Introduction to Marketing
Key learnings of the lecture «Introduction to Marketing», Fall 2016, Prof. Wangenheim @D-MTEC, ETH Zürich
Key learnings of the lecture «Introduction to Marketing», Fall 2016, Prof. Wangenheim @D-MTEC, ETH Zürich
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 46 |
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Language | English |
Category | Marketing |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 04.01.2017 / 27.12.2019 |
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What are the steps in the STP model?
- Segmentation
- indentify bases for segmenting the market
- develop profiles of resulting segments
- Targeting
- identify segment attractiveness
- select the target segment(s)
- Positioning
- develop positioning strategy for each target segment
- formulat the guidelindes for all marketing-mix activities
Name Segmentation variables in consumer markets
- Geographic (nations, states, regions,...)
- Socio-demographic (age, gender, religion, race, income,...) => largely available, but might be misleading (deomgraphic twins)
- psychographic (social class, lifestyle, personality characteristics, needs, wants, attitudes, preferences) => these are the underlying drivers of the buying and usage behavior, but hard to optain. socio-demographic as proxy.
- benefit (eg. price-conscious segment vs. brand-conscious segment vs. qualityconscious segment.)
- behavioural variables (user status, usage rate, loyalty status,...)
How to do targeting?
- Evaluating market segments
- Conducting a five-forces analysis on segment-level, including CLV concept
- Determine CE (customer equity) of all segments, enrich and further develop with behavioral data etc.
- Select targeting segments
- Undifferentiated targeting (mass marketing
- differentiated (mass marketing)
- Concentrated (niche marketing)
- Micromarketing (local or individual marketing)
Pros and Cons for online targeting and marketing?
+ low cost, reach a lot of people, you reach whom you want to reach
- privacy concerns, people tend to ignore web adds, ad-blockers, marketing material is avialable for anoyne to copy
What is Perceptual mapping and where can it be used in the STP model?
Perceptual maps, also known as market maps, usually have two dimensions but can be multi-dimensional; they can be used to identify gaps in the market and potential partners or merger targets as well as to clarify perceptual problems with a company's product.
Segmenting - Targetin - Positioning: can be used for positioning.
With what parties does a product manager need to interact?
- Advertising agencies
- Media
- Packaging
- Purchasing
- Publicity
- Sales
- Market research
- Fiscal
- Legal
- R&D
- Manufacturing and distribution
Name different types of offerings
- Goods (tanigble)
- Services (intangible)
- Bundles (2 or more goods combined to one offer => price is lower)
- Hybrids (combination of goods and services (eg. iPod and iTunes))
- Solutions (Combination of integrated goods and/or services (and/or software) b. Individualized, customized, Implemented, Maintained) => price is higher
What are the four main Brand development strategies?
Line extension (existing brand within existing product lines, eg. New Model in the Mercedes C-Class)
Brand extension (existing brand with new product, eg. new nivea deo)
Multibranding (new brand within existing product line, eg. various beer brand of a brewery)
Development of new brands and lines (new brand and new product line, eg. Lexus of Toyota)
Brand strategies
Individual brand (eg. brands of P&G like Ariel, Pampers, Bounty, ...)
Family brand (eg. Nivea, Ricola)
Branded house (eg. Apple, Sony)
House of brands (eg. P&G, UniLever)
Brand transfer (eg. Swatch)
Co-branding (Bonne Belle & Dr. Pepper: Flavored Lip Balm)
Types of innovation
Incremental innovation (VW Golf 4 => Golf 5)
Market breakthrough (Selfie-sticks)
Technological break through (Seagway)
Radical innovation (www)
How can customers pay if it is not money?
• Data
• Attention
• Network value
• Co-production
• Word-of-mouth
• (future) transactions or revenues
3 approaches to pricing
- Cost based pricing: Product => Costs => Price => Value => Customers
- Value-based pricing: Customers => Value => Price => Costs => Product
- competition-base pricing
Skimming pricing <=> penetration pricing
Skimming: Price starts at high levels an then decreases (eg. iPhone)
Penetration: Price starts at low level an then increases (eg. Adobe)
Degrees of price discrimination
First degree: Individual price for each customer, Price equals each customer‘s willingness to pay, Perfect price discrimination with skimming the whole consumer‘s, surplus.
