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Definition: “Marketing is the activity for creating, communicating, delivering and exchanging offerings that benefit customers, the organization, its stakeholders, and society at large.” - American Marketing Association (as noted in Kerin) Definition: “the art and science of identifying, understanding, acquiring and satisfying customers” - Steve Hertzenberg Art & science Customer-centric ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Identify: who are your targeted (best) customers? Understand: what do they want/need/value? Acquire: persuade target that you will satisfy them Satisfy: actually deliver value Typically done in an exchange of value ◦ Goods or services for money Marketers’ world is mostly outside of the corporate walls B2B Marketing (IBM, Cisco, SAP) B2C Marketing (P&G, General Mills, Nestle) Positions inside firm or with outside agency ◦ Advertising, Public Relations, Database Marketing, Internet Marketing, New Product Development, Marketing Research and many more Retailing ◦ Store Management, Merchandise Buyer Sales & Sales Management Everyone ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ For-profit organizations Non-profit organizations Political parties Churches Schools Individuals CEOs Partners Supervisors Employees 24/7/365 Anywhere/everywhere business takes place ◦ Malls, stores, e-tailers, restaurants, auctions, corporate offices, etc. ◦ Non-profit fundraisers To bring life to an organization Customers are why organizations exist … … and Marketing is why organizations have customers Customers and the revenue they provide are firm’s lifeblood Understand the environment Identify & understand the target market(s) Create positioning and brand Develop Marketing Mix (the 4 P’s of Marketing) to persuade and satisfy ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Product (goods, services, ideas) Price Place (distribution) Promotion (communications) Evaluate and make changes - constantly Controllable and Uncontrollable Variables Social Economic Product Price Customer Promotion Place Technological Regulatory Competitive Production orientation – focus on production ◦ “If you build it, they will come” ◦ Focus on production/distribution efficiencies ◦ Ex. - Model T (Ford): early1900s Sales orientation: move inventory ◦ Firm builds what it wants ◦ Sales must reduce inventory so production efficiencies continue One time deals, new customer promos ◦ Ex. – General Motors: 1970’s – early 1980’s Marketing Concept - focus shifts to customers Understanding: who they are what they want/need how they satisfy those needs today identifying a better way to satisfy those needs NOTE: not a perfect way; better than the competition Persuading: convince customers to obtain satisfaction from you Ex. - Apple’s first McIntosh Customer Relationship Era ◦ Still customer focused ◦ Same requirements as before re: need, understanding & value ◦ Added concept of capturing information on customers to build enduring relationships Deliver value in everything you do ◦ Products ◦ Customer experience Ex. - Apple iPod Regardless of “era” -Today , marketers tasked with figuring out : ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ who the best targets / customers are what these customers value how firm can provide it how to persuade customers to find value from you how to build profitable & lasting relationships Complete set of benefits buyer receives with a purchase ◦ Includes tangible product, any service components, all intangibles (e.g. brand/image, convenience, etc.) ◦ Often referred to as the Whole Product Delivering value involves meeting a “need” ◦ Requires identifying or creating customers’ needs Most products identify and meet existing needs Some new products (rare) create new needs