bonddonraj
Par 100 posts (V.I.P)
Change is occurring at an accelerating rate; today is not like yesterday, and tomorrow
will be different from today. Continuing today’s strategy is risky; so is turning
to a new strategy. Therefore, tomorrow’s successful companies will have to heed three
certainties:
➤ Global forces will continue to affect everyone’s business and personal life.
➤ Technology will continue to advance and amaze us.
➤ There will be a continuing push toward deregulation of the economic sector.
These three developments—globalization, technological advances, and deregulation—
spell endless opportunities. But what is marketing and what does it have to do
with these issues?
Marketing deals with identifying and meeting human and social needs. One of
the shortest definitions of marketing is “meeting needs profitably.” Whether the marketer
is Procter & Gamble, which notices that people feel overweight and want tasty
but less fatty food and invents Olestra; or CarMax, which notes that people want more
certainty when they buy a used automobile and invents a new system for selling used
cars; or IKEA, which notices that people want good furniture at a substantially lower
price and creates knock-down furniture—all illustrate a drive to turn a private or social
need into a profitable business opportunity through marketing.
MARKETING TASKS
A recent book, Radical Marketing, praises companies such as Harley-Davidson for succeeding
by breaking all of the rules of marketing.1 Instead of commissioning expensive
marketing research, spending huge sums on advertising, and operating large market-customers,
and create more satisfying solutions to customers’ needs. They form buyers
clubs, use creative public relations, and focus on delivering quality products to win
long-term customer loyalty. It seems that not all marketing must follow the P&G model.
In fact, we can distinguish three stages through which marketing practice might
pass:
1. Entrepreneurial marketing: Most companies are started by individuals who visualize an
opportunity and knock on every door to gain attention. Jim Koch, founder of Boston
Beer Company, whose Samuel Adams beer has become a top-selling “craft” beer,
started out in 1984 carrying bottles of Samuel Adams from bar to bar to persuade bartenders
to carry it. For 10 years, he sold his beer through direct selling and grassroots
public relations. Today his business pulls in nearly $200 million, making it the leader
in the U.S. craft beer market.2
2. Formulated marketing: As small companies achieve success, they inevitably move toward
more formulated marketing. Boston Beer recently began a $15 million television
advertising campaign. The company now employs more that 175 salespeople and has
a marketing department that carries on market research, adopting some of the tools
used in professionally run marketing companies.
3. Intrepreneurial marketing: Many large companies get stuck in formulated marketing,
poring over the latest ratings, scanning research reports, trying to fine-tune dealer
relations and advertising messages. These companies lack the creativity and passion
of the guerrilla marketers in the entrepreneurial stage.3 Their brand and product
managers need to start living with their customers and visualizing new ways to add
value to their customers’ lives.
The bottom line is that effective marketing can take many forms. Although it is
easier to learn the formulated side (which will occupy most of our attention in this
book), we will also see how creativity and passion can be used by today’s and tomorrow’s
marketing managers.
The Scope of Marketing
Marketing people are involved in marketing 10 types of entities: goods, services, experiences,
events, persons, places, properties, organizations, information, and ideas.
Goods. Physical goods constitute the bulk of most countries’ production and
marketing effort. The United States produces and markets billions of physical
goods, from eggs to steel to hair dryers. In developing nations, goods—
particularly food, commodities, clothing, and housing—are the mainstay of the
economy.
Services. As economies advance, a growing proportion of their activities are
focused on the production of services. The U.S. economy today consists of a
70–30 services-to-goods mix. Services include airlines, hotels, and maintenance
and repair people, as well as professionals such as accountants, lawyers,
engineers, and doctors. Many market offerings consist of a variable mix of
goods and services.
Experiences. By orchestrating several services and goods, one can create, stage,
and market experiences. Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom is an experience;
so is the Hard Rock Cafe.
Events. Marketers promote time-based events, such as the Olympics, trade
shows, sports events, and artistic performances.Persons. Celebrity marketing has become a major business. Artists, musicians,
CEOs, physicians, high-profile lawyers and financiers, and other professionals
draw help from celebrity marketers.4
Places. Cities, states, regions, and nations compete to attract tourists, factories,
company headquarters, and new residents.5 Place marketers include economic
development specialists, real estate agents, commercial banks, local business
associations, and advertising and public relations agencies.
Properties. Properties are intangible rights of ownership of either real property
(real estate) or financial property (stocks and bonds). Properties are bought
and sold, and this occasions a marketing effort by real estate agents (for real
estate) and investment companies and banks (for securities).
Organizations. Organizations actively work to build a strong, favorable image in
the mind of their publics. Philips, the Dutch electronics company, advertises
with the tag line, “Let’s Make Things Better.” The Body Shop and Ben & Jerry’s
also gain attention by promoting social causes. Universities, museums, and
performing arts organizations boost their public images to compete more
successfully for audiences and funds.
Information. The production, packaging, and distribution of information is one
of society’s major industries.6 Among the marketers of information are schools
and universities; publishers of encyclopedias, nonfiction books, and specialized
magazines; makers of CDs; and Internet Web sites.
