Marketing Exam 1 Chapters 1-3, 5-9
positioning statement
-used both internally and externally of company -convert their positioning ideas for the offering into written statement
Social media
Facebook measures the amount of likes twitter instagram
Influencer
affect buying decision usually by helping define the specifications for what is bought EX: info technology manager influences purchase in computers
market segmentation
aggregating prospective buyers into groups or segments 1. have common needs 2. will respond similarly to a marking action
for-profit organization
aka business firm privately owned that services its customers to earn a profit EX: Target, NIKE
Joint venture
foreign company and a local firm invest together to create local business -share ownership, control, profits of new company
Buyers
formal authority and responsibility to select the supplier and negotiate the terms of the contract
Deciders
formal or informal power to select or approve the supplier that receives the contract
production era
goods were scarce and buyers were willing to accept virtually any goods that were available and make do with them
What is marketed
goods, services, ideas
offerings
goods, services, ideas that satisfy customers needs/wants and add value to the organization
Tariffs
govt tax on products or services entering a country, primarily serve to raise prices on imports -average is 4%
consideration set
group of brands a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands in the product of brands in the product class of which he or she is aware
customer experience
internal response that customers have to all aspects of an organization and its offering *both indirect and direct contacts of customers
Commercialization
last stage of New product development process - positions and launches a new product in full scale production and sales -most expensive stage
Robinson-Pathan act
makes it unlawful to discriminate in prices charged to differentiate purchases of the same products where effect may lesson competition= money
consumer spending
makes up 2/3 of US economic activity *based on expectations of the future *monitored by companies to make decisions
salesforce survey forecast
making the firms salespeople to estimate sales during a forthcoming period -salespeople can be unreliable forecasts but there is logic to this approach becuz they are in direct contact with customers
Exclusive territorial distribution
manufacturer grants a distributor sole rights to sell a product in a specific geographical location
sales era
manufacturers found they could produce more goods than buyers could consume, competition grew, firms hired more salespeople to find new buyers
organizational buyers
manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers, service companies, not-for-profit orgs, and govt agencies that buy products and services for their own use or for resale -all buyers in nation except ultimate buyers -total annual purchases are greater than that of ultimate buyers -3 types: industrial, reseller and govt
Build to order (BTO)
manufacturing a products only when there is an order from a customer -after this came mass customization
extended problem solving
many brands examines, many sellers considered, many number of product attributes evaluated, many number of external info sources used, considerable of time spent searching EX: audio systems and cars
monopolistic competition
many sellers compete with substitutable products within a price range
pure competition
many sellers with similar product
Joint decision making
most decisions are made by both the husband and wife *increases with the education of spouses * most common with car, vacation, hours, electronics and family financial purchases
consumerism
movement to increase the influence, power and rights of consumers in dealing with institutions
*variation by level
moving down levels in an organization means creating increasingly specific, detailed strategies and plans
Group potential buyers into segments
must ask "would segmentation be worth doing?" or "is it possible" - meaningful segments involve meeting specific criteria
Research objectives
must be clear on the purpose of the research 1. explanatory research: provides ideas about a vague problem 2. descriptive research: trying to find the frequency with which something occurs or the extent of a relationship between 2 factors 3. casual research:tries to determine the extent to which the change in one factor changes another one
Personal needs
need for achievement, status, self-respect and prestige
Customer want
need that is shaped by a person knowledge, culture and personality
Internet of Things (loT)
network of products embedded with connectivity-enabled electronics
Market development
new market, current products
diversification
new markets, new products
Users in buying center
people in the org who actually use the product or service EX: secretary
Reference groups
people to whom an individual looks as a basis for self-appraisal or as a source of personal standards *influence info, attitudes, and aspiration levels that help set a consumers standards *three types: associative, aspiration, dissociative
Ultimate consumers
people who use the products and services purchased for a household
market
people with both the desire and ability to buy a specific offering
Macroeconomic conditions
performance of economy based on GDP, unemployment, price changes (inflation) *in prices increase faster than consumer income= less spending
bad timing
product is introduced too soon, too late or when consumer tastes are shifting dramatically
Public sources
product rating programs, govt agencies, Consumer reports
Form utility
production of the product/service
Business products
products orgs buy that assist in providing other products for resale EX: components and support products
Consumer products
products purchases by the ultimate consumer EX: connivence products, shopping products, specially products
types of goals
profit sales market share quality customer satisfaction employee welfare social responsibility
trademarks
protect both firm and trademarked product and the consumer buying it
NAICS
provides common industry definitions for Canada, Mexico and the US making it easier to measure economic activity in the 3 members of NAFTA
Lanham Act
provides registration of a company trademarks *company can lose trademark if it becomes too generic
situational influences
purchase task, social surrounds, physical surroundings, temporal effects and antecedent states all affect purchase decision
business portfolio analysis
quantify performance measures and growth rates to analyze their firms SBU's as though they were a collection of separate investments *which SBU generates cash and which requires cash
Usage rate
quantity consumed or patronage-store visits-during a specific period -used with airlines a lot (frequent-flyer program) -some measure,eat pf usage by, or sales obtained from, various segments is central to the analysis
price discounting
quantity discounts are legal when the more you buy=cheaper or price matching competitors *price fixing is illegal
market share
ratio of sales revenue of form to total sales revenue of all firms in industry *this includes the firm itself
purchase task
reason for engaging in the decision
Cannibalization
reduction in sales volume, sales revenue, or market share of one product as a result of the introduction of a new product by the same producer
market segments
relatively homogeneous groups of prospective buyers 1. have common needs 2. will respond similarly to marketing action
social class
relatively permanent, homogenous divisions in society into which people sharing similar values, interests and behavior can be grouped *determined by occupation, source of income, and education *upper, middle, lower class *firms recognize differences in media preferences between classes like lower classes prefer tabloid magazines vs middle classes like reality magazines (PEOPLE) and upper liking travel and news magazines
Personal sources
relatives, friends whom the consumer trusts
Clayton act
replaced sherman antitrust act to forbid certain actions that are likely to lesson competition although no actual harm had yet occured
Evaluation criteria
represent both the objective attributes of a brand and the bijective ones you use to compare different products and brands EX: for cellphones the criteria is retail price, phone display, audio quality, text messaging, web capability, camera quality, battery life
Values
represent personally or socially preferable modes of conduct or states of existence that tend to persist over time **become apparent in the personal values of individuals that affect their attitudes and beliefs and the importance assigned to specific behaviors and attributes of products and services
telephone consumer protection act
requirements for telemarketing promotions
discontinuous innovation
requires new learning and consumption patterns by consumers -Marketing strategy: educate consumers through product trial and personal selling -EX:wireless router, digital video recorder, electric car
competencies
special capabilities-skills, technologies, resources-that distinguish it from other orgs and provide customer value *must provide competitive advantage
Brand community
specialized group of consumers with a structured set of relationships involving a particular brand, fellow customers of that brand, and the product in use -think about brand names, product category, other customers who use the brand, and the marketer that makes and promotes the brand
product item
specific product that had a unique brand, size or price
purchase decision process
stages buyer foes thru to make decisions 1. problem recognition 2. info search
Mission
statement of the organizations functions in society that often identifies its customers, markets, products and technologies *clear, concise, meaningful, inspirational, long-term *exist for all 3 types of orgs
Cultural symbols
things that represent ideas and concepts in specific culture *evoke deep feelings
Screening and evaluation
third stage in New product development process -internally and externally evaluate new product ideas to eliminate those that warrant no further effort
buying committee
this is essentially the same thing as a buying center but for large miltstore chain resellers, the group must be highly formalized EX: this is for target, 7-eleven, connivence stores
temporal effects
time of day or amount of time available
Gross income
total amount of money made in one year by a person, household or family *before taxes
sales forecast
total sales of a product that a firm expects to sell during a specified time period under specific environmental conditions and its own marketing efforts 1. judgements of the decision maker 2. surveys of knowledgeable groups 3. statistical methods
exchange
trade of things of value between a buyer and a seller that each is better off after the trade *key to marketing
Back translation
translated word or phrase is retranslated into the original language by a different interpreter to catch errors
