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Marketing Ethics - Product Safety and Pricing

This document discusses marketing ethics related to product safety, pricing, and target marketing. It addresses questions around who might purchase a product, what price they can afford, and who is responsible if harm occurs. Ethical perspectives are examined, such as whether exchanges are informed, voluntary and avoid coercion or deception of buyers. The document also covers issues like pricing strategies, advertising, consumer protection, and marketing to vulnerable groups.

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Zurul
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
161 views

Marketing Ethics - Product Safety and Pricing

This document discusses marketing ethics related to product safety, pricing, and target marketing. It addresses questions around who might purchase a product, what price they can afford, and who is responsible if harm occurs. Ethical perspectives are examined, such as whether exchanges are informed, voluntary and avoid coercion or deception of buyers. The document also covers issues like pricing strategies, advertising, consumer protection, and marketing to vulnerable groups.

Uploaded by

Zurul
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

Marketing Ethics – Product

Safety and Pricing

1
Four “Ps” of Marketing
• Product
• Pricing
• Promotion
• Placement

2
Basic Concept of the Market
• A place where a seller brings a product or
service and where a buyer is willing to
“exchange” something of value for the
product or service.

3
Big Questions
• Who would be interested in buying the good or
service?
• What price would they be willing to pay?
– How much can they afford?
• How will the price affect other stakeholders
(distributors, retailers, competitors)
• Who is responsible for the product should harm
occur?
• Are requirements different if selling in other
countries?

4
Ethical Perspectives
• A free exchange is “Prima Facie” (On its face)
ethically legitimate
– Kantian – respect for individual because they are
seen as capable of pursuing their own interests.

5
Issue Occur When
• Exchange was a result of informed or
voluntary consent
– No Fraud
– No Deception
– No Coercion

6
Kant Again
• Were participants treated simply as means to
an end?
• Are there real benefits from the transaction?
• What other values maybe at stake (societal
concerns)

7
Coercion
• The more an individual needs the product the
less free they are to decide (addicts or very ill
people)
• Informed consent
– What about buyers with impaired skills (reading,
math, life experience)?
• Addition to “Affluenza” (higher degree of
consumption will lead to higher degrees of
happiness)

8
Values beyond needs of buyer
• Fairness
• Health
• Justice
• Safety
• There is a market for children

9
Product Liability
• First sense
– Who or what caused the problem
• Second sense
– Assignment of blame or fault “who is
responsible?”
• Third sense
– Who is accountable? Such as who is responsible
for paying an elderly persons bills

10
Negligence
• Contract – only what is promised
• Contractarian view – I have duties to what I
have narrowly and explicitly assumed
• General duty: Not to put others at
unnecessary or avoidable risk
– One does not neglect their duty to exercise
reasonable care not to harm other people
• Ought not reasonably oblige someone to do what they
cannot do
• One ought not to harm others

11
• One standard – liable only for harms they could
actually foresaw occurring
– Recklessness or even intentional harm are far beyond
simple negligence
• A higher standard – Avoid harm that even if not
actually thought about they should have thought
about.
• What would a reasonable person expect an
“average person to know”
• Higher your knowledge the greater your
obligation
12
Product Liability
• Strict – Product performance. Therefore
responsibility is on producers
• Who pays
– Tough luck – consumer pays
– Society – Socialized insurance
– Manufacturer
• Deep pockets and ability to pass on cost
• “compensatory justice” Those who caused the harm or have
benefited from the transaction should compensate people
harmed
• Guns and Cigarettes

13
Caveat Emptor
• You are required only to live up to your end of
the bargain. Pay the price – Deliver the goods
or services

14
Pricing
• A fair price is one that both parties agree to
– What about availability of buyers and sellers? If either
limited then no market equilibrium
• Knowledge of buyers
– AIDs drugs in Africa
• What about patents?
• What about monopolistic pricing?
– Wal-Mart, COSTCO, Target, Safeway
• What about stair-step pricing in auto industry?
• What about government subsidies?

15
Chapter Nine
Marketing Ethics: Advertising and
Target Marketing

16
The Last Two “Ps”
• Promotion and Placement
– Target Marketing
– Market Research
• Ethical Influence
– Persuading, Asking, Informing, Advising
• Unethical Influence
– Threats, Coercion, Deception, Manipulation, Lying

17
Draw the line between Ethical and
Unethical

Unethical Ethical

18
Consumer Protection
• Federal Trade Commission
– Focus on effect or intent
– Who judges what “might” happen
– Political consequences if regulate after harm is
done
• Do we assume consumers are reasonable or
relatively ignorant

19
Other forms of consumer autonomy
• Over time the market will weed out deceptive
ads and practices
• Affluent Society (John Kenneth Galbraith)
– “Dependence effect” Market was creating the
consumers
• Disrupting supply and demand
• Creating irrational and trivial consumer demands
• Violates consumer autonomy through manipulation
• What would Kant say?
20
Possible violations of individual
autonomy
• Advertising creates want which are not
autonomous
– Why do people shop?
• Non-autonomous desires
– First order (Happen at any given time and rational
individuals can step away from them)
– Second Order (unable to step back. Like an Alcoholic
• Arrington argues that marketing influences us by
appealing to pre-existing conditions
21
• Dworkin – To be an autonomous choice it must
indepedently accepted by the individual
• Crisp – Need to know why it is accepted. Gets to
the capacity of the consumer
• Lippke – To be an autonomous decision maker
the individual must have a variety of intellectual
skills, discipline, attitudes, and motivations
– Ads carry meta-messages (emotional appeals,
oversimplification, superficiality, shoddy standards of
proof.

22
Marketing to the vulnerable

23
Unique Volunerability
• Consumer (unable to fully participate as an
informed participant in the marketplace
• General (Susceptible to some physical,
psychological or financial harm)
• What about target marketing to poor, minority
groups, accident victims, funeral settings,
college students.

24

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