Marketing

Marketing at the TU München

Marketing at the TU München

Felix Roth

Felix Roth

Kartei Details

Karten 88
Sprache English
Kategorie Marketing
Stufe Universität
Erstellt / Aktualisiert 26.07.2013 / 13.03.2015
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Scope and Importance of Marketing

 

 

“Marketing is a customer focus that permeates organizational functions and processes and is geared towards …

 

  • Making promises through value proposition
  • Enabling the fulfillment of individual expectations created by such promises
  • Fulfill such expectations through support to customers’ value-generating processes”

   ->   Value creation

 

Marketing Management: “The art and science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping and growing customers through creating, delivering and communicating superior customer value” 

 

Relevant for:

  • Shaping products and services
  • Building strong brands
  • Identifying target groups

When you buy a product, it means you’re not just becoming the owner of the item. 

 

Products include services (-> Service-dominant logic) and events, experiences, persons, places and ideas shape the behavior of customer today.

 

Understanding Markets and Customers
  • Needs
  • Demands

 

Needs are basic human requirements; they become wants when directed to objects that might satisfy the needs.

Demands are wants for products and services backed by an ability to pay.

 

Types of Markets

 

  • Consumer (Individual decision – making)
  • Business (Industry decision – making)
  • Non-profit (Decision – making in charities, sports clubs, etc.)

 

Market Terms

 

Marketplace (physical e.g. store)

Marketspace (digital e.g. Internet)

Metamarket (Cluster of complimentary products and services that are related, but spread across industries)

Metamediaries (Intermediaries that bring together collections and people)

 

Marketing Realities and Challenges

 

Major societal forces

 

  • Recession and economic recovery; effects around the globe
  • Technological developments

 

Changing consumption patterns

 

  • “Slam-on-the-break”
  • “Pained but patient”
  • “Comfortably well off”

“Live-for-today”

 

Marketing Philosophy

 

Production philosophy -> Selling philosophy -> Marketing philosophy

 

Key principles

 

  • Customer – centered perspective
  • The goal is to be more effective than competitors

.) Goal (increasing customer value)

.) Means (the use of marketing mix instruments)

.) Method (the support of decisions via market research findings)

 

Ten commandments:

 

  1. Segment the market, choose he most attractive segments, and develop a strong position
  2. Map customer needs, perceptions, preferences and behavior
  3. Know the competitors, theirs strengths and weaknesses
  4. Build strong partnerships with stakeholders and reward them
  5. Develop systems for choosing good opportunities
  6. Implement a marketing planning system that leads to plans
  7. Exercise control over its product and service elements
  8. Build strong brands
  9. Encourage leadership and build team spirit among employees
  10. Constantly introduce innovations that secure a competitive advantage in the market

Marketing Management Process

 

  • Planning: Establishing goals and selecting a plan of action to achieve the goals
  • Organizing: Establishing an organization’s structure and culture
  • Leading: Energizing, directing and persuading others and creating a vision
  • Controlling: Comparing actual performance to predetermined standards (goals)

 

Management in marketing means to…

 

  • Put the customer first
  • Shape the customer value proposition
  • Sense and respond to the market

 

Strategic Management:

 

 

Planning ---> Implementing ---> Controlling

 

The Value – Delivering Process

 

  1. Discovering the required value -> 2.) Developing a suitable customer offering -> 3.) Delivering the value -> 4.) Communicating the value

 

1.) Corporate and Division Strategy

 

  1. Defining the mission

 

 

  1. What is our business?
  2. Who are our customers?
  3. What is the value to our customers?
  4. What will our business be?
  5. What should our business be?

è Mission Statement

 

Corporate and Division Strategy

 

 

  1. Defining the business

 

Companies should consider their business as  a customer – satisfying process that delivers expected value

 

1.) Corporate and Division Strategy

 

  1. Resource Allocation to SBU’s

 

Purpose of Strategic Business Units (SBU)

Develop separate strategies and assign appropriate funding to business that can be managed independently from each other.

 

Three characteristics

§  Single businesses that can be planned separately from the rest

§  There is an own set of competitors for each strategic business unit

§  A manager is responsible for planning and profit performance

(Stars, Cash Cows, Dogs, Question Marks)

 

1.) Corporate and Division Strategy

 

 

  1. Assessing Growth Opportunities

 

 

                                                     Current products                              New Products

Current Markets              Market penetration                               Product Development

New Markets                      Market Development                      Diversification

 

SWOT – analysis

 

S               =               Strengths

W             =               Weaknesses

O              =               Opportunities

T               =               Threats

 

Goals are objectives that are specified with respect to magnitude and time: SBUs set these goals and “Manages By Objectives” (MBO)

 

  • Objectives must be arranged hierarchically
  • Objectives should be quantified
  • Objectives should be realistic
  • Objectives must be consistent

 

 

The Marketing Plan

 

 

 

The Marketing Plan is the central instrument for directing and coordinating the marketing effort.

