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Marketing Principles and Practice – Chapter 1 (Lecture Summary)

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This document provides a structured summary of Chapter 1 on marketing principles and practice, covering foundational concepts such as the definition of marketing, market orientation, customer value, the marketing mix, and relationship marketing. It explains key distinctions like customers vs. consumers, sales vs. marketing, and acquisition vs. retention. The summary also includes insights on customer centricity, service-dominant logic, co-creation, CRM, and the broader societal impact of marketing.

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November 18, 2025
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2025/2026
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chapter 1: Marketing principles and and practice
1.1 What is marketing?
goal = to understand and meet customer needs to create value
definition: Marketing is a social and managerial process by which individuals and groups
obtain what they need and want through creating and exchanging products and value with
others.
→ In business context: To build and maintain profitable relationships with stakeholders

What does marketing apply to?:
-​ Physical products
-​ Services
-​ Retail
-​ Experiences
-​ Events
-​ Film, music, and theater
-​ Places
-​ Ideas
-​ Charity and non-profit
-​ People
=> anywhere “buyers” have a choice

1.2. What is the difference between customers and consumers?

consumers’ buying roles




1.3. Market Orientation
Definition: “The organization-wide generation of market intelligence pertaining to current and
future customer needs, dissemination of the intelligence across the departments, and
organization-wide responsiveness to it”
→ Organization-wide belief in delivering customer value (= every department should think
about a customer's need)
→ Create products to meet existing and latent needs

, the 3 components of marketing orientation:
-​ Customer orientation = focus on customers.
-​ Competitor orientation = watch the competition.
-​ Interfunctional coordination = teamwork across the company.




Customer centricity:
Not trying to please all customers
Fulfilling needs in a profitable way

1.5. Differences between sales and marketing
Sales: Product push, short-term focus on satisfaction of customer needs

Marketing: Product pull, long-term focus on satisfaction of customer needs, high focus on
stimulation of demand


marketing sales

long term satisfaction of customer needs short term satisfaction of customer needs

co-creation lesser input into customer design of offering

high focus on stimulation of demand more focused on meeting existing demand



acquisition vs. retention
obtaining a good relationship vs. maintaining it

Tip of the iceberg → What consumers see is only a fraction of companies’
overall business strategies

Selling = the tip of the iceberg
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