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Defining Marketing

Marketing is a societal process by


which individuals and groups obtain
what they need and want through
creating, offering, and freely
exchanging products and services of
value with others.
- Philip Kotler (p. 7)

©2000 Prentice Hall


Core Concepts of Marketing
Target Markets & Segmentation
Needs, Wants, and Demands
Product or Offering
Value and Satisfaction
Exchange and Transactions
Relationships and Networks
Marketing Channels
Supply Chain
Competition
Marketing Environment
©2000 Prentice Hall
Simple Marketing System

Communication

Goods/services
Industry Market
(a collection (a collection
of sellers) Money of Buyers)

Information
©2000 Prentice Hall
Structure of Flows
Resources Resources
Money Resource Money
markets
Services,
money Taxes,
goods
Services, Taxes
money
Manufacturer Government Consumer
markets markets markets
Taxes,
goods Services
Services, Taxes,
money goods
Money Money
Intermediary
Goods, services markets Goods, services
©2000 Prentice Hall
Company Orientations
Towards the Marketplace
Consumers prefer products that are
Production Concept widely available and inexpensive

Consumers favor products that


Product Concept offer the most quality, performance,
or innovative features

Consumers will buy products only if


Selling Concept the company aggressively
promotes/sells these products

Focuses on needs/ wants of target


Marketing Concept markets & delivering value
better than competitors
©2000 Prentice Hall
Customer Delivered Value
Starting
point Focus Means Ends

Existing Selling and Profits through


Factory products promotion sales volume

(a) The selling concept

Customer Integrated Profits through


Market needs marketing customer
satisfaction

(b) The marketing concept


©2000 Prentice Hall
Traditional Organization Chart

Top
Management

Middle Management

Front-line people

Customers

©2000 Prentice Hall


Evolving Views of Marketing’s
Role

Finance
Production
Production Finance
Human
resources
Marketing Human
resources Marketing

a. Marketing as an b. Marketing as a more


equal function important function
©2000 Prentice Hall
Evolving Views of Marketing’s
Role
Production

Marketing Customer

c. Marketing as the d. The customer as the


major function controlling factor
©2000 Prentice Hall
Evolving Views of Marketing’s
Role
Production

Marketing

Customer

e. The customer as the controlling


function and marketing as the
integrative function
©2000 Prentice Hall
Review

 Course Organization
 Tasks of Marketing
 Major Concepts & Tools of Marketing
 Marketplace Orientations
 Marketing’s Responses to New
Challenges

©2000 Prentice Hall

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