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E & The Arts. Chapter 3 The Market. The Market. Four Distinct Groups The Consumer Market Distribution Agents The State Sponsors Each needs specific strategies. Terms. Globalization Competition Industry Fragmentation. One Company, Four Target Markets. Consumer Market
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E & The Arts Chapter 3 The Market
The Market • Four Distinct Groups • The Consumer Market • Distribution Agents • The State • Sponsors • Each needs specific strategies
Terms • Globalization • Competition • Industry Fragmentation
One Company, Four Target Markets • Consumer Market • Individuals who buy a specific good or service • Comprised of virtually 100% of the population • However, not everyone buys everything • Market segmentation does occur
Market Segmentation • Four known segmentation factors • Family values • Education and the value it places on art • Past experiences with art • Amateur art practice • You can get far more detailed than this in your attempt at segmentation
The Distribution Market • An agent or intermediary • Performing arts--- a presenter
The State as a Market • Federal • Regional • Local • Support cultural enterprises in a variety of ways • In US only 6% of budget comes from public sources
Cause Related Marketing • Benefits to giver • Elevated social status • Visibility • Advertising • Goodwill • More attractive workforce
Market Demand • May be expressed either; • Quantitatively • Monetarily • Demand expressed quantitatively is usually more realistic and comparable over time and geography
A Definition • There is a distinction made between Market Demand (MD) and Corporate Demand (CD) • CD= The business done by one company (perhaps yours) • MD= The sum total of all CD.
Market Share • A particular business’ share of the overall demand for its product.
Demand Real and Potential • Real Demand= overall sales volume in a specific time period • Potential Demand= The maximum level that may be reached by a product in a given context • If the real and potential demand are equal, the market is said to have reached the saturation point
Changes in Market Demand • World Leisure Market, Tremendous growth between the 60’s and the 80’s • Reasons • Women's liberation • Larger population • More leisure time • Higher incomes • Higher education levels • Baby boomers
Competition • Who is the competition? • Other cultural products • Other products designed to occupy the consumer’s free time, such as sports, travel, continuing education, hobbies, etc.
Competition • Three types • Competition within the category • Competition between genres of cultural products • Competition between cultural products and leisure products
Globalization • Makes it possible to both export and import many cultural products • While exporting the product gives additional venues, importing the product creates increased competition
Industry Fragmentation • Porters 5 Forces
Industry Fragmentation • Occurs when competitors are small yet numerous • Barriers to entry are small or nonexistent • Buyers/Suppliers are strong • Little possibility of differentiation
Competitive Advantage • Company must stand out • Must do something better than all the others • This competency must be positively viewed by consumers • If it is rare, un-imitable, un-substitutable, and valuable then it has the strong possibility of leading to a sustained competitive advantage
The Macro-Environment • The Demographic Environment • The Cultural Environment • The Economic Environment • The Political-Legal Environment • The Technological Environment