Title: 1. THE MARKTING ENVIRONMENT
11. THE MARKTING ENVIRONMENT
- Environment Scanning The process of collecting
information about the forces in the marketing
environment. - Environmental Analysis
- Assessing implications and
- deriving implications for your firm
2Objectives Of Environmental Scanning
?
- Detect scientific, technical, economic, social
and political trends/events - Define potential threats, opportunities, or
changes implied by trends/events - Promote future orientation in management/staff
thinking - Alert management/staff to trends converging,
diverging, speeding up, slowing down or
interacting
Horizon Site, Environmental Scanning by James
Morrison, 1992, http//horizon.unc.edu/courses/pap
ers/enviroscan/
3Scanning Involves
- Observation
- Secondary Sources
- Business
- Trade
- Government
- General-interest publications
- Marketing research
- Cautions
- Know how to use information
- Dont gather too much information
4Responding To Environmental Forces
- Accept as uncontrollable- passive and reactive
- Attempt to influence and shape them-proactive
- Constructive
- Bring desired results
- Are limits
(Toyota responding to environmental forces. Page
59)
5LEVEL OF MARKET COMPETITION
Competition Budget
Competition Generic
Competition Product Category
Competition Product Form
6Society of Competitive Intelligence Professionals
- Monitoring Competition
- Helps determine competitors strategies and their
effects on firms strategies - Guides development of competitive advantage and
adjusting firms strategy - Provides ongoing information about competitors
- Assists in maintaining a marketing orientation
7Competitive Structures
8Factors Contributing To Creation Of Oligopolies
?
- Plentiful, inexpensive money for buyouts
- Investor emphasis on gross income growth rather
than profit margins - Optimism about ever-expanding consumption
- Laissez-faire attitude about industry
concentration - Key brands/brand management important
- New international markets
- Looser rules on transnational ownership
- Felt as best bet for corporate survival
Oligopoly Watch, First principle of
oligopolies, Oct. 2003, http//www.oligopolywatch
.com/2003/10/07.html
9Monitoring Competition
- Price- most competitors monitor
- Do more than analyze information
- Develop ongoing system for gathering information
- Understand market - customer needs
- Helps in recognition of own strategy flaws
103. ECONOMIC FORCES
- Economic Conditions
- Buying Power
- Willingness to Spend
11Economic Conditions
- Business Cycle
- Prosperity
- Recession
- Depression
- Recovery
12Buying Power
- Income
- Disposable Income
- Discretionary Income
- Wealth
13Gains In Buying Power (1990-2010)
Augustachronicle.com, Minority Buying Power,
Oct. 22, 2005,http//chronicle.augusta.com/divers
ity/2005/buying-power.shtml
14Willingness To Spend
- An inclination to buy because of expected
satisfaction from a product, influenced by the
ability to buy and numerous psychological and
social forces.
15American Consumer Satisfaction Index
?
Figure 3.1
Source American Customer Satisfaction Index,
University of Michigan Business School, Sept.
2005, www.theacsi.com
U.S. Automakers Slippingin Consumer
Satisfaction
164. POLITICAL FORCES
- Legislation enacted
- Legal decisions interpreted by courts
- Regulatory agencies created and operated
- Marketers
- Adjust to conditions
- Influence through contributions
17Top Corporate DonorsBy Political Party
185. LEGAL ANDREGULATORY FORCES
- Procompetitive legislation- preserves competition
- Consumer Protection legislation
- Protect people from harm
- Prohibit hazardous products
- Information disclosure
- Particular marketing activities
- Encourage compliance
- Regulatory Agencies
- Self-Regulatory forces
19Legal Forces
- - Objectives
- - protect companies from each other
- - protect consumers from companies
- - improve competition
- - protect society
- these objectives are sometimes often in
conflict
20Federal Trade Commission Enforcement Tools
Figure 3.2
Source www.ftc.gov.
Federal Trade Commission Website
21Advertising and the FTC
- - ad substantiation
- - drop ads
- - affirmative disclosure
- - corrective ads
- - counter ads
- - implied uniqueness
- - comparative ads
22Product
- - product liability
- - tort reform
- - fair packaging/labeling
- - warranty protection
23Channels
- tying arrangements
- collusion
24Pricing
- - discriminatory pricing
- - price fixing
- - conscious parallel action
- - price signaling
- - price protection
- - free riders
25Major Laws AffectingMarketing Decisions
26Regulatory Agencies
27Self-Regulatory Forces
- Trade Associations
- Better Business Bureau
- National Advertising Review Board
- Advantages
- Less expensive
- More realistic
- Limitations
- Nonmember firms do not have to abide
- Lack of enforcement tools
- Often less strict
28Direct-To-Consumer Pharmaceutical Guidelines
296. TECHNOLOGICAL FORCES
- Impact of Technology
- Effects include
- Dynamics
- Reach
- Self-Sustaining
- Adoption and Use of Technology
(Monster.com has changed the way people search
for jobs. Page 72)
307. SOCIOCULTURAL FORCES
- The influences in a society and its culture(s)
that change peoples attitudes, beliefs, norms,
customs, and lifestyles.
31Issues Of Sociocultural Forces
- Demographic and diversity characteristics
- Age, gender, race, ethnicity
- Marital/parental status, income, education
- Cultural Values
- Health
- Family
- Environment
- Consumerism- efforts to protect consumers rights