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BA 390
Week 1 - Intro
Week 2 - Marketing Environment
- Marketing environment: “Actors and forces outside marketing that affect marketing management's ability to build and maintain successful relationships with target customers.”
- Micronenvironment:
- Marketing environment close to the company.
- The company, suppliers, marketing intermediaries, customer markets, competitors, publics.
- Macroenvironment:
- Larger marketing environment.
- Demographic, economic, natural, technological, political, cultural forces.
Microenvironment
- Success depends upon working with the company, suppliers, marketing intermediaries, customers, competitors, and publics.
- These groups make up company's value delivery network.
The Company
Must take other groups within company into account:
- Top mgmt
- Finance
- R&D
- Purchasing
- Operations
- Accounting
These other groups all impact marketing's decisions through their input into product delivery.
Suppliers
- Supplier problems seriously affect marketing.
- Must watch availability.
- Supply problems can damage satisfaction in long run.
Marketing Intermediaries
Intermediaries are firms that help promote, sell, and distribute goods to final buyers. There are four types:
- Resellers
- Distribution channel firms.
- Help find customers and make sales to them.
- Large resellers have power to dictate terms and shut products out of markets.
- Physical Distribution Firms
- Help company stock and move goods.
- Determine best ways to ship, store.
- Marketing Services
- Marketing research, advertising agencies, media firms, marketing consultants.
- Help target & promote products to the right markets.
- Financial Intermediaries
- Banks, credit companies, insurance co., etc.
- Help finance transactions or insure against risks.
Marketing must partner carefully with marketing intermediaries to ensure top performance.
Customers
- Study 5 types of customer markets closely.
- Consumer markets – end users.
- Business markets – purchase for further processing or use in production.
- Reseller markets – purchase for resale at profit.
- Government markets – purchase for public services.
- International markets – these markets in other countries.
Competitors
- Position offerings stronger than competitors' in minds of consumers.
- Consider size & position vs. competitors.
Publics
Public: A group that has an actual or potential interest in or impact on an org's ability to achieve objectives.
Seven types of publics:
- Financial:
- Banks, investment houses, stockholders.
- Influence ability to obtain funds.
- Media:
- Newspapers, magazines, etc.
- Carry ads, news, editorial opinion.
- Gov't:
- Must take gov't developments into consideration.
- Product safety, truth in ads, etc.
- Citizen-action:
- Consumer orgs, enviro-groups, minority groups.
- Marketing decisions may be questioned by groups.
- Local:
- Neighborhood residents, community groups.
- Contribute to these orgs.
- General public:
- Public's image of co. affects buying.
- Internal:
- Workers, managers, volunteers, board of directors.
- When employees feel good about co., feeling spreads externally.
Company's Macroenvironment
Macroenvironment includes larger forces that create opportunities and pose threats to company.
Demographic Environment
Demography: “The study of human populations in terms of size, density, location, age, gender, race, occupation, and other statistics.
- Growing global population means growing needs to satisfy.
- May also mean growing market opportunities.
Changing Age Structure
- Most important demographic trend.
- Biggest groups include baby boomers, gen X, gen Y.
Baby Boomers
* Post WWII, 78M people born between 1946-64. * 28% of today's population. * Earn > half of all personal income. * Aging boomers create good market for: * Housing * Remodeling * Financial services * Travel/entertainment * Eating out * Health/fitness * Luxury cars/other luxuries
Generation X
- More cautious economic outlook.
- Cynical of easy success promises.
- Respond to honesty in advertising.
- Will overtake boomers by 2010 as primary market.
Generation Y
- Currently teenagers.
- Created large kid/teen markets.
- Fluent with computer technology.
Changing American Family
- 32% of households are nonfamily.
- Blah blah stupid people.
Geographic Population Shifts
- Telecommuting on the rise.
Better-Educated Population
- Rising number of educated people.
- Increasing demand for quality products, books, magazines, travel, personal computers.
- Also more white-collar workforce.
Increasing Diversity
- US “salad bowl.”
Economic Environment
Economic environment: Factors that affect consumer buying power and spending patterns.