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Marketing Part 1: “Getting the World to Beat a Path to Your Door” June 2007 & March 2009 Santa Fe Small Business Development Center & Cambridge College Introduction - Unit 16 IGCSE Business Studies You must make your own notes from the text book to supplement this presentation and discussion . http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlmzwZXa-Ww Adapted by John Bell from presentation by Jan Zimmerman Author, Web Marketing for Dummies Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing www.watermelonweb.com 1 © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 2 3 What We’ll Consider • Types of Market • To be a “Product” or “Market” lead business • How to Create or Improve Your Marketing Slogans or Tags • How to Apply the 4Ps of Marketing • How to Identify Your Target Audience • What You Can Learn from Competition • Defining the Marketing Mix for Business • What It Will Cost to Market • What It Will Cost Not to Market 4 Marketing is Not Rocket Science If it works, keep doing it. If it doesn’t, change! 5 A Word About Words • Marketing everything you do to build awareness of your company and products • Sales everything you do to convert marketing interest to a purchase • Advertising one technique used for marketing and sales promotion © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 6 Why You Need to Market • To Survive – Against competitors • To Grow – Access new markets – Access resources • To Thrive – Increase profits – Develop new products © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 7 What Is Marketing? Marketing is only part of a business, but all of business is marketing. © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 8 Some other definitions © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 9 Some Marketing Principles • Customers are valuable – establish • • • • and keep good relationships Define Mass or narrow, niche, markets Go after 1 market at a time Know your audience and forget the rest Fish where the fish are 10 The Marketing Process • Analyze Your Situation (SWOT) • Set Marketing Goals & Objectives • Develop Marketing Strategies – Define target markets – Tailor strategies to each market • Implement Strategies • Monitor Results 11 SWOT • Strengths (internal) – what sets your company apart • Weaknesses (internal) – areas that may affect ability to perform • Opportunities (external) – outside factors you can take advantage of • Threats (external) – risks you face (e.g. lack of sources of capital) 12 see text book 13 Marketing Statements or Tags • • • • Have a clear Mission Statement 5-7 words that describe your business May be descriptive or a slogan May include a value proposition - what sets your company apart i.e. U S P’s • Appears on marketing materials Remember USP = Unique Selling Point i.e. what makes your product different and 14unique A few Mission Statements 15 Product or Market Lead Product Market • Can win a large market, lead your competitors and make big profits • More risky as customers may not want it!! • Follow, copy or steal other peoples successful ideas • Will not be able to lead Market • Less risky but more competition 16 The 4 P’s of Marketing • Product or Service • Price • Place or Position (distribution) • Promotion © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 17 Product or Service • Physical product(s) or service(s) being sold • Includes packaging, associated services, e.g., tech support © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 18 Price • Price point for product or service • Includes discounts, special offers, warranties • Compare to competitors © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 19 Position or Place • • • • Where distributed When distributed How distributed Business 2 Business vs. Business 2 Customer • How customers buy – Where – When – How (catalog, phone, online, in-store) 20 Promotion • • • • Advertising Promotion Publicity Public Relations 21 Targeting Your Audience • • • • • • • • Who buys your product or service? Who does not buy it? What need or function does it serve? What else do your customers buy to satisfy that need or function? What price do they pay? When do they buy? Where do they buy? Why do they buy ? 22 Segmenting Your Audience • • • • • Demographics Maslow’s Hierarchy Adoption Cycle Life Cycle Psychographics 23 Demographics • • • • • • • Age distribution Gender Income Ethnicity Education Occupation Geography © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing Watch for trends: fewer married couples, smaller family size, changing roles of women, higher incomes, etc. 24 Who Buys and why? Some Factors effecting choice and ability to buy Self-actualization External/Internal Esteem Social Safety Physiological Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs 25 Do not confuse with organisational hierarchy Shows a typical medium to large organisation – remember a Sole Trader has to do everything!! 26 Product Adoption Cycle © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 27 Product Life Cycle – Another view © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 28 Segmentation by age and life status Single Stage Newlyweds Young, Not Young, No Living at Home Children Full Nest 1 Youngest Child Under Six Full Nest 2 Youngest Child Over Six Full Nest 3 Empty Nest Older No Children Married at Home Couples Not Retired Few Financial Obligations Better off financially than they will be in near future. Dissatisfied with Financial financial position position and savings improving. Fashion Opinion Leaders Highest purchase rate & highest average purchase of durable goods. Home purchasing peak, liquid assets low. Less influenced Hard to by advertising. influence with Buy large sized advertising. packaging. Home ownership at peak. Not interested in new products. Recreation Oriented Recreation Oriented Interested in new products. Time limited. Buy Basic Furniture, Cars, Entertainment, Clothes Buy Basic Buy durable Furniture, Cars, goods and Entertainment, childrens toys. Clothes Interested in travel, recreation, health, selfeducation. Buy vacations, Buy medical luxury home supplies and improvements. health aids. Buy many foods, cleaning materials, home supplies. Financial position improved. Upgrade home, furniture, appliances, cars Most satisfied with financial position and savings. Retired Drastic cut in income, concerned about wealth preservation. Solitary Survivor Limited income, sell home. Special need for attention, affection and security. Buy medical supplies and healthcare. 29 Psychographics – Lifestyle Attitudes or characteristics • Grouping people according to attitudes, values, or lifestyles http://www.sric-bi.com/VALS/presurvey.shtml • Porsche example i.e. who buys: – – – – – Top Guns (27%): Ambition, power, control Elitists (24%): Old money, car is just a car Proud Patrons (23%): Car is reward for hard work Bon Vivants (17%): Car is for excitement, adventure Fantasists (9%): Car is form of escape 30 An Example of Segments & how they can change 31 Learn from Your Competitors • Decide what information you need • Identify what companies already serve this market with similar product • For potential markets, identify companies that sell an alternative solution to estimate demand © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 32 Collecting Data • Watch other advertising • Survey existing or prospective customers • Consumer rating panels • Observation usage • Focus groups 33 Choosing a Marketing Mix • Purpose of the marketing campaign – Branding vs. Selling • Target Market - Segmentation • Timing – When will marketing take place • Budget © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 34 Make Marketing Mix Fit • Establish Marketing Goals & Objectives • Develop Marketing Strategies • Select marketing mix (tactics) for each strategy • Implement Tactics • Monitor Results & Revise 35 Key Factors Affecting the Marketing Mix • Purpose of your marketing campaign • Timing - when marketing will take place • Budget - how much do you have to spend? • Where are your fish? What tactics are used by or appeal to your audience? 36 37 What It Will Cost to Market – a guidline • Needs to fit with your business plan • Estimate costs at 20-25% of projected revenues for new business, product or market • After established, estimate costs at 10% of projected revenues © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 38 What It Will Cost NOT to Market some thoughts • Missed opportunity • You can only make a first impression once • Reduced revenues • Longer to profitability • If sales sag, increase marketing © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 39 Review • What idea most stuck in your mind? • Which concept is the most confusing for you? • What would you like to see covered next week? • What will you try to learn during the coming week? 40 Mmmmhhhh • “the End” …. or at least • “the end of the beginning © 2011 JCB & Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing 41