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Enterprise Marketing

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Title: No Slide Title Author: Benson Honig Last modified by: Ed Created Date: 5/28/1995 4:33:00 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Enterprise Marketing


1
Enterprise Marketing
2
What is Enterprise Marketing ?
  • Definition Marketing
  • The process of creating, distributing, promoting
    and pricing goods, services and ideas to
    facilitate satisfying exchange relationships with
    customers.
  • Definition Enterprise
  • A business organization
  • An undertaking, especially one of some scope,
    complication and risk.

3
Enterprise Marketing
  • Creating, distributing, promoting and pricing
    goods, services and ideas to business
    organizations.

4
Why do we market?
  • Brand awareness
  • Generate demand
  • Satisfy customer needs
  • Generate value for customers
  • Establish beneficial customer/buyer relationships

5
The Marketing Mix
  • Product
  • Distribution
  • Promotion
  • Price

6
Product
  • A good, service or idea
  • Developing a product that is a part of everyday
    life, that satisfies customer needs and
    expectations
  • Examples of successful products Coco-Cola,

7
Distribution
  • Getting the product to the customer
  • Making the product available when the customer
    needs it

8
Promotion
  • Increase customer awareness
  • Offer buying incentives
  • Generate demand

9
Price
  • Setting a reasonable price based on
  • Customer expectations
  • Competition
  • Perceived value
  • Customer value Customer benefit - Cost

10
Good Ideas and Good Products are a Dime a Dozen
  • Good People are Rare!

11
Marketing is
  • Resource intensive
  • Expensive
  • Time consuming

12
The Solution
  • Target your market Identify your market segment
    and focus your marketing efforts towards it.
  • Marketing Plan The systematic process of
    accessing marketing opportunities and resources,
    determining marketing objectives, defining
    marketing strategies and planning implementation
    of the marketing activities.

13
The Marketing Plan, components
  • Executive Summary
  • Environmental Analysis identifying the target
    market
  • Analysis tools Porters five forces, S.W.O.T.
    and P.E.S.T.
  • Marketing Objectives Numbers, projections and
    financials
  • Marketing Strategy Activities, resources,
    timetable

14
The Marketing Plan, continued
  • Marketing Implementation the plan to meet the
    objectives
  • Evaluation and control the means to measure the
    success or failure of the marketing plan, the
    contingency plan in case it fails.

15
P.E.S.T.
  • Political forces
  • Economic forces
  • Socio-cultural forces
  • Technological forces

16
Why Institutions are Important to Business
Students and Otherwise Disinterested Parties
17
Institutions and Technology
  • Legal Structure
  • Bills of Exchange
  • Insurance
  • Taxation
  • Association
  • Double Entry Bookkeeping
  • Diversity

18
Legal Structure
  • Late 1800s Royal Courts in London began using
    precedent to enforce legal contracts. Allowed
    suits of foreigners. Reputation for fairness
  • Allowed growth of transactions
  • Made London a world financial center to be copied

19
Legal Structure
  • Weber states West inherited Roman formal law -
    logical and reasoned, free of ritual and magic
  • How does a legal structure create and promote
    technological advancement today? How will it
    directly impact your role as managers and
    entrepreneurs?

20
Bills of Exchange
  • Checks (or letters to the effect) created the
    first international banking system
  • Important to provide short term capital (loans)
    avoiding Catholic churchs usury prohibition
  • Deposits and trading of these checks developed
    into banks that provided deposits and loans -
    churning wealth

21
Insurance
  • Lloyds of London founded in late 1600s
  • Risks of piracy, sea hazards, etc...
  • Allowed individuals to take greater risks for
    greater potential gain
  • Promoted more investment
  • What are the implications for insurance today in
    the technology arena?

22
Taxation
  • Arbitrary assessments paid for military
    protection
  • People hid their wealth from confiscation -
    everything in China owned by the Emperor
  • Expansion of professional armies promoted
    technological development, but required
    consistent revenue
  • Exchange from right to pillage to a stable
    activity

23
Taxation
  • Magna Carta first time individual property was
    protected from confiscation by the crown
  • Provided for town customs
  • resulted in strength of new merchants - Holland
    and England developed parliaments limiting royal
    power

24
Taxation
  • Problem of concealment of wealth prevented
    investment
  • Consistent and predictable taxation allowed
    businessmen to plan long term
  • New environments attracted capital, as wealthy
    merchants moved to protected locations
  • Much wealth was portable - not situated

25
Taxation
  • What are the implications of Tax policy on
    contemporary technological firms?

26
Social Institutions
  • Merchant families were a result of kinship ties
  • Larger investments of capital, such as
    shipbuilding, was done by the state
  • How do individuals organize themselves into
    productive units?
  • Investors began to have faith in corporations
    managed by others

27
Social Institutions
  • Limitations of family run empires
  • Importance of larger organizations to
    technological innovation
  • How do social institutions promote contemporary
    technological innovation?

28
Double Entry Bookkeeping
  • The hands in the till problem
  • Bookkeeping creates an abstract entity
  • Allowed to objectively evaluate performance of a
    business
  • How does bookkeeping alter our decision making
    process regarding technological innovation today?