Second degree: Individual price for different customer segments, but customer decides in which segment he is (eg. SBB 1/2-Tax)
Third degree: Individual price for different customer segments, customer can not decide in which segment he is (Mensa)
Procedure for conjoint analysis
- Acquire the preference scores of products
- Compute the average score for each attribute level (eg. 9+2+4=5 for 1GB, 1+4=2.5 for 10GB): \(AS_k= \frac {\sum U_i}{| M_K|}\)
- Compute the part worh for each attribute level (normalize to [0,1]) \(PW_k=\frac{AS_k-minAS} {maxAS-minAS}\) max and min AS of ALL average scores!
- Compute raw importance for each attribute \(RI_j=maxPW-minPW\) = span of the attribute level (eg. for data volume we have max 0.57 and min 0.27 => RI = 0.3
- Compute the relative importance for each attribute: \(PI_j=\frac {RI_j}{\sum RI_p}\cdot 100percent\)
What is marketing?
«Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating,
communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for
customers, clients, partners, and society at large.»
4P's?
- Product
- Product variety
- Quality
- Design
- Features
- Brand name
- Packaging, Size
- Services, Warranties, Returns
- Price
- List price
- Discounts, Allowances
- Payment period
- Credit terms
- Promotion
- Advertisement
- Personal selling
- Sales promotion
- Public relations
- Place
- Channels
- Coverage
- Assortment
- Locations
- Inventory
- Transportation
- Logistics
What are the 3 extensions of the 4 P's?
- People
- Employees
- Customers
- Communication calture and value
- Employee research
- Physical Evidence
- Facility Design
- Equipment
- Signage
- Employee Dress
- Other tangibles
- Processes
- Flow of activities
- Number of steps
- Level of costumer involvement
What is Customer relationship management (CRM)?
«Customer relationship management (CRM) is the process of building and
maintaining profitable customer relationship by delivering superior customer value
and satisfaction.»
4R's of CRM?
Recruitment/Relations, Retention, Referrals and Recovery
Formula for costumer life time value CLV?
\(CLV_j=\displaystyle\sum^{T}_{t=0} \frac {v \cdot p} { (1+i)^t}\)
Formula for Customer equity?
\(CE=\sum CLV\)
How to increase Customer Equity?
- Increase relationship length
- o Loyalty programs
- o Loyalty management (satisfaction, trust, repurchase intention)
- o Create customer lock in (eg. Nespresso)
- Increase relationship breadth
- o Cross-buying efforts (=> next product to buy models)
- Increase relationship depth
- o Increase purchase frequency or accelerate purchase
- o Increase purchase value (stimulate upgrades)
- Increase Word of Mouth
- o Customer Satisfaction
- o Customer Excitement, Customer Experience, Customer Involvement
- o Abnormal campaigns, social media, communities
- Reduce per-customer costs
- o Migrate to self-service
- o (selectively) charge service fee (eg. SWISS)
- o Customer service communities
Types of buying decision behaviour
Impulsive: low involvement (chocolate at check-out)
Habitual: low involvement (toilet paper)
Limited: medium involvement (restaurant selection)
Extensive high involvement (holidays)
What is the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM) and what is it about?
High and low involvement decisions. High involvement goes via the central route, low via the peripheral route.
For low involvement advertising, repetition is important. Short message,
easy to memorize. Consumers are not interested and willing to process
information actively.
› For high involvement advertising, people really thing about their decision,
processed actively, needs strong arguments. Consumers are interested
and willing to process advertising messages (as well as other information)
actively
Buyer's decision process?
Need recognition => Information search => Evaluation of alternatives => Purchase decisions => Postpurchase cognitions
What is an attitude and what are its 3 components?
An attitude is a lasting, general evaluation of people (including oneself), objects, advertisements, or issues
ABC Model:
Affect: how a consumer feels about an object
Behaviour refers to the consumer’s intentions to take action
Cognition what the consumer believes to be true about the attitude object
Theory of planned behaviour, what is it about?
Attitudes are not always consistent with behaviour => Intention-behaviour gap.
- Behaviour
- Depends on motivation (intention) and ability (behavioural control)
- Intention
- Cognitive representation of a person's readiness to perform a given behaviour
- Indicates how hard people are willing to try in order to perform the behaviour
- Determined by attitude toward behaviour, subjective norms, perceived behavioural control
Characteristics of the conjoint measurement
• Decompositional
• Price as product feature
• Statistical technique for transforming rankings into utility
• Experimental design
• Fill out a questionnaire
Characteristics of Multiattribute Attitude Models
• Compositional
• Price typically disregarded
• Psychological theory behind attitude measurement
• Descriptive research design
• Importance of attributes could either be inferred by using statistical techniques, or directly asked for
• Give priorities
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