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Bus 352 May 10

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Explain impact of demographic and economic factors. Impact of natural environment and ... Not knowingly do harm. Marketing Ethics: Morally difficult situations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bus 352 May 10


1
Bus 352 May 10
  • Margaret Cornish
  • Global Marketing Environment
  • ex bank branch
  • Competitive Strategies
  • Market Plan Outline
  • Marketing and Society
  • Case 20

2
May 10 - Admin
  • Register with Maria Tamblyn
  • Course Project handout
  • Submit proposal on May 24
  • Case Method
  • e-mail address list
  • Web-site posting of comments
  • Mid-term (June 10, 9 -11am)

3
Global Marketing Environment- Chapt 3
  • Objectives Macro and Micro
  • Explain impact of demographic and economic
    factors
  • Impact of natural environment and technological
    trends
  • Political and cultural context
  • How can firm respond to/manage its marketing
    environment?

4
Firms microenvironment
  • Internal finance, R D, production, accounting,
    top mgmt
  • Suppliers
  • Channels, Intermediaries
  • Customers
  • Competitors
  • Publics - community, investors, media,
    government, citizen action, employees

5
Macroenvironment
  • Demographics pop profile by age, lifestyle,
    education, diversity
  • Economic forces gdp income distribution -
    changes in income, cost of living, interest rates
    savings rates
  • Natural Environment shortage of resources, need
    to preserve environment

6
Macroenvironment demographics
  • Profile of Fiftysomethings job, lifestyle,
    values shopping habits
  • Formative life experiences?
  • Behaviour categories venturers, organizers,
    worriers and optimists. Are these useful to
    marketers?
  • Product for each segment?

7
Macroenvironment (contd)
  • New technologies replace old ones (and
    businesses) shorten product life-cycles
  • Politics (legislation and guidelines) affect wide
    range of corporate activity - Food Drug Act,
    Competition Act, Customs Act
  • Cultural Values (core vs secondary)

8
Marketers Objective
  • Watch and adapt to the marketing environment to
    seize opportunities and avoid threats
  • six macro-environment forces (incl internal)
  • six macro-environment forces
  • Class example Describe the global marketing
    environment of a bank branch in Waterloo

9
Competitive StrategiesChapter 18 Objectives
  • Analyze customers
  • Analyze competitors
  • Distinguish between
  • Customer value and satisfaction
  • Value chain and customer value delivery network
  • Customer, competitor and market orientation

10
Marketing is the art of attracting and keeping
profitable customers
11
Competitive StrategiesHow do customers choose?
  • choose the offer with the most value to them
  • form expectations/perceptions of value and act
  • satisfaction depends on whether the offer
    delivers expected value
  • repurchase behaviour is determined by
    satisfaction

12
Competitive StrategiesCustomer delivered value
  • Total customer value minus customer cost
  • customer cost (, search effort, convenience,
    sales process, delivery timing and reliability
    etc).
  • Evaluating customer satisfaction surveys, ghost
    shoppers, word of mouth sales, lost customer
    analysis, risk of dominance

13
Value Chain (firm-based) Basic level of
competition
  • Each dept must excel at their contribution to
    value chain (design, production, marketing,
    delivery or support). Each must add value
    customer is willing to pay for.
  • In addition, the product must be delivered
    seamlessly to the customer. This is a critical
    role of mgmt.

14
Customer value delivery chain - advanced level
  • Eliminating duplication at each level in the
    delivery chain from suppliers to wholesales to
    delivery and payment systems
  • Alternatively adding features and services at
    each of these stages
  • While partnerships may be successful, there are
    losers in this struggle early adopters win

15
Competitive Strategies
  • Loss of 1 customer is 5x more expensive than cost
    of gaining a new customer. Why?
  • Customer lifetime value
  • Customer loyalty what does it mean? risk of
    dominance?

16
Old Marketing ModelFirm focused
  • focus on product
  • define target group
  • set brand objectives
  • focus on brand benefit
  • create strategic advertising
  • execute brand plan
  • measure performance against fixed set of
    competitors

17
New Marketing ModelCustomer focused
  • focus on process for serving C
  • nourish C relationship
  • respect and value C
  • develop refresh relevance to C
  • enter dialog with C
  • improvise to sustain C relnship
  • inter-functional attitude
  • measure what customers want

18
Relationship MarketingWhen is it most
appropriate?
  • Depends on the target market
  • There is a spectrum ranging from markets with
    many, low margin customers - to
  • markets with few, high margin customers
  • To intensify relationship first add financial
    benefits, then social benefits, then structural
    ties