statistical methods
trend extrapolation: best known statistical method which involves extending a pattern observed in past data into the future Linear trend extrapolation: trend with straight line to fit past sales data in order to project sales in future
Disadvantages of joint venture
two companies may disagree about policies or course of action or govt bureaucracy bugs down the effort
Govt markets
type of organization market -federal, statem and local agencies that buy goods and services for the constituents they serve -includes things like NASA
Industrial market
type of organization market -reprocess a product or service they buy before selling it again to the next buyer -manufacterurs (companies that primarily sell psychical goods)=25% of all industrial firms -service companies and real estate makes up 75%
reseller markets
type of organization market -wholesalers and retailers that buy physical products and resell them again without any reprocessing
Environment forces
uncontrollable factors that affect a marketing decision 1.social 2.economic 3. technological 4. competitive 5. regulatory forces
Customer value
unique combination of benefits received by targeted buyers that includes quality, connivence, on-time delivery and both before sale and after sale service @ a specific price
Stock keeping unit (SKU)
unique number that defines an item for ordering or inventory purposes -each product has this
Test-Market cities
use be demographically representative of markets target for new product, have cable TV systems that can deliver different ads to different homes, and have retailers with checkout counter scanners to measure sales
External approach to Screening and evaluation
use concept maps: external evaluations with consumers that consist of preliminary testing of a are product idea rather than an actual finished product -rely on written descriptions of the product
Roles in buying center
users, influencers, buyers, deciders, gatekeepers
modified rebuy
users, influencers, old deciders in the buying center want to change the product specifications, price, delivery schedule or supplier
4 P's of marketing
(product, price, promotion, place)
High and Low resource consumers
***High resource INNOVATORS: successful, sophisticated, take-change people, image is important, early adopters and change leaders, richness and variety ****Low Resource SURVIVORS: focus on meeting basic needs rather than fulfilling desires, modest market, loyal to fav brands
Population shifts
*US population shifting to southern and western states *Vermont decreased in size * North Dakota, Texas, Utah, Wyoming increasing most rapidly *within states, population shifts rural to cities
judgments of the decision maker
- 99 percent of all sales forecast -direct forecast: estimating the value to be forecast without any intervening steps -lost-horse forecast: starting with the last known value of the item being forecast, listing the factors that could affect the forecast, assessing whether they have a positive or negative impact, making the final forecast
racial/ethnic diversity
-1 in 3 US residents are African American, Native American, Alaska Native, Asian American, or Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islander -Asian Americans, Hispanics and African Americans are supposed to greatly increase
African American buying patterns
-2nd largest spending power in US -african american women spend 3x more on health and beauty products than white women -price conscious but still strongly motivated by quality and choice -respond more to products and advertising that appeal to the African American cultural image -likely to tell friends about products/services they like than the general public
Develop research plan
-2nd step of marketing research -specify constraints: restrictions placed on potential solutions to a problem -identify data needed for marketing actions -determine how to collect data (concepts and methods)
external sources of secondary data
-US Census reports, trade association studies, business periodicals, internet-based reports
independent e-markets
-act as a third party and provide an Internet technology trading platform and a centralized market that enable exchanges between buyers and sellers -charge a fee for service -exist wheres thousands of geographically dispersed buyers and sellers are, volatile prices caused by demand and supply fluctuations, time sensitivity due to perishable offerings and changing technologies, easily comparable offering between a variety of sellers
Demographical segmentation
-based on objective physical (gender, race) measurable (age, income) or other classification attribute (birth era, occupation) of prospective buyers -house hold size
Psychographic segmentation
-based on some subjective mental or emotional attributes (personality), aspirations (lifestyle), or needs of prospective customers -lifestyle
Cultural ethnocentricity
-belief that aspects of ones culture are superior to another -this has spread to some people disfavor imported products purely because they are foreign
how to respond to value consciousness
-open stores in convient locations -offer more deals
Direct investment
-biggest company a company can make when entering the global market -domestic firm actually investing in and owning a foreign subsidiary or division -this may follow one of the other 3 market strategies
Alternative evaluation
-clarifies the problem for the consumer by suggesting criteria to use for the purchase, yielding brand names that might meet the criteria, and developing consumer value perceptions -assessing value
evaluation phase
-compare results with plans to identify deviations -exploit positive deviations; correct negative ones
large organization
-complex -levels of business: Board of directions corporate level strategic business unit level functional level
Economic infrastructure
-country's communications, transportation, financial, and distribution systems -communication infrastructure in developing countries is limited compares with those of developed countries -formal operating procedures among financial institutions and the notion of private property are still limited
Develop a market product grid and estimate the size of markets
-each cell can show estimated market since of a given product sold to a specific market segment -horizontal row: identifying and labeling markets -vertical columns: product groupings -estimating market sizes help determine which target market segments to select and which product groupings to offer
organizational inertia in new product failures
-encountering "groupthink" in task force and committee meetings -avoiding the "NIH problem"
Questionnaire data
-facts and figures obtained by asking people about their attitudes, awareness, intentions, and behaviors -idea generation methods of idea evaluation method
Asian American Buying Patterns
-fasest growing subculture in US -Assimilated asian americans:conserving in English, highly educated, high ranking jobs, buying patterns like Americans -Nonasssimilated Asian Americans: recent immigrants who still cling to their native languages and customs -as a whole characterized by hard working, strong family ties, appreciation for education, median family incomes exceeding those of other ethnic groups -most entrepreneurial in US
Define the problem
-first step of marketing research -set research objective: specific, measurable goals the decision maker seeks to achieve -identify possible marketing actions
private e-markets
-for large companies focusing on streaming the companies purchase transactions with its suppliers and customers -not third party but represent interests of their owners
keys to successful organization
-forward looking -anticipate future events+respond quickly/efficiently -thrive in uncertain, chaotic, changing environment
ways of segment organizational (business) Markets
-geographical: statistical area such as metropolitan area versus micropolitan -demographic: NAICS code, number of employees, annual sales -behavioral: usage rate, number of locations, purchase location
4 bases of segmentation
-geogrpahic -demographic -psychgraphic -behavioral
Ideals motivated consumers
-guided by knowledge and principles ****high resource THINKERS are mature, reflective, and information seeking people who value order, knowledge and responsibility -value durability and functionality over styling and newness -not brand loyal ****Low resource BELIEVERS are conservative, conventions people with concrete beliefs based on family, religion, community and the nation -chose familiar products and brands=brand loyal
Radical invention
-highest level of risk -revolutionary new product
Challenged of marketing research
-how to determine if consumers will buy a product they have never seen nor thought about? -How to obtain answers that people know but are reluctant to reveal" -How to help people accurately remember and report their interests, intentions and purchases
Concepts
-ideas about products or services -to find out about consumer reactions for a potential new product, a picture of verbal description of a product/service may be offered for sale called the new-product concept
SWOT analysis
-identify industry -analyze competitors -assess own org -research customers
Select Target Market
-if company picks too narrow a set of segments, it may fail to reach the volume of sales and profits it needs -if company selects too broad it may spread its marketing efforts so thin that the extra expense exceeds the increased sales and profits
organizational synergy
-increased customer value achieved through performing orgs functions such as marketing or manufacturing more efficiently -customer should be better off because of increased synergies
Opinion Leadership
-individuals who exert direct or indirect social influence over others -knowledgeable about or users of particular products and services so their opinions influence other choices -10 percent of US adults -identifying, reaching and influencing these people are a challenge of companies
Group product to be sold into categories
-indivudual products -grouping products into meaningful categories so that buyers can relate to them -supermarkets and department stores are organized into product groups
Test marketing
-offering product for sale on a limited basis in a defined area for a specific amount go time -only done if room in the budget -3 types: standard, controlled, simulated
Word of mouth
-influencing people during conversation -most powerful and authentic info source for consumers because it typically involves friends viewed as trustworthy -67% of sales are due to this -magnified by internet and companies can receive feedback by tracing people thoughts on internet -can be a source of negative info or positive
Marketing reasons for new product failures
-insignificant point difference -incomplete market and product protocol before product development starts -not satisfying customer needs on critical factors -bad timing -no economical access to buyers -poor product quality -poor execution of the marketing miss: brand name, package, price, promotion, distribution -too little market attractiveness
