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Chapter 1 Marketing: The Art and Science of Satisfying Customers

Chapter 1 Marketing: The Art and Science of Satisfying Customers. Objectives. Define marketing, explain how it creates utility, and describe its role in the marketplace. Contrast marketing activities during the four eras in the history of marketing.

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Chapter 1 Marketing: The Art and Science of Satisfying Customers

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  1. Chapter 1Marketing: The Art and Science of Satisfying Customers

  2. Objectives • Define marketing, explain how it creates utility, and describe its role in the marketplace. • Contrast marketing activities during the four eras in the history of marketing. • Explain the importance of avoiding marketing myopia. • Describe the characteristics of not-for-profit marketing.

  3. Objectives • Identify and briefly explain each of the five types of nontraditional marketing. • Explain the shift from transaction-based marketing to relationship and social marketing. • Identify the universal functions of marketing. • Demonstrate the relationship between ethical business practices, social responsibility, and marketplace success.

  4. What is Marketing? • Organizations must create utility to survive

  5. Table 1.1 - Four Types of Utility

  6. A Definition of Marketing • Marketing - An organizational function and a set of processes for: • Creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers • Managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its stakeholders

  7. Today’s Global Marketplace • Factors that have extended economic views • Increase in international trade agreements • Growth of electronic business • Interdependence of the world’s economies

  8. Figure 1.1 - Five Eras of Marketing History

  9. Characteristics of the Five Eras

  10. Converting Needs to Wants • Consumers acquire goods and services on a continuing basis to fill certain needs • To convert needs into wants, marketers: • Focus on the benefits of goods and services

  11. Avoiding Marketing Myopia • Marketing myopia - Management’s failure to recognize the scope of its business • Focusing on customer need satisfaction can overcome myopia

  12. Not-for-Profit Marketing • Marketing in not-for-profit organizations • Marketing strategy is adopted to meet service objectives • Not-for-profit organizations form alliances with business firms for mutual benefit • Characteristics of not-for-profit marketing • Does not focus on bottom line • Markets to multiple audiences

  13. Table 1.3 - Categories of Nontraditional Marketing

  14. From Transaction-Based Marketingto Relationship Marketing • Transaction-based marketing - Buyer and seller exchanges characterized by limited communications and little or no ongoing relationships between the parties • Marketers realize that consumers are becoming more and more sophisticated

  15. Using Social Marketing to Build Relationships • Focus is on moving the customers up the loyalty ladder to increase their lifetime value • Interactive marketing - Buyer–seller communications in which the customer controls the amount and type of information received from a marketer • It is increasingly taking place on social mediasites like Facebook, Twitter, and blogs

  16. Figure 1.2 - Converting New Customers to Advocates

  17. Developing Partnerships and Strategic Alliances • Strategic alliances -Partnerships in which companies combine resources and capital to create competitive advantages in the market • Forms of alliances • Product development partnerships • Vertical alliances • Not-for-profit organizations often raise awareness and funds through strategic partnerships

  18. Figure 1.3 - Eight Universal Marketing Functions

  19. Ethics and Social Responsibility • Companies that promote ethics and socialresponsibility produce increased employee loyalty and customer growth • Social responsibility programs are meant to enhance a society’s welfare • Help in improving public image of the firm • Sustainable products and practices are goals of socially responsible firms

  20. Strategic Implications of Marketing in the 21st Century • Advances and innovations in electronic commerce and computer technologies have allowed organizations to: • Reach new markets • Reduce selling and marketing costs • Enhance their relationships with customers and suppliers

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