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Summary Foundations of Marketing

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Herewith a summary for the exam Foundations of Marketing in year 1. This summary includes all the key concepts needed to know. With this summary, I obtained an 8!

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Uploaded on
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Chapter 1
What is marketing?

Marketing: The process by which companies engage customers, build strong customer
relationships, and create customer value in order to capture value from customers in return

Forms of marketing:
 Traditional
1. Making a sale
2. Abundance of products in the nearby shopping centers
3. Television, magazine, and direct-mail ads
 Contemporary
1. Satisfying customer needs
2. Imaginative websites and mobile phone, apps, blogs, and social media
3. Reach customers directly, personally, and interactively

Marketing mix: A combination of factors that can be controlled by a company to influence
consumers to purchase its products. The marketing mix tools should be blended into a
comprehensive integrated marketing program
 Product
 Price
 Place or distribution
 Promotion or communication

Core customer and marketplace concepts: Five-step model for creating and capturing
customer value
 Needs, wants, and demands
1. Needs: Physical and social needs
2. Wants: Form of human need shaped by culture and individual personality
3. Demands: Human wants that are backed by buying power
 Market offering: Products, services, information, or experiences offered to a market to
satisfy a need or a want
 Value and satisfaction
 Exchanges and relationships: Actions taken to create, maintain, and grow desirable
exchange relationships with target audiences involving a product, service, or idea
 Markets: Set of all actual and potential buyers of a product or service

Marketing myopia: The mistake of paying more attention to the specific products a company
offers than to the benefits and experiences produced by these products

Marketing management: The art and science of choosing target markets and building
profitable relationships with them. Once it fully understands consumers and the marketplace,
marketing management can design a customer value-driven marketing strategy
 Market segmentation
 Target marketing
 Differentiate and position

Marketing management orientations: Marketing management wants to design strategies
that will engage target customers and build profitable relationships with them
 Production concept: Consumers will favor products that are available and highly
affordable
 Product concept: Consumers will favor products that offer the most quality, performance,
and features


1

, Selling concept: Consumers will not buy enough of the firm’s products unless the firm
undertakes a large-scale selling and promotion effort
 Marketing concept: Knowing the needs and wants of target markets and delivering the
desired satisfaction better than competitors do
 Societal marketing concept: Overlooks possible conflicts between consumer short-run
wants and consumer long-run welfare

Societal marketing concept:
 Society: Human welfare
 Consumers: Want satisfaction
 Company: Profits

Chapter 1
Engaging customers

Customer satisfaction: The extent to which a product’s perceived performance matches a
buyer’s expectations

Customer lifetime value: Value of the entire stream of purchases a customer makes over a
lifetime of patronage

Share of customer: The portion of the customer’s purchasing that a company gets in its
product categories. Share of customer is increased by
 Good customer relationship management
 Offering greater variety to current customers
 Creating programs to cross-sell and up-sell to existing customers

Customer equity: The total combined customer lifetime values of all of the company’s
current and potential customers

Chapter 2
Company’s wide strategic planning

Strategic planning: The process of developing and maintaining a strategic fit between the
organization’s goals and capabilities and its changing marketing opportunities

Strategic planning process:
1. Defining the company mission
 Mission statement: A statement of the organization’s purpose—what it wants to
accomplish in the larger environment
2. Setting company objectives and goals: Corporate level
3. Designing the business portfolio
4. Planning marketing and other functional strategies: Business unit, product, and market
level

Business portfolio: The collection of businesses and products that make up the company.
The best business portfolio is the one that best fits the company’s strengths and weaknesses
to opportunities in the environment

Portfolio analysis: The process by which management evaluates the products and
businesses that make up the company. The company will want to put strong resources into
its more profitable businesses and phase down or drop its weaker ones

Growth-share matrix: A portfolio-planning method that evaluates a company’s strategic
business units in terms of market growth rate and relative market share

2

,  Stars: High-growth and high-share businesses or products
 Cash cows: Low-growth and high-share businesses or products
 Questions marks: Low-share business units in high-growth markets
 Dogs: Low-growth and low-share businesses and products

Chapter 2
Marketing strategy and mix

Marketing strategy: The marketing logic by which the company hopes to create customer
value and achieve profitable customer relationships

Customer value-driven marketing strategy:
 Market segmentation: Dividing a market into distinct groups of buyers who have different
needs, characteristics, or behaviors and who might require separate marketing strategies
or mixes
 Market targeting: The process of evaluating each market segment’s attractiveness and
selecting one or more segments to enter
 Positioning: Arranging for a product to occupy a clear, distinctive, and desirable place
relative to competing products in the minds of target consumers
 Differentiation: Actually differentiating the market offering to create superior customer
value

Marketing mix: The set of tactical marketing tools— product, price, place, and promotion—
that the firm blends to produce the response it wants in the target market
 Product: Acceptability
 Price: Affordability
 Place: Accessibility
 Promotion: Awareness

SWOT analysis: An overall evaluation of the company’s strengths (S), weaknesses (W),
opportunities (O), and threats (T)
 Strengths: Internal capabilities that may help a company reach its objectives
 Weaknesses: Internal limitations that may interfere with a company’s ability to achieve its
objectives
 Opportunities: External factors that the company may be able to exploit to its advantage
 Threats: Current and emerging external factors that may challenge the company’s
performance

Marketing implementation: Turning marketing strategies and plans into marketing actions
to accomplish strategic marketing objectives

Marketing control: Measuring and evaluating the results of marketing strategies and plans
and taking corrective action to ensure that the objectives are achieved

Chapter 3
The macro- and micro environment

Marketing environment: The actors and forces outside marketing that affect marketing
management’s ability to build and maintain successful relationships with target customers
 Microenvironment: Actors close to the company that affect its ability to serve its
customers
 Macroenvironment: Larger societal forces that affect the microenvironment
Actors in the microenvironment:
 The company: Marketers must work in harmony with other company departments to
create customer value and relationships

3

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