Shopping products
-items for which the consumer compares several alternatives on criteria such as price, quality or style -fairly expensive -large number of selective outlets -differentiation from competitors stressed -consumers prefer specific brands but will accept substitutes -infrequent purchases, lots of shopping time EX: cameras, TVs, briefcases, airline tickets
Specialty products
-items that the consumer makes a special effort to search out and buy -usually very expensive -very limited distribution -uniqueness of brand and status is stressed in promotion -consumers are very brand loyal and won't accept substitutes -infrequent purchases -extensive search and decision time EX: poles watches, heart surgery, Rolls-Royce cars
Connivence Products
-items that the consumer purchases frequently, conveniently and with minimum of shopping efforts -relatively inexpensive -widespread, many outlets -promotion: price, availability, awareness stressed -consumers are aware of brand but will accept substitutes EX: hand soap, cake mix, toothpaste
Unsought products
-items the consumer does not know about or knows about but does not initially want -price varies -limited distribution -awareness is essential and promotion -consumers will accept substitutes -some comparison shopping EX: burial insurance, thesaurus
US population
-larger, older, more diverse -321 million people but by 2030 will be 359 million
Regulatory
-laws protecting competition, laws affecting marketing mix actions, self-regulation
US imports and Exports
-leader in exports but over past 30 years their imports have exceeded exports-deficient -imports and exports have dramatically increased
disadvantages to licensing
-licensor forgoes control of its product and reduces the potential profits gained from it -licensor mat be creating its own competition by licensee modifying the product and entering market so licenser tries to stay innovative to keep the licensee dependent on them
Advantage to licensing
-low risk and a capital free entry into foreign country -licensee gains info to start with a competitive advantage and foreign country gain employment by having the product manufactured locally
cognitive learning
-making connections between 2+ ideas or simply observing the outcomes of others behaviors and adjusting your own accordingly -learning through thinking, reasoning, and mental problem solving without direct experience
Criteria for selecting target segments
-market size -expected growth: even though the market may be small, it may grow significantly in the future -competitive position: less competition=more attractive the segment is -cost of reaching the segment: if inaccessible to firms marketing action should not be pursued -compatibility with the orgs objectives and resources
internal sources of secondary data
-marketing inputs (budgets, financial statements, sales call reports) -marketing outcomes (actual sales and customer communications)
traditional family
-married couple with children younger than 18 years old -makes up 21% of all US households
Disadvantages of secondary data
-may be out of date -definitions or categories might not be quite right for researchers projects -may not be specific enough for the project so may be necessary to collect primary data too
cross tabulation
-method of presenting and analyzing data involving 2+ variables to discover relationships in the data -most widely used technique for organizing and presenting marketing data -offers great flexibility -permits direct interpretation and an easy means of communicating data to management -used to summarize questionnaire, observational and experimental data
disadvantage of cross tabulation
-misleading if percentages are based on too few observations -can hide some relationships becuz each cross tab typically shows only 2 or 3 variables
insignificant point difference
-most important fact for a new product to defeat competing ones-having superior characteristics that deliver unique benefits to the user
Achievement-motivated consumers
-motivated by achievement and look for products/services that demonstrate success to their peers or to a group they aspire to ***High resource Achievers: buy, goal-directed lifestyles and a deep commitment to career and family, image is important, time-saving devices, establish prestige products ***Loe resource STRIVERS: trend followers, lack education, skills and tenacity to change their circumstances, money=success to them
Purchase decision
-must ask yourself, from whom do I buy from and when do I buy -Choice of which seller to buy from will depend on such considerations as terms of sales, your past experience, and return policy -deciding when to buy is determine by discounts, store atmosphere, pleasantness or ease of the shopping experience, salesperson assistance, time pressure and financial state
nonprofit organization
-nongovt organization that services it customers but doesn't have profit as the goal -provides services to some clients -goal: operational efficiency or client satisfaction -funds>expenses=success EX: hospitals, colleges, museums, Teach for America
implementation phase
-obtain resource -design marking organization -develop schedules -execute marketing program -define precise tasks, responsibilities, deadlines
One product and multiple market segments
-org produces only a single product or service and attempts to sell it to 2 or more market segments -avoids extra costs of developing and producing additional versions of the product -only additional costs would be for advertising and promotion which is a lot less than producing more goods
Multiple products and multiple market segments
-org products multiple products aimed at separate target markets -popular in car makers -more expensive but very effective if it meets customer's needs better, doesn't reduce with the costs of producing a different version of the offerings for each segment -in auto industry this can reduce quality and raise prices (downsides)
size of the order or purchase
-organization buying is much larger than consumer buying -knowing how order size affects buying practices is important in determining who will participate in the purchase decision, who will make the final decision, and the length of time that will require to arrive at a purchase agreement
Drive variable
-part of behavioral learning -a need that moves an individual to action EX: hunger-> might be represented by motives
Cue variable
-part of behavioral learning -stimulus or symbol perceived by customers
Reinforcement
-part of behavioral learning -the reward
marketing program
-plan that integrates the marketing mix to provide a good, service or idea to prospective buyer -develop budget by estimating revenues, expenses, profits
cognitive dissonance
-post purchase psychological tension or anxiety -to deal with this, consumers try to applaud themselves for making the right choice -sellers sometimes use ads or follow-ups to comfort buys that they made the right decision
protectionism
-practice of shielding one or more industries with a country economy from foreign competition through the use of tariffs or quotas -argument is it limits the outsourcing of jobs, protects a nations political security, discourages economic dependency on other countries and promote development of domestic industries
Observational data
-primary data -facts and figures obtained by watching hoe proper actually behave -collected by mechanical, personal or neuromarketing methods
Motivation
-psychological concept -energizing force that stimulate behavior to satisfy a need
Post purchase behavior
-realizing the value of your purchase by comparing it with his or her expectations and is either satisfied or dissatisfied -if dissatisfied it could be due to either consumer expectations being too high or product deficiency and the seller but be sensitive to customers use
Hispanics buying patterns
-represent largest racial/ethnic subculture in US in terms of population and opening power -36% are immigrants -quality and brand conscious -prefer buying American products -buying preferences are influenced by family and peers -consider advertising a credible product info source -convenience is not important product attribute, nor is low fat products
Buying Function in organizations
-responsible for facilitating the selection and purchase of products and services for the org's own use or resale to consumers -gathering and screening info about products and services, prices and suppliers called vendors -formal solicitation of bids from vendors and making awards of purchasing contracts -purchasing managers, procurement managers, sourcing managers
marketing synergies
-running horizontally in market product grid, each row represents an opportunity for efficiency in terms of a market segments showing what products would be needed -single customers segment will likely require a variety of products so the company saves money on marketing but spends more on production
Product synergies
-running vertically done the market-product grid, each column represents an opportunity for efficiency in research and development and production -which product is attractive by the most number of market segments? -must address the concerns of a wide variety of consumers, which costs more time and money
Derived demand
-sales of business products frequently result from the sale of consumer products -characteristic of business product EX: as consumer demand for cars increase, the company demand for paint for the car will increase
market product focus and goal setting
-set market and product setting -select target market -find points of difference -position
Attitude formation
-shaped by our values and beliefs, which are learned -learned predisposition to respond to an object or class of objectives in a consistency favorable or unfavorable way -2 types of values: Cultural values and personal values
Criteria in forming segments
-simplicity and cost-effectiveness of assigning potential buyers to segments -potential for increased profit -similarity of needs of potential buyers within a segment - difference of needs of buyers among segments -potential of a marketing action to reach a segments
Segments of one: Mass Customization
-tailoring products or services to the tastes of individual customers on a high-volume scale made possible by internet ordering and flexible manufacturing/marketing processes -economics of scale made mass produces products so affordable that most customers are willing to compromise their individual tastes and settle for standardized products
Collecting relevant info
-third step of marketing research -obtain secondary data -obtain primary data
world population
-today: 7.3 billion -2050: 9.6 billion -shifting are structure: # of people 65+ is projected to triple by 2050 *trending are important to look at to find new target markets
Political Stability
-trade depends on this -affected by govt orientation toward foreign companies and trade with other countries -political strife terrorism, war -marketers measure and track country risk rating to monitor political stability
