BBA MM 1 2 Notes25
BBA MM 1 2 Notes25
UNIT-1
Introduction: Nature, Scope and Importance of Marketing, Evolution of
Marketing; Core marketing concepts; Company orientation - Production concept,
Product concept, selling concept, Marketing concept, Holistic marketing concept;
Marketing Environment: Demographic, Economical, Political, Legal, Socio-
cultural, Technological environment (Indian context); Market and competition
analysis, Market Analysis and Creating and Delivering Customer Value. types of
marketing (B2C, B2G, B2B, C2C)
Introduction to Marketing:
Definitions:
Dr. Philip Kotler defines marketing as “the science and art of exploring, creating, and
delivering value to satisfy the needs of a target market at a profit. Marketing identifies
unfulfilled needs and desires. It defines, measures and quantifies the size of the identified
market and the profit potential. It pinpoints which segments the company is capable of serving
best and it designs and promotes the appropriate products and services.”
Marketing is making connections between customers with your products, brand(s) and business,
such that they are likely to buy from you.
What is marketed?
Goods:
Physical goods constitute the bulk of most countries production and marketing effort.
Companies market billions of cars ,refrigerator, television sets machines and various other
mainstays of a modern economy.
Services:
Events:
Marketing promote time based events, such as major trade shows, artistic performance, and
company anniversaries. Global sporting events such as the Olympic or world cup are promoted
aggressively to both companies and fans.
Experiences:
By orchestrating several services and goods, a film can create, stage and market experiences.
Disney Worlds represents experiential marketing for entertainment.
Persons: Celebrity market is a major business. Today , every major film star has an agent, a
personal manager, and ties to public relations agency. Celebrity marketers market themselves
(self branding)-think of Madonna, Oprah Winfrey, Shaharuk Khan.
Places: cities, states region and whole nation’s compare actively to attract tourist, factories
company headquarters, and new residents. Place marketers include economic and advertising
and public relations agencies.
Properties:
Properties are intangible rights of ownership of either real property (real estate) or financial
property (stocks and bonds). Properties are bought and sold and this requires marketing.
Organizations:
Organizations actively work to build a strong, favorable and unique image in the minds of their
target publics. Companies spend money on corporate identity ads.
Information:
Information can be produced and marketed as a product. This is essentially what schools and
universities produce and distribute at a price to parents students and communities.
Ideas:
Every market offering includes a basic idea. Products and services are platforms for delivering
some idea or benefit.
Traditionally, a “market” was a physical place where buyers and sellers gathered to buy and
sell goods. Economists describe a market as a collection of buyers and sellers who negotiate
transactions that involve a particular product or product class (such as the housing market or
the grain market).
There are five basic markets: resource markets, manufacturer markets, consumer markets,
intermediary markets, and government markets. The five basic markets and their connecting
flows of goods, services, and money are shown in Figure 1
Figure 1
Fig.-1 Structure of Goods, Services, and Money Flows in a Modern Exchange Economy
Types of Market
Consumer market
Companies selling mass consumer goods and services such as soft drink, cosmetics, air travel,
and athletic shoes and equipment spend a great deal of time trying to establish a superior brand
image.
Business market
Companies selling business goods and services often face well-trained and well informed
professional buyers who are skilled in evaluating competitive offerings.
Global markets
Companies selling goods and services in the global marketplace face additional decisions and
challenges. They must decide which countries to enter. Developing global market strategies for
local products involves expanding the reach of products that have traditionally been marketed
and sold within a specific local or regional context. When companies aim to take local products
to global markets, they must adapt their strategies to accommodate cultural, economic, legal,
and competitive differences.
1. Convenience Products
Convenience products refer to frequently purchased items and services that customers buy
without much consideration. Customers typically stick to their preferred brands when it comes
to convenience goods unless they are swayed by advertising or product availability.
For example, items such as groceries, over-the-counter medications, and household products
like cleaning supplies.
