Week 1 | What is marketing Flashcards

1
Q

What is marketing?

A

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

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2
Q

Think like a marketer

A

Every time you see advertising, ask yourself the following questions: Who is the target audience and what is the message? What is the communications strategy used? Why are they choosing this particular time of the day, week, season or even phase of the marketing campaign? Why are they saying it here, in this particular medium? Why did they choose this particular person to say it, e.g. a celebrity, an authoritative person or someone similar to the target audience? What do they want their audience to do, e.g. buy now, consider the brand, change their beliefs or attitudes? What is the call to action trigger?

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3
Q

Marketing isn’t just for products

A
  • Services
  • Ideas
  • People
  • Places
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4
Q

Needs, wants and demands

A
  • Needs are states of felt deprivation, e.g. ‘I need a car to commute to work’.
  • Wants are the manifestation of human needs, as shaped by culture and individual personality, e.g. ‘I want a Mercedes Benz’.
  • Demands are human wants that are backed by buying power, e.g. ‘I can afford a Kia’.
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5
Q

Market offerings

A

People satisfy their needs and wants by exchanging value with the marketer. In exchange for their money, and usually some time and effort, they obtain a ‘market offering’,

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6
Q

Value, satisfaction and quality

A

Customer value can be summed up as the sum of total benefits minus total costs. Customer benefits is the bundle of economic, functional and psychological benefits customers expect from a product. Customer costs is the bundle of costs customers expect to incur in evaluating, obtaining, using and disposing of the offering . This can be monetary, time, energy or mental costs.

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7
Q

Exchange

A

Exchange is the act of obtaining a desired object from someone offering something in return. For it to occur, the following conditions are necessary:

  • At least two parties present.
  • Something of value the other wants.
  • Ability to communicate offer.
  • Freedom to accept or reject.
  • Desire to deal with other party.
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8
Q

Transaction

A

A transaction is a trade between two parties that involves at least two things of value, agreed-upon conditions, a time of agreement and a place of agreement.

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9
Q

What is a market

A

A market is the set of all actual and potential buyers of a product. These buyers share a need or want that can be satisfied through exchange. This represents the overall potential market. The actual market depends on the number of people who exhibit the need, have resources and authority to engage and are willing to offer these resources in exchange for what they want.

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10
Q

What are marketing management philosophies?

A

An organisation’s marketing management philosophy influences their behaviour and characteristics and how they interact with their customers.

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11
Q

Production Philosophies

A

For those companies who believe in this philosophy, the emphasis is manufacturing efficiency.

  • The focus is on the internal capabilities of the organistion to develop and produce better, cheaper and widely available products.
  • It doesn’t consider where the products also meet the needs of the marketplace - but allows continuous improvements to be made.
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12
Q

Sales Philosophies

A

For those companies who believe in this philosophy, the focus is on selling existing products.

  • Generally, large-scale and aggressive selling and promotional efforts are used, so there is an inward focus on staff.
  • Buys into the belief that high sales equate to high profits
  • Useful when organisations have over capacity.
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13
Q

marketing Philosophies

A

For those companies who believe in this philosophy, the emphasis is on customer needs and wants and delivering the desired satisfaction better
than competitors.

  • Belief is that customer satisfaction happens when the focus is on the customer, whereas previous philosophies focused first on company needs.
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14
Q

Relationship Philosophies

A

For those companies who believe in this philosophy, they expand the marketing orientation focus from making a sale that meets the needs and wants of the marketplace to the value of the repeat sale.

  • Efforts are dedicated towards establishing a relationship with the customer rather than a cone time exchange.
  • It recognises that other parties that complement or aid in facilitating the exchange as being essential to success, e.g suppliers.
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15
Q

Societal Philosophies

A

For those companies who believe in this philosophy, they expand the marketing orientation focus from making a sale that meets the needs and wants of the marketplace to the value of the repeat sale.

  • Efforts are dedicated towards establishing a relationship with the customer rather than a cone time exchange.
  • It recognises that other parties that complement or aid in facilitating the exchange as being essential to success, e.g suppliers.
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16
Q

The marketing mix

A

This is where all the fun begins—where marketers become like artists. Just as a painter mixes and uses colour to form visually attractive images, a marketer uses the four Ps to create something that appeals to the consumer. Trade-offs are made between the price and the product features, the place where it is made available and the promotion it
receives. The whole marketing mix is a jigsaw puzzle and you need to work out where to put all the pieces

17
Q

The 4 Ps

A

Product
Price
Place/Placement
Promotion

18
Q

The 4cs

A

Customer needs
Costs
Convenience
Communication

19
Q

Product

A

A product is either a tangible good or an intangible service that is need to meet a specific customer need or demand. All products follow a logical product life cycle and it is vital for marketers to understand and plan for the various stages in this cycle and their unique challenges. It is key to understand those problems that the product is attempting to solve. The benefits offered by the product and all its features need to be understood and the unique selling proposition of the production need to be studies. In addition, the potential buyers of the product need to be identified and understood.

20
Q

Price

A

Price covers the actual amount the end user is expected to pay for a product. How a produce is priced will directly affect how it sells. This is linked to the perceived value of the product to the customer rather than an objective costing of the product on offer. If there is a positive customer value, then a product may be successfully priced higher than its objective monetary value. Conversely, if a product has little value in the eyes of the consumer, then it may need to be under-priced to sell.

21
Q

Customer value–based pricing

A

Setting the price based on buyers’ perceptions of value.

22
Q

Cost-based pricing

A

Setting prices based on the costs for producing, distributing and selling the product, plus a fair rate of return for the company’s effort and risk.

23
Q

Competitor-based pricing

A

Setting prices based on competitors’ strategies, costs, prices and market offerings.

24
Q

Place

A

Place or placement has to do with how the product will be provided to the customer. Distribution is a key element of placement. This placement strategy will help assess what channel is the most suited to a product. How a product is accessed by the end user also needs to compliment the rest of the product strategy.

The choice of supply chain, distribution channels, value creation and retailing and wholesaling are all factors to consider in this area of the marketing mix.

25
Q

Promotion

A

Marketing communication strategies and techniques all fall under the ‘promotion’ heading. These may include advertising, sales promotions, special offers and public relations. Whatever the channel, it is necessary for it to be suitable for the product, price and the end user it is being marketed to. It is important to differentiate between marketing and promotion. Promotion is just the communication aspect of the entire marketing function.

26
Q

What does AIDA stand for?

A

Attention
Interest
Desire
Action