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Indicator 1.02 – Employ marketing information to develop a marketing plan. Marketing. THE MARKETING MIX. Includes four basic strategies called the 4 P’s or elements of marketing. A combination of decisions a business makes in order to best reach its target market.
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Indicator 1.02 – Employ marketing information to develop a marketing plan Marketing
THE MARKETING MIX • Includes four basic strategies called the 4 P’s or elements of marketing. A combination of decisions a business makes in order to best reach its target market. • It is called a Marketing Mix because the 4 P’s can each be adjusted to better meet the needs of the customers and company • Product • Place • Price • Promotion
The 4 P’s • Product - Businesses must decide which products to offer customers. • Level of quality, features, branding, packaging, service, and warranty are items to decide and develop for each product.
PRODUCT • Marketers as themselves questions such as: • Should we offer one product-or more than one? • Is the product a good, service, or idea? • Does the product have special features? • Does the product have multiple uses? • What resources are necessary to research and develop the product? • What level of quality should be produced or provided? • Which brands should be used? • How should the product be packaged? • How might the product affect the firm’s image? • How might customers view this product in relation to others? • Should we offer a warranty, maintenance contract, or other support services?
The 4 P’s • Place - Having the product available at the right time and location. • Also known as channel management/ distribution. • For example, store locations, website, and catalogs are the standard for most retailers today. Decisions of direct distribution or indirect distribution (intermediaries/middlemen) must be made.
PLACE • Consider the following: • Which firms to buy the product from? • When to buy the product? • How much of the product to order? • Where to make the product available? • How to process customer orders? • Which firms to involve in the process? • How to answer customer questions? • How to coordinate all of the steps involved?
The 4 P’s • Price - The amount a business charges customers for a product. • What competition is charging, determining seasonal discounts and allowances, and credit terms.
PRICE • Determine pricing objectives: • Getting their product into more customers’ hands. • Helping customers view their firm as distinct from competitors • Bringing in the amount of income they need or want. • Raising the product’s value in the customer’s eyes • Matching the product’s value with what customers expect to receive
The 4 P’s • Promotion - Informing and reminding customers of the products available to them and persuading them to purchase. Promotional Mix includes advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, and publicity. • These decisions are based on the budget a business sets for the promotional mix.
PROMOTION • Consider the following: • Which messages to send? • Which media to use? • When they want messages delivered? • How often they want messages delivered? • How to coordinate communication efforts? • How to evaluate results? The ultimate goal of promotion is to generate a positive response from customers.
IMPORTANCE OF THE 4 P’S • Product is important to obtain or develop the best product mix within your market and your target market. • Place is important because it is the avenues you come into contact with your customers. This is the element that has direct impact on loyalty and repeat customers. • Price is important because it establishes your profit and set the quality level of your products/services. • Promotion is important because it communicates with your customers so they know about your product mix.
DO YOU KNOW?? • How should the product be packaged? Product • Should we offer credit and layaway? Pricing • Should we allow our product to be sold by a wholesaler? Place • How often should we advertise? Promotion
How many sales people should we hire? Promotion • Should we offer guarantees or warranties? Product • Which type of transportation should we use to move the product? Place • What should be offered for sale? Product • How often should we put the product on sale? Price • Which celebrity could we use to entice customers into the store? Promotion
RELATIONSHIP OF GOALS, TACTICS, & STRATEGIES TO THE MARKETING MIX • Goals/Objectives: Specific statements that clearly communicate what the business expects to achieve. • Established to fulfill the mission statement • Must be single-minded, realistic, specific, measurable, consistent with each other and with overall company goals, and must include a time frame for completion • Strategies: Specific statements indicating how the business expects to accomplish its objectives taking the demands of the target market(s) into account. • Identify target markets • Identify appropriate marketing mix choices • Utilize information obtained during SWOT analysis
RELATIONSHIP OF GOALS, TACTICS, & STRATEGIES TO THE MARKETING MIX • Tactics: • Tangible, measurable tasks that have to be completed to accomplish the strategic objectives. • Tactics are the day-to-day activities that step the company toward its goals. • Tactics are used to reach the strategies that then meet the goals.