When promoting convenience goods, marketers might use tactics that disparage other brands
more frequently. This is because customers could be persuaded to change their purchasing
habits if they are swayed, for example, by a comparative advertisement.
If you want to promote a convenience product, you should also focus on both price and
convenience. You need to make sure that the purchasing process is as seamless as possible,
with minimal effort required from the customer.
2. Shopping Goods
Shoppers usually spend more time researching and comparing shopping goods before
purchasing since they are not impulse buys, unlike convenience goods. Affordable items such
as clothes and home decor can be purchased while shopping. Higher-end goods, such as cars
and houses, can have a significant economic impact even if they are only purchased once.
When it comes to marketing shopping goods, marketers have to focus more on the product’s
features and benefits. Consumers need to be convinced of the purchase, so they will often
compare different brands and models to find the one that fits their needs.
When it comes to shopping goods, product quality, and pricing have a greater strategic
importance than for convenience goods. Customers carefully consider their choices, so
providing an attractive value is crucial for companies. This means that you can either sell a
product that is of higher quality than your competitors’ products at the same price or sell a
product that has similar quality but at a lower price. Promoting shopping goods requires
emphasizing the unique features of a product to differentiate it from its competitors, unlike
promoting convenience goods which focuses on creating brand awareness.
3. Specialty Goods
Specialty goods often include high-end features and a higher price tag. They are distinct
products that marketers can promote to a specific group of consumers without facing
competition. Customers anticipate a high-quality product when they buy specialty products
since they do it often out of passion or pastime.
Examples of specialty goods include watches, luxury cars, high-end appliances, etc.
The difficulty for marketers when it comes to advertising specialty items is to concentrate on
the product’s distinctive qualities and emphasize them. Specialty product marketers often
utilize focused marketing instead of mainstream media efforts to reach their target clientele.
You may not need to persuade customers that your product is superior to rivals when marketing
specialist brands. Customers often crave these things since they are frequently uncommon
purchases with strong brand recognition. Concentrate on product innovation and development
to retain the strong demand for specialty items. As a result, consumers continue to support your
brand.
4. Unsought Goods
Products that consumers aren’t often eager to purchase are known as unsought goods. Although
these items are useful, buying them is often not enjoyable. Out of a sensation of dread, danger,
or need, people often purchase these types of products.
Some examples of unsought goods are insurance, medical services, safety products, etc.
To successfully market unsought goods, it is important to raise awareness about the product
and persuade consumers to buy it by demonstrating how it can prevent future difficulties. The
company might create a commercial that appeals to emotions by portraying how the customer’s
unexpected death could lead to financial difficulties for their family. Advertising is crucial to
convince customers to purchase insurance and safeguard their families, as people rarely buy
such products without being encouraged.
Needs
Needs are the basic human requirements. People need food , air, water, clothing, and shelter
to survive.
Need, in terms of marketing can be divided into the following five types:
1. Stated Need
Stated Needs are the ones which are specified clearly by the customer or the market.
They are also the expected needs for a particular product or service. These needs are at
the most basic level without which the need cannot be qualified. e.g. I need food to eat
and i feel like having a sandwich.
2. Real Needs
Real needs are at one level above the stated needs and put a boundary on the above.
Real needs define the parameter which are immediate to defining and fulfilling the need.
e.g. I need a cheese sandwich at affordable price.
3. Unstated Needs
Unstated needs are which are not obvious but are expected by the customer. These are
the needs which can be used to differentiate by the companies while designing the
products to fulfil the needs of the customer. e.g. I need basic vegetables to be added as
part of my sandwich. It should not be just a single slice cheese plain sandwich.
4. Delight Needs
Delight needs are the needs which provide the 'wow' factor. These needs like unstated
needs can make some products more popular than the other if they meet these needs.
e.g. The quality of the cheese used to be the best one with special sauce but still the
price of the sandwich would be below 2$.
5. Secret Needs
These are the needs which a customer might not state or realize but can be one of the main
reasons for choosing a particular product to fulfil the basic stated need. e.g. i need this
sandwich to quickly eat my food and look cool.
