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Published byChad Peters Modified over 6 years ago
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LAUNCHING A NEW BILLION-DOLLAR FOOD CATEGORY—IN JUST SEVEN YEARS!
Developing Chobani’s Unique Greek Yogurt Reaching Customers Chobani Today Chobani, Marketing, and You Chobani
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FIGURE 1-1 A marketing department relates to many people, organizations, and environmental forces
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WHAT IS MARKETING? REQUIREMENTS FOR MARKETING TO OCCUR
LO 1-1 Two + Parties with Unsatisfied Needs A Desire and Ability to be Satisfied A Way for the Parties to Communicate Something to Exchange Domino’s Pan Pizza
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American Marketing Association’s new official definition of marketing released August 2004:
Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering and exchanging offerings that have values for customers, clients, partners, and society at large.
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Ultimate Goal of Marketing
The passion to understand and satisfy the needs of customers in well-defined target markets.
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Core Concepts of Marketing (1 of 2)
Needs Wants Demands Marketing Offers Value
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Core Concepts of Marketing (2 of 2)
Satisfaction Exchange Transaction Market Utility
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Utility Production and marketing together create utility
Utility - The want-satisfying power of a good or service
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TABLE 1.1 Four Types of Utility
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Six Eras of Marketing PRODUCT PRODUCTION SALES MARKETING SOCIETY
RELATIONSHIP
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Marketing Myopia Marketing myopia - Management’s failure to recognize the scope of its business Overcoming marketing myopia Developing broader marketing-oriented business ideas focusing on customer need satisfaction
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Avoiding Marketing Myopia
TABLE 1.2 Avoiding Marketing Myopia
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AVOIDING MARKETING MYOPIA
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Not-for-Profit Marketing
Marketing in not-for-profit organizations Operate in both the public and private sector Adopt marketing strategies to meet service objectives Communicate their messages through advertisements relating to their goals Form alliances with for-profit firms to promote each other’s causes
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Characteristics of Not-for-profit Marketing
Focus is to generate revenue to support their causes and not on the bottom line May market tangible goods and services Markets to multiple audiences Often possess some degree of monopoly power in a given geographic region Service users have less control over the firm’s future
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Categories of Nontraditional Marketing
TABLE 1.3 Categories of Nontraditional Marketing
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Nontraditional Marketing
Person marketing – Efforts to cultivate the attention, interest, and preferences of a target market toward a person Celebrity endorsements Place marketing - Efforts to attract people and organizations to a particular geographic area Tourism enhancements
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Nontraditional Marketing
Cause marketing - Identification and marketing of a social issue, cause or idea to selected target markets Many profit-seeking firms link their products to social causes Strong support among customers and employees for cause-related marketing
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Nontraditional Marketing
Event marketing - Marketing of sporting, cultural, and charitable activities to selected target markets Also, includes sponsorship of such events by firms Event sponsorships have gained effectiveness in increasing brand recognition, enhancing image, boosting purchase volume
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Nontraditional Marketing
Organization marketing - Intended to persuade others to: Accept the organization’s goals Receive its services Contribute to the organization in some way Adopted by mutual-benefit organizations, service organizations, and government organizations
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Converting New Customers to Advocates
FIGURE 1.2 Converting New Customers to Advocates
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