19
Competitive Strategies Competitor Analysis
  • Identify competitors - companies with similar
    offer as well as latent competitors
  • Assess competitor strategies and strategic groups
    on quality-service grid
  • Within a strategic group differentiate
    competitors by product quality, pricing, service,
    distribution coverage, sales force strategy, ads
    and promotion

20
Competitive Strategies Competitor Analysis
(contd)
  • Analyze competitor capabilities R D,
    technology, manufacturing, purchasing, financial
    resources etc.
  • Objective is to identify strengths and weaknesses
    of major competitors as means of anticipating
    what they might do in the market place and how
    the firm can avoid or mitigate the effect of such
    action.

21
Competitive Strategies Competitor Analysis
(contd)
  • Selecting those to attack vs those to avoid
  • Clarity about respective strengths and weaknesses

22
Competitive Strategies Market vs customer
orientation
  • Market-oriented company pays attention to both
    customers and competition in designing its
    marketing strategies

23
Competitive StrategiesThree Basic Forms
  • Overall cost leadership production and
    distribution
  • Differentiation product and marketing perceived
    industry leader
  • Focus one or more market segments

24
Competitive Strategies3 Value Disciplines
  • Operational Excellence - low cost, convenience,
    lean and efficient value delivery system
  • Customer intimacy - products meet precise needs
    of target segments who are willing to pay
    premium
  • Product Leadership - stream of leading edge
    products/services

25
Competitive Positions
  • Market leader
  • Challenger
  • Follower
  • Nicher

26
Market Leader
  • Largest share, new products, new channels, new
    uses, new markets, widest distribution coverage,
  • Vulnerability Largest sunk costs may be
    over-extended
  • Response Inc total demand inc market share
    defend position, attack competitor

27
Market Challenger
  • 2 or 3 market share
  • define strategic objectives a) inc share or b)
    seize leadership
  • attack leader (if leader is tired) or attack
    follower - target competitive weakness must
    have advantage can be achieved by acquisition

28
Market ChallengerAttack Strategies
  • Styles of Attack
  • Frontal
  • Encirclement
  • Bypass
  • Flanking
  • Guerilla

29
Market Follower
  • Active Defines growth path to avoid retaliation
  • Passive less competitive market leader not
    innovative
  • Strategy quickly match and even improve on
    leaders innovation without RD costs
  • must have some advantage service. Location,
    price

30
Market Niche Strategy
  • carefully tailored product or service (end-user,
    geog, price, quality, service)
  • premium or lower cost
  • niche is typically incidental to large players
  • risk niche grows to attract market leaders

31
Marketing SocietyObjectives
  • major social criticisms
  • consumerism and environmentalism
  • socially responsible marketing
  • ethics in marketing
  • guiding principles of public policy

32
Marketing Social Criticisms
  • Higher prices
  • Deceptive practices (ads, sales)
  • High pressure selling
  • Shoddy unsafe products
  • Planned Obsolescence
  • Poor service to disadvantaged

33
Criticism economic rationale
  • Overselling of private goods creates unsatisfied
    demand for public goods. Issue Consider
    life-cycle costs of product and ensure producers
    (or consumers) pay full social costs of their
    operations

34
Green MarketingReuse, reduce, recycle
  • producer (and consumer?) assume responsibility
    for products life cycle costs
  • sustainability framework for pollution, product
    stewardship, new environmental technologies to
    reduce or limit waste pollution
  • current investment is in pollution control not
    (yet) prevention

35
Marketing EthicsMorally difficult situations
  • Criteria individual responsibility, corporate
    policy, legal requirement
  • Difference btwn what people say and what they
    choose
  • Moral difficulty with world wide standards
  • Lets review examples on p.699 and article on
    marketing to children

36
Marketing Professional Ethics
  • Not knowingly do harm

37
Marketing EthicsMorally difficult situations
  • Criteria individual responsibility, corporate
    policy, legal requirement
  • Difference btwn what people say and what they
    choose
  • Moral difficulty with world wide standards
  • Lets review examples on p.699 and article on
    marketing to children

38
Marketing legal Issues
  • Selling kick backs, bribes, discrimination
  • Advertising false or deceptive
  • Packaging labeling, recyclability
  • Pricing fixing, predatory
  • Place/Channel tied selling

39
Principles for Public Policy
  • Consumer and producer freedom
  • consumer info/education
  • consumer protection
  • curbing potential harm
  • economic efficiency
  • innovation
  • meeting basic needs
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