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CH 1 Overview of Marketing CLASS

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128 views27 pages

CH 1 Overview of Marketing CLASS

Uploaded by

Braden Spath
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Because learning changes everything.

Chapter 1
Overview of Marketing

Copyright 2022 © McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Learning Objectives

Learning Objective 1.1 Define the role of


marketing.
Learning Objective 1.2 Describe the evolution of
marketing over time.
Learning Objective 1.3 Describe how marketers
create value for a product or service.

© McGraw Hill LLC 3


Water Bottles

© McGraw Hill LLC CD_works27/Shutterstock 4


What Is Marketing?

Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes


for creating, capturing, communicating, delivering, and
exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients,
partners, and society at large.

© McGraw Hill LLC Alejandro Rivera/Getty Images 5


Exhibit 1.1 Core Aspects of Marketing

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill LLC 6


Marketing Is about Satisfying Customer
Needs and Wants
How does Dove offer value?
• Dove added the Dove
Men+Care line and expanded
into products for babies.
• In advertising to male
consumers, Dove seeks to
acknowledge and recognize
modern men’s caregiving roles,
so it can link these
communications to its baby care
products too.
• Dove seeks to acknowledge and Dove seeks to acknowledge and recognize
modern men’s caregiving roles, so it can link
recognize modern men’s these communications to its baby care
caregiving roles, so it can link products.
these communications to its
baby care products.

© McGraw Hill LLC Source: Unilever 7


Exhibit 1.2: Exchange: The Underpinning of
Seller-Buyer Relationships

© McGraw Hill LLC 8


Exhibit 1.3: The Marketing Mix

© McGraw Hill LLC Source: McGraw-Hill Global Education Holdings, LLC 9


Marketing Creates Value through Product,
Price, Place, and Promotion Decisions

The Marketing Mix: • Product.

• Price.
The controllable set
of decisions or • Promotion.
activities that the firm
uses to respond to • Place.
the wants of its target
markets.

© McGraw Hill LLC 10


Product: Creating Value

The fundamental purpose of


marketing is to create value
by developing a variety of
offerings, including goods,
services, and ideas, to
satisfy customer needs.

• Goods.
• Services.
• Ideas.
Marketing creates value by
promoting ideas, such as bicycle
safety.

© McGraw Hill LLC Source: Street Smart, a public safety campaign of Metro, the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia. 11
Price: Capturing Value

Price is everything a
buyer gives up (money,
time, energy) in
exchange for the
product or service.

If you don’t mind sitting in a middle seat and


putting all your baggage under your seat, flying
on low-cost carriers like Frontier is a good value.

© McGraw Hill LLC Kateryna Kukota/Alamy Stock Photo 12


Place: Delivering the Value Proposition

Place represents all the


marketing processes
necessary to get the product to
the right customer when that
customer wants it.

Place more commonly deals


specifically with retailing and
marketing channel
management, also known as
supply chain management.
Hertz creates customer value by using biometrics to
create a function that recognizes loyal customers
using facial, iris, or fingerprint scans.

© McGraw Hill LLC Jeff Martin/AP Images 13


Promotion: Communicating the Value
Proposition

Promotion is
communication by a
marketer that informs,
persuades, and reminds
potential buyers about a
product or service to
influence their buying
decisions and elicit a
response.
Babar books wanted to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the
series. It initiated a $100,000 campaign, working in collaboration
with toy stores and bookstores.

© McGraw Hill LLC BananaStock/Alamy Images 14


Exhibit 1.4: Marketing Can Be Performed by
Individuals and by Organizations

© McGraw Hill LLC 15


Marketing Impacts Various Stakeholders

Customers.

Supply Chain Partners.

Employees.

Industry.

Society.
The Great American Milk Drive, run in conjunction with
Feeding America, seeks to ensure that local food banks are
sufficiently stocked with nutritious, frequently requested items.

© McGraw Hill LLC Source: America’s Milk Companies 16


PROGRESS CHECK (1 of 3)

1. What is the definition of marketing?


2. Marketing is about satisfying blank and
blank.
3. What are the four components of the marketing
mix?
4. Who can perform marketing?

© McGraw Hill LLC 17


Exhibit 1.5 Marketing Evolution:
Production, Sales, Marketing and Value

Photos (left to right): Ryan McVay/Photodisc/Getty Images; Clement Mok/Photodisc/Getty Images; Lawrence Manning/Corbis/Getty Images; Ryan McVay/Photodisc/Getty
Images; Mark Dierker/McGraw-Hill

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill LLC 18


Value-Based Marketing

A Lipstick Option for Those Who Dream of a Hermès


Bag

© McGraw Hill LLC © Justin Sullivan/Getty Images 19


Value-Based Marketing Era

© McGraw Hill LLC 20


PROGRESS CHECK (2 of 3)

1. What are the various eras of marketing?

© McGraw Hill LLC 21


How Does Marketing Create Value and
How Do Firms Become More Value Driven?

Build relationships with customers.

Gather and analyze information.

Balance benefits and costs.

Connect with customers using social and


mobile media.

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill LLC 22


Value Stems From Four Main Activities

Adding Value

Using Marketing Analytics

Embracing Social and Mobile Marketing

Ethical and Societal Dilemma: Engaging in


Conscious Marketing

Access the text alternative for slide images.

© McGraw Hill LLC 23


Marketing Analytics

Companies collect massive amounts of data about


how, when, why, where, and what people buy.

Kroger collects massive amounts of data about how, when, why, where, and what people buy and
then analyzes those data to better serve its customers.

© McGraw Hill LLC © Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty Images 24


Connecting With Customers Using Social
and Mobile Marketing

Social media ad
spending is growing,
increasing by 32 percent
in 2018 alone.

3.26 billion people link


to some social media
sites through their
mobile devices.
Make travel arrangements online either
through Facebook or hotels’ mobile app and
check-in is a breeze.

© McGraw Hill LLC Erik Isakson/Blend Images/Getty Images 25


Resolving Ethical and Societal Dilemmas

Conscious Marketing

Socially Responsible
Firms

Making socially
responsible activities an
integral component of
corporate strategies.
Too Good To Go is a UK-based app that
has partnered with 1,381 food stores to
match hungry customers to restaurants and
stores with surplus food that would
otherwise go to waste.

© McGraw Hill LLC Guillaume Payen/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images 26


PROGRESS CHECK (3 of 3)

1. Does providing a good value mean selling at a


low price?
2. How are marketers connecting with customers
through social and mobile media?

© McGraw Hill LLC 27


End of Main Content

Because learning changes everything. ®

www.mheducation.com

Copyright 2022 © McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.

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