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The Marketing Environment
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THE MARKETING ENVIRONMENT
The external forces that directly or indirectly influence a firm’s acquisition and allocation of resources and its creation of products
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Uncontrollable Factors
Social Economic Product Price Place Promotion Customer Technological Regulatory Competitive
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THE ENVIRONMENT AFFECTS EVERYONE
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Proper Scan Identify CORRECT environment Identify key facts and trends
Proper scale: global, national, regional, local Proper industry Determine key competitors Identify key facts and trends Earlier is better Assess impact quickly/accurately Localize trends if business is local Use scan to make forward-looking decisions
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Competitive Forces Competition: firms that market similar or substitute products Who does your customer consider when looking to satisfy the need for what you do? When analyzing competition: Consider the competitive structure Identify key competitors SWOT Competitive advantages Marketing mix
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Total Budget (Indirect) Competitors
Types of Competition Brand Competitors Product Competitors Generic Competitors Total Budget (Indirect) Competitors
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Competitive Structures
Monopoly One competitor Many, typically big, barriers No close product substitutes Maintain monopoly status No competition Pure competition
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Competitive Structures
Oligopoly Few competitors Some barriers Homogeneous or differentiated products Focus on competitor reactions to events No competition Pure competition
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Competitive Structures
Monopolistic Competition Many competitors Fewer barriers Product differentiation, many substitutes Focus on differentiating product/brand No competition Pure competition
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Competitive Structures
Pure Competition Unlimited competitors no barriers to entry Countless substitutes Theoretical situation No competition Pure competition
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Economic Forces Economic Conditions Buying Power Willingness to Spend
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Business Cycle A pattern of economic fluctuations that has four stages
Prosperity Recession Depression Recovery
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Buying Power and Willingness to Spend
Buying Power = resources (typically money) that can be traded in an exchange Gross income: total income Disposable income: after tax money used for necessities Discretionary income: money left over after covering taxes and necessities Willingness to Spend is closely related to Ability to Buy “Cash or credit”
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Legal/Regulatory and Political Forces
Legislation Legal decisions by courts Regulatory agencies Self-regulatory forces Marketers Adjust to conditions Influence through contributions
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Legal and Regulatory Forces
Regulatory Agencies Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Self-Regulatory Forces Better Business Bureau National Advertising Review Board (NARB)
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Technology Technology is the application of knowledge and tools to solve problems and/or perform tasks more efficiently Inventions or innovations
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Technology Characterized by:
Falling costs Increasingly new products/rapid obsolescence of old products Can transform entire industries and/or societies
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Social The influences in a society and its culture(s) that change people’s attitudes, values and/or lifestyles Examples Demographic shifts “Going green” Increasing customer sophistication Population migration
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