Marketing & Social Media
FHNW- BITMr. Flad
FHNW- BITMr. Flad
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 402 |
---|---|
Langue | English |
Catégorie | Marketing |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 15.09.2020 / 23.11.2024 |
Lien de web |
https://card2brain.ch/cards/20200915_marketing_social_media?max=40&offset=40
|
Intégrer |
<iframe src="https://card2brain.ch/box/20200915_marketing_social_media/embed" width="780" height="150" scrolling="no" frameborder="0"></iframe>
|
Name the strategy steps to take when dealing with the five forces
Position your company where the forces are weakest
- find a profitable market niche
Reshape the forces in your favour
- Standardize specification for parts -> bargaining power of suppliers go down
- Expand your services -> buyers' switching costs go up
- Invest more heavily in unique products -> price rivalry goes down.
- Invest in R&D / marketing expenditures -> market entry barriers go up
- Reach customers directly -> bargaining power of distributors goes down
Exploit changes in the forces
- Identify game-changing trends early. Structural changes open up new needs and new ways to serve existing needs e.g. iTunes
What does the developing a marketing concept step normative orientation include?
The normative orientation step includes the development of vision, mission, guiding principles, code of ethics etc. Result in Vision, mission and guiding principles of the marketing concept.
What does the developing a marketing concept step strategic development processes include?
Strategic development processes include strategic analyses e.g. SWOT analysis, Industry analysis, Portfolio analysis to develop portfolio strategies.
Skills analysis to build up core competencies. Analysis of strategic groups and Stakeholder analysis.
What does the developing a marketing concept step operation management progesses include?
Operation management processes parts in coordination and management of day-to-day business and the controlling -> definition of KPI's, monitoring of assumptions and measurement of progress.
What is part of the marketing strategy when developing a marketing concept?
Marketing Strategy gets input from the market analysis and includes decision on target markets and positioning decisions. The results are included in the marketing mix.
What is a Marketing Mix? How does it fit into the developing of a marketing concept.
How are Market Sizes defined?
- Market capacity is a theoretical maximum size; it indicates the theoretical capacity of a market without regard to prices and purchasing power. Market capacity is a quantity that can change depending on the size of the market base (number of users).
- Market potential is the equivalent of demand for a good or service at a specific price and with the best possible marketing-mix.
- Market volume comprises the sum of all the actually realized turnovers of all the suppliers on the market. In cases in which market supply is adequate, market potential and market volume correspond with each other.
- Market share is a KPI that puts a company’s own production or sales volume in proportion to the total market. As a key indicator, it is of major strategic importance because in many markets, the competitor with the biggest market share has advantages, for example regarding brand awareness, production costs and network effects.
What parts do you need to consider when doing an internal analysis?
- Business process an markets
How do you calculate the added Value of Turnover?
Preparatory work, including Goods & services procured from third parties) plus the Gross added value, containing of Depreciation and Net added value equals the overall Turnover.
Company B adds more value to it and is so harder to copy. They have a stronger position in the market and offer more individualized products than company A who just adds a little on top of an existing base.
What is important when creating a value chain analysis?
When creating a value chain analysis you need to keep the logic of the value chain in mind. The value chain needs to show all the key activities and assess value added. All activities for current and potential contribution to competitive advantage need to be examine. You should invest in activities where you possibly get the highest added value and get rid of activities which do not contribute to any value. And you need it identify activities that could be produced at lower cost or the performance increased.
What are the five-phases of the product life-cycle? Describe them
- In the introduction phase, pioneer customers buy the product that is still largely unknown. During this phase, the positioning of the product is shaped. If, for example, a new service is priced too low, it hardly ever reaches a quality image later. If it is positioned too high, the market penetration may not be successful enough. Due to the small quantity of sales, this phase requires high investments in production, opening new markets and positioning.
- During the growth phase, sales rise rapidly due to new customers and higher consumption or because of early replacement demand. Here, it is vital to assure quality during rapid growth for sufficient cost optimization. During escalating sales, excessive costs may be not be taken into account, and that will have an effect, at the latest during the next phase.
- In the maturity phase, when growth rates decrease and competition intensifies, maximum profits have already been achieved. It is now important to manage costs and ensure continued optimum growth.
- In the saturation phase, sales decline. Competition has permanently shifted from a quality and positioning competition into a cutthroat and cost competition.
- During the decline phase, only those who, thanks to optimum cost structures or reserves from earlier years, have enough leeway for a relaunch (meaning relaunching products with modifications like new design, new image etc.) will survive. After a severe decline, fundamental innovation is required.
What is a SWOT analysis?
An analysis of internal Strengths and Weaknesses and external Opportunities and Threats. The goal is to match company's strengths to good opportunities in the environment while improving weaknesses and minimize threats
Corporation = internal
Strengths: employee knowledge, owned assets and funding
Weaknesses: Rigid organizational structure, missing experience
External = market segments, product markets, distribution, external influencer, competitors, environment dimensions
Opportunities: growth of a market segment, demand for a new product.
Threats: price erosion and new competitors
Explain how to create a SWOT-Matrix
- Gathering of relevant external influential factors and dimensions
- Conduct opportunities and threats analysis
- Gathering of relevant internal influential factors and dimension
- Conduct strength and weaknesses analysis
- Combine external OT and internal SW analyses
- Point out and summarize the central and most immanent marketing problem statement to be solved according to the SWOT-Matrix
Which is the most important one?
Give the Key concepts of a market analysis
A company’s marketing environment consists of the actors and forces outside marketing that affect marketing management’s ability to build and maintain successful relationships with target customers.
The macroenvironment consists of larger societal forces that affect the microenvironment (Political, Economic, Socio-cultural, Technological, Ecological Factors > PESTE-Framework).