planning phase
1) SNOT Analysis: 2) market product focus and goal setting 3)marketing program
Middle level of newness in org perspective
1) can be significant jump in innovation or tech such as new smart phones or digital cameras OR -brand extension: putting established brand name on a new product in an unfamiliar market
advantages of secondary data
1)tremendous time saving because the data have already been collected and published or exist internally 2) low cost such as free or inexpensive Census reports 3) greater level of info available thru secondary data
4 relevant factors for marketing
1. 2+ parties with unsatisfied needs 2. desire and ability to satisfy these needs 3. a way for the parties to communicate 4. something to exchange
Census Bureau classification system
1. Metropolitan statistical area: at least 1 urban area of 50,000+ people with social and economic integration 2. micropolitan statistical area: at least 1 urban cluster of 10,000-50,000 people with social and economic integration near
5 step marketing research approach
1. define problem 2. develop research plan 3. collect relevant info 4. develop findings 5. take marketing actions
General process of marketing
1. discover needs and wants of prospective customers 2. satisfy them
5 trends influencing global marketing
1. gradual decline of economic protectionism by individual countries 2. formal economic integration and free trade among nations 3. global competition among global companies for global customers 4. emergence of networked global marketspace 5. growing prevalence of economic espionage
Steps in segmenting and targeting markets
1. group potential buyers into segments 2. Group products to be sold into categories 3. develop a market-product grid and estimate site of markets 4. select target markets 5. take marketing actions to reach target markets
Steps of perceptual map
1. identify important attributes for a product or brand class 2. discover how target customers rate competing products or brands with respect to these attributes 3. discover where the company's product or brand is on these attributes in the minds of potential customers 4. reposition the company's product or brand in the minds of potential customers
3 types of organizations
1. non profit org 2. for profit 3. govt agencies
Advantages of joint venture
1. one company may nor have financial, physical, or managerial resources to enter foreign market alone but this allows them to 2. govt may require or encourage this before it allows a foreign company to enter its market
3 segmentation strategies
1. one product and multiple market segments 2. multiple products and multiple market segments 3. segments of one or mass customization
four stages of manufacturers life
1. production era 2. sales era 3. marketing concept era 4. customer relationship era
Challenges of Hispanics
1. very diverse so cultural differences affect buying preferences 2. large language barrier
4 questions of buying center
1. which people are in the buying center for the product or service 2. what is the relative influence of each member of the group 3. what are the buying criteria of each member 4. how does each member of the group perceive our firm, our product and services and our salespeople
Sherman antitrust act
1890 forbids contracts, combinations or conspiracies in restraint of trade AND actual monopolies or attempts to monopolize any part of trade or commerce
Attitude change
3 approaches to change consumer attitudes 1. changing beliefs about the extent to which a brand has certain attributes 2. Changing the perceived importance of attributes 3. adding new attributes to the product
newness from organizational perspective
3 levels of newness and innovation lowest level: product line extension middle level: brand extension highest level: radical invention
controllable factors
4 P's that make up the marketing mix which can be used by the marketing manager to solve a marketing program
semantic differential scale
5 point scale in which the opposite ends have one or 2 word adjectives that have opposite meanings
Development
5th stage of New product development process -turns the idea on paper into a prototype -results in demonstrable, producible product that invites not only manufacturing the product efficiently but also performing lab+consumer tests to ensure product meets the standards established in prototype
Market testing
6th stage of New product development process -exposing actual produces to prospective consumers under realistic purchase conditions to see if they will buy
80/20 rule
80% of a firms sales are obtained from 20% of its customers -another name for usage rate
Ethnic spending
Asian Americans: $770 billion/year Hispanics: $1.3 trillion/year African Americans: $1.1 trillion/year
4 largest importers of the US
China, Canada, Mexico, Japan in order purchased 2/3 of US exports
Low involvement purchases
EX: toothpaste, soap purchases consumer barely any research into the decision a
Newness in legal term
Federal trade commission (FTC) says "new" be limited to use with a product up to 6 months after it enters regular distribution
NIH problem
Not invented here problem: ideas from the outside are rejected simply because they come from the outside=BAD
leaders in global merchandise trade
US, China and Germany
decision making
act of consciously choosing from alternatives
Electronic commerce
activities that use electronic communication in the inventory, promotion, distributions , purchase and exchange products and services
entry
additional producers=lower prices so barriers to entry are implemented to make it difficult for new firms to enter the market
World Trade Organization (WTO)
addresses an array of world trade issues with 160 countries accounting for 90% of world trade -permeant institution that sets rules governing trade between its member through panels of trade experts who decide on trade disputes between members anise binding decisions
Gray market
aka parallel importing -situation where products are sold thru unauthorized channels of distribution -individuals buy products in a lower prices country from a manufacturers authorized retailer, ship them to high prices countries and then sell them below the manufacturers suggested retail price through unauthorized retailers
information technology
all of the computing resources that collect, store, and analyze the data -managers struggle most with how to efficiently transform the huge amount of data into useful info
Strategic marketing process
allocates its marketing mix resources to reach its target markets *3 phases: planning, implementation, evaluation
Internet Technology
allow companies to create internents and extranets
telephone survey
allow flexibility, unhappy respondents may hang up on the interviewer even with the efficiency of computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI)
Trademark law revision act
allows company to secure rights to a name before actual use by declaring an intent to use name
open-ended question
allows respondents to express opinions, ideas, or behaviors in they own words without being forced to choose among alternatives that have been predetermined by a marketing researcher
Competitive forces
alternative firms that could provide a product to satisfy a specific markets needs 1 . pure competition 2. monopolistic competition 3. oligopoly 4. pure monopoly
competitive
alternative forms of competition, small business
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
am dement that makes it a crime for US corporations to bribe an official of a foreign govt or political party to obtain or retain business in a foreign country *bribery of foreign govt officials is a crime *dumping is a crime
Psychographics
analysis of consumer lifestyles -provides insights into consumer wants and needs -proven useful in segmenting and targeting consumers for new and existing products and services -catchall label used to describe a variety of segmentation such as those based on behaviors, attitudes, activities, interests, opinions and social values
Methods
approached that can be used to collect data to solve all or part of a problem 1) observing behavior of users 2)asking users questions about their opinions and experience 3) sampling 4) statistical inference
Exclusive dealing
arrangement a manufacturer makes with a reseller to handle only its products and not those of competitiors
survey of buyers intentions forecast
asking prospective customers if they are likely to buy the product during some future time period -effective for industrial products with few prospective buyers
Marketing strategy for low involvement
attention is places on maintaining quality, avoiding stockout situations so that buyers don't substitute a competing brand, using repetitive advertising messages that reinforce a consumers knowledge or assure buyers they made the right choice
ability
authority, time and money
generation cohorts
baby bloomers, generation X, Generation Y, millennial
Geographical segmentation
base don where prospective customers live or work (region, city size)
Behavioral segmentation
based on some observable actions or attitudes by prospective customers - important to know what product features are important to customers and the usage rate -EX: where they buy, what benefits they seek and how frequently they buy and why
physiological needs
basic to survival and must be satisfied first
consumer learning
behaviors that result from repeated experience and reasoning -behavioral learning, cognitive learning and brand loyalty
Identify market needs
benefits in terms of parodic features, expense, quality, saving in time and convenience
utility
benefits or consumer value received by users of the product *4 types: form, place, time, pocession
effective marketing
benefits society=enhanced competition, improves quality of products/services and lowers prices
mail surveys
biased because those most likely to respond have had especially positive or negative experiences with the product or brand
Baby bloomers
born between 1946-1964 -graying of America -76 million -wealthiest generation: 50% of all consumer spending
generation X
born between 1965-1976 -50 million people -aka baby bust (# people born declined) -self-reliant, supportive of racial/ethnic diversity and better educated -not prone to extravagance, like a blend of caution, pragmatism and traditionalism
Generation Y
born between 1977-1994 -72 million - aka echo-boom/baby blooms (increasing) -interested indistinctive, memorable, personal experiences -good with work-life balance -strongwilled, passionate, optimistic -attracted to purposeful work where the have control -influence on music, sports, computers, video games, networking, communication
global brand
brande marketed under the same name in multiple countries with similar and centrally coordinated marketing programs -same product formulation or service concept, deliver the same benefits to consumers, and use consistent advertising across multiple counties and cultures
E-marketplaces