29
Weber and the Protestant Ethic
  • Calvinist doctrine promoted a calling or devotion
    to work
  • Wealth no longer looked at as inherited right,
    but god-given reward
  • Accumulation of capital was a service to god
  • Devotion to work, dependability, diligence,
    self-denial, austerity
  • Reformation removed church from business

30
The Importance of Diversity
  • Newly emerging Nation-States were in competition
    with each other to amass wealth and conduct trade
  • Unlike in China, were a rational bureaucracy
    diffused power, Europe was fragmented
  • China adopted a policy of status quo - limiting
    the range of technological innovation and
    diffusion

31
The Importance of Diversity
  • In the West, technology could provide important
    advantages and diversity flourished

32
Factory Production
  • The Shift toward factory production
  • Energy and the Industrial Revolution
  • The Steam Engine
  • Steel
  • Textiles
  • Ceramics
  • Capital
  • The Labor Market

33
The Shift Toward Factory Production 1750-1880
  • Required surplus in agriculture
  • Guild was the rule until late 1800s - family
    firms with apprentices
  • Factories were less personalized - company towns
    provided living accommodations
  • Growth of urbanization (enclosure laws cited by
    Polyani)

34
Energy
  • Watermills, animals, and humans limits size of
    factories
  • Steam engine and improvements in harnessing water
    improved efficiency (1725 Newcomen engine)
  • Watt improved the engine fully by 1790, using 1/3
    as much coal
  • Required production to be near coal, larger
    factories, away from the home

35
Iron and Steel
  • Improvement in 1700s to 1800s allowed output
    increase from 12 tons a week to 1600 tons a week.
  • Steam powered blowers to furnaces (technological
    linkages).
  • More ore, near coal, required transportation
    improvements (more linkages)
  • Mills created demand for their own product
  • Compare with computer revolution

36
Technological Linkages
  • Steam engine allowed larger steel mills
  • Steel Mills required advanced steel and steam
    technologies
  • Larger trains and ships now viable out of steel -
    as are newer engines
  • Military power depended on new types of steel for
    canons and rifles

37
Textiles
  • Led the industrial revolution
  • by 1788, 143 looms run by waterwheel spinning
    cotton to 55,500 steamers in 1829
  • Technology of production went with change in
    ORGANIZATION of production
  • From Cottage to Factory
  • Costs of textiles reduced - success meant the
    cheapest product of comparable quality

38
Ceramics
  • Organizational change occurred before steam
    engine due to Taylorist nature
  • Organizational advantages of unified control,
    step by step production, specialization, and
    central power source
  • What are the organizational changes occurring now
    with the information revolution? How might they
    effect your activities?

39
Capital
  • Larger firms produced more goods - driving prices
    downwards as a result of technological
    improvements
  • R suggests that increases in factory output were
    sufficient to provide quick returns
  • Funding of capital by English country (deposit)
    banking system
  • Consumption was not lowered to fuel rev.

40
The Labor Market
  • Displacement of agricultural workers to urban
    environments. Conditions at the start of the
    industrial revolution were bleak. From 90 t 5
    agricultural workers represents a major
    structural shift. Enclosure laws (Polyani again)
  • Factories drew from poor landless population

41
The Labor Market
  • In Paris, 1776, 91,000 homeless
  • Replaced a social institution - the apprentice
    system- resulting in less educational investment
    (but is was a severe system)
  • Factory perceived as exploitation of the poor-
    longer work hours, hazardous work
  • Franchise at the end of the revolution,1897

42
The Labor Market
  • Factories allowed employment of unskilled women
    and children, less theft, and more consistent
    working hours, in exchange for building the plant
    (capital investment)
  • Move from craftsmen satisfaction to modern
    times
  • What are the implications of new technologies on
    todays labor market?

43
Class 1c
44
Managing Resources for Entrepreneurship
  • Review of Resource Based Approach
  • Personality Characteristics of Es
  • Sociological Characteristics of E
  • Organizational Characteristics of E
  • Technology
  • Creativity

45
(No Transcript)
46
Review of Resource Based Theory
  • SCA Created when firms possess resources that
    are
  • Valuable
  • Rare
  • Imperfectly imitable
  • Nonsubstitutable

47
Resource Types
  • Financial
  • Physical
  • Human
  • Technological
  • Reputational
  • Organizational

48
Individual Resources
  • Psychologists look at personality
  • Need for Achievement
  • Locus of Control Externals who believe in fate,
    and Internals who believe in control
  • Risk Taking not upheld by research
  • Weak results - Jamaican research are
    entrepreneurs surviving or creating?

49
Sociological Approach
  • SES- social and economic status
  • Human Capital
  • Social Capital
  • religiosity
  • group membership
  • marital status
  • Financial Capital
  • Other factors include age, immigrant, gender,
    market structure,environmental factors

50
Process Models
  • Initiative
  • Consolidation of resources
  • Management of the organization
  • Autonomous action (strategy)
  • Risk taking

51
Commitment and Control of Resources
  • Goal of acquiring resources for SCA
  • aware of liquidity and time requirements
  • too soon and the wrong resources might be
    obtained
  • While managers seek to control and own resources
    (for status and power) Es are willing to borrow
    and rent non strategic resources

52
Management Structure
  • Usually prefer a flat organization with informal
    networks
  • coordination important because nonstrategic
    resources are uncontrolled and must be shared
  • Incentives are usually deferred compensation,
    stock options, equity

53
Knowledge
  • Critical to a start up - often a result of a spin
    off
  • Tacit knowledge most important - the way of doing
    - uncodified
  • much harder to duplicate
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