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Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
Lesson
8
Lesson
overview and learning objectives:
In
last Lesson we tried to understand
the concept of Portfolio in detail
and had a brief
concept
regarding
the marketing process. The marketing
process consists of four
steps: analyzing market
opportunities;
developing marketing strategies; planning marketing
programs, which
entails
choosing
the marketing mix (the four
Ps of product, price, place,
and promotion); and
organizing,
implementing,
and controlling the marketing
effort. Today we will be
covering Marketing
process
in
more detail:
A.
MARKETING
PROCESS
The
Marketing Process
Once
the strategic plan has
defined the company's overall mission and
objectives, marketing plays
a
role in carrying out these
objectives.
The
marketing
process is the
process of analyzing market opportunities,
selecting target markets,
developing
the marketing mix, and
managing the marketing effort.
Target customers stand at
the
center
of the marketing process. There
are following steps in
Marketing Process:
5.
Analyzing marketing opportunities
6.
Selecting target
markets
7.
Developing the marketing
Mix
8.
Managing the marketing
effort
a.
Analyzing marketing opportunities
First
step of the marketing process is
analyzing market opportunities and availing
these
opportunities
to satisfy the customer's requirements to
have competitive advantage.
The marketing
function
of analyzing market opportunities is important in
the marketing planning process.
Any
marketing
manager must analyses the
long-run opportunities in the market to
improve the business
unit's
performance. To evaluate its opportunities
firms needs to operate a
reliable marketing
information
system.
Marketing
research is an indispensable marketing
tool for this purpose.
Researching the market
allows
the company to gather
information about their customers,
competitors and any
environmental
changes to determine the market
opportunities. Once the market
opportunities
have
been analyzed then modern
marketing practice calls for
dividing the market into
major
market
segments, evaluating each segment,
and selecting and targeting those market
segments that
the
company can best
serve
b.
Selecting the target Market:
To
succeed in today's competitive
marketplace, companies must be customer
centered. They must
win
customers from competitors and
keep them by delivering
greater value.
·
Sound
marketing requires a careful, deliberate
analysis of consumers.
·
Since
companies cannot satisfy all
consumers in a given market, they must
divide up the
total
market (market segmentation), choose the
best segments (market targeting),
and
design
strategies for profitably serving
chosen segments better
than the competition
(market
positioning).
Market
segmentation is the
process of dividing a market into
distinct groups of buyers with
different
needs,
characteristics, or behavior who
might require separate products or
marketing mixes.
Market
targeting is the
process of evaluating each market
segment's attractiveness and
selecting one
or
more segments to enter. A
company should target segments in
which it can generate the
greatest
36
Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
customer
value and sustain it over
time. A company may decide
to serve only one or a few
special
segments,
or perhaps it might decide to
offer a complete range of products to
serve all market
segments.
Special segments may be
called "market niches." Most
companies enter a new
market
by
serving a single segment, and if
this proves successful, they
add segments.
Market
positioning is
arranging for a product to
occupy a clear distinctive
and desirable place
relative
to
competing products in the
minds of target consumers. In positioning
a product, a company
first
needs to identify possible
competitive advantages upon
which to build the position.
To gain
competitive
advantage, the company must
offer greater competitive
advantage to the
target
segment.
The company's entire marketing program
should support the chosen
positioning strategy.
Effective
positioning begins with
actually differentiating the company's
marketing offer so that
it
gives
consumers more value than
they are offered by the
competition.
c.
Developing the Marketing Mix
Once
the company has decided on
its overall competitive marketing strategy, it
is
ready
to
begin
planning the details of the
marketing mix. The marketing
mix is the
set of controllable
marketing
variables that the firm
blends to produce the response it wants in
the target market.
The
marketing
mix consists of everything
that the firm can do to
influence the demand for its
product.
These
variables are often referred to as
the "four Ps."
1).
Product
stands
for the "goods-and-service" combination
the company offers to the
target
market.
2).
Price
stands
for the amount of money
customers have to pay to obtain
the product.
3).
Place
stands
for company activities that
make the product available
to target consumers.
4).
Promotion
stands
for activities that communicate
the merits of the product
and persuade
target
consumers to buy it.
An
effective marketing program blends all of
the marketing mix elements
into a coordinated
program
designed to achieve the company's
marketing objectives by delivering value to
consumers.
Some
critics feel that the four Ps
omit or underestimate certain important
activities.
1).
"Where are services?" they
ask.
2).
"Where is packaging?"
3).
The 4 Ps seems to take the
seller's view rather than
the buyer's view.
4).
Perhaps a better classification
would be the 4 Cs:
a).
Product = Customer Solution.
b).
Price = Customer Cost.
c).
Place = Convenience.
d).
Promotion = Communication.
d.
Managing the Marketing
Effort
The
company wants to design and
put into action the
marketing mix that will best
achieve its
objectives
in target markets. This
involves four marketing management
functions. The four
functions
are: analysis,
planning, implementation, and
control
a.
Marketing Analysis:
Marketing
analysis involves a complete analysis of
the company's situation. The
company performs
analysis
by Identifying environmental
opportunities and threats. Analyzing
company strengths and
weaknesses
to determine which opportunities the
company can best pursue.
Feeding information
and
other inputs to each of the
other marketing management
functions.
37
Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
b.
Marketing
Planning:
Within
each business unit,
functional plans must be
prepared, including marketing
plans. Such
plans
include marketing plans which
are aggregate plans consisting of
plans for product
lines,
brands
and markets.
