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MAR 3023961

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Rich Gonzalez University of South Florida. 2. URLs (used today) ... 1 Suntrust, Eddie Bauer, First Union, Ann Taylor, Dillard's, Super Target, Sony, Verizon... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MAR 3023961


1
MAR 3023-961
  • Basic Marketing
  • Fall 2003St. Petersburg
  • September 3, 2003
  • Customer OrientationCustomer Satisfaction
  • Rich Gonzalez University of South Florida

2
URLs (used today)
  • mailman.acomp.usf.edu/mailman/listinfo/MAR3023-691
  • www.burton.com
  • www.theacsi.org

3
September 3, 2003--Agenda
  • LISTSERV
  • Student Survey Results
  • VideoBurton Snowboards
  • Quiz 1
  • Customer Satisfaction
  • For September 10

4
For September 3
  • Chapter 1
  • Drucker Handout
  • LISTERV Subscribe and Introduction

5
For September 10
  • Chapter 3--Environment
  • Chapter 9Consumer Behavior
  • LISTERV Subscribe and Introduction

6
Class Websites
  • coba.usf.edu
  • coba.usf.edu/departments/marketing/grads/gonzalez
  • Lets Demo One More Time

7
Listserv Follow-Up
  • Subscribe or Viewmailman.acomp.usf.edu/mailman/
    listinfo/MAR3023-691
  • Subscribe or View mailman.acomp.usf.edu/mailman/l
    istinfo/mar3023-691
  • Send tomar3023-691_at_mailman.acomp.usf.edu
  • Do NOT Send tomar3023-691-owner_at_mailman.acomp.u
    sf.edu

8
LISTSERV
  • Subscribe Use Simple Password!!!
  • Sign on by Thursday
  • Send Introduction on Friday after 1000 AM
  • SUBJECT Mary IrvineIntroduction1) Major, how
    long at USF?2) What youre looking for in
    Marketing class3) A little bit about yourself,
    career, hobbies, etc.Same as you would do in
    class

9
(No Transcript)
10
Survey Results
  • People like cellular phones
  • 87 are using them
  • 1248 estimated minutes/ month
  • Only 5 Have PDAsOnly 3 Use PDAs

11
Survey Results I-Net
  • Age 26.2
  • 38 of 38 are using the Internet
  • Internet usage range is 2 - 70 hrs./week
  • 15.7 hr/week Your Average
  • 5.1 hr/week U.S. Average
  • 15.0 Last Basic Marketing Class
  • 13.7 hr/week MBA Class
  • 11.2 hr/week Your Average of TV
  • TV 12.4 hours/week for Last Basic Class
  • U.S. Average 24 hr/week

12
Survey Results Best Company I Ever Dealt With
  • 5Publix
  • 3Wal-Mart
  • 2-- Dell, Circuit City ,Home Depot, Best Buy
  • 1Suntrust, Eddie Bauer, First Union, Ann
    Taylor, Dillards, Super Target, Sony, Verizon...
  • 8 Blank, None

13
Survey ResultsLikely Careers
  • Accounting------------------ 8
  • Law---------------------------4
  • Management-----------------5

14
Survey Results--Careers to Avoid!
  • Accounting------------ 9
  • Medical---------------- 4
  • Science-----------------3

15
Survey Results-Marketing Is
  • Advertising.
  • Advertising to the public in an effective way.
  • Sales.
  • Tactics used in order to push sales
  • Selling and creating advertising for a product
  • Basically the advertising and selling of
    products or services.
  • Meeting customers satisfaction
  • A way to make people prefer your product

16
Survey Results-Marketing Is
  • Process ... which companies utilize to get their
    products info to consumer(s)/potential
    consumers.
  • the basis for any/all business.

17
Survey Results-Marketings Importance
  • Make money.
  • Increase profit.
  • Information to choose products
  • To make the business better.
  • Influences consumers.
  • It helps a company by giving direction in what
    to do in order to achieve sales.
  • Im trying to start a business.

18
Survey Results-Cool Answers
  • Career to avoid waiting tables
  • Career to avoid anything with cubicles
  • Career to avoid waste management
  • Career to avoid marketing
  • Favorite Web Site google.com
  • Marketing Is Advertising, publishing and
    exaggeration of information to attract customers
    .

19
Burton Snowboards
  • Video
  • Take Notes for Discussion

20
Discussion
21
Burton SnowboardsJake Burton
  • 1977College Done, Snurfer
  • Develop New Product
  • Develop New Market
  • Develop Relationship With Customers
  • 1970-80s Resistance Ski Resorts
  • Creating UtilitySomething New!

