What makes a business idea work? Does it only take money?

Marketing

“The activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large.”

C H A P T E R 1 What Is Marketing? What makes a business idea work? Does it only take money? Why are some products a huge success and similar

products a dismal failure? How was Apple, a computer company, able to create and launch the wildly successful

iPod, yet Microsoft’s first foray into MP3 players was a total disaster? If the size of the company and the money

 

behind a product’s launch were the difference, Microsoft would have won. But for Microsoft to have won, it would

have needed something it hasn’t had in a while—good marketing so it can produce and sell products that

consumers want.

So how does good marketing get done?

1. DEFINING MARKETING

L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E

1. Define marketing and outline its components.

Marketing is defined by the American Marketing Association as “the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for cus- tomers, clients, partners, and society at large.”[1] If you read the definition closely, you see that there are four activities, or components, of marketing:

1. Creating. The process of collaborating with suppliers and customers to create offerings that have value.

2. Communicating. Broadly, describing those offerings, as well as learning from customers. 3. Delivering. Getting those offerings to the consumer in a way that optimizes value. 4. Exchanging. Trading value for those offerings.

However, the traditional way of viewing the components of marketing, which emerged in the early 1950s, is based on the following four Ps:

1. Product. Goods and services (creating offerings). 2. Promotion. Communication. 3. Place. Getting the product to a point at which the customer can purchase it (delivering). 4. Price. The monetary amount charged for the product (exchanging).

The four Ps are called the marketing mix, meaning that a marketing plan is a mix of these four com- ponents. If the four Ps are the same as creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging, you might be wondering why there was a change. The answer is that they are not exactly the same. Product, price, place, and promotion are nouns. As such, these words fail to capture all the activities of marketing. For example, exchanging requires mechanisms for a transaction, which consist of more than simply a price or place. Exchanging requires, among other things, the transfer of ownership. For example, when you buy a car, you sign documents that transfer the car’s title from the seller to you. That’s part of the ex- change process.

Even the term product, which seems pretty obvious, is limited. Does the product include services that come with your new car purchase (such as free maintenance for a certain period of time on some models)? Or does the product mean only the car itself? Finally, none of the four Ps describes particu- larly well what marketing people do. However, one of the goals of this book is to focus on exactly what it is that marketing professionals do.

© 2018 Boston Academic Publishing, Inc., d.b.a. FlatWorld. All rights reserved. Created exclusively for Essa AlSaeed <[email protected]>

value

Total sum of benefits received that meet a buyer’s needs. See personal value equation.

personal value equation

The net benefit a consumer receives from a product less the price paid for it and the hassle or effort expended to acquire it.

1.1 Value Value lies at the center of everything marketing does (Figure 1.1). What does value mean?

FIGURE 1.1 Value: The Center of Marketing

Marketing is composed of four activities centered on customer value: creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging value.

When we use the term value, we mean the benefits buyers receive that meet their needs. In other words, value is what the customer gets by purchasing and consuming a company’s offering. So, al- though the offering is created by the company, the value is determined by the customer.

Furthermore, our goal as marketers is to create a profitable exchange for consumers. By profitable, we mean that the consumer’s personal value equation is positive. The personal value equation is

value = benefits received – (price + hassle) Hassle is the time and effort the consumer puts into the shopping process. The equation is a per-

sonal one because how each consumer judges the benefits of a product will vary, as will the time and effort he or she puts into shopping. Value, then, varies for each consumer.

One way to think of value is to think of a meal in a restaurant. If you and three friends go to a res- taurant and order the same dish, each of you will like it more or less depending on your own personal tastes. Yet the dish was exactly the same, priced the same, and served exactly the same way. Because your tastes varied, the benefits you received varied. Therefore the value varied for each of you. That’s why we call it a personal value equation.

6 PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING VERSION 3.0

© 2018 Boston Academic Publishing, Inc., d.b.a. FlatWorld. All rights reserved. Created exclusively for Essa AlSaeed <[email protected]>

marketing concept

A philosophy underlying all that marketers do, driven by satisfying customer wants and needs.

market oriented

The degree to which a company follows the marketing concept.

production orientation

A belief that the way to compete is a function of product innovation and reducing production costs, as good products appropriately priced sell themselves.

production era

A period beginning with the Industrial Revolution and concluding in the 1920s in which production-orientation thinking dominated the way in which firms competed.

selling orientation

A philosophy that products must be pushed through selling and advertising in order for a firm to compete successfully.

selling era

A period running from the 1920s to until after World War II in which the selling orientation dominated the way firms competed.

product orientation

A philosophy that focuses on competing through product innovation.

marketing era

From 1950 to at least 1990 (see service-dominant logic era, value era, and one-to-one era), the dominant philosophy among businesses is the marketing concept.

Value varies from customer to customer based on each customer’s needs. The marketing concept, a philosophy underlying all that marketers do, requires that marketers seek to satisfy custom- er wants and needs. Firms operating with that philosophy are said to be market oriented. At the same time, market-oriented firms recognize that exchange must be profitable for the company to be success- ful. A marketing orientation is not an excuse to fail to make profit.

Firms don’t always embrace the marketing concept and a market orientation. Beginning with the Industrial Revolution in the late 1800s, companies were production orientation. They believed that the best way to compete was by reducing production costs. In other words, companies thought that good products would sell themselves. Perhaps the best example of such a product was Henry Ford’s Model A automobile, the first product of his production line innovation. Ford’s production line made the automobile cheap and affordable for just about everyone. The production era lasted until the 1920s, when production-capacity growth began to outpace demand growth and new strategies were called for. There are, however, companies that still focus on production as the way to compete.

From the 1920s until after World War II, companies tended to be selling orientation, meaning they believed it was necessary to push their products by heavily emphasizing advertising and selling. Consumers during the Great Depression and World War II did not have as much money, so the com- petition for their available dollars was stiff. The result was this push approach during the selling era. Companies like the Fuller Brush Company and Hoover Vacuum began selling door-to-door and the vacuum-cleaner salesman (they were always men) was created. Just as with production, some compan- ies still operate with a push focus.

In the post–World War II environment, demand for goods increased as the economy soared. Some products, limited in supply during World War II, were now plentiful to the point of surplus. Companies believed that a way to compete was to create products different from the competition, so many focused on product innovation. This focus on product innovation is called the product orientation. Companies like Procter & Gamble created many products that served the same basic function but with a slight twist or difference in order to appeal to a different consumer, and as a result products proliferated. But as consumers had many choices available to them, companies had to find new ways to compete. Which products were best to create? Why create them? The answer was to create what customers wanted, leading to the development of the marketing concept. During this time, the marketing concept was developed, and from about 1950 to 1990, businesses operated in the marketing era.

CHAPTER 1 WHAT IS MARKETING? 7

© 2018 Boston Academic Publishing, Inc., d.b.a. FlatWorld. All rights reserved. Created exclusively for Essa AlSaeed <[email protected]>