The microenvironment consists of the actors close to the company that affect its ability to service its customers (Five Forces Framework).
The value chain depicts the sequential process of a firm’s key value creating activities and supporting activities.
SWOT analysis is used to evaluate the company’s strengths (S), weaknesses (W), opportunities (O), and threats (T). – Strengths include capabilities, resources, and positive situational factors. – Weaknesses include negative internal factors and negative situational factors. – Opportunities are favorable external factors. – Threats are unfavorable external factors.
Define Marketing Research
Marketing research is the systematic and objective
- Identification
- Collection
- Analysis
- Dissemination
- And use of information
For the purpose of improving decision making related tot he identification and solution of problems and opportunities in marketing.
What are the assessing marketing information needs?
A good MIS balances the information users would like to have against
–What they really need
–What is feasible to offer
Obtaining, analyzing, storing, and delivering information is costly.
–Firms must decide whether the value of the insight is worth the cost.
What are the different goals of Marketing research?
- Get transparent information about markets (market research as basis for decisions)
- Collection, analysis and interpretation of information needed from an about the target market
- Knowledge about interdependences of markets and market mechanisms
- Information about motivation and needs of participants of the markets
- Basis for segmentation
- Basis for positioning of products and services
- Recognize trends and changes (market research as a early warning system)
- Act, do not only react: identify early enough changes or minimize dangers
- Determine changing values or attitudes and trends in (ecological, economic, social or technical) environments.
- Definition of market figures (capacity, volumes, market share, saturation)
- Minimize risks in general
- Measurement of progress and success of marketing tasks (Market research as a controlling instrument
- Effect of individual measures
- Consistency (reliability, acceptance) of the marketing-mix
- Measurement of image
- Efficiency of the marketing tasks
- Optimization of the marketing tasks
How do you classify marketing research?
What steps do they include?
Problem-Identification Research
Research undertaken to help identify problems which are not necessarily apparent on the surface and yet exist or are likely to arise in the future. Examples: market potential, market share, image, market characteristics, sales analysis, forecasting, and trends research.
Steps:
- Market potential research
- Market share research
- Market characteristics research
- Sales analysis research
- Forecasting research
- Business trends research
Problem-Solving Research undertaken to help solve specific marketing problems. Examples: segmentation, product, pricing, promotion, and distribution research.
Steps:
- Segmentation research
- Product research
- Pricing research
- Promotion research
- Distribution research
What are Management decision problems and the Marketing research problem? Compare them
Management Decision Problem | Marketing research problem
Ask what the decision maker needs to do | Asks what information is needed and how it should be obtained
Action oriented: focuses on symptoms| Information oriented: focus on the underlying causes
Should a new product be introduced? | To determine consumer preferences and purchase intentions for the proposed new product
Should the advertising campaign be changed? | To determine the effectiveness of the current advertising campaign
Should the price of the brand be increased? | To determine the price elasticity of demand and the impact on sales and profits of various levels of price changes
How do you create questions and hypotheses of development of research
Define Research Design
A research design is a framework or blueprint for conducting the marketing research project. It details the procedures necessary for obtaining the information needed to structure or solve marketing research problems.
What are components of a research design?
- Define the information needed
- Design the exploratory, descriptive, and/or causal phases of the research
- Specify the measurement and scaling procedures
- Construct and pretest a questionnaire (interviewing form) or an appropriate form for data collection
- Specify the sampling process and sample size
- Develop a plan of data analysis
What classifications are there for research designs?
Research Design
- Exploratory research design
- Conclusive research design
- Descriptive research
- Causal research
What is the use and methods of exploratory research?
Use
- Formulate a problem or define a problem more precisely
- Identify alternative courses of action
- Develop hypotheses
- Isolate key variables and relationships for further examination
- Gain insights for developing an approach to the problem
- Establish priorities for further research
Methods
- Survey of experts
- Pilot surveys
- Secondary data analyzed in a qualitative way
- Qualitative research
What is the use and methods of descriptive research?
Use:
- To describe the characteristics of relevant groups, such as consumers, salespeople, organizations, or market areas.
- To estimate the percentage of units in a specified population exhibiting a certain behavior.
- To determine the perceptions of product characteristics.
- To determine the degree to which marketing variables are associated.
- To make specific predictions.
Methods
- Secondary data analyzed in a quantitative as opposed to a qualitative manner
- Surveys
- Panels
- Observational and other data
What is the use and methods of causalresearch?
Use:
- To understand which variables are the cause (independent variables) and which variables are the effect (dependent variables) of a phenomenon
- To determine the nature of the relationship between the causal variables and the effect to be predicted
Method: Experiments
What are methods and tools along the research process?
Data sources primary or secondary data, or both. Existing studies in the MIS
Research Approaches observational research, focus-group research, survey research, behavioural data, experimental research
Research instruments questionnaires, qualitative measures, mechanical devices
Sampling plan sampling unit: who is to be surveyed?, sample size: how many people should be surveyed?, sampling procedure: How should the respondents be chosen?
Contact Methods Mail questionnaire, telephone interview, personal interview, online interview.
What is Primary vs. Secondary Data?
- Primary data are originated by a researcher for the specific purpose of addressing the problem at hand. The collection of primary data involves all six steps of the marketing research process
- Secondary data are data that have already been collected for purposes other than the problem at hand. These data can be located quickly and inexpensively. Secondary data are of primary importance in marketing research.
What is the use of secondary data?
- Identify the problem
- Better define the problem
- Develop an approach to the problem
- Formulate an appropriate research design (for example, by identifying the key variables)
- Answer certain research questions and test some hypotheses
- Interpret primary data more insightfully