Marketing
planning involves deciding on marketing
strategies that will help
the company to attain
its
overall strategic objectives. A detailed
plan is needed for each
business, product, or brand.
A
product
or brand plan
should
contain the following
sections:
executive
C
ontents o f a M a rketing Pla n
summary,
current marketing
situation,
threats
and
opportunity
analysis,
Executive
Summary
objectives
and
issues,
Current
M arketing Situation
marketing
strategies, action
Threats
and Opportunity Analysis
programs,
budgets, and
controls.
Objectives
and Issues
M
arketing Strategy
Contents
of
Marketing
Action
Program s
Plan
Budgets
1.
Executive
Controls
summary
-
The
opening
section
of
the marketing plan that
presents a short summary of
the main goals
and
recommendations
to be presented in the
plan.
2.
Current
marketing situation - The
section of a marketing plan that
describes the
target
market and the company's position in
it. The current marketing
situation is the
section
of a marketing plan that describes
the target market and the
company's position
in
it. Important sections
include:
1).
A market description.
2).
A product review.
3).
Analysis of the competition.
4).
A section on distribution.
3.
Opportunities
and Issues Analysis- This
section requires the marketing
manager to
look
ahead for threats and
opportunities that the
product(s) might face. A
company
marketing
opportunity would be an attractive
arena for marketing action
in which the
company
would enjoy a competitive
advantage. In the threats and
opportunities
section,
managers are forced to
anticipate important developments that
can have an
impact,
either positive or negative, on the
firm. Having studied the
product's threats
and
opportunities, the manager
can now set objectives and
consider issues that
will
affect
them.
4.
Objectives
- Objectives
should be stated as goals
the company would like to
reach
during
the plan's term.
5.
Marketing
strategy - The
marketing logic by which the business
unit hopes to achieve
its
marketing objectives. Marketing strategy
consists of specific strategies
for target
markets,
marketing mix and marketing
expenditure level. Strategies
should be created
for
all marketing mix components.
The marketing budget is a section of the
marketing
plan
that shows projected revenues, costs,
and profits. The last
section of the
marketing
plan outlines the controls
that will be used to monitor
progress. This allows
for
progress checks and
corrective action.
38
Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
6.
Action
programs - This
section sets out what
will be done, when, by whom
and how
much
will be spent doing
it.
7.
Projected
profit-and-loss statement - The
marketing budget section of the
plan
shows
projected revenues, costs and
profits/surpluses.
8.
Controls
- This
last section outlines the
control measures that will
be used to monitor
progress.
Goals may be set out weekly,
monthly, quarterly, annually or
for all such
periods.
Following evaluation of results, actions
are recommended and implemented
in
the
next period.
c.
Marketing Implementation:
Marketing
Implementation is the process
that turns marketing plans
into marketing actions in
order
to accomplish strategic marketing objectives. Whereas
marketing planning addresses the
and
"why"
of marketing activities, implementation addresses
the "who", "where", "when",
and "how".
One
firm can have essentially
the same strategy as
another, yet win in the
market- place through
faster
or better execution. Successful
implementation depends on an action
program that pulls
all
of
the people and activities
together and forms sound
formal organizational structure its
decision
and
reward structure (HRM functions
and procedures) and the
firm's marketing strategies
fitting
with
its company culture (the
shared system of values and
beliefs).
Marketing
Department Organization
The
company must design a marketing
department that can carry
out marketing analysis,
planning,
implementation,
and control. Formats for
organizing the department
include:
1).
The functional
organization where
different marketing activities are headed
by a
functional
specialist (such as a sales manager,
advertising manager, etc.).
2).
The geographic
organization where
sales and marketing people
are assigned
to
specific
countries, regions, or districts.
3).
A product
management organization where a
product manager develops a
complete
strategy
for a product or brand.
Today, many firms are
shifting to customer
equity management
where
customer profitability is
important.
4).
A market
or customer management organization where a
specific market plan is
developed
for each specific market or
customer.
5).
A combination
plan where
large companies many times
combine elements of any of the
above.
d.
Marketing Control
Marketing
control is the process of
measuring and evaluating the results of
marketing strategies
and
plans, and
taking
M
a r k e tin g C o n tr o l
corrective
action to ensure
that
marketing objectives
P
ro c e s s
are
attained.
Implementation
requires
four
steps:
1).
Set specific goals
M
e a s u re
E
v a lu a te
Take
Set
(What
do we want to
P
e rfo rm a n c e
P
e rfo rm a n c e
C
o r r e c tiv e
G
o a ls
achieve?).
A
c tio n
2).
Measure
performance
(What is
happening?).
3).
Evaluate
performance
(Why is it happening?).
4).
Take corrective action (What
should we do about
it?).
39
Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
Two
broad forms of control are
important:
1).
Operating
control involves
checking ongoing performance against the
annual plan and
taking
corrective action when
necessary.
2).
Strategic
control involves
looking at whether the company's
basic strategies are
well
matched
to its opportunities. The major
tool for accomplishing this
form of control is
the
marketing
audit. The marketing
audit is a comprehensive,
systematic, independent, and periodic
examination
of a company's environment, objectives, strategies,
and activities to determine
problem
areas and opportunities. The
purpose is to recommend a plan of action to
improve the
company's
marketing performance.
1).
The marketing plan covers
all major marketing areas of a
business, and not just
trouble
spots.
2).
If done correctly, the audit is
normally conducted by an objective
and
experienced
outside party who is independent of the
marketing department.
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