Marketing Cheat Sheet
Marketing Cheat Sheet
What is Marketing?
The marketing process involves a series of steps aimed at creating and capturing
customer value. This is illustrated in Figure 1.1 in the source document "CIF1001
LECT1.pdf".
Understanding the Marketplace
• Wants: The form human needs take, shaped by culture and personality.
• Marketing Myopia: Focusing too much on specific products rather than the
benefits and experiences they provide.
• This requires determining the target market and defining the company's value
proposition – the benefits promised to satisfy customer needs.
• The marketing mix, known as the four Ps (product, price, promotion, place), is
used to create an integrated marketing program that delivers the intended
value.
Customer Relationship Management
• The Digital Age: Dominated by the Internet of Things (IoT), digital and social
media marketing, mobile marketing, big data and AI.
It's worth noting that these trends may continue to evolve and marketers must stay
informed about these changes to adapt their strategies effectively.
Mission Statement
• The mission statement defines the organization's purpose and what it wants to
achieve in the larger environment.
• Business portfolio: The collection of businesses and products that make up the
company.
Growth-Share Matrix
• Purpose: To analyze a company's SBUs based on market growth rate and relative
market share.
• Categories: Stars (high growth, high share), Cash Cows (low growth, high share),
Question Marks (high growth, low share), Dogs (low growth, low share).
• Limitations: Defining and measuring market share and growth can be difficult, it
doesn't provide much guidance for future planning.
Downsizing
Marketing's Role
• Marketing Strategy: The logic by which the company creates customer value
and achieves profitable customer relationships. It involves segmentation,
targeting, differentiation, and positioning.
• Definition: Net return from a marketing investment divided by the cost of the
investment.
Demographic Environment
• Key Trends: Changing age and family structures, geographic shifts, educational
characteristics, population diversity.
Economic Environment
Natural Environment
Technological Environment
• Impact: Technological advancements rapidly change the marketplace, create
new products and opportunities, and raise concerns about safety.
Cultural Environment
• Definition: Institutions and forces that affect society's values, perceptions, and
behaviors.
• They are crucial for creating customer value, engagement, and building strong
relationships.
• Obtaining valuable insights can be challenging, as marketers need to manage
information from a wide range of sources.
• Big Data refers to the massive and complex datasets generated by today's
information technologies.
• This data comes from various sources, including market research, internal
transaction data, social media monitoring, connected devices, and other digital
platforms.
• Customer insight teams play a vital role in collecting and analysing information
from numerous sources. These teams usually include members from all
company functional areas (or departments).
o Customer data
o Software data
o Reports
• Marketing Research: This involves collecting data that is not readily available.
Common methods for gathering marketing research data include:
o Phone surveys
o Internet surveys
o In-person surveys
Internal Data
Marketing Research
o Designing research
o Collecting data
o Analysing data
o Reporting findings
o This stage involves determining the research goals, which might fall into
one of the following categories:
▪ Contact methods
▪ Sampling plans
▪ Research objectives
▪ Information needed
▪ Budget
▪ Lower cost
▪ Quick to obtain
▪ May be biased
▪ Research Approaches:
▪ Contact Methods:
▪ Mail questionnaires
▪ Telephone interviews
▪ Personal interviews
▪ Individual interviews
▪ Group interviews
▪ Consumer tracking
▪ Online experiments
▪ Sampling Plan:
▪ Convenience sample
▪ Judgement sample
▪ Quota sample
▪ Research Instruments:
▪ Questionnaires
▪ Open-ended questions
▪ Closed-ended questions
▪ Mechanical instruments
▪ Interpret findings
▪ Draw conclusions
▪ Report to management
o Misuse of research findings: Ensuring that research results are not used
to mislead or manipulate consumers
o Follower demographics
o Follower actions
o Content performance
• Engagement: The total number of interactions with the content, including likes,
comments, shares, saves, follows, mentions, hashtag usage, clicks, and direct
messages.
• Engagement Rate: The percentage of people who saw the content and
interacted with it.
• The sources also provide links to further resources on using Facebook Analytics
for marketing decisions, noting that it was discontinued in 2021.
