked at its customers' buying patterns over a 15-year period as determined by their use of a loyalty card. What method did Jeffrey's use to make sense of the data that was available?
Data mining
When demand for one product occurs because of demand for a related product this is called
Derived demand
A sudden drop in the average consumer income would be an example of which external force affecting the marketing environment?
Economic
The attributes a consumer considers important about a certain product are referred to as
Evaluative criteria
The distinct family-related phases that an individual progresses through over the course of his or her life is called the
Family-life cycle
A(n) __________ is a small group of people brought together for an intensive discussion of a topic.
Focus group
Compare the following product offerings. Which is the best example of direct competition?
Google and Yahoo
How consumers make choices is influenced by the personal, financial, and social significance of the decision being made, in other words, their level of
Involvement
A major advantage of primary data collection is that
It can be tailored to meet the specific research needs
A major disadvantage of primary data collection is
It takes more time to collect than secondary data and is more costly
_____________________ is a legal process in which one firm pays to use or distribute another firm's resources, including products, trademarks, patents, intellectual property, or other proprietary knowledge.
Licensing
Which of the following has the ability to crunch large amounts of structured and unstructured data, taking the guesswork out of various marketing tasks in order to identify messages that are more likely to be well received?
Machine learning
Which marketing strategy is being employed by a firm that is seeking to expand in foreign markets?
Market development
Adrienne decides to add new sales representatives and increase advertising in her existing market for her current line of security systems. Adrienne is pursuing a __________ growth strategy.
Market penetration
When it comes to income distribution, what income class are marketing professionals particularly attracted to?
Middle-income household
Quota sampling is a type of ________________ sampling.
Nonprobablility
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
Note: know it when you see it A company's commitment to meeting the needs of its stakeholders (internal: employees, managers, owners) (external: suppliers, society, government, creditors, shareholders, customers)
Mattel wanted to determine whether a new toy would appeal to preschoolers, so it put six 4-year-olds in a room with several toys and waited to see which ones they played with. What form of research is this?
Observation
What process allows researchers to see how people behave and record behaviors that are relevant to the research objective?
Observation
ABC Pharmaceuticals has developed a patented medication that treats allergies more effectively than other medications, and causes fewer side-effects. As far as a SWOT goes, this represents a(an):
Opportunity
In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, what need must be satisfied first before a person will seek to satisfy any other need?
Physiological
The activities a firm undertakes to create a certain perception of its product in the eyes of the target market is referred to as
Positioning
4 elements of marketing mix
Product, Price, Place, Promotion
The top level in Maslow's hierarchy of needs is
Self-actualization
Grocery stores are increasingly selling more pre-prepared foods that take little time and effort on the part of the consumer. Changes to which one of the following external factors would be the most likely cause?
Socioculture
According to your text, of all the external factors that affect the marketing environment, which one represents the most significant challenges, as well as the most significant opportunities, for marketing professionals?
Technological
Which of the following generated an estimated 26 percent share of the global gross domestic product, making it the largest economy in the world in 2010?
The EU
According to your text, which of the following serves as perhaps the most important source of external information?
The consumer's family and friends
family life cycle (social factor)
The distinct family-related phases that an individual progresses through over the course of his or her life.
Overall GDP is the most common gauge of
The overall expansion or contraction of an economy
NAFTA is a trade agreement between
US, Canada, Mexico
reference group
a collect of people to whom a consumer compares himself or herself membership reference group: the group to which a consumer actually belongs aspirational reference group: the individuals a consumer would like to emulate dissociative reference group: the people that the individual would like to be like
observation research
a data collection tool that involves watching how people behave and recording anything about that behavior that might be relevant to the research objective
surveys
a data collection tool that poses a sequence of questions to respondents
The internal considerations in a SWOT analysis are
a firm's strengths and weaknesses
What is the premise behind the marketing concept?