Content:

  • Marketing Strategy
  • Financial Projections
  • Situation Analysis

 

Digital Environment

 

 

From value chains to value networks:

 

  • Value networks = system of partnerships and alliances that a firm creates to source, augment and deliver its offering

 

Information and communication technologies influence the marketing management process. Examples:

 

  • Analysis and planning
  • Databases
  • Communications
  • Research

 

Customer Perceived Value

The difference between the prospective customer’s evaluation of all the benefits and costs.

 

Steps of customer-perceived value analyses:

 

  1. Identify major benefits that are valued by customers
  2. Assess the importance of the different benefits
  3. Assess the company’s and competitor’s performances on the benefits against their rated importance
  4. Examine how customers in specific segments rate the company’s performance against specific competitors on a benefit basis
  5. Monitor customer values over time

 

Why is customer satisfaction important? – Satisfied Customers …

 

  • Stay loyal longer and pay less attention to competing brands
  • Buy more as the company introduces new market offerings and upgrades existing ones
  • Promote the company by word of mouth
  • Cost less to serve than new customers
  • Are less sensitive to price

è Higher returns and lower stock market risks

Delight (i.e., very high satisfaction) creates an emotional bond

 

Why do customers become loyal?

 

  • Psychological factors (e.g. personal relations and attachment)
  • Situational factors (e.g. closeness to home)
  • Contractual factors (e.g. cell phone)
  • Technical and functional factors (e.g. software compatibility)
  • Economic factors (e.g. high switching costs)

Customer Relationship Management

 

Customer Relationship Management (CRM) is the process of carefully managing detailed information about individual customers and all customer ‘touchpoints’ to maximize customer loyalty; this includes creating, maintaining and enhancing strong relationships.

 

CRM Strategies:

 

o   Reduce the rate of customer detection

o   Increase the longevity of customer relationships

o   Enhance the growth potential of each customer

o   …

 

1.) Customer Lifetime Value

 

 

The CLV is the net present value of the stream of future profits expected over the customer’s lifetime purchases.

 

1.) Information Management in the Digital World

 

Information and communication technologies influence the marketing management process, including analysis and planning, databases, researches,…

A Marketing Information System consists....

 

of people, equipment and procedures to gather, sort, analyze, evaluate and distribute needed, timely and accurate information to marketing decision makers. Main sources:

  • Internal Records (Sales information, …)
  • External Records (Set of procedures and sources used by managers to obtain everyday information about developments in the marketing environment)

 

1.) Introduction to Marketing Research

 

 

Marketing research is defined as the systematic design, collection, analyzing and reporting of data and findings relevant to a specific marketing situation facing the company.

 

1.) The Marketing Research Process

 

  1. Define the problem
  2. Develop the research plan
  3. Collect the information
  4. Analyze the information
  5. Report the findings (presentation, thesis,…)
  6. Make the decision

 

Characteristics of Good Market Research

 

  1. Use scientific methods
  2. Research creativity
  3. Use multiple methods
  4. Interdependence of models and data
  5. Value and cost of information
  6. Healthy skepticism
  7. Ethical marketing

 

Marketing – Mix Modeling

 

Marketing – Mix Models analyze data from a variety of sources, such as retailer scanner data, company shipment data, pricing, media and promotion spending data, to understand the effects of specific marketing activities.

A Customer – Performance Scoreboard records how well the company is doing year after year on customer – based measures.

A Stakeholder – Performance Scorecard tracks the satisfaction of various constituencies who have a critical interest in and impact on the company’s performance including employees, suppliers, banks, distributors, retailers, and stockholders.

 

1.) Introduction to Consumer Research

 

 

Consumer behavior

 

Consumer behavior is the study of how individuals or groups buy, use and dispose goods, services, ideas or experiences to satisfy their needs and wants.

  • Consumer Psychology: Motivation, perception, learning, memory
  • Three consumer characteristics levels: Individuals, Social Groups, Cultures

o   Psychology: Perception

§  Sensation is the immediate response of our sensory receptors to basic stimuli (Sights, Sounds, Smells, Taste, Textures)

§  Perception is the process by which sensations are selected, organized and interpreted

 

Principles of human behavior in social groups

 

  • Within groups, humans tend to behave alike
  • Social groups convey perceptions of inferior or superior position
  • Social groups may be indicated by a cluster of variables
  • Group designation is mobile over time

 

Branded communities

 

  • A group of consumers who share a set of social relationships based usage or interest in a product