This document provides an overview of marketing, including defining marketing as creating value through exchanges between organizations and customers. It discusses the key elements of the marketing mix - product, price, place, and promotion. Product involves creating offerings to satisfy customer needs. Price captures value through what customers are willing to pay. Place delivers the value proposition through distribution channels. Promotion communicates value to influence customers. Marketing impacts stakeholders and helps create value for organizations and society.
2. Overview of Marketing
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
LO1 Define the role of marketing in
organizations.
LO2 List the elements of the marketing mix.
LO3 Describe how marketers create value for a
product or service.
LO4 Understand why marketing is important
both within and outside the firm.
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3. What is Marketing?
Marketing is the activity, set of
institutions, and processes for creating,
capturing, communicating, delivering,
and exchanging offerings that have
value for customers, clients, partners,
and society at large.
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6. Product: Creating Value
The fundamental
purpose of Marketing is
to create value by
developing a variety of
offerings, including
goods, services, and
ideas, to satisfy
customer needs.
Royalty-Free/Corbis
Flying Colours Ltd./Getty Images
Roz Wodward/Getty Images
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7. Price: Capturing Value
Price is everything a buyer gives
up (money, time, energy) in
exchange for the product
The key to determining prices is
to figure out how much
customers are willing to pay and
assess whether a profit can be
made at that point
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8. Place: Delivering the Value Proposition
Place, or supply chain
management, describes all
activities necessary to get
the product to the right
customer when the
customer wants it
Where would you find this
product in the store?
Courtesy Horizon Organic Dairy
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9. Promotion: Communicating Value
Promotion is
communication by a
marketer that informs,
persuades, and reminds
potential buyers about a
product or service to
influence their opinions
or elicit a response
Photo by Paul Hawthorne/Getty Images
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10. Marketing Can be Performed by
Individuals and Organizations
ETSY Website
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#3: These questions are the learning objectives guiding the chapter and will be explored in more detail in the following slides.
#4: Point out that this new definition is somewhat controversial, because many feel it includes everything within marketing.
Ask students: Do you agree? Answers might include uncertainly in the definition of value.
#5: Ask students about problems they have for which there are no products to meet their needs.
They might think about products that they could use for their homes, their computers, organizing their work, their cars.
This is how marketers generate ideas for new products by uncovering consumer needs.
#6: Each party to the exchange gives up something of value: The customer usually gives up money., however, sometimes they also give up time and information. The firm gives up the good or service. The exchange in the end is mutually beneficial.
#7: Students often can relate to goods and services, but the marketing of ideas is a new concept to them. Use the example of drunk driving prevention;
Ask Students: How is that idea marketed?
Organizations such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving or Students Against Drunk Driving often receive support from brewers and distillers in promoting responsible drinking and safe driving.
Ask students: What is the exchange these groups are asking consumers to enter?
Answer: They want you to consume alcohol in a manner that is consistent with safety, which means sacrificing some consumption.
#8: A good example of how price expresses value is the variations in price associated with air travel.
The prices can vary based on demand for the flight, timing, and destinations.
Pricing strategies will be discussed in later chapters, but you may also wish at this point to introduce the notion of market pricing versus cost pricing.
#9: Place delivers the product to the customers. Students may overlook the importance of this component of the marketing mix because it is not as readily visible from the consumer perspective. To get this point across, suggest a few products and then trace the path those products likely take from manufacturer to retailer to consumer.
#10: Calvin Kleins provocative advertising has helped create an image that is filled with youth, style, and sex appeal.
#11: This exhibit illustrates how the same product, a desktop computer, can be sold from firm to firm, from firm to consumer, and then be used consumer to consumer to sell C2C.
Ask students whether theyve bought from other consumers online. Many options are available to buy C2C online, especially with the development of online cooperatives like esty.com. Follow the web link to visit this site.
#12: Marketers affect many stakeholders. Customers represent one stakeholder group but others include all those in the supply chain, employees, and society at large.
Supply chain partners include manufacturers, agents, wholesalers, retailers, and so on. Companies market to employees with employment marketing, also known as internal marketing, to recruit and retain the best employees.
#13: Marketing has been through several eras. This exhibit graphically represents the changes over time from an emphasis on production to one based on value-based marketing. The production-oriented era took place around the turn of the 20th century, when most firms believed a good product would sell itself. In the sales-oriented era, production and distribution techniques improved and supply outpaced demand. Firms found an answer to overproduction by focusing on sales. In the market-oriented era, the focus was on what customers wanted. Now, we are in the value-based era, which maintains the market orientation but also includes a focus on giving greater value than the competition.
Value reflects the relationship of benefits to costs. Value-based marketing means implementing a marketing strategy according to what customers value.
#14: Ask students why it is important to share information?
This brings up the point that many good marketing companies have cross functional teams. The finance, IS and operations departments work together to bring value to the end consumer.
#15: Firms become value driven by focusing on four activities.
#16: Ask students why it is marketing so important?
Marketing has shifted its focus dramatically, it also has evolved into a major business function that crosses all areas of a firm or organization.
#17: Kelloggs asserts:
Our values: we act with integrity and show respect
Our foods: we produce a range of foods to meet your tastes and health needs
Our marketing practices: long-standing commitment to responsible marketing
In our communities: great things can happen when a company is an active corporate citizen
Our environment: were helping to preserve and protect our natural resources
#18: Exchange is the trade of things of value between the buyer and the seller so that each is better off as a result.
#19: Goods are items that you can physically touch.
#20: Ideas include thoughts, opinions, and philosophies, and intellectual concepts which can be marketed.
#21: A supply chain is the group of firms that make and deliver a given set of goods and services.
#22: Value reflects the relationship of benefits to costs.