Ideas. Every market offering has a basic idea at its core. In essence, products and
services are platforms for delivering some idea or benefit to satisfy a core need.
will be different from today. Continuing today’s strategy is risky; so is turning
to a new strategy. Therefore, tomorrow’s successful companies will have to heed three
certainties:
➤ Global forces will continue to affect everyone’s business and personal life.
➤ Technology will continue to advance and amaze us.
➤ There will be a continuing push toward deregulation of the economic sector.
These three developments—globalization, technological advances, and deregulation—
spell endless opportunities. But what is marketing and what does it have to do
with these issues?
Marketing deals with identifying and meeting human and social needs. One of
the shortest definitions of marketing is “meeting needs profitably.” Whether the marketer
is Procter & Gamble, which notices that people feel overweight and want tasty
but less fatty food and invents Olestra; or CarMax, which notes that people want more
certainty when they buy a used automobile and invents a new system for selling used
cars; or IKEA, which notices that people want good furniture at a substantially lower
price and creates knock-down furniture—all illustrate a drive to turn a private or social
need into a profitable business opportunity through marketing.
MARKETING TASKS
A recent book, Radical Marketing, praises companies such as Harley-Davidson for succeeding
by breaking all of the rules of marketing.1 Instead of commissioning expensive
marketing research, spending huge sums on advertising, and operating large market-customers,
and create more satisfying solutions to customers’ needs. They form buyers
clubs, use creative public relations, and focus on delivering quality products to win
long-term customer loyalty. It seems that not all marketing must follow the P&G model.
In fact, we can distinguish three stages through which marketing practice might
pass:
1. Entrepreneurial marketing: Most companies are started by individuals who visualize an
opportunity and knock on every door to gain attention. Jim Koch, founder of Boston
Beer Company, whose Samuel Adams beer has become a top-selling “craft” beer,
started out in 1984 carrying bottles of Samuel Adams from bar to bar to persuade bartenders
to carry it. For 10 years, he sold his beer through direct selling and grassroots
public relations. Today his business pulls in nearly $200 million, making it the leader
in the U.S. craft beer market.2
2. Formulated marketing: As small companies achieve success, they inevitably move toward
more formulated marketing. Boston Beer recently began a $15 million television
advertising campaign. The company now employs more that 175 salespeople and has
a marketing department that carries on market research, adopting some of the tools
used in professionally run marketing companies.
3. Intrepreneurial marketing: Many large companies get stuck in formulated marketing,
poring over the latest ratings, scanning research reports, trying to fine-tune dealer
relations and advertising messages. These companies lack the creativity and passion
of the guerrilla marketers in the entrepreneurial stage.3 Their brand and product
managers need to start living with their customers and visualizing new ways to add
value to their customers’ lives.
The bottom line is that effective marketing can take many forms. Although it is
easier to learn the formulated side (which will occupy most of our attention in this
book), we will also see how creativity and passion can be used by today’s and tomorrow’s
marketing managers.
The Scope of Marketing
Marketing people are involved in marketing 10 types of entities: goods, services, experiences,
events, persons, places, properties, organizations, information, and ideas.
Goods. Physical goods constitute the bulk of most countries’ production and
marketing effort. The United States produces and markets billions of physical
goods, from eggs to steel to hair dryers. In developing nations, goods—
particularly food, commodities, clothing, and housing—are the mainstay of the
economy.
Services. As economies advance, a growing proportion of their activities are
focused on the production of services. The U.S. economy today consists of a
70–30 services-to-goods mix. Services include airlines, hotels, and maintenance
and repair people, as well as professionals such as accountants, lawyers,
engineers, and doctors. Many market offerings consist of a variable mix of
goods and services.
Experiences. By orchestrating several services and goods, one can create, stage,
and market experiences. Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom is an experience;
so is the Hard Rock Cafe.
Events. Marketers promote time-based events, such as the Olympics, trade
shows, sports events, and artistic performances.Persons. Celebrity marketing has become a major business. Artists, musicians,
CEOs, physicians, high-profile lawyers and financiers, and other professionals
draw help from celebrity marketers.4
Places. Cities, states, regions, and nations compete to attract tourists, factories,
company headquarters, and new residents.5 Place marketers include economic
development specialists, real estate agents, commercial banks, local business
associations, and advertising and public relations agencies.
Properties. Properties are intangible rights of ownership of either real property
(real estate) or financial property (stocks and bonds). Properties are bought
and sold, and this occasions a marketing effort by real estate agents (for real
estate) and investment companies and banks (for securities).
Organizations. Organizations actively work to build a strong, favorable image in
the mind of their publics. Philips, the Dutch electronics company, advertises
with the tag line, “Let’s Make Things Better.” The Body Shop and Ben & Jerry’s
also gain attention by promoting social causes. Universities, museums, and
performing arts organizations boost their public images to compete more
successfully for audiences and funds.
Information. The production, packaging, and distribution of information is one
of society’s major industries.6 Among the marketers of information are schools
and universities; publishers of encyclopedias, nonfiction books, and specialized
magazines; makers of CDs; and Internet Web sites.
Ideas. Every market offering has a basic idea at its core. In essence, products and
services are platforms for delivering some idea or benefit to satisfy a core need.