Wants
People have strong needs for recreation, education, and entertainment. These needs become
wants when they are directed to specific objects that might satisfy the need. Wants are shaped
by one’s society.
Demands
Demands are wants for specific products backed by an ability to pay. How many customers are
actually willing and able to buy a product?
Marketing management has the task of influencing the level, timings and composition of
demand in a way that will help the organization to achieve its objectives. Also, a marketer has
to take into consideration different types of demand for his product before he comes up with a
strategy. Here are some effective marketing strategies for various types demand
Negative Demand
Most or even all important segments in a market dislike the product, even to the extent of being
prepared to pay a price to avoid it - for example, some people have a negative demand for
dental care, and others have a negative demand for air travel.
Marketing Strategy: The task of marketing in this situation is generally to identify the cause of
negative demand and attempt to counter it. For example, if the product has a poor reputation
or image, or its features or performance are inadequate, then marketing managers will need to
consider how to alter the reputation of the product, whether to change its features and generally
determine how to ensure that the correct image is created for that product. The marketing task
is to analyze, why the market dislikes the products?
No Demand
This usually covers products with no perceived value in a particular market. In relatively crime
free areas, for example, there may be no demand for security systems because consumers may
not appreciate the need for such products.
Marketing Strategy: The marketing task is to find ways to connect the benefits of the products
to the person’s natural needs and interests. The task of marketing then becomes one of
stimulating demand for that product. In practice, this often means persuading consumers to buy
or use a particular product or service. This element of persuasion means that stimulation
marketing is often subject to criticism for being manipulative, but of course we must
remember that it may be beneficial in many cases such as encouraging vaccination and
encouraging health screening.
Latent Demand
One of the demand states that company may face in certain situations. This happens because
consumers may share a strong need that cannot be satisfied by any existing product. There is a
strong latent demand for a specific product.
Marketing Strategy: The marketing task is to measure the size of the potential market and
develop effective goods and services that would satisfy the demand.
Declining Demand
In this case, the demand for a product is declining and this decline represents something more
serious than a temporary drop in sales. Examples might include rail travel in the US, vinyl
records or mechanical watches.
Marketing Strategy: The task of marketing is to identify causes of decline and to reassess the
nature of the product, its features, its target market and the marketing campaign with a view to
either reviving demand for the product or deleting it. We should perhaps note that attempts to
revive a product go beyond simply relying on large scale advertising and promotional efforts
since these often act as an indication to the consumer that the particular product is experiencing
difficulties.
Irregular Demand
Irregular demand is arguably one of the most common situations facing anyone involved in
marketing in the service sector. It involves a situation where the pattern of demand is based on
seasonal factors or other sources of volatility such as short term economic fluctuations. There
are many examples of this type of demand in food markets, holiday markets and travel markets.
Marketing Strategy: The task of marketing management in this situation is concerned with
attempting to synchronies demand and supply. Marketing may tend to focus primarily on the
demand side by discouraging use when demand is at its strongest, encouraging use when
demand is at its weakest or finding alternative markets with counter cyclical patterns of demand.
However, there may need to be some consideration of the supply side and the potential to which
supply can be increased by the holding of larger stocks, improved distribution or increased
output.
Full Demand
Demand is currently at a desirable level and one that is consistent with the existing corporate
and marketing objectives.
Marketing Strategy: The main concern in this situation is to maintain this level of demand by
continuously monitoring and adjusting marketing campaign as and when attitudes change or
competitive threats appear.
Some organizations face a demand level that is higher then they can or want to handle.
Marketing task is De-marketing which requires finding ways to reduce the demand temporarily
or permanently.
Marketing Strategy: The marketing task is to reduce but not remove demand - perhaps by
making the product less available to less attractive market segments or by making it generally
less available by reduced promotions, increased price or limited distribution.
