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Chapter 11 of Introduction to Business: Processes and Context

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September 27, 2017
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Marketing: building profitable
customer connections

11.1: Marketing: getting value by giving value
 American marketing association: “activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating,
communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers,
clients, partners, and society at large
 Benefit that businesses seek from marketing: long-term profitability. First they need to
deliver value to customers and other stakeholders.
 Successful marketer: delivers value by filing customer needs in ways that exceed their
expectations.
 This maintains sales in the future, and thus runs into long-term profitability.
 Utility: ability of goods and services to satisfy these wants. Since there is a wide range of
wants, products can provide utility in different ways
o Form utility: satisfies wants by converting inputs into a finished form. E.g. the
slicing, dicing and frying of potatoes into fries
o Time utility: Satisfies wants by providing goods and services and a convenient
time. E.g. evening delivery times or 24 hour restaurants
o Place utility: satisfies wants by providing goods and services at a convenient
place for customers. E.g. vending machines: refuel tired students on campus
o Ownership utility: satisfies wants by smoothly transferring ownership of goods
and services from seller to buyer. E.g. car dealers: financing options
 Satisfying wants that exceed expectations is a job that never ends.

11.1.1: scope of marketing
 For years, businesspeople have applied the principles of marketing to goods & services in
all categories.
 In the past decade, other organisations adopted marketing strategies/tactics to expand
goals
 Non-profit organisations – in private and public sectors – play a significant role in our
economy, employing more people than the federal government and all governments
combined.
 These organisations use marketing to achieve goals. E.g. colleges markets itself to
prospective students and alumni donors
 These organisations play an essential role in the expansion of marketing across our
economy. New marketing strategies:
o People marketing: sports politics and art dominate this category. Entertainers
and athletes us marketing. E.g. Paris Hilton, who builds her career on promotion,
including perfumes and fashion items.
o Place marketing: drawing people to a particular place. Cities and states use this
to attract businesses, or tourism E.g. Vegas: “what happens in Vegas… stays in
Vegas”

, o Event marketing: includes marketing or sponsoring athletic, cultural or charitable
events. Partnerships between public/private sectors are increasingly common.
E.g. Olympics
o Idea marketing: Public/private organisations market ideas that are meant to
change how people think or act. E.g. Don’t drink and drive.
 Can be used in combination: e.g. Walk for breast cancer.

11.1.2: Evolution of Marketing: product to consumer

Production era
 Marketing didn’t always begin with the customer. Consumers did not have overwhelming
number of choices that are available now. Products were purchased as soon as they were
produced/distributed.
 Top business priority was to produce large quantities as efficiently as possible.

Selling era
 Production capacity increased in 1920. Supply exceeded demand, which caused the
emergence of hard sell.
 Especially when the depression and WW2 made consumers even more reluctant to part
with their limited money

Marketing era
 In the 1950s an era of relative peace/prosperity emerged.
 Marketers attempted to provide goods and services that met the customer needs better
than anything else on the market.
 The marketing concept is a philosophy that makes customer satisfaction the central
focus.
 Companies that embrace this, strive to delight customers, integrating it in all activities

Relationship era
 Marketing concept has gathered momentum across the economy leading to the current
era: zeros in on long-term customer relationships
 Acquiring new customers costs a lot of time and money. Satisfied customers can develop
advocates for your business, becoming powerful generators.


11.2: Customers: front and centre

11.2.1: Customer relationship management (CRM)
 CRM is the centrepiece of successful marketing. It is the ongoing process of acquiring,
maintaining and growing profitable customer relationships by delivering unmatched
value.
 It works best when marketers combine communication with one-on-one personalisation.
 Information is essential: it is not possible without collecting, managing and applying the
right data at the right time for the right person.

Limited relationships
 Scope of relationship does not depend only on data you gather, but on the industry.
 E.g. companies cannot maintain a personal bond with every chocolate buyer
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