Introduction to Marketing (extension)

Extension to register of Roland Schenkel Introduction to Marketing, Prof. Florian v. Wangenheim, D-MTEC ETH Zurich

Extension to register of Roland Schenkel Introduction to Marketing, Prof. Florian v. Wangenheim, D-MTEC ETH Zurich


Fichier Détails

Cartes-fiches 31
Langue English
Catégorie Marketing
Niveau Université
Crée / Actualisé 27.12.2019 / 27.12.2019
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Why conducting marketing research?

  • discover latent needs (e.g. cars vs. horses --> customers were asking for faster transportation, not for cars)
  • discover new, potentially profitable markets

Limitatinos of the 4 Ps

product oriented concept --> not applicable for service companies, internet companies, "free" service providers (Google search)

 

2 perspectives of maximazing CE

  • Static perspective: focus on customer with highest predicted CLV --> hold & acquire high CLV customers
  • Dynamic perspective: focus on customers for which CLV increase has the highest return to investment --> increase CLV of customers, focus on most reactive customers

Difficulties in measuring customer loyalty

  • multi-dimensional construct: repurchase, word-of-mouth, cross-buying etc.
  • differs across industries: contractual (telecom) vs. non-contractual (airline)

Buying behavior in case of high involvement & significant differences among brands

Complex buying behavior

Buying behavior in case of low involvement & significant differences among brands

Variety seeking buying behavior

Buying behavior in case of high involvement & few differences among brands

Dissonance-reducing buying behavior

Buying behavior in case of low involvement & few differences among brands

Habitual buying behavior

Standard learning hierarchy

Low-involvement hierarchy

Experiential hierarchy

Reactions to consumer need studies

  • Short-run reactions:
    - (Re)Positioning of existing products
    - Adaption of communications (highly trendy features, e.g. green products)
    - Adapting easy-to-change product features (add service features)
  • Long-run reactions:
    - Change or adapt company strategy (e.g. Audi: cars for old people –> sport cars)
    - New products (e.g. products for LOHAS (lifestyle of health and sustainability) costumers, products for aging society)
    - New business fields
    - Change business model (e.g. form product to service – XEROX, IBM)

In a conjoint analysis, health and price are ___ while healty - unhealthy and 1$, 5$, 10$ are ___.

Sequence of a conjoint analysis

  1. prepare product ranking
  2. compute average score of each attribute level
  3. compute part worth utility of each attribute level
  4. compute raw importance of each attribute
  5. compute relative importance of each attribute

Conjoint analysis:

average score of k =

Conjoint analysis:

part worth utility of k =

Conjoint analysis:

raw importance of h =

Conjoint analysis:

relative importance of h (%) =

When to apply conjoint analysis

  • Evaluate impact of a product redesign
  • Test new product concepts
  • Estimate demand curve and set pricing
  • Estimate brand equity
  • Identify market segments

Characteristics of market segments

  • Measurability: degree to which size, purchasing power and profiles of a market segment can be measured
  • Accessibility: degree to which a market segment can be reached
  • Substantiality: degree to which a market segment is sufficient large and profitable
  • Differentiability: degree to which a market segment is conceptually distinguishable
  • Actionability: degree to which attracting programs can be designed for attracting and serving a market segment

3 levels of a product

  • Core product: product that is most directly related to core competencies of the company, benefit that makes product valuable (e.g. relaxation is core product of holidays)
  • Actual product: physical or tangible product that a customer buys to receive core benefit (core product + branding, packing, design etc.)
  • Augmented product: both primary physical and non-physical attributes that are added to increase the product's value (actual product + after sale service, warranty etc.)

Characteristics of a service

  • Intangibility: not touchable
  • Heterogenity: no two services are the same --> evaluation in advance is not possible
  • Inseperability: not storable --> production and consumption occur together
  • Perishablity: services perish, e.g. if plane takes off, seat (service) cannot be sold anymore
  • Lack of ownership
  • Customer co-production

Brand strength

Ability of a brand to acquire and bind customers more effectively than without branding

Different brand sponsors

  • Manufacturer's brand: manufacturer markets a brand under its own name (e.g. BMW)
  • Private brand: brand owned by wholesaler or retailer (e.g. M-Classic) --> "battle of brands" (vs. manufacturer's brand)
  • Licensed brand: contract of brand owner and company that wants to use the brand for its products (e.g. Mickey Mouse used by Ravensburger)
  • Co-branding/brand partnership: two companies form an alliance creating a marketing synergy (e.g. Philips & Nivea)

2 price definitions

  • Narrow definition of price: amount of money charged for a product
  • Broad definition of price: sum of values a consumers exchange for the benefit of a product, including non-paying values (e.g. word-of-mouth, co-production (self-checkout), data, network value etc.)

Major promotion tools

  • Advertising
  • Sales promotion (e.g. 20% discount)
  • Personal selling (mostly B2B)
  • Public relaitons: building good relationships with company's various publics
  • Direct marketing: direct connections to carefully targeted individual customers

Communication metrics

  • Circulation: number of printed copies of an issue
  • Issues sold: total number sold - number of complementary issues and returns
  • Gross reach: number of contacts that can be reached with the medium
  • Gross rating point GRP: \(CR=reach*frequency\)
    reach: % of target group exposed to the medium
    frequency: # of times a person of the target group is exposed to the medium
  • Cost per mille: \(CPM=\frac{c}{C}*1000\)
    c: cost for using the medium
    C: # of contacts with each use of the medium

Advantages and disadvantages of online marketing

+ posiblity to measure consumer response (view, click, sale, lead) (not just assuming)
+ metrics are based on interactivity --> better proxies for advertisement success
+ online customer journey analysis enables path conversion analysis

- most companies have troubles in tracing the sources of consumer's actions
- data exists, but firms are not able to use/analyze them
- cockie-based tracking has disadvanteges (expire after 30 days, cleaining tools)

Importance of service in B2B markets

Sale of product accounts only for a small portion of the revenue, most of the revenue comes from providing services to the product

4 processes of a solution (B2B)

  1. Requirements definition
  2. Customizationa & integration
  3. Deployment
  4. Post-deployment support

Advantages and disadvantages of solutions for customers

+ lower functionality risk
+ lower transaction costs
+ no skills for integration required

- high risk of technological and/or contractual lock-in
- more expensive