bring together buyers and supplier organizations for online trading communities to make real-time exchange of info, money, products and services possible
millennial
burn since 1994 -idealistic, energetic, transparent, page to get started
growth strategies
business portfolio analysis and diversification analysis
Organization buying objectives
buy products and services to help achieve their objectives
supply partnership
buyer and its supplier adopt mutually beneficial objectives, places, and procedures for the purpose of lowering the cost or increasing the value of products and services delivered to the ultimate consumer
reverse auction
buyer communicates a need for a product or service and would-be suppliers are invited to bud in competition with each other *more would-be suppliers=prices decrease -suppliers favor this because it allows them to capture more business and develop relationships with buyers
Requirement contracts
buyer must purchase all or part of its needs for a product from 1 seller for a time period
straight rebuy
buyer or purchasing manager reorders an existing product or service from the list of acceptable suppliers, probably without even checking with suers or influencers from the engineering, production or quality control departments
Direct contact of customer
buying, using and obtaining service
Barriers of entry
capital requirements, advertising expenditures, product identity, distribution access, cost of customers of switching suppliers
Product adaptation
changing a product in some way to make it more appropriate for consumers preferences to a country climate but use the same promotion
technological
changing in tech, tech impact on consumer value, tech enabled data analytics
product repositioning
changing the place a product occupies in a consumers mind relative to competitive products
points of difference
characteristics of a product that make 1+ superior to competitive substitutes
economic espionage
clandestine collection of trade secrets or propriety info about a companys competitors -common in high technology industries -to counteract this, the Economic Espionage Act makes the theft of trade secrets by foreign entities a federal crime in the US
Classifying services
classified according to whether they are delivered by 1. people or equipment 2. business firms or nonprofit orgs 3. govt agencies
customer value proposition
cluster of benefits that an organization promises customers to satisfy their needs
Multinational marketing
combinations of the marketing mix that reflect the unique attitudes, ancestry, communication preferences and lifestyles of different races
extranets
communication with suppliers, distributors, and advertising agencies
Internents
communication within org
Standard test marks
company develops a products and then attempts to sell it they normal distribution channels in a number of test-market cities -time consuming, expensive and can expose company's plans to competitors -producer sells product to distributors, wholesalers, and retailers
licensing
company offers the right to trademark, patent, trade secret or other similar valued item of intellectual property in return for a royalty or a fee
Head to Head positioning
competing directly with competitors on similar product attributes in the same target markets
Ideas
concepts, actions or causes that are usually marketed by nonprofit orgs or GOVT
Value consciousness
concern for obtaining the best quality, features, and performance of a product or service for a given price EX: recession caused customers to cut back on brand-name products and distance they are willing to drive to shop
FTC
concerned with deceptive or misleading advertising and unfair business practices and has the power to 1.issue cease and desist orders 2. order corrective advertising
Social needs
concerned with love and friendship
decision
conscious choice from among 2 or more alternatives
global consumer
consist of consumer groups living in many countries or regions of the world who have similar needs or seek similar features and benefits from products or services
product mix
consists of all of the product lines offered by an org
Customer value assessment of tech
cost of tech is decreasing so customers value it based on quality, service, and relationship *tech provides value by developing new products
open innovation
consists of practices and processes that encourage the use of external as well as internal ideas and collaboration when conceiving, producing, and marketing new products and services
Microeconomic conditions
consumer income *gross income, disposable income, discretionary income
selective retention
consumers do not remember all the info they see, read, or hear, even minutes after the exposure *affects internal and external search stages
Continuous innovation
consumers don't need to learn new behaviors -Marketing strategy: ain consumer awareness and widen distribution EX: toothpaste->manufacturers add new features like "whitens teeth" "removes plaque" but consumers don't need to relearn how to use toothpaste
antecedent state
consumers mood or amount of cash on hand -consumers with credit cards buy more than those with cash or debit cards
Beliefs
consumers subjective perception of how a product or brand performs on different attributes -based on personal experience, advertising, and discussions with other people -help shape the favorable or unfavorable attitude the consumer has toward certain products, services and brands
Controlled test markets
contracting the entire test program to an outside service. Service pays retailers of shelf space and guarantees a specified % of the test products potential distribution volume
Gatekeepers
control the flow of info in the buying center
Idea evaluation methods
conventional questionnaires using personal, mail, telephone, fax, and online surveys of a large sample of past, present, or prospective customers
Product-Related Legislation
copyright law, digital millennium act, consumer product safety act,
Advantages of direct investment
cost saving, better understanding of local market conditions, fewer local restrictions
Pricing strategy
countries may impose competitive, political, and legal constraints on the pricing latitude of global companies -pricing too low= charged with dumping -pricing too high=gray market problem
Measure of success
criteria or standards used in evaluating proposed solutions to the problem Objectives too broad= problem may nor be researchable Objectives too narrow= value of research results may be seriously lessened
Market penetration
current market, current products
Product development
current market, new products
organizational buying behavior
decision making process that orgs use to establish the need for products and services and identify, evaluate, and choose among alternative brands and suppliers
recession
declining economic activity *less production, unemployment increases and less spending
physical surroundings
decor, music, and crowding in retail stores may alter how purchase decisions are made
New product in eyes of Consumer
defines new products according to the degree of learning required by the consumer
supplier development
deliberate effort by organizational buyers to build relationships that shape suppliers products, services, and capabilities to fit buyers needs and those its customers
social forces
demographic characteristics of the population and its culture
social
demographic shifts, cultural changes
Family life cycle
describes the distinct phases that a family progresses through from formation to retirement, each phase brining with it identifiable purchasing behaviors
demographics
describing population according to selected characteristics EX: age, gender, ethnicity, income, occupation
Self expression-motivated consumers
desire social or physical activity, variety, and risk ***high resource EXPERIENCERS: young, enthusiastic and impulsive consumers who become excited about new possibilities but are equally quick to cool, want to make an impact, energy from activity, form over function ***Low resources MAKERS: practical people who have constructive skills, value self sufficient and independence, and are impressed by material possession, love working
marketing tactics
detailed day-to-day operational marketing actions for each element of the marketing mix that contribute to the overall success of marketing strategies
Balance of trade
difference between the monetary value of a nations exports and imports *surplus: imports exceed exports *deficit: exports exceed imports
variation by product
different for product versus service versus idea
deceptive mail prevention and enforcement act
direct mail sweepstake EX: "no purchase necessary to enter"
Corporate level
directs overall strategy *CMO's have increasing power in org
first object to marketing
discovering the needs of prospective buyers/customers which is done thru customer surveys, concept tests and other forms of marketing research
Dynamically continuous innovation
disrupts consumers normal routine but doesn't require totally new learning -Marketing strategy: advertise points of difference and benefits to consumers -EX: electric toothbrush,smartphones
Intermediary
distributor that has the marketing know-how and resources necessary for the effort to succeed
spouse dominant decision making
either husband or wife is mostly responsible for making decisions *wives have more say in groceries, toys, clothing, medicines *husbands have more say in home or car maintenance
European Union (EU)
eliminated most barriers to the free flow of products, services, capital and labor across their borders -adopted euro
online surveys
email and internet surveys to collect primary data -send out to target consumers -this method is usually used for consumers to assess products and services evaluate the design and usability of their websites -advantage: low cost and fast feedback -disadvantage: may go to junk or spam mail or pop-up blocks, people can take survey more than once creating significant bias in results
Stakeholders
employees, shareholders, BOD, suppliers, distributors, creditors, unions, govt, local communities, customers
Personal interview surveys
enable the interviewer to be flexible in asking probing questions or getting reactions to visual materials but are very costly
networked global marketspace
enables the exchange of products, services and info from sellers anywhere to buyer anywhere at any time and at a lower cost
key traits
enduring characteristics within person or in his or her relationships with others EX: assertiveness, extroversion, compliance, dominance, aggression -inherited or formed at an early age and change little over the years
international firms
engage in trade and marketing in different countries as an extension of the marketing strategy in its home strategy -market products in other countries the same as they do in the original country
Components of competition
entry, power buyers and sellers, existing competitors and substitutes,
not satisfying customer needs on critical factors
even if quality is high, is consumers are not satisfied, they will not buy product
who markets?
