Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Chapter 1: Marketing’s Role in the Global Economy.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Chapter 1: Marketing’s Role in the Global Economy."— Presentation transcript:

1 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Chapter 1: Marketing’s Role in the Global Economy

2 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Marketing Defined Micro-marketing The performance of activities that seek to accomplish an organization’s objectives by anticipating customer needs and directing the flow of need-satisfying goods and services. Macro-marketing A social process that directs an economy’s flow of goods and services to effectively match supply and demand and to meet society’s objectives. 1-3

3 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Implications of the Definition of Micro- Marketing Applies to profit and nonprofit organizations. NOT just persuading customers to buy. Begins with customer needs and focuses on customer satisfaction. Includes marketing activities -- but it also is a philosophy that guides the whole business. Seeks to build a relationship with the customer. 1-4

4 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Marketing Is Important! Marketing impacts all of us in our lives as consumers Gives us choices Stimulates innovation and economic growth There are many good job opportunities in marketing Regardless of what career path you take, no firm (or non-profit organization) survives for long if it can’t satisfy some group of customers. 1-5

5 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Two Basic Kinds of Economic Systems Planned - government planners decide what and how much is to be produced and distributed by whom, when, to whom, and why. Market-directed - individual decisions of the many producers and consumers make the macro-level decisions for the whole economy. 1-4

6 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Micro-Macro Dilemma What is good for some producers and consumers may not be good for society as a whole.

7 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Exchange and Marketing In very basic economic systems, each seller must meet directly with each buyer in order to exchange something of value. As needs increase, the number of exchanges can soon become unmanageable for one person. Exhibit 1-2A 1-7 Ten exchanges required without central market Pots BasketsHats KnivesHoes

8 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Exchange and Marketing Central market middleman Pots BasketsHats Knives Hoes Five exchanges required with central market Exhibit 1-2B 1-8 In a centralized market, a buyer can go to one location to find many different products from many different sellers. By reducing the time both buyers and sellers must spend to complete an exchange, prices can be lowered.

9 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Marketing Facilitates Production and Consumption Exhibit 1-3 Production Sector Specialization and division of labor = heterogeneous supply capabilities Consumption Sector Heterogeneous demand for form, task, time, place, and possession utility Discrepancies of Quantity Discrepancies of Assortment Spatial Separation Separation in Time Separation of Information Separation in Values Separation of Ownership Marketing needed to overcome discrepancies and separations 1-11

10 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Universal Functions of Marketing Buying, selling, transporting, storing, standardization and grading, financing, risk taking, and market information are the universal functions of marketing. Functions help overcome separations and discrepancies. Can be performed by producers, middlemen, facilitators, or consumers. Responsibility for performing these functions can be shared and shifted. From a micro viewpoint, not every company must perform every function. From a macro viewpoint, all these functions must be performed by someone. 1-4

11 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Many Individual Consumers To create utility and direct flow of need-satisfying goods and services To overcome discrepancies and separations Perform universal marketing functions Middlemen intermediaries Many Individual Producers Facilitators Model of Market-Directed Macro-Marketing System Exhibit 1-4 1-12 Monitoring by government(s) and public interest groups

12 For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Marketing Ethics Marketing ethics - the moral standards that guide marketing decisions and actions. Individuals develop moral standards based on their own values. Opinions about what is right or wrong vary from one society to another. The prevailing practice of most businesspeople is to be fair and honest. 1-4


Download ppt "For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Chapter 1: Marketing’s Role in the Global Economy."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google