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Marie De Leon Rakshan Khateeb Ashley Kim Scott Jacobsen

Marie De Leon Rakshan Khateeb Ashley Kim Scott Jacobsen. Creating Customer Value and Satisfaction in a Changing World. What is Marketing?. Satisfying customers while making a profit.

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Marie De Leon Rakshan Khateeb Ashley Kim Scott Jacobsen

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  1. Marie De LeonRakshan KhateebAshley KimScott Jacobsen Creating Customer Value and Satisfaction in a Changing World

  2. What is Marketing? • Satisfying customers while making a profit. • process of obtaining what people & organizations need and want through creating and exchanging products and value with others. • Goals: • attain new customers by promising superior value • keep current customers by delivering satisfaction.

  3. Consumers: Needs, Wants, & Demands Needs – goods or services that is needed to survive [ie food] Wants – goods & services not needed to survive but are still desired Demands – goods and services people/society request

  4. Marketing Management Marketing Management – Deals with managing demand, and managing customer relationships Demand Management - Finding and increasing demand, and sometimes changing or reducing demand such as in Demarketing Profitable Customer Relationships - Attracting new customers while keeping current customers

  5. Connecting Technologies • Connecting technologies in computers, telecommunications, information, & transportation help to: • Communicate with customers in groups or one-on-one • Distribute products more efficiently & effectively • Learn about & track customers with databases • Create products & services tailored to meet customer needs

  6. The Internet • Described as the technology behind New Economy. • New applications include: • “click-and-mortar” companies • “click-only” companies • Business-to-business e-commerce • 2003: business-to-business transactions online expected to reach $3.6 trillion • 2005: 500,000 companies expected to use the Internet conduct business.

  7. Direct Connections With Customers • Most marketers are targeting fewer, potentially more profitable 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 [ie Dell Computer] • Direct marketing allows buyers to be active participants in shaping the marketing offer and process; some buyers design their own products online [ie landsend.com]

  8. Connections With Marketing’s Partners • Connecting inside the company • Every employee must be customer-focused • Teams coordinate efforts toward customers • Connecting with outside partners • Supply chain management • Strategic alliances

  9. Mike Park, Jessica Saks, Gary Laurita, Nikita Alexiades Strategic Planning and the Marketing Process

  10. Concepts • Strategic planning throughout the company and its four steps. • Business portfolio designs and growth strategies. • Efficient planning strategies and marketing’s role in strategic planning. • The marketing process and the forces that influence it.

  11. Strategic Planning • Many companies operate without formal plans, however these plans can provide many benefits such as: • -encouraging management to think ahead • -forcing managers to create clear objectives and policies • -helping the company to anticipate and respond quickly to changes and sudden developments.

  12. Strategic Planning Strategic Planningis the Process of Developing and Maintaining a Strategic Fit Between the Organization’s Goals and Capabilities and Its Changing Marketing Opportunities.

  13. 4 Steps in Strategic Planning

  14. Setting Company Objectives and Goals

  15. Managing the Marketing Effort

  16. Marketing Control Process

  17. Dmitriy Perkis. Alex Tumarinson Joe Buzzetta Harmon Narula Marketing in the New Internet Economy

  18. Digitalization & Connectivity Intranets – connect people within a company. Extranets – connect a company with its suppliers. Internet – connects users all around the world. Internet Explosion Explosive growth forms the heart of the New Economy. Companies must adopt Internet technology or risk being left behind. Major Forces Shaping the Internet Age

  19. Conducting business in the new Internet Age will call for a new model for marketing strategy and practice. All buying and selling may involve direct electronic connections between companies and customers. Marketing should play the lead role in shaping new company strategy. Marketing Strategy in the New Internet Age

  20. e-Business, e-Commerce, and e-Marketing in the Internet Age • e-Business • Involves the Use of Intranets, Extranets & the Internet to Conduct a Company’s Business • e-Commerce • Involves Buying & Selling Processes Supported by Electronic Means • E-Marketing • “e-selling” side of e-commerce

  21. E-Commerce Benefits Benefits to Sellers Benefits to Buyers • Customer Relationship Building • Reducing Costs & Increasing Speed and Efficiency • Offers Greater Flexibility • Truly Global Medium • Convenient • Buying is Easy and Private • Greater Product Access and Selection • Access to Comparative Information • Buying is Interactive and Immediate

  22. B2C B2B • Estimates are that B2B e-commerce will reach $3.6 trillion in 2003. • By 2005, more than 500,000 enterprises will participate as buyers, sellers, or both. • Much e-commerce takes place in open trading networks: • Some companies are also setting up private trading networks (PTNs) • Sales expected to increase from $34 billion in 2001 to $130 billion by 2006. • Provides e-marketers with access to consumers in all age groups. • More customer-initiated and customer-controlled.

  23. C2C C2B • Today’s consumers can contact and communicate with companies. • Consumers can search out sellers on the Web, learn about their offers, and initiate purchases. • Example: Using http://www.priceline.com/, consumers can bid for airline tickets, hotel rooms, etc. • Then, sellers decide whether to accept their offers. • Occurs between people over a wide range of products and services. • EBay’s C2C transacted more than $5 billion in trades last year. • Involves interchanges of information through: • Forums • Newsgroups

  24. Reasons for Dot.com Failures • Failure to research or plan • Spin & hype instead of marketing strategies • Spending offline to establish brand identities • Attention on gathering new customers instead of building brand loyalty • Poorly designed Web sites • Lack of good distribution delivery processes • Prices and margins were often very low

  25. Click-and-Mortar Companies • Many resisted adding e-commerce because of potential for channel conflict and cannibalization. • Many are doing better than brick or click-only operations i.e. http://staples.com. • Trusted brand names & financial resources, • Large customer bases, • Knowledge & experience, • Good relationships with key suppliers, • Ability to offer customers more options, • Buy online & return unwanted merchandise to store.

  26. Placing Ads and Promotions Online • Online advertising - used to build Internet brands or attract visitors. • Forms of online advertising & promotion: • Banner ads & tickers (move across the screen) • Skyscrapers (tall, skinny ads at the side of a page) • Rectangles (boxes larger than banner) • Interstitials (online ads that pop up between changes) • Browser ads (sponsors pay viewers to watch) • Content sponsorships (sponsoring content on sites) • Microsites (limited areas managed by an external co.) • Viral marketing (Internet word-of-mouth)

  27. Creating or Participating in Web Communities Allow members to exchange views on issues of common interest. http://iVillage.com Share common interests & well-defined demographics. E-mail or Webcasting E-mail: mainstay for B2C & B2B Webcasting automatically downloads customized information to recipients’ PCs. Other e-Marketing Methods

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