every organization and nonprofit organization *even individuals such as political candidates
Semiotics
examines the correspondence between symbols and their role in the assignment of meaning for people ***global markets can tie cultural symbols into their products, services and brands to attract certain people
product differentiation
existence of different market segments had caused firms to use a marketing strategy -firm uses different marketing mix actions such as product features and advertising to help consumers perceive the product as being different and better than competing products
Global comeptition
exists when firms originate, produce and market their products and services worldwide -broadens competitive landscape for marketers
Four general market entry options
exporting, licensing, joint venture, direct investment
order of financial commitment, risk and marketing control for market entry strategies
exporting, licensing, joint venture, direct investment ***with increased risk comes increased profit potential***
data mining
extraction of hidden predictive information from large databases to find statistical links between consumer purchasing patterns and marketing actions
Data
facts and figures related to the project -2 types: secondary and primary
Primary data
facts and figures that are newly collected for the project **3 types observational data, questionnaire data and other sources of data
secondary dara
facts and figures that have already been recorded prior to the project at hand -2 types internal data and external data
Values of customers outside US
fate, tradition, rank/status, group welfares, birthright
Brand loyalty
favorable attitude toward and consistent purchase of a single brand over time *results from the positive reinforcement of previous actions *this trend is declining in North America, Western Europe, and Japan
Govt Agencies
federal, state, country, or city unit that provides a specific service to its constituents EX: census Bureau-provides population and economic data
oligopoly competition
few companies control the majority of industry da;es EX: verizon AT&T, Spring< T-mobile
Power of buyers
few in number, low switching costs, product represents significant share of the buyers total cost
take marketing actions
fifth step of marketing research approach -identify marketing actions, put them into effect and monitor how the decisions turn out 0convert marketing research findings into specific marketing recommendations with a clear objective -implement action recommendation: creating ads -evaluate results
selective perception
filtering of exposure, comprehension, and retention
Disadvantages of direct investment
financial commitment and high risk
Internal approach to Screening and evaluation
firm employees evaluate the technical feasibility of a proposed new product idea to determine whether it meets the objectives defined in the new product strategy development stage
Dumping
firm sells a product in a foreign country below its domestic price or below its actual cost -dont to build a company share of the market pricing at a competitive level -done to rid of surplus products that aren't being sold domestically
Direct exporting
firm sells its domestically produced products in a foreign country without intermediaries -countries with large sales volumes and easy to obtain (don't need intermediary) -involves little more risk the indirect but involves more profit
Indirect exporting
firm sells its domestically produced products in foreign country thru an intermediary -least amount of commitment and risk but returns least profit -ideal for company w/ no overseas market but wants to market abroad
customer and suppliers suggestions
firms ask salespeople to talk to customers and ask their purchasing personal to talk to suppliers to discover new product ideas
customer relationship era
firms continuously seek to satisfy the high expectations of customers *often thru internet
number of potential buyers
firms marketing to consumers, try to reach thousands or millions of people whereas firms marketing to organizations are restricted to fewer buyers
New product strategy development
first stage in New product development process -defines rile for a new product in terms of the firms overall objectives -firm uses SWOT analysis and environmental scanning to assess strengths and weaknesses relative to the trends it identifies as opportunities or threats -protocol and strategic roles are determined
market orientation
focusing on continuously collecting info about customer needs and sharing info across departments and using it to create customer value
organizational strategies formula
foundation+ direction
Business analysis
fourth stage of New product development process -specifies feature of the product or service and the marketing strategy needed to bring it to market and make financial projections -assess total "business fit" with company's mission and objectives -last checkpoint before significant resources invested to create prototype
develop findings
fourth step of marketing research approach -analyze data -present findings: clear pictures and concise
market-product grid
framework to relate the market segments of potential buyers to products offered or potential marketing actions -purpose is to trigger marketing actions to increase sales and profits -shows where synergies can be found
core values
fundamental, passionate, enduring principles that guide its conduct over time * motivate stakeholders *must be communicated to entire org
Statistical inference
generalize the results from the sample to much larger groups of distributors, customers, or prospects to help decide on marketing actions
cash cows
generate more money than they can use *dominant share of slow-growth markets *provide cash to overhead and invest in other SBU's
Segmentation bases in order of used by companies
geographic bases, behavioral bases, demographic bases, psychographic bases -many companies usually use more than one at a time
copyright law
gives authors of literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work the exclusive right to print, perform or otherwise cope that work
employee welfare
good employee opportunities/conditions
product
good, service or idea consisting of a bundle of intangible and tangible attributed that satisfies consumers needs and is received in exchange for money or something else of value
Product
good, service, idea to satisfy consumer needs
Product line
group of product or service items that are closely related because they satisfy a class of needs, are used together, are sold to the same customer group, are distributed through the same outlets, or fall within a given price range
Functional Level
groups of specialists (departments) that create value for organization *strategic direct is most specific @ this level
good
has tangible attributes that a consumers five sense can perceive or untangle attributes consisting of its delivery or warranties -can be either nondurable or durable
Multi domestic marketing strategy
have many different product variations, brand names and advertising programs as countries in which they do business
Time utility
having offering available when needed
place utility
having the offering available where consumers need it
Diversification analysis
helps firm search for growth opportunities from among current and new markets as well as current and new products
Stars
high share of high-growth markets *extra cash to finance own rapid future growth
board of directors (BOD)
highest ranking officer in org *must process leadership skills like overseeing daily operation and makes decisions for survival EX: president or CEO
organizational strategies
how will it do it? *variation by level or product
social responsibility
idea that an organization are accountable to a larger society and should help with societal problems
too little market attractiveness
ideal is a large target market with high growth and real buyer need but often the target market is too small or competitive to warrant the huge expenses necessary to reach out
Political-Regulatory Climate
identifying the current climate/ health of the govt, and determining how long that unfavorable or favorable climate will last EX: political stability, trade regulations,
Digital Millennium Copyright act
improve protection of copyrighted digital products
No economical access to buyers
in supermarkets, there is only enough shelf space and the product with the highest demand will be sold there so some products fail because they are not accessible to buyers
Economy
income, expenditures, and resources that affect the cost of running a business and household
Product line extension
incremental improvement of an existing product line the company already sells -potential benefit of adding new customers but the twin dangers of increasing expenses and cannibalizing products in the existing line -least risk associated
idea generation method
individual interviews, focus groups
buying center
individuals in this group share common goals, risks, and knowledge important to a purchase decision
reciprocity
industrial buying practice in which 2 organizations agree to purchase each others products and services -restricts free market trade -exists and can limit flexibility of orgs in choosing alternative suppliers
self regulation
industry attempts to police itself *disadvantages: non compliant by member and employees or too strong regulation can violate Robinson-Patman Act
Market space
info and communication based electronic exchange environment occupied by sophisticated computer and telecommunication technologies and digital offerings
5 family member roles
info gatherer, influencer, decision maker, purchaser and user *common trend is preteens and teens being info gatherer, influencers, and decision makers due to working parents
Focus groups
info sessions of 6-10 past, present, or prospective customers in which a discussion leader, or moderator asks for opinions about the firms products and those of its competitors including how they use these products and special needs that these products don't adress -help uncover things that interviews don't
Marketer-dominated sources
information from sellers including advertising, company websites, salespeople, and point-of -purchase displays in stores
problem recognition stage
initial step in purchase decision perceiving a difference between a persons ideal and actual situations big enough to trigger a decision
services
intangible activities or benefits that na org provides to satisfy consumers needs in exchange for money or something else of value
Information search
internal search: scan memory for previous experiences with products or brands external search: going to personal sources, public sources or marketer-dominated sources for info because your past knowledge and experience is insufficient, the risk of making the wrong decision is high and the cost of gathering information is low
Types of global companies
international firms, multinational forms and transnational firms
selective comprehension
interpreting info so that it is consistent with your attitudes and beliefs
Product invention
invent new products designed to satisfy common needs across countries
Technology
inventions or innovations from applied science or engineering research *connectivity growing *computers develop all five senses *green technologies *3D technologies
Cross-cultural analysis
involved the study of similarities and differences among consumers in two or more nations or societies -get understanding of and an appreciation for the values, customs, symbols, and language of other societies -involves study of values, customs, cultural symbol, language, cultural ethnocentricity
nondurable goods
item consumers in one or few uses EX: food, fuel
Components
items that become part of the final product EX: raw materials, assemblies
Support Products
items used to assist in producing other products and services EX: installations (buildings and fixed equipment), accessory equipment, supplies, industrial services
organization
legal entity that consists of people who share a common mission of achieving a specific goal
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