Unwholesome Demand
Any positive level of demand is regarded as excessive because of the undesirable qualities of
the product. This situation is probably most commonly associated with 'vice' products such as
drugs, smoking and other 'social cause' products. However, counter-marketing may also be
relevant in the business community when it may be used to phase out firms existing products.
This may involve ending promotions, raising price or even, for some products, the
implementation of legal restrictions.
Marketing Strategy: These categories of demand demonstrate that the task of marketing
management is much broader than simply creating and maintaining demand - rather it involves
responding to and managing patterns of demand within the market place. However, it is
important to stress that this demand management does not take place in isolation. Marketing
must manage demand more effectively than the competition in order to be successful and must
be prepared to respond and react to what happens in the marketplace, not only in terms of
existing and potential consumers but also in terms of competitor’s activities.
As markets become more and more competitive and customers become more sophisticated and
quality conscious, the adoption of a marketing orientation becomes increasingly important in
ensuring organizational success. This marketing orientation requires that the consumer be seen
as central to the business and that the organization focuses its attention on identifying and
responding to consumer needs as they are at present, as well as trying to anticipate future needs.
However, the type of products which can be developed will be affected by the organization’s
own capabilities. The key principle of marketing is to be able to meet consumer needs more
effectively than competitors.
Segmentation:
Segmentation is the first step of the STP strategy. Segmentation is the process of dividing
the whole market into small subgroups based on shared characteristics like age, gender, taste,
preferences, etc. Customers having similar needs and behaviours are to be put together. A
market segment is a portion of the whole market that is expected to respond similarly to a given
situation. Segmentation helps the business identify what type of customers they should target
to sell their product/service. For these reasons, a company should properly do the segmentation
process. Market segmentation can be done based on:
Targeting
The process of evaluating market segments and choosing the best to target comes under Market
Targeting. Market Targeting undertakes the decision of choosing the best target audience and
the degree to which the target market should be targeted. In simple terms, it is a process of
choosing the best target audience for the product/service and declaring the other segments
to be useless for a particular kind of product/service.
A business must determine the target audience after thorough research; otherwise, the business
is going to end up wasting time and resources with no return on investment. Generally, a new
product/service is first made available to a single target, and if it remains optimal, the business
takes up other segments as well. Market targeting also depends on the size of the company.
Besides, the more the target markets, the more will the cost of targeting.
Positioning
The activity of positioning involves placing the product/service in the minds of the target
customers and making the image of the product/service superior as compared to other similar
products. Various factors affect the process of positioning such as:
• The larger the size of the target market, the more it will be difficult to position the
product/service.
• If there is no competition in the market, then the business can create a completely
different and new market positioning strategy.
• If the product has already a good brand value, then it will be of advantage to the business
to position any new product/service.
• If the company decides to offer fewer prices for its product/service than the rival firms,
then the business can have an advantage in market positioning.
Companies address needs by putting forth a value proposition, a set of benefits that they
offer to customers to satisfy their needs. The intangible value proposition is made physi cal
by an offering, which can be a combina tion of products, services, information, and
experiences.
A brand is an offering from a known source. A brand name such as McDonald's carries
many associations in people's minds that make up the brand image: hamburgers, fun,
children, fast food, convenience, and golden arches. All companies strive to build a strong,
favorable, and unique brand image.
The offering will be successful if it delivers value and satisfaction to the target buyer. The
buyer chooses between different offerings based on which she perceives to deliver the most
value. Value reflects the sum of the perceived tangible and intangible benefits and costs to
customers. It's primarily a combination of quality, service, and price ("qsp"), called the
"customer value triad." Value increases with quality and service and decreases with price,
although other factors can also play an important role in our perceptions of value. Value is
a central marketing concept. We can think of marketing as the identification, creation,
communication, delivery, and monitoring of customer value. Satisfaction reflects a person's
judgments of a product's perceived performance (or outcome) in relationship to expectations.
If the performance falls short of expectations, the customer is dissatisfied and disappointed.
If it matches expectations, the customer is satisfied. If it exceeds them, the customer is
delighted.