22
Burton SnowboardsJake Burton
  • 1980-90s Create Distribution Channel
  • Create AwarenessClinics, Demos
  • SponsorshipsCompetitions
  • Learn To Ride Program
  • Catalog
  • 2000- Web Site www.burton.com
  • 2002- Olympics Medal Sport

23
Last Time
  • What Is Marketing?
  • Where Is Marketing?
  • Drucker

24
Peter Drucker--Discussion
  • What is the purpose of a company?
  • Do customers always know what they want?
  • Do customers buy products?
  • What customers value is not always obvious.

25
Peter Drucker contd
  • How does a business create customers? What
    functions must a business perform?
  • Marketing
  • Innovation

26
Marketing
  • 1. Process (Planning Execution)
  • 2. Product, Price, Promotion, Distribution
  • 3. Goods, Services, Ideas
  • 4. Exchange Relationship
  • 5. Satisfy Objectives (Customer Organization)

27
Marketing Basics
  • Definitions, Elements, Building Blocks for
    Understanding Marketing

28
If we want to know what a business is, we have to
start with its purpose. And its purpose must lie
outside the business itself. In fact, it must
lie in society since a business enterprise is an
organ of society. There is one valid definition
of business purpose to create a customer.
29
Marketing
  • At the broadest level, the function of marketing
    activities is to bring together buyers and
    sellers.

30
Marketing Functions
  • ExchangeBuying Selling
  • DistributionTransport Storing
  • FacilitatingStandardizingFinancingRisk-TakingI
    nformation

31
Utility
Want-satisfying power of a good or service.
32
Four Types of Utility
Type
Function
Form
Production
Time
Marketing
Place
Marketing
Ownership (Possession)
Marketing
33
Marketing
Process of planning and executing the conception,
pricing, promotion and distribution of ideas,
goods, services, organizations, and events to
create and maintain relationships that satisfy
individual and organizational objectives.
34
Exchange Process
Activity in which two or more parties give
something of value to each other to satisfy
perceived needs.
35
How does a firm create a customer?
  • Identifying customer needs
  • Designing goods and services that meet those
    needs
  • Communicating information about those goods and
    services
  • Making goods or services available at
    times/places that meet customers needs

36
How does a firm create a customer?
  • Pricing goods and services to reflect costs,
    competition, and customers ability to buy
  • Providing for the necessary service and follow-up
    to ensure customer satisfaction after the purchase

37
Four Eras in the History of Marketing
38
Production Orientation
Business philosophy stressing efficiency in
producing a quality product, with the attitude
toward marketing that a good product will sell
itself.
Ford Any color they want, as long as its
black.
39
Sales Orientation
Consumers will resist purchasing nonessential
goods Only creative advertising and personal
selling can overcome consumers resistance
The salesman Has an answer for EVERY objection
or question?
40
Consumer Orientation
Business philosophy incorporating the marketing
concept that emphasizes first determining unmet
consumer needs and then designing a system for
satisfying them.
41
Marketing Concept
Companywide consumer orientation with the
objective of achieving long-run success.
Invented by GE in the 50s, Drucker talked about
it too.
42
Marketing Concept
  • Target market
  • Customer needs wants
  • Integrated company efforts
  • Profits

43
(No Transcript)
44
Marketing Myopia
What is your business? Really.
Verizon, JetBlue, Nintendo, as examples
Revlon, as an example
45
Boeing
  • Is in what business?
  • Global aerospace-technology company
  • SatellitesAircraft servicesInternet service on
    airlines

46
Elements of the Marketing Mix within an
Environmental Framework
Competitive
Distribution
Product
Political-Legal
Target Market
Social-Cultural
Price
Promotion
Technological
Economic
47
Target Market
Group of people toward whom a firm markets its
goods, services, or ideas with a strategy
designed to satisfy their specific needs and
preferences.
48
Product Strategy
Element of marketing decision making involved in
developing the right good or service for the
firms customers, including package design,
branding, trademarks, warranties, product life
cycles, and new-product development.
49
Pricing Strategy
Element of marketing decision making dealing with
methods of setting profitable and justifiable
prices.
50
Distribution Strategy
Element of marketing decision making concerned
with activities and marketing institutions that
get the right good or service to the firms
customers.
51
Promotional Strategy
Element of marketing decision making that
involves appropriate blending of personal
selling, advertising, and sales promotion to
communicate with and seek to persuade potential
customers.
52
Marketing Mix
Blending the four strategy elements of marketing
decision making--product, price, distribution,
and promotion--to satisfy chosen consumer
segments.
53
Technology
Application to business of knowledge based on
scientific discoveries, inventions, and
innovations.
54
Quiz 1
55
Quiz 1 Q1
  • 1. The group of people toward whom a firm markets
    its goods, services or ideas with a strategy
    designed to satisfy their specific needs and
    preferences is
  •  
  • A) best served with relationship marketing.
  • B) a customer cluster.
  • C) frequently bigger than what is estimated.
  • D) a target market.
  • E) a target population.
  •  