lifted many trade barriers between Canada, Mexica and the US and created marketplace of more than 475 million consumers -simulated trade flows among member nations as well as crowd border retailing, manufacturing, and investment -coasta rica, Dominican republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua are all part of this
segmentation
link between various buyers needs and the or marketing program -leads to tangible marketing actions that can increase sales and profitability -stresses importance of grouping people or org in a market according to the similarity of their needs and the benefits they are looking for in making a purchase -needs and benefits must be related to specific marketing actions that the org can take such as a new product or special promotion
relationship marketing
links the organization to its individual customers, employees, suppliers and other partners for the mutual long-term benefit *personal ongoing relationship with individual customers that begins before and continues after sale
Market department job
listen to customers, develop offerings, implementing marketing program actions, evaluating if actions are achieving goals
competitors
lots of competitors to distinguish from
Question marks
low share of high growth markets *need large investments *which to invest in is the questions
Dogs
low shares of slow growth markets
economic
macroecon conditions, consumer income
Existing competitors and substitutes
makes for slow growth: competition is heated for any possible gains in market share and high fixed costs: pressure for firms to fill production capacity
Consumer income and purchasing power
marketer must consider average per capita or household income for countries consumers and how the income is distributed to determine a nations purchasing power -as proportion of middle-income households increase, nations purchasing capability increases -estimated 1/2 of world has achieve middle class status -marketers must consider that people in developing countries receive got subsidies such as food, housing and health care that supplement their income. Their income might look bad on paper when in reality they are promising consumers
execute marketing program actions
marketing mix of product, price, promotion, place (distribution)
Business to business marketing
marketing of products and services to companies, goats, or not-for-profit organizations for use in creation of products and services that they can produce and market to others
marketing strategy
means by which a girl is to be achieved, usually characterized by a specified target market and a marketing program to reach it
promotion
means of communication between buyer and seller
perceptual map
means of displaying in two dimensions the location of products or brands in the minds of consumers -allows managers to see how consumers perceive competing products or brands, as well as the firms own products/brand
place
means of getting the product to the consumer
Marketing metric
measure of the quantitive value or trend of a marketing action or result *data visualization uses graphs to spot deviation from plans during evaluation phase and take action
Robert M McMath
meetings the needs of customers is hard than it seems. 40% of new products fail so her suggests: 1.focus on what the customer benefit is 2. learn from past mistakes customers needs frequently change making it hard to keep up with
blended family
merging 2 previously separated units into a single household -1/3 Americans is a step parent, stepchild or apart of blended family -young people are postponing marriage and parenthood
best way to reach multinational audience
mobile devices and social media
Consumer lifestyle
mode of living that is identifies by how people spend their time and resources, what they consider important in their environments and what they think of themselves and the world around them
Dual adaptation strategy
modifying both their products and promotional messages
disposable income
money consumers have left after paying taxes to use for necessities such as food, housing and transportation *gross income- income taxes *tax changes after this
Profit
money left after a for-profit org subtracts (revenues-expenses) reward for the risk it undertakes in marketing its offerings
Discretionary income
money that remains after paying for taxes and necessities that is used for luxuries *increased by reducing savings
consumer product safety act
monitor product safety and establish uniform product safety standards
Evaluating the decision itself
monitoring the marketplace to determine if action is necessary in the future
disadvantage of secondary data
more costly and time consuming to collect
advantage of primary data
more flexible and more specific to the problem being studied than secondary data
increased Customer value
more products, improved quality of existing products, lower prices, easier access to products thru improved distribution,
organizational buying criteria
objective attributes of the suppliers products and services and the capabilities of the supplier itself 1. price 2. ability to meet the quality specifications required for the item 3. ability to meet required delivery schedules 4. technical capability 5. warranties and claim policies in the event of poor performance 6. past performance on previous contracts 7. production facilities and capability those who meet or exceed this criteria create customer value
experiment
obtaining data bu manipulating factors under tightly controlled conditions to test cause and effect -independent variable is called driver: usually one or more of marketing mix elements -dependent variable is change in purchases of individuals, households, or orgs -disadvantage: outside factors can distort result and affect dependent variables
Strategies of lowering perceived risk
obtaining seals of approval, securing endorsements from influential people, providing free trials of the product, giving extensive usage instructions, providing warranties and guarantees
Stimulus generalization
occurs when a response elicited by one stimulus (cue) is generalized to another stimulus EX: using the same brand name for different products
selective exposure
occurs when people pat attention to messages that consistent with their attitudes and beliefs and ignore messages that inconsistent with them *popular in post purchase stage or when a need exists
Associative group
oen to which a person actually belongs, including frats and stats and alumni groups easily identifiable and targeted by firms selling insurance, insignia products and charter vacations
trade feedback affect
one agreement for free trade among nations explaining that imports affect exports and vice versa
routine problem solving
one brand examined, few sellers considered, one product attribute evaluated, no external info sources used, minimal time spent searching EX: grocery shopping, frequently bought supplies
Target market
one or more specific groups of potential consumers toward which an organization directs its marketing program
dissociative groups
one that a person wished to maintain a distance from because of difference in values or behaviors -firms avoid these in their marketing
Aspiration group
one that a person wishes to be a member of or wishes to be identified with such as professional society or sports team
durbal goods
one that usually lasts over many uses EX: appliances, cars, and smartphones
pure monoply
only one firm sells the product *common for necessary products life water, electricity, cable service *controlled by govt because of price protections for customers
new buy
org is a first-time buyer of the product or service -involves greater potential risks in the purchase so buying center is enlarged to include all those who have a stake
buyer-seller relationships
organizational buying is more likely to involve complex negotiations concerning delivery schedules, price, technical specifications, warranties and claim policies
strategy
organizations long-term course of action designed to deliver a unique customer experience while achieving its goals -help focus and direct its efforts to accomplish goals -all orgs set a strategic direction
societal marketing concept
organizations should satisfy the needs of consumers in a way that provides for society well-being aka satisfy consumer needs but are also beneficial to society too
Industry
organizations that develop similar offerings -create competition to have compelling and sustainable advantage for superior level -marketing strategy=having a clear understanding of industry within it competes
social surroundings
other people present when making a purchase, customers with children buy about 40% more items than those shopping alone
Customer Need
person feels deprived of basic necessities such as food, clothing and shelter
Current values in US
personal control, efficiency, work, continuous change, equality, individualism, self-help, competition, future orientation, action
Self-actualization
personal fulfillment
mall intercept interviews
personal interviews of consumers visiting shopping centers which reduces cost of personal interview and allows flexibility to show respondents visual cues such as ads or actual product samples -disadvantage:respondents may not be representative of target consumers=biased result
Consumer involvement
personal. social and economical significance of the purchase by the consumer that affects how many steps a consumer follows in the purchase decision process
Stimulus discrimination
persons ability to perceive differences in stimuli
Personality
persons consistent behaviors or responses to reoccurring situations *guides and directs consumer behavior
Product position
place a product occupies in consumers needs based on important attributes relative to competitive products -2 types: head to head positioning, differentiation positioning
Marketing strategy of high involvement
ply consumers with product info through advertising and personal selling and use social media to italics on this behavior through comparative advertising that focuses on existing product attributes and often introduce novel evaluative criteria for judging competing brands
Global marketing strategy
practice of standardizing marketing activities when there re cultural similarities and adapting them when cultures differ\ -allow marketers to realize economies of scale from their production and marketing activities
Countertrade
practice of using barter rather than money for making global sales *10-15% of world trade involves this
countertrade
practice of using barter rather than money for making global sales -10-15% of work trade -popular in Eastern Europe, Russia, Asia
data visualization
presentation of the results of the analysis is a new field of marketing research
New product compared to existing product
product is functionally different from existing products EX: features added to existing product to try to appeal to more customers, may be revolutionary and create new industry
Purchase decision process
problem recognition, info search, alternative evaluation, purchase decision, post purchase behavior
consumer socialization
process by which acquire the skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to function as consumers -children learn how to purchase by interacting with adults in purchase situations and through their own purchasing and product usage experiences
Consumer perception
process by which an individual selects, organizes and interprets info to create a meaningful picture of the world
environmental scanning
process of continually acquiring info on events occurring outside the org to identify and interpret potential trends
Environmental scanning
process of continually acquiring info on events occurring outside the organization to identify and interpret potential trends
Marketing research
process of defining a marketing problem and opportunity, systematically collecting and analyzing info, and recommending actions
behavior learning
process of developing automatic responses to a situation built ip through repeated exposure to it *Four variables: drive, cue, response, and reinforcement
Customer relationship management (CRM)