a focus on satisfying the needs of the customer
A membership reference group is defined as
a group to which a consumer actually belongs
product development
a marketing strategy that entails the creation of new products for present markets
Daphne used to work in the city where she would take public transportation to work. However, she just took a new job in the suburbs and now not only has to find a place to live, but also has to buy a car to get to and from her job. For Daphne, these things represent
a need
direct competition (category competition or brand competition)
a situation in which products that perform the same function compete against one another
diversification
a strategy of increasing sales by introducing new products into new markets
Big Data
a term that describes both the growth in information that inundates businesses each day and the complex tools use to analyze the data and derive meaningful insights
simple random sampling
a type of sampling in which everyone in the target population has an equal chance of being selected
nonrandom sampling
a type of sampling that does not attempt to ensure that every member of the target population has a chance of being selected
cognitive dissonance
buyers remorse
the effect of time on consumer behavior
consumers are often willing to pay more for products if the placement of those products saves them time
The price of one country's currency in terms of another country's currency is referred to as
currency exchange rate
A good mission statement should be oriented around the
customer
primary data
data collected specifically for the research problem at hand collection method examples: focus groups, surveys, observations, data gathered by equipment (e.g video), in depth personal interviews advantages: pertain only to firm's research, may provide inside into why and how consumers make choices disadvantages: more expensive, may be difficult to enlist customer participation, may take excessive amount of time to collect examples of us: to understand consumer motivation, to determine the effect of variables, to gain feedback
Supermarkets collect information about individual customers through their use of loyalty cards and then analyze the data to look for patterns in purchases. This is an example of
data mining
The description of human populations based on characteristics such as age, gender, ethnicity, and education level is referred to as
demographics
analyzing qualitative data
disadvantages: results may be difficult to measure objectively, time consuming, poor interpretation of open ended questions advantages: substantial insight, participant can cover things that the researcher may not previously have thought of
analyzing quantitative data
disadvantages: sampling errors, may be limited by researchers' questions, response rates can be very low advantages: results may be generalizable to larger population, some method can be conducted quickly and inexpensively, analysis of data is faster, can be cost effective, can conduct causal studies that indicate why behaviors occur, often convenient for respondent
direct ownership
domestic firm actively manages a foreign company or overseas facilities risks: -it can be difficult to manage local resources from afar advantages: provides firm with more control over its intellectual property, advertising, pricing and product distribution
what are the external factors affecting the marketing environment?
economic (GDP, income distribution, inflation, consumer confidence) demographic sociocultural political legal technological
SWOT analysis (situational analysis)
evaluation of a firm's strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats
Opportunities (SWOT)
external factors that the company may be able to exploit to its advantage
situational influences
factors like time and involvement that serve as an interface between consumers and their decision-making process
low-involvement products
inexpensive products that can be purchased without much forethought and that are purchased with some frequency (impulse purchase)
secondary data
information collected for alternative purposes prior to the study collection method examples: literature reviews, online electronic searches, company records, marketing information systems, private research companies, boundary spanners (e.g salespersons) advantages: less expensive, readily available disadvantages: data may not be relevant or accurate or altered examples of use: to gather macroeconomic or socioeconomic data, to obtain info about competitors, to gain insight into international cultures and markets
Strengths (SWOT)
internal capabilities that may help a company reach its objectives
Weaknesses (SWOT)
internal limitations that may interfere with a company's ability to achieve its objectives
Marketers must realize that the consumer is unlikely to engage in any of the subsequent steps of the buying process if he or she
is not aware of the problem or does not recognize the need for it
Value
its role in marketing, along with an understanding, and the ability to identify, what the mutual benefits are for a given transaction.
what are the 5 international market entry strategies?
low risk, lower potential return 1) exporting 2) licensing 3) franchising 4) join venture 5) direct investment high risk, higher potential return
what are the four basic categories of marketing growth strategies?
market penetration, product development, market development, diversification
The act of collecting, interpreting, and reporting information concerning a clearly defined marketing problem is known as
market research
high involvement products
significant purchases that carry a greater risk to consumers if they fail
market development
strategies focus on selling existing goods and services to new customers
market penetration
strategies that emphasize selling more of the firm's existing goods and services to existing customers
country-of-origin effects
the beliefs and associations people in one country have about goods and services produced in another country
As it pertains to a situation analysis, the term "market" refers to
the group of consumers that is interested in and able to buy a particular product
Target Marketing
the group of customers toward which an organization directs its marketing efforts
if the U.S dollar rises in value against the Euro dollar, what will happen to the imports to the U.S from Europe?
