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Marketing in a Domestic Environment – Part I. Class 3. Marketing: Micro and Macro levels. Macro Level: Marketing is the process by which buyers and sellers are brought together and discrepancies of assortments, place, and time are resolved. Marketing activities include:
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Marketing: Micro and Macro levels • Macro Level: • Marketing is the process by which buyers and sellers are brought together and discrepancies of assortments, place, and time are resolved. • Marketing activities include: • Communication to inform buyers and sellers about each other. • Negotiation and consummation of transactions • Transportation of goods from the point of production to the point of purchase. • Storage of goods from the time of production to the time of purchase
Revisiting Utopinasia • David and Hugo are trading shirts and pants • A mutually beneficial exchange rate has been set • Both engaged in market-making activities to facilitate the trade • Benefits of trade exceed cost of market-making activities
Revisiting Utopinasia • Now let’s add other producers of shirts and pants • How will this change Hugo and David’s approach to trade?
= Marketing Strategy STP • Mass Marketing or Undifferentiated Marketing:Go after the whole market with one offer and focus on common needs rather than differences • Product-variety Marketing or Differentiated Marketing: target several market segments and design separate offers for each. • Target Marketing or Concentrated Marketing: Large share of one or a few sub-markets. Good when company’s resources are limited.
Requirements of an Effective Segmentation In order for a customer segmentation to be effective, it must be meaningful, actionable, measurable and substantial Meaningful • Customers must demonstrate needs, aspirations or behavioral patterns that are similar within a segment and different across segments • A distinction between a price sensitive and a quality seeking segment is meaningful, since the two segments demonstrate distinguishable sets of needs Actionable • A company must be able to reach customers within each segment through effective and targeted marketing programs • A customer segment consisting of customers with blue eyes is not actionable, since it is very hard to identify and reach only customers with blue eyes Substantial • Segments must be large and profitable enough to make the investment in serving them worthwhile • myCFO.com is targeted towards high net worth individuals, helping them manage their portfolios. Even though the number of those individuals is small, the $ amount managed is sizeable, thus constituting a substantial segment Measurable • Key characteristics of the segments (e.g. size and spending patterns) must be easy to measure Source: Philip Kotler, Marketing Management, 1997 (Chapter 9, page 269)
Positioning • Positioning Simply, positioning is how your target market defines you in relation to your competitors. • A good position: 1. Makes you unique 2. Is considered a benefit by your target market
Positioning Strategies • Positioning Strategies There are seven positioning strategies that can be pursued: • Product Attributes: What are the specific product attributes? • Benefits: What are the benefits to the customers? • Usage Occasions: When / how can the product be used? • Users: Identify a class of users. • Against a Competitor: Positioned directly against a competitor. • Away from a Competitor: Positioned away from competitor. • Product Classes: Compared to different classes of products.
Positioning Differences The differences that are promoted for a product must be: • Important: The difference delivers a highly valued benefit to the target buyers • Distinctive: Competitors do not offer the difference, or the company can offer it in a more distinctive way • Superior: The difference is superior to other ways that the customer might obtain the same benefit • Communicable: The difference can be explained and communicated to the target buyers • Preemptive: Competitors cannot easily copy the difference • Affordable: Buyers can afford to pay the difference • Profitable: Company can introduce the difference profitably
The Marketing Task (Controllable) Implementation MarketingStrategy • Product • Price • Promotion • Distribution • Segmentation • Targeting • Positioning
Domestic environment (uncontrollable) Competitive structure Political/ legal forces Economic climate The Domestic Marketing Task Implementation MarketingStrategy • Product • Price • Promotion • Distribution • Segmentation • Targeting • Positioning
Developing a Marketing Strategy • Situation Analysis • Segmentation and Targeting • Positioning • Marketing Objectives • Implementation - Marketing Mix • Budget