process of identifying prospective buyer, understanding them intimately and developing favorable longterm perceptions of the organization and its offering so that buyers will choose them in the marketplace
Customer experience management (CEM)
process of managing the entire customer experience within the company
exporting
producing products in one country and selling them in another country -allows country to make the least number of changes in terms of its products, org, and corporate girls -host countries don't like this becuz it provides less local employment than under alternative means of entry
power of sellers
product is critical and when switching cost is high
depth interview
researchers ask lengthy, free-flowing kinds of questions to probe for underlying ideas and feelings
likert scale
respondent indicated the extent to which he or she agrees or disagrees with a statement
close-ended or fixed alternative questions
respondents select one or more response options from a set of predetermined choices
quota
restriction placed on the amount of a product allowed to enter or leave a country -can be mandated or voluntary by govt -import quotas seeks to guarantee domestic industries access to a certain percentage of their domestic market
regulatory forces
restrictions state and federal place on businesses with regard to the conduct of its activities *protect customers from unfair trade practices and ensure their safety
poor product quality
results from product not being thoroughly tested -can come from materials, labor and other expenses
marketing plan
road map for the marketing actions of an organization for a specified future time period
Day commuters
run ads inside commuter buses and put flyers under the windshield wipers of cars in parking lots used by day commuters
Communication adaptation strategy
same product sold across countries but the advertising is different to match differences in cultural and buying motives
panels
sample of consumers to stores from which researchers take a series of measurements -disadvantage: researcher team needs to recruit new members continually to replace those who drop out who must match the former -used to see if consumers change their behavior over time
Economic considerations
scan of marketplace should include an assessment of the economic infrastructure in countries, measurement of consumer income in different countries, and recognition of a country's currency exchange rates
idea generation
second stage of New product development process -develop pool of concepts to serve as candidates for new products, building upon the previous stages results -internal approach: train employees in the art and science of asking specific probing questions -suggestions from employees, customer and suppliers, research and development laboratories, analyzing competition, smaller firms/universities/inventors
Differentiation positioning
seeking a less-competitive, smaller market niche in which to locate a brand
Sampling
selecting a group of distributors, customer, or prospects, asking them questions and treating their answers as typical of all whom they are interested
Safety needs
self-preservation as well as physical and financial well-being freedom from harm
traditional auction
seller puts an item up for sale and would-be buyers are invited ro bid in competition with each other *more would-be buyers=prices go up -used to dispose of excess merchandise
typing arrangment
seller requires purchase of 1 product to also buy another item in line
Channel of product from A->B country
seller, sellers international marketing headquarters, channels between nations, channels within foreign nation, final consumer
Production extension
selling same product in other countries with same promotion -works best when consumer market target is alike across countries and cultures: same desires, needs, and uses of product
sustainable procurement
sensitivity to how buying decisions affect the environment with the goal of reducing the negative impact on human health and the physical environment
dichotomous questions
simplest form of a fixed alternative question that allows only a "yes" or "no"
Culture
set of values, ideas and attitudes that are learned and shared among the members of a group *shift toward more equality of men and women in the market place *industries are trying to avoid creating separate products for man and women
culture
set values, ideas, attitudes and norms of behavior that is learned and shared among the members of an organization
New product development process
seven stages an org goes thru to identify opportunities and convert them into salable products or services
Limited problem solving
several number of brands examined, serval sellers considered, moderate product attributes evaluated, few external info sources used, little time spent searching EX: crossings a toaster or restaurant to eat at
protection competition
sherman antitrust act, clayton act, robinson-pitman act
customers
show that customer satisfaction is crucial *responding to customers is the first law of business
individual interview
single researcher asking questions of one respondent -advantages: bring able to probe for additional ideas using follow up questions to a respondents initial answers -disadvantage: very expensive
Green technologies
smart grid electricity, online energy management, consumer generated energy
Primary data sources
social media, panels and experiments, info technology, and data mining
Environmental forces
social, economic, technological, competitive, regulatory
poor execution of the marketing mix
some factor in the marketing mix creates a barrier for consumers
Groupthink
someone in the new product planning meeting knows or suspects the product concept is a dumb idea but is too afraid to speak up for fear of being cast as a "negative thinker" -can be minimized when group leaders encourage group members to challenge assumptions, express constructive dissent and offer alternatives
Protocol
statement that, before product development begins, identifies a well defined target market, specific customer needs, wants and preferences and what the product will be and do to satisfy consumers -used to aid products towards success rather than failure before company begins producing
goals
statements of an accomplishment of a task to be achieved often by a specific time *converts mission and business into long/short term performance targets *many types of goals
buy class
straight rebut, new buy, modified rebuy
Business Model
strategies an organization developed to provide values to the customer sites serves *triggered by technological innovation
marketing concept era
strive to satisfy customer needs, achieve organizations goals, market orientation
subcultures
subgroups within the larger or national culture with unique values, ideas, and attitudes *three major in US: Hispanics, African Americans, Asian Americans
Strategic Business Unit (SBU)
subsidiary, divison, unit of organization that markets a set of related offerings to a clearly defined target market *managers set a more specific strategic direction ofr their businesses to exploit value creating opportunities
General values of customers worldwide
sustainability and preservation
VALs
system run by Strategic Business Insights (SBI) measures the enduring differences between people that explain and predict lifestyles meaningfully -examines intersection og psychology, demographics, and lifestyles -SBI says consumers are motivated to buy products and services and seek life experiences that give shape, substance and satisfaction to their lives -consumers are driven by wither ideals, achievement or self expression
Link needs to actions
take steps in segment and target markets
Research and development lab suggestions
talking to those within the company labs to do research and experiments with products and services
Simulates test markets
technique that somewhat replicates a full-scale test market run in shopping malls to find consumer who use the product class being tested. Next qualified participants are chosen and asked product related questions then asked which product they would purchase based off of ads -less costly, time efficient
Consumer ethnocentrism
tendency to believe that it is inappropriate, indeed immoral, to purchase foreign-made products -believe its wrong becuz such purchases are unpatriotic, harm domestic industries, and cause domestic unemployment -makes job of global markets hard
Marketing
the activity, set of instructions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value to customers, clients, partners, and society at large
perceived risk
the anxiety felt because the consumer cannot anticipate the outcomes of a purchase but believes there may be negative consequences (financial costs, risk of physical harm, performance of product) *greater the risk=more extensive search
Language
the wide variety of languages worldwide and even with in countries make it hard for markets to communicate with consumers and can lead to problems like unintended messages -best language to communicate to consumers is their own -English, French and Spanish are principal languages
derived demand
the demand for industrial products and services is driven by or derived from, the demand for consumer products and services -based on expectations of future consumer demand
Currency exchange rate
the price of one countries currency expressed in terms of another countries currency -exchange fluctuations affect sales and profits made by global companies
data analytics
the solutions to transforming huge amounts of data into useful information by managers
self concept
the way people see themselves and the way they believe others see them *actual self concept: how people actually see themselves *ideal self concept: how people would like to see themselves
high involvement purchases
usually consists of one of the three 1. item is expensive 2. can have serious personal consequences 3. could reflect on ones social image this means that the consumer engages in extensive info searches, consider many product attributes, brands. form attitudes and participate in word of mouth communication EX: audio and video systems, cars, boats, houses
Procession utility
value of making an item easy to purchase through the provision of credit cards or financial arrangements
Franchising
variation of licensing -one of fastest-growing market-entry strategies -included soft-drink, motel, retailing, fast-food, and car rental operation and variety of business services -MCdonalds=biggest
Trade regulations
variety of rules that govern business practices within their borders and often serve as trade barriers
Transnational firm
views the world as one market and emphasizes cultural similarities cross countries and universal consumer needs and wants rather than differences -use global marketing strategy
Multinational Firm
views the world of consisting of unique parts and markets to each part differently -use Multi domestic marketing strategy
marketing dashboard
visual display of the essential info related to achieving a marketing objective *based on graphs and tables, we know when to take action
evaluating the decision process used
was it effective? was it flawed? could it be improve for future?
crowdfunding
way to gather an online community of supporters to financially rally around a specific project that is unlikely to get resources from traditional sources such as banks or venture capital firms
customs
what is considered normal and expected about the way people do things in a specific country
price
what is exchanged for the product
organization direction
what will we do? *must determine what industry or market sector
setting strategic direction
where are we now? where do we want to go?
organizational foundation
why does it exist? -core values -mission -culture
Incomplete market and product protocol before product development starts
without protocol, firms try to design a vague product for a phantom market and consumer often question the validity
indirect contact of customer
word of mouth comments from other customers reviewers new reports
subliminal perception
you see or hear messages without being aware of them such as in advertisements *evidence shows these messages have limited effects on behavior *no legal in the US but marketers still incorporate them