• Cultural Factors:
• Personal Factors:
o Occupation: A person's job can influence the types of goods and services
they purchase
o Age and Life Stage: Consumer preferences evolve throughout their lives,
affecting their choices in food, clothing, furniture, and recreation
• Psychological Factors:
• Complex Buying Behaviour: This occurs when consumers are highly involved in
a purchase and perceive significant differences among brands. It's common for
expensive, risky, infrequent, and self-expressive purchases.
5. Postpurchase Behaviour: The consumer's actions after the purchase are based
on their satisfaction or dissatisfaction. Cognitive dissonance (buyer's remorse)
can occur if the consumer experiences post-purchase conflict.
• The customer journey encompasses all the experiences a consumer has with a
brand over time. This includes their interactions, purchases, and engagement
with the brand.
o Increased engagement
o Brand advocacy
o Trial: The consumer tries the new product on a small scale to assess its
value.
o Adoption: The consumer decides to make full and regular use of the new
product.
o Early Mainstream: Adopt new products before the average person but
are not opinion leaders.
o Late Mainstream: Skeptical of new products and adopt them only after a
majority of people have already done so.
Five characteristics can influence the rate at which a new product is adopted:
• Compatibility: The degree to which the innovation fits the values and
experiences of potential consumers.
• Triability: The degree to which the innovation may be tried on a limited basis.
• Market Structure and Demand: Business markets have fewer, but larger buyers.
Demand is derived from consumer demand, inelastic (less affected by price
changes), and fluctuates more.
3. Differentiation: Creating a unique and valuable offering that sets your product
or service apart from the competition.
• Consumer Markets:
• Business Markets:
o Operating characteristics
o Purchasing approaches
o Situational factors
o Personal characteristics
• International Markets:
o Geographic location
o Economic factors
o Cultural factors
Market-Targeting Strategies:
• Micromarketing:
• Rebranding: changing outward factors like brand image (e.g., Burger King's logo
redesign, dahmakan's shift from "healthy food" to affordability).
• Customer journey: the sum of the ongoing experiences consumers have with a
brand over time, affecting their buying behaviour and engagement.
Understanding the customer journey helps marketers create positive
experiences.
• Adoption process: the mental process an individual goes through from learning
about an innovation to final regular use.
o Late Mainstream: skeptical, adopt only after the majority have tried it.
• Service: An activity, benefit, or satisfaction offered for sale that is intangible and
does not result in ownership.
• Market offerings: Encompass both tangible goods and services, often combined
with customer experiences to differentiate from competitors.
Consumer Products
Industrial Products
Figure 8.2 in the sources provides a visual overview of individual product decisions.
• Branding: The name, term, sign, or design that identifies a product or service.
• Product Support Services: Enhance the value of the product (e.g., customer
service).
o Product Line Filling: Adding more items within the present range.
o Product Line Stretching: Lengthening the product line beyond its current
range.
• Product Mix (Product Portfolio): The set of all product lines and items offered by
a seller.
o Consistency: How related the product lines are in end use, production,
distribution, etc.
Services Marketing
• Variability: Quality depends on who provides them and when, where, and how.
Brand Strategy
• Brand Equity: The differential effect of knowing the brand name on customer
response.
Figure 8.5 in the sources outlines the major brand strategy decisions.
o Distinctiveness
o Extendability
o Translatability
o Legal protection
• Brand Sponsorship:
Brand Management
Figure 9.1 in the sources illustrates the major stages in the new product
development process.
2. Idea Screening: Evaluating ideas to identify those with the greatest potential.
Use the R-W-W screening framework:
o Can we win? Does the company have the resources and competitive
advantage to succeed?
o Is it worth doing? Will the product be profitable and fit the company's
objectives?
4. Marketing Strategy Development: Creating an initial marketing plan for the new
product.
5. Business Analysis: A thorough review of the financial projections for the new
product.
7. Test Marketing: Testing the product and its marketing program in realistic market
conditions.
o Decisions include:
• Products go through a life cycle with distinct stages, each requiring different
marketing strategies.
• Figure 9.2 in the sources shows the typical sales and profit patterns over a
product's life cycle.
1. Introduction Stage
2. Growth Stage
o Expanding distribution.
3. Maturity Stage
• Industry profits might decline due to price competition and increased marketing
costs.
4. Decline Stage
o Maintain: Support the product in the hope that competitors will exit the
market.
Table 9.2 in the sources summarises product life cycle characteristics, objectives,
and strategies.
Additional Considerations