Title: CUSTOMERDRIVEN MARKETING
1CUSTOMER-DRIVEN MARKETING
2Sales Orientation
- 1890 - 1920 began the era of mass production
- Now production could exceed the immediate demand
- Business took on a sales orientation, devoting
more resources to getting the sale - Post WWII brought the era of the Buyers Market
- More production, more choice
3FILM FIRING YOUR CUSTOMERS
- When you go shopping, are there any efforts made
to encourage you to spend more? What are they? - Have stores or other businesses made subtle
efforts to eliminate you or someone you know as a
customer? How?
4FILM FIRING YOUR CUSTOMERS
- Thinking of your family, what marketing efforts
have you noticed aimed at you versus your
parents? Are they effective? - What businesses would be wise to court you and
your classmates as customers even if they would
lose on your business in the short run?
5What is Marketing?
- Determining the needs and wants of others
- Providing a good or service to satisfy those
wants or needs - That satisfaction should meet or exceed the level
of expectation - Find a need and fill it
6The Exchange Process Giving Up One Thing in
Return for Another
Something of Value
(money,credit,labor, goods)
Buyer
Seller
(goods,services,ideas)
Something of Value
7Value Added by Marketing
- Time Utility - products available when the
customer wants them - Place Utility - goods and services available
where the customer wants them - Ownership Utility - making the exchange of goods
easy - Form Utility - created through the production
process - Information Utility - informs the buyer of
existence, usage, price and where available
8Functions of Marketing
- Buying
- Selling
- Transporting
- Storing
- Grading
- Financing
- Marketing research
- Risk taking
9Using the Marketing Concept
Marketing Success
Training employees
Quality
Service
Value
Customer satisfaction
10Total Quality Management
- Business moved from a customer orientation to a
desire to please the consumer - Involve employees in the attempt to exceed
customer expectations - This approach goes hand in hand with employee
empowerment
11Marketing for the New Millenium
- Train cross-functional teams to get everyone in
the organization committed to customer
satisfaction - Marketing aimed not only at the consumer, but
society as a whole - Relationship marketing tries to custom make goods
for the customer and establish a long-term
relationship with the client
12Understanding the Marketing Process
- Market research to find out if a need exists
- Design a product to meet the need
- Distribution - getting the product to the
customer - Establishing a relationship with the customer
- Promoting the product, dealing with complaints,
etc. helps to establish a customer relationship
13APPLICATION EXERCISE FIND A NEED FILL IT
- Divide into groups
- Come up with one proposal
- Discuss in class
14DEVELOPING A MARKETING STRATEGY
15Target Marketing
- The process of deciding which market segments to
serve - Variables to consider in making the decision
about a target market - Size and growth potential of the segment
- How reachable is the segment
- The nature of the market
- The nature of the company
16Target Market Strategies
12-8
17Market Segmentation
- Geographic Segmentation - geographic areas
- Demographic Segmentation - age, sex, education,
occupation, family size, etc. - Psychographic Segmentation - lifestyle,
interests, values, attitudes - Behavioristic consumer characteristics
18Generational Marketing
- Canadas oldest citizens - the generation of
great hope - desire products that
reward them for hard work - Baby boomers - the generation born in great
economic prosperity - desire
products that save time or simplify
living - Gen Xers - desire products that fit with the
image of (born between 1966-1980) self they are
creating - Generation Y - the most privileged
generation - desire products that are
high-tech and authentic and
nontraditional shopping venues
19Marketing to Different Generations (or target
markets)
Whats Cool?
- According to Boomers According to Generation Y
- Lexus LS 400 Jeep Wrangler
- Gap Delias
- Estee Lauder Hard Candy
- Palm Pilot Motorola Flex Pagers
- Coke Mountain Dew
- Nikes Vans
Source Ellen Neuborne and Kathleen Kerwin,
Generation Y,Business Week, February 15, 1999,
pp. 82-83.
20The Marketing Mix
- The environment is in a constant state of change
- Social forces
- Economic realities
- Technological developments
- Global forces
- The four Ps in marketing Product, Price, Place,
Promotion make up the Marketing Mix
21Elements in the Marketing Mix
Product
Price
Place
Promotion
- Goods
- Service
- Features
- Accessories
- Packaging
- Instructions
- Warranty
- Branding
- Options
- List price
- Credit terms
- Allowances
- Flexibility
- Discounts
- Channel type
- Intermediaries
- Market coverage
- Transport mode
- Objectives
- Advertising
- Personal selling
- Publicity
- Public relations
- Sales Promotion
- Word of mouth
Marketing Manager
Marketing Program
22Product Development and the Value Package
- Intense competition forces companies to
constantly develop new products - The Value Package is everything that the consumer
evaluates when deciding to buy - This includes both tangibles and intangibles such
as price, packaging, store appearance, delivery,
past experience, brand image, name, reputation,
etc.
23The Buying Decision-making Process
- Need recognition
- Choice of an involvement level (how much
information?) - Alternative search evaluation
- Purchase decision
- Post-purchase evaluation
- Possible cognitive dissonance
24Buying Behavior
- Psychological variables
- perception
- motivation
- learning
- Social variables
- social roles
- reference groups
- social classes
- culture
25Whos Buying Beetles?
Age of head of household
Source USA Today, February 2, 1999, p. B-3.
26A Marketing Mix and the Marketing Environment
27Marketing Environment Trends
11-15
1
1 White 59, hispanic 51,black 35 (only groups
broken out)Source Census Bureau
Source USA Today, March 3, 1999, p. A-1.
28Careers in Marketing
- Careers available in Retail or Wholesale
Marketing - Selling
- Advertising
- Public Relations
- Transportation
- Distribution
- N.B. - everything has been sold by someone at
least once before you use it
29ON TO DIMENSIONS OF MARKETING STRATEGY
(21/11/2005)
- Assignment chapter 12
- Class Activities
- Case Analyzing Canadian Tires Marketing
Strategy (group work) - Film discussion Boom, Bust Retail (questions
on p. 327)