Marketing Channels
To reach a target market, the marketer uses three kinds of marketing channels.
Communication channels deliver and receive messages from target buyers and include
newspapers, magazines, radio, television, mail, telephone, billboards, posters, fliers, CDs,
audiotapes, and the Internet. Beyond these, just as we convey messages by our facial
expressions and clothing, firms communicate through the look of their retail stores, the
appearance of their Web sites, and many other media. Marketers are increasingly adding
dialogue channels such as e-mail, blogs, and toll-free numbers to familiar monologue
channels such as ads.
The marketer uses distribution channels to display, sell, or deliver the physical product or
service(s) to the buyer or user. They include distributors, wholesalers, retailers, and agents.
The marketer also uses service channels to carry out transactions with potential buyers. Service
channels include warehouses, transportation companies, banks, and insurance companies that
facilitate transactions. Marketers clearly face a design challenge in choosing the best mix of
communication, distribution, and service channels for their offerings.
Supply Chain
The supply chain is a longer channel stretching from raw materials to components to final
products that are carried to final buyers. The supply chain for women's purses starts with hides
and moves through tanning, cutting, manufacturing, and the marketing channels to bring
products to customers. Each company captures only a certain percentage of the total value
generated by the supply chain's value delivery system. When a company acquires com petitors
or expands upstream or downstream, its aim is to capture a higher percentage of supply chain
value.
Competition
Competition includes all the actual and potential rival offerings and substitutes a buyer might
consider. Suppose an automobile company is planning to buy steel for its cars. There are several
possible levels of competitors. The manufacturer can buy steel from U.S. Steel in the United
States, it can buy from a foreign firm in Japan or Korea, it can buy from a minimill such as
Nucor at a cost savings, or it can buy aluminum from Alcoa for certain parts to reduce the car's
weight or engineered plastics from Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC), purchasers of
GE Plastics, for bumpers instead of steel. Clearly, U.S. Steel would be thinking too narrowly
about its competition if it thought only of other integrated steel com panies. In fact, in the long
run U.S. Steel is more likely to be hurt by substitute products than by other steel companies.
The production concept is one of the oldest concepts in business. It holds that consumers will
prefer products that are widely available and inexpensive. Managers of production-oriented
businesses concentrate on achieving high production efficiency, low costs, and mass
distribution. This orientation makes sense in developing countries such as China, where the
largest PC manufacturer, Lenovo, and domestic appliances giant Haier take advantage of the
country's huge and inexpensive labor pool to dominate the market. Marketers also use the
production concept when a company wants to expand the market.
The product concept proposes that consumers favour products that offer the most quality,
performance, or innovative features. Managers in these organizations focus on making superior
products and improving them over time. However, these managers are sometimes caught up in
a love affair with their products. They might commit the "better-mousetrap" fallacy, believing
that a better mousetrap will lead people to beat a path to their door. A new or improved product
will not necessarily be successful unless it's priced, distributed, advertised, and sold properly.
The selling concept holds that consumers and businesses if left alone, won't buy enough of the
organization's products. The organization must, therefore, undertake an aggressive selling and
promotion effort. The selling concept is expressed in the thinking of Sergio Zyman, Coca-
Cola's former vice president of marketing, who said: "The purpose of marketing is to sell more
stuff to more people more often for more money to make more profit."
The selling concept is practiced most aggressively with unsought goods, goods that buyers
normally do not think of buying, such as insurance, encyclopedias, and cemetery plots. Most
firms also practice the selling concept when they have overcapacity. They aim to sell what they
make, rather than make what the market wants. However, marketing based on hard selling
carries high risks. It assumes that customers who are coaxed into buying a product will like it,
and that if they don't, they not only won't return or bad-mouth it or complain to consumer
organizations, but they might even buy it again.
Rather, it provides product platforms on which each person customizes the features he desires
in the computer.
The marketing concept holds that the key to achieving organizational goals is being more
effective than competitors in creating, delivering, and communicating superior customer value
to your chosen target markets. Several scholars have found that