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MARKETING MANAGEMENT BY KOTLER AND KELLER (12TH ED.) LECTURE NOTES Chapter 1. Defining marketing for the 21st century Importance of marketing Financial success often depends on marketing ability. In many companies today marketing is represented as a C-level position at the top – CMO Chief Marketing Manager like CEO, CFO. The scope of marketing Definition American Marketing Association (AMA) definition (previous): Marketing is an organizational function and a set of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its stakeholders. Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large (October 2007). Exchange, transaction, transfer What is marketed Goods, services, events, experiences, persons, places, properties, organizations, information, ideas Demand states – marketers are responsible for demand management. Marketing managers seek to influence the level, timing and composition of demand to meet the organization’s objectives. Negative demand Nonexistent demand Irregular demand Full demand Latent demand Overfull demand Unwholesome demand Key customer markets Consumer markets Business markets Global markets Non-profit and governmental markets Declining demand Marketplace – Physical markets like a supermarket. Marketspace – Digital market like internet. 1 Change in business and marketing Changing technology Globalization Deregulation (changing laws) Privatization Customer empowerment Customization Heightened competition Industry convergence Retail transformation Disintermediation Company orientations toward the marketplace The production concept The product concept The selling concept The marketing concept The holistic marketing concept (Figure 1.3.) – It has four components: Relationship marketing – has the aim of building mutually satisfying long term relationships with key parties –customers, suppliers, distributors, and others. Integrated marketing – devising marketing activities and assembling fully integrated marketing programs to create, communicate and deliver value for consumers. Four Ps of marketing (McCarthy) – Product, price, promotion, place. Four Cs (Lauterborn) – Customer solution, customer cost, convenience, communication. Internal marketing – ensuring that everyone in the organization embraces appropriate marketing principles, especially senior management. Social responsibility marketing – understanding broader concerns and the ethical, environmental, legal and social context of marketing acitivities and programs. Fundamental marketing concepts, trends and tasks Core concepts Needs, wants and demands – needs are basic human requirements, needs become wants when they are directed to specific objects, demands are wants for specific products backed by an ability to pay. Target markets, positioning and segmentation Marketers start by dividing-up the markets inti segments. The marketer then decided which segments present the greatest opportunity- target markets. For each chosen target market the firm develops a marketing offering. 2 The offering is positioned in the minds of the target buyers as delivering some central benefits. Offerings and brands Companies first address needs by putting forth a value proposition, which is a set of benefits they offer to customers to satisfy their needs. Then, this intangible value proposition is made physical by an offering, a combination of products, services, information and experiences. A brand is an offering from a known source. Value and Satisfaction – Value reflects the perceived tangible and intangible benefits and costs to customers. Satisfaction reflects a person’s comparative judgments resulting from a product’s perceived performance in relation to his or her expectations. Marketing channels – communication, distribution, service channels. Supply chain – channels from raw materials to final product offering. Competition – all the actual and potential rival offerings and substitutes that a buyer might consider. Marketing environment The task environment (micro) – immediate actors such as the company, suppliers, distributers, dealers and target customers. The broad (macro) environment- demographic, economic, physical (land, water, air etc.), technological, political-legal, socio-cultural environment. Marketing planning 3 Chapter 2. Developing Marketing Strategies and Plans Marketing and customer value (Fig. 2.1.) Traditional physical process sequence Value creation and delivery process The central role of strategic planning – To understand marketing management, we must understand strategic planning. Most large companies consist of four organizational levels: The corporate level The division level The business unit level The product level The marketing plan The strategic marketing plan – lays out the target markets and the value proposition that will be offered, based on an analysis of the best market opportunities. The tactical marketing plan – specifies the marketing tactics, including product features, promotion, merchandising, pricing, sales channels and service. Corporate and division strategic planning All corporate headquarters undertake four planning activities: Defining the corporate mission Establishing strategic business units (SBUs) Assigning resources to each SBU Assesing growth opportunities Defining the corporate mission – Organizations develop mission statements to share with managers, employees and customers. A clearful, thoughtful mission statement provides employees with a shared sense of purpose, direction and opportunity. The statement guides geographically dispersed employees to work independently and yet collectively toward realizing the organization’s goals. Good mission statements has three major characteristics: They focus on a limited number of goals Mission statements stress the company’s major policies and values. They define the major competitive spheres within which the company will operate: Industry 4 Products and applications Competence Market segment Vertical channels Geographical Establishing SBUs Defining the business – A business must be viewed as a customer satisfying process, not a goods producing process. Products are transient, basic needs and customer groups endure forever. SBUs has three characteristics: Single business – planned separately from the rest of the company Has its own set of competitors Has a manager responsible for strategic planning etc. Assessing growth opportunities Intensive growth – improving existing businesses Integrative growth – Backward, forward, horizontal integration Diversification growth – Finding opportunities outside the present businesses Downsizing and divesting older businesses Business unit strategic planning (Figure 2.7.) The business mission SWOT analysis External environment analysis A marketing opportunity is an area of buyer need and interest in which there is high probability that a company can profitably satisfy that need. An environmental threat is a challenge posed by an unfavorable trend or development that would lead to lower sales or profit. Internal environment analysis – Marketing memo Goal formulation – Profitability, sales growth, market share improvement, risk containment, innovation, reputation goals. Criteria for objectives Arranged from the most to the least important 5 Stated quantitatively whenever possible Realistic Consistent Strategy formulation – Strategies are game plans for reaching goals. Three main strategies (Porter) Overall cost leadership Differentiation Focus on narrow market segments Program formulation and implementation Estimating costs , stakeholder and employee satisfaction Feedback and control – Monitoring developments and changes in markets 6