Title: Defining%20Marketing%20for%20the%2021st%20century
1Defining Marketing for the 21st century
- Instructor Omid (Hassan) Samarian
- Teacher Dr.Ahmad Zadeh
2What is marketing?
- simply put Marketing is the delivery of customer
satisfaction at a profit. - Marketing is a social and managerial process
whereby individuals and groups obtain what they
need and want through creating and exchanging
products and value with others.
3Marketing importance and role
4Core concepts of Marketing
- Needs, wants, demands
- Products, services, and experiences
- Value, satisfaction, and quality
- Exchange, transaction, and relationships
- Markets
5Needs, wants, and Demands
- Human needs are states of felt deprivation. They
are basic human requirements. These needs were
not invented by marketers they are a basic part
of the human makeup. - Wants are the form human needs take as they are
shaped by culture and individual personality.
Wants are shaped by ones society. - Demands human wants that are backed by buying
power.
6Products, services, and experiences
- A product is anything that can be offered to a
market to satisfy a need or want. It includes
physical objects, services, persons, places,
organizations, and ideas. - Thus the term product includes more than just the
physical properties of a good or service. It also
includes a brands meaning to consumers. - The term product also includes more than just
goods or services. Consumers decide which events
to experience, which entertainers to watch on TV,
which places to visit on vacation, which
organizations to support through contributions,
and which ideas to adopt. To the consumer, these
are all products. - Service an activity or benefit that one party
can offer to another that is essentially
intangible, and does not result in the ownership
of anything.
7Value, satisfaction, and quality
- Customer value is the difference between the
values the customer gains from owning and using a
product and the costs of obtaining the product.
Customers often do not judge product values and
costs accurately or objectively. They act on
perceived value. - Value proposition a set of benefits to satisfy
needs Value Benefits / Costs (functional
benefits emotional benefits) / - (monetary costs time costs energy costs
psychic costs) Customer satisfaction depends on
a products perceived performance in delivering
value relative to a buyers expectations. If the
products performance falls short of the
customers expectations, the buyer is
dissatisfied. If performance matches
expectations, the buyer is satisfied. If
performance exceeds expectations, the buyer is
delighted. - Note a company can always increase customer
satisfaction by lowering its price or increasing
its services, but this may result in lower
profits. Thus, the purpose of marketing is to
generate customer value profitably. This requires
a very delicate balance the marketer must
continue to generate more customer value and
satisfaction but not give away the house. - In the narrowest sense, Quality can be defined as
freedom from defects. - Marketers have two major responsibilities in a
quality-centered company. - first, they must participate in forming
strategies that will help the company with
through total quality excellence. - Second, marketers must deliver marketing quality
as well as production quality.
8Exchange, transaction, and relationships
- Exchange the act of obtaining a desired object
from someone by offering something in term. - Transaction 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. - Relationship marketing the process of creating,
maintaining, and enhancing strong, value-laden
relationships with customers and other
stakeholders.
9Marketing and exchange
- Marketing (Kotler, 1980) human activity directed
as satisfying needs and wants through exchange
processes. - Exchange is the core concept of marketing
- Exchange is a value creating process because it
leaves both parties better off. - There are at least two parties.
- Each party has something that might be of value
to the other party. - Each party is capable of communication and
delivery. - Each party believe it is appropriate or desirable
to deal with the other party. - The focal point in an exchange is marketing offer
combination of products, services, information,
or experience that satisfy a need or want.
10Markets
- Economists describe a market as a collection of
buyers and sellers who transact over a particular
product or product class. - Marketers often use the term market to cover
various grouping of customers. - Market the set of all actual and potential
buyers of a product or service.
11Key customer markets
12What is marketed?
13Marketing management
- Marketing management
- is the analysis, planning, implementation, and
control of programs designed to create, build,
and maintain beneficial exchanges with target
buyers for the purpose of achieving
organizational objectives. - Marketing management is concerned not only with
finding and increasing demand but also with
changing or even reducing it. (Demand management)
- Demarketing marketing to reduce demand
temporarily or permanently- the aim is not to
destroy demand but only to reduce or shift it.
14Marketing management the newest definition
- Marketing management is the art and science
- of choosing target markets, and getting, keeping,
and growing customers through creating,
delivering, and communicating - Superior customer value.
15Marketing management practice
- In fact, marketing practice often passes through
three stages - 1. Entrepreneurial marketing most companies are
- Started by individuals who live by their wits.
They visualize an opportunity and knock on every
door to gain attention. - 2. Formulated marketing as small companies
achieve success, they inevitably move toward more
formulated marketing. - 3. Entrepreneurial marketing many large and
mature companies need to reestablish within their
companies the entrepreneurial spirit and actions
that made them successful in the first place.
They need to encourage more initiative and
Entrepreneurial at the local level.
16Marketing management tasks
- Developing marketing strategies
- Delivering value
- Capturing marketing insights
- Building strong brands
- Connecting with customers
- Communicating value
- Creating long-term growth
- Shaping market offerings
17Marketing management philosophies
18Production and product orientation
- Production orientation
- It holds that consumers will prefer products that
are very cheap and widely available. - High volume, production efficiency, basic
features, mass distribution. - Product orientation
- It holds that consumers will favor those products
that offer the most quality, performance or
innovative features. - Making superior products and improve it.
19Selling concept
- It holds that consumers will ordinary not buy
enough of the organizations product. - The Company should undertake aggressive selling
and promotion efforts. - Sell more stuff to more people more often for
more money in order to make more profit. - The aim is to sell what we make rather than
making what market wants.
20Marketing orientation
- Instead of product or selling, it focuses on
customers. - Instead of hunting, marketing is gardening
- The job is not to find the right product for your
customers. - Being more effective than competitors in
creating, delivering and communication superior
customer value to the target market.
21- Thank You For Your Patience Attention