Coming up w/ Marketing Strategy You own a RESTAURANT • Goal: A family-style restaurant wants to increase sales • Strategy: Add a kids’ menu in order to increase sales to young parents in the area • Tactics : To introduce the new kids’ menu, the family style restaurant might decide to use the following tactics: • 1. Introduce kid-tested meals • A)spaghetti & meatballs C) hot dog w/chips • B) macaroni & cheese D) hamburger w/fries • 2. Offer a free ice cream cone to each child
What is a Market? • Market: The group of all potential customers who have similar needs and wants and have the ability to buy the product. Businesses must understand who the potential consumers are in order to effectively meet their needs and wants.
WHAT IS A TARGET MARKET? • Identified segments of the market that a business wants to have as their customers. For example, teenagers, mothers-to-be, single mothers, American Family, men .vs. women, or college freshman. Each example has wants and needs that can be targeted and utilized to develop effective strategies to reach existing and/or potential customers.
IMPORTANCE OF TARGET MARKETS • A target market represents the people most likely to buy what you sell. These people have something in common that solidifies their desire for your product or service. And that something distinguishes them from the market at large.
MASS MARKETING • A single marketing plan used to reach all consumers. • Ex. Chewing gum & light bulbs
MASS MARKETING • Advantages • Don’t have to pay for the production of similar products • Can price and distribute one type of product more easily than many • Can send one promotional message to everyone • Easier to manage, cost effective • Predictable response rates • Easy to set up. • Disadvantages: • Diversity of the audience • Unable to track return, low response rates • Nonpersonal • Beliefs that everyone is the same • Low profit margins • High competition
SEGMENTATION • Market Segmentation is the process of dividing a larger market into smaller parts. • Market segment is a subgroup of a larger market that share one or more characteristics.
MARKET SEGMENTATION • Advantages: • Providing the products customers want • Effective communication • Higher response rate, • Repeat and loyal customers • Personal • Disadvantages: • More expensive, more difficult to produce • Expensive to set up • Requires more marketing research
4 TYPES OF MARKET SEGMENTATION • Demographic • Psychographic • Geographic • Behavioral
DEMOGRAPHIC SEGMENTATION • Gender: indicates purchase preferences • Origin or heritage: race, ethnicity, nationality • Religion • Social or economic status: education level, occupation, income • Life stage: age, generation, marital status, family life cycle, family size.
GEOGRAPHIC SEGMENTATION • Markets divided by where the customer lives. • It is valuable information because businesses can tailor their product mix based on location. Characteristics are nations, states, regions, counties, cities, or neighborhoods.
PSYCHOGRAPHIC SEGMENTATION • Defined: Markets divided by social and psychological characteristics. (value/morals, attitude Lifestyles, and interests) • Characteristics reflect consumer buying behaviors. The characteristics are Interests, Habits, Activities, Lifestyles, Opinions, & Hobbies. These reflect who your customers are. Businesses that use Marketing principles to guide their decision making must evaluate and reevaluate their customer’s wants and needs continuously to stay ahead in the game.
BEHAVORIAL SEGMENTATION • Dividing the market into groups based on what they are looking for in a product and why they buy the product • Types of behavioral segmentation: • Product Benefits • Usage • Loyalty • Occasions
ACTIVITY • Pick a person and decide the following about that person: • Demographic – what age, gender, race, etc • Geographic – where does she live: east, west, suburbs, urban, etc • Psychographic – what does this person like to do? Run, dance, fun, etc • Behavioral – specifics; runs three miles, works out daily, looking for a shoe that’s stylish, etc. • Type a description of person on computer. • Go to Nikeid.nike.com and customink.com and create a shoe and shirt that would appeal to that specific segmentation. • Cut out pictures and description and paste to separate sheet of paper; label “MARKETING SEGMENTATION”