Title: Chapter One Marketing: Managing Profitable Customer Relationships
1Chapter OneMarketing Managing Profitable
Customer Relationships
2OUTLINE
- Marketing defined
- Marketing Mix defined
- Market - defined
- Marketing Process discussed
- Needs vs. Wants and Buyer Motivation
- P for Product deeper analysis
- OOPS Marketing Myopia
- Value
- Marketing Concepts
- Not for Profit Marketing
3What is Marketing?
4What is Marketing?
- a social and managerial process by which
individuals and groups obtain what they need and
want through creating and exchanging value with
others. - Armstrong, et. al., p. 7
5What is a Market?
6What is a Market?
- The set of actual and potential buyers of a
product, service or experience. - Also seen traditionally as a marketplace where
the business transaction (or trade) is enacted
between buyers and sellers. For example - A bizarre
- Flea market
- Farmers market
- Retail Store
- Wholesale Outlet
- Online Internet Store
- Cell Phones digital radio waves
- In Marketing when we talk about potential markets
we usually are referring to a set of buyers. - These people share a need or want that can be
satisfied through exchange relationships.
7What is successful Marketing?
- Attracting new customers by promising and
delivering superior value. - Building long-term relationships with customers
by delivering continued customer satisfaction. - Creating, building and managing these
relationships profitably over time.
8What is the Marketing Mix?
P P P P
9The Four Ps (marketing mix)
- Product
- Price
- Place
- Promotion
10The Marketing Process
- Understand the marketplace and customer needs and
wants. - Design a customer-driven marketing strategy.
- Construct a marketing program that delivers
superior value. - Build profitable relationships and create
customer delight. - Capture value from customers to create profits
and customer equity.
11Needs vs. Wants and Buyer Motivation - needs
- Needs are states of felt deprivation.
- Physical
- Food, clothing, shelter, safety.
- Social
- Belonging, affection.
- Individual
- Learning, knowledge, self-expression.
12Abraham MaslowsHiearchy of Needs
Solomon, Zaichowsky, Polegato, 2008
13Needs vs. Wants and Buyer Motivation - wants
14Needs vs. Wants and Buyer Motivation -
Motivational Strength
- Biological vs. Learned Needs
- (innate instinct vs. learned behaviour)
- Drive Theory
- (achieving homeostasis by satiating tension
caused by the arousal of unpleasant states) - Expectancy Theory
- pulled by positive incentives (goals) rather
than pushed from within
15Needs vs. Wants and Buyer Motivation -
Motivational Direction
- MOTIVES tend to be directional
- Needs vs. Wants
- Need unsatisfied requirement (hunger)
- Want the way a person satisfies a need which
ultimately is dependent on their historical
reality (cheeseburger vs. trail mix) - Types of Needs
- Biogenic or psychogenic
- Motivational Conflicts
Fig. 4-1 Solomon, Zaichowsky, Polegato, 2008
16P for product Deeper Analysis
- Products
- Anything that can be offered for
- acquisition,
- attention,
- use or consumption
- That might satisfy a need or want.
- Services
- Activities or benefits offered.
- Essentially intangible.
- Do not result in ownership of anything.
- Experiences
- Create, stage and market brand experiences.
- Attending live theatre, music concert.
- Ideas
- Solutions, consultation, patents, innovations.
17Marketing Myopia
- Sellers pay more attention to the specific
products they offer than to the benefits and
experiences produced by the products. - They focus on the wants and lose sight of the
needs. - The great railroads lost out to the exploding
trucking industry. - They forgot that their business was solving
transportation problems, not running railroads.
18Value and Satisfaction
- If the performance and the customers experience
is lower than expectations, then customer
satisfaction is low. - If the performance and the customers experience
meets expectations, then the customer is
satisfied. - If the performance and the customers experience
exceeds expectations, then the customer is
delighted. - How can we do this?
19Core Marketplace Concepts
- Customers have needs, wants and demands.
- Marketers offer products or services.
- Customers seek value and satisfaction from
offers. - Demands and offers result in transactions and
relationships. - Markets are all potential customers with a
similar demand.
20Customer-Driven Marketing
- Divide markets into segments.
- Choose the right segment to target.
- Offer a unique value proposition.
- Differentiate your offer from competitor offers.
- Build customer value and satisfaction.
- Nurture long-term customer relationships.
21Segmentation and Targeting
- Segmentation divides the market into groups of
customers with varying needs and wants. - Targeting selects the right segment to nurture.
- Types of Market Segmentation (see Chp. 2)
- Demographic variables
- Geographic location
- Behavioural variables
- Psychographic variables
22Demand Management
- Marketing management seeks to control demand.
- Increasing demand is the norm.
- Demarketing seeks to reduce demand in certain
circumstances.
23Value Proposition
- The set of benefits or values the company
promises to deliver to its target markets to
satisfy their needs.
24Capturing Value In Return
- Customer lifetime value
- Share of customer
- Building Customer Equity
- The total combined customer lifetime value of all
of the companys customers - Combination of market share, share of customer
and lifetime customer value - Often a more accurate measure of a companys
value than sales or market share
25Marketing Concepts
- Production affordability and availability.
- Product -- quality and innovation.
- Selling -- promotion and hard selling.
- Marketing -- customer satisfaction and
relationships. - Societal long-term value to both customer and
society.
26Not-For-Profit Marketing
- Marketing of ideas, values and institutions.
- Increasing awareness that these organizations
must build relationships with constituents and
stakeholders. - Challenge of using new marketing techniques for
not-for-profit initiatives.
27Thanks!
Do Happy Customers Successful
Companies? Expectation Management is Key
28REVIEWLets Discuss your Marketing Examples
- What is good? Why?
- What is bad? Why?
- Please use what you have read and learned today
to describe the reasons for your choices.