1 / 32

Chapter 1

Chapter 1. Marketing in a Changing World: Creating Customer Value and Satisfaction. Road Map: Previewing the Concepts. Define what marketing is and discuss its core concepts. Explain the relationships between customer value, satisfaction, and quality.

brody
Download Presentation

Chapter 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 1 Marketing in a Changing World: Creating Customer Value and Satisfaction

  2. Road Map: Previewing the Concepts • Define what marketing is and discuss its core concepts. • Explain the relationships between customer value, satisfaction, and quality. • Define marketing management and understand how marketers manage demand and build profitable customer relationships. • Compare the five marketing management philosophies. • Analyze the major challenges facing marketers heading into the new “connected” millennium.

  3. What Is Marketing? • Simply put: Marketing is the delivery of customer satisfaction at a profit. Goals: • Attract new customers by promising superior value. • Keep and grow current customers by delivering satisfaction.

  4. Core Marketing Concepts

  5. Marketing Defined Process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and wantthrough creating and exchangingproductsand value with others.

  6. What are Consumers’ Needs, Wants and Demands?

  7. This Is a Need Needs- state of felt deprivation including physical, social, and individual needs (e.g., food)

  8. Types of Needs • Physical: • Food, clothing, shelter, safety • Social: • Belonging, affection • Individual: • Learning, knowledge, self-expression

  9. This Is a Want Wants - form that a human need takes as shaped by culture and individual personality (e.g., pastry)

  10. This Is Demand Demand

  11. What are Consumers’ Needs, Wants, and Demands?

  12. What Will Satisfy Consumers’ Needs and Wants? Products Anything that can be Offered to a Market to Satisfy a Need or Want Experiences Persons Places Organizations Activities Ideas Services Activity or Benefit Offered for Sale That is Essentially Intangible and Does Not Result in the Ownership of Anything

  13. Value Gained From Owning a Product and Costs of Obtaining the Product isCustomer Value Product’s Perceived Performance in Delivering Value Relative to Buyer’s Expectations is Customer Satisfaction Total Quality Management Involves Improving the Quality of Products, Services, and Business Processes How Do Consumers ChooseAmong Products and Services? Customer-Driven Quality

  14. How Do Consumers Obtain Products and Services? Transactions Exchanges • Relationships • Building a Marketing • Network by Adding: • Financial Benefits • Social Benefits • Structural Ties • Profitable Customers

  15. Exchange vs. Transaction • Exchange: • Act of obtaining a desired object from someone by offering something in return. • Transaction: • A trade of values between two parties. • One party gives X to another party and gets Y in return. Can include cash, credit, check, or barter.

  16. How Do Consumers Obtain Products and Services? Transactions Exchanges • Relationships • Building a Marketing • Network by Adding: • Financial Benefits • Social Benefits • Structural Ties • Profitable Customers

  17. Interactive Student Assignment • Consider the following thought questions, formulate an answer, pair with another student, share your thoughts with one another on the following items: • When was the last time you were completely satisfied with something you purchased? • What was it? • Why were you satisfied? • What did a marketer have to do with this?

  18. Modern Marketing System

  19. Marketing Management Marketing Management Involves managing demand, which involves managing customer relationships Demand Management Finding and increasing demand, also changing or reducing demand such as in Demarketing Profitable Customer Relationships Attracting new customers and retaining and building relationships with current customers

  20. Stage 1. Entrepreneurial Marketing Marketing Management Practice Stage 2. Formulated Marketing Stage 3. Intrepreneurial Marketing

  21. Marketing Management Philosophies Production Concept Product Concept Selling Concept Marketing Concept Societal Marketing Concept Customer-Driven

  22. Marketing and Sales Concepts Contrasted

  23. Societal Marketing Concept

  24. Marketing Challenges in the New “Connected” Millennium

  25. Connecting Technologies in Computers, Telecommunications, Information, & Transportation Provide Help To: Technologies for Connecting

  26. Technologies for Connecting Create Products & Services Tailored to Meet Customer Needs Learn About & Track Customers With Databases Distribute Products More Efficiently & Effectively Communicate With Customers in Groups Or One-on-One

  27. The Internet • The Internet has been hailed as the technology behind a New Economy. • New applications include: • “click-and-mortar” companies • “click-only” companies • Business-to-business e-commerce • Business-to-business transactions online are expected to reach $3.6 trillion in 2003. • By 2005, 500,000 companies will use the Internet to do business.

  28. Connections With Customers • Most marketers are targeting fewer, potentially more profitable customers. • Asking: • What value does the customer bring to the organization? • Are they worth pursuing? • Connecting for a customer’s lifetime.

  29. Direct Connections With Customers • Many companies use technologies to let them connect more directly with their customers. • Products available via telephone, mail-order catalogs, kiosks and e-commerce. • Some firms sell only via direct channels (i.e. Dell Computer, http://www.amazon.com/), others use a combination. • Direct marketing is redefining the buyer’s role in connecting with sellers. • Buyers are active participants in shaping the marketing offer and process; some buyers design their own products online such as at http://www.landsend.com/.

  30. Connecting Inside the Company Every employee must be customer-focused Teams coordinate efforts toward customers Connecting With Outside Partners Supply Chain Management Strategic Alliances Connections With Marketing’s Partners

  31. Connections With the World Around Us Global Connections Broadening Connections Value Connections Social Responsibility Connections

  32. Rest Stop: Reviewing the Concepts • Define what marketing is and discuss its core concepts. • Explain the relationships between customer value, satisfaction, and quality. • Define marketing management and examine how marketers manage demand and build profitable customer relationships. • Compare the five marketing management philosophies. • Analyze the major challenges facing marketers heading into the next millennium.

More Related