D Lecture and Ch. 2, page p45
56
Quiz 1 Q2
  • 2. Companies always try to create time and place
    utility. Marketing creates time utility and
    manufacturing (production) creates place utility.
  •  
  • A) True
  • B) False
  • .
  •  

B Chap 1 p 5-6
57
Quiz 1 Q3
  • 3. According to Chapter 1, a category of
    nontraditional marketing is
  •  
  • a. emotion marketing.
  • b. distinction marketing.
  • c. place marketing.
  • d. event marketing.
  • e. both c. and d.

E Chap 1 p15-19
58
Quiz 1 Q4
  • 4. The Marlboro example discussed in class was
    primarily about
  •  
  • a. the litigation in the tobacco industry.
  • b. how price is important in marketing.
  • c. how Marlboro has lost market share.
  • d. how good marketing can change product image.
  • e. the lack of a females in Marlboro ads.
  •  

D Class Lecture Aug. 27
59
Quiz 1 Q5
  • 5. The Sales Era (1925 1950s) was the best era
    for marketing .
  •  
  • A) True
  • B) False.
  •  

B Chap 1 p 10
60
We Stopped Right Here...
61
Customer Satisfaction
  • National Measurement by ACSI

62
Why Satisfy Customers?
  • There is only one boss, the customer, and he can
    fire everybody in the company, from the chairman
    down, simply by spending his money elsewhere.
  • Sam Walton, P24

63
Satisfaction
  • What is it?

64
(No Transcript)
65
Customer Satisfaction
  • Performance - Expectations

66
Customer Satisfaction
  • ACSI
  • American Customer Satisfaction Index
  • Claes Fornell---University of Michigan
  • American Society for Quality
  • Annual Quarterly--updating industries
  • 7 categories

67
ACSI--Each Quarter
  • 15,000 customers of190 companies70 government
    agencies
  • Firms represent 30-40 U.S. GDP
  • Experience--Expectations is Satisfaction
  • Customer perceptions of value quality
  • Computer Model gives score of 1 to 100
  • 3 point change is significant

68
www.theacsi.org
  • Lets Take a Look At Real Customer Sat
    Datahttp//www.theacsi.org/overview.htm
  • 2nd Quarter 2004 Scores (Aug. 20,
    2004)http//www.theacsi.org/second_quarter.htm
  • The Customer Sat Modelhttp//www.theacsi.org/mod
    el.htm

69
  • Overall, is Customer Sat getting better???

70
Trend??? Overall Sat
  • 1994 74.5
  • 1995 74.2
  • 1996 73.0
  • 1997 71.1
  • 1998 72.2
  • 1999 72.1
  • 2000 72.0
  • 2001 72.2
  • 2002 73.2

71
Recent Reductions in C.S.
  • Kmart
  • Ford
  • Gateway
  • Firestone
  • AT T
  • US Air
  • Northwest Airlines

72
Questions
  • What are some implications?
  • How is marketing affected?
  • Do you agree/disagree with results?

73
Summary
  • Customer Satisfaction is part of the overall
    marketing of a product/service offering
  • Customer Sat is crucial to business performance

74
Conclusions Customer Sat Going Down
  • A. Companies emphasized PRODUCTIONduring the 90s
    and are making cuts in the last 2 years
  • B. Increased expectations of customers --
  • Consumer expectations are increasing faster
    than companies can improve quality and benefits

75
Class Analysis
  • Is there a relationship between
  • customer satisfaction
  • and business performance???

76
Michael Dell
  • 1984UT-Austin
  • Buying Parts (HD, PS, etc) Putting Together PCs
    for Friends and Customers
  • Office/Workshop Dorm
  • Figured Out Customers Were Novices AND That
    Biggies Were NOT Efficient
  • Dell Created Utility
  • Dell Was Customer Oriented
  • Dell Was an Entrepreneur

77
Dell Experience A Current Example
  • Web Site
  • Doesnt Work unless ziphttp//support.dell.com/d
    ellcare/orderstatus/orderstatus.aspx
  • Workshttp//support.dell.com/dellcare/orderstatu
    s/singleorderstatus.aspx?order_number452819148va
    lidate33549_ctl38.x0_ctl38.y0

78
For September 3
  • Chapter 3--Environment
  • Chapter 9Consumer Behavior
  • LISTERV Subscribe and Introduction
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