the price of imported goods fall result: helps U.S importers that buy from Europe because it lowers their cost, they pay less for the same imports
if the U.S dollar falls in value against the Euro dollar, what will happen to the imports to the U.S from Europe?
the price of imported goods fall result: hurts U.S importers that buy from Europe because it raises the cost to the U.S buyer, they pay more for the same imports
if the U.S dollar falls in value against the Euro dollar, what will happen to the exports from the U.S to Europe?
the price of the exported goods fall result: helps U.S firms that export to Europe because it lowers cost of the good to the European buyer, which make U.S firm more competitive
if the U.S dollar rises in value against the Euro dollar, what will happen to the exports from the U.S to Europe?
the price of the exported goods rise result: hurts U.S firms because it raises the cost of the good to European buyer, which makes the U.S firm less competitive
Strategic Plan
typically includes an organization's plans for key functional areas: marketing plan, human resources plan, financial plan, and risk management plan
Maslow's hierarchy of needs model
what do marketers use to figure out motivation (the inward drive we have to get we need or want)
joint venture
when a domestic firm buys part of a foreign company or joins with a foreign company to create a new entity risks: - domestic and international firms often operate differently which can lead to culture clashes - mistrust over proprietary knowledge, conflict over new investments - disagreements on sharing rev and profits
sensory marketing
marketing that engages consumers' senses and affects their behaviors
Global marketing
marketing that targets markets throughout the world
business-to-business marketing (B2B)
marketing to organizations that acquire goods and services in the production of other goods and services that are then sold or supplied to others
Needs vs. Wants
need is biological (food, water, shelter) where wants is a product we want (headphones, makeup)
After reviewing the existing data on seasonal spending by his company's customers, Marvin decided he needed new information collected to address his research questions. Therefore, Marvin will need __________ data to address the questions in his market research study
primary
Marketers who design and offer new products and services to their existing customers are pursuing a ____________________ growth strategy.
product development
Ritual Consumption
refers to a pattern of behaviors tied to life events that affect what and how we consume. These behaviors tend to have symbolic meanings and vary greatly by importance and by culture.
Positioning
refers to the activities a firm undertakes to create a certain perception of its product in the eyes of the target market example: McDonalds entering gourmet coffee market, it had to overcome the perception that it was simply a fast food restaurant. marketers launched an advertising campaign called "unsnobby coffee" positioned its product as a place for consumers to get great coffee for a lower price than Starbucks
Jane wants to know what percentage of freshman at her college purchase clothing with college logos. She decides to randomly interview 10 people from each of the dorms and ask them. These people are her
sample
Exploratory Research
seeks to discover new insights typical research method: qualitative referred data source: internal
exporting
selling domestically produced products to foreign markets
focus groups
Data collection tool in which a moderator engages a small group of people as they discuss a particular topic or concept with each other in a spontaneous way.
High-involvement purchases are characterized by the fact that they
Carry a greater risk to consumers if they fail
Compare the following product offerings. Which is the best example of direct competition?
Coffee and tea
According to your text, the formal name for buyer's regret is
Cognitive dissonance
The superior position a product enjoys over competing products if consumers believe it has more value than other products in its category is referred to as a
Competitive advantage
franchising
Contractual arrangement in which the franchisor provides a franchisee the right to use its name and marketing and operational support; in return, franchisee pays franchisor a free and a share of profits risks: - granting name to a franchisee far away is difficult - franchisors also run the risk of providing such detailed info that they can potentially have a competitive advantage if they choose to open their business
The beliefs and associations people have about a country that can be either positive or negative are referred to as
Country-of-origin effects
If a domestic firm makes the mistake of believing that foreign consumers want exactly the same products that are sold in the United States, then that firm is most likely ignoring the importance of
Cultural fit
Threats (SWOT)
Current and potential external factors that may challenge the firm's short- and long-term performance.
All of the following are sources of external secondary data, EXCEPT:
Customer surveys
The activity of buyers and sellers trading things of value so that each is better off as a result is referred to as
an exchange
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
an international agreement that established a free-trade zone among the United States, Canada, and Mexico
descriptive research
asks the questions who, what, when, where, and how typical research: qualitative or quantitative preferred data source: external or internal
casual research
attempts to understand cause-and-effect relationships among variables typical research method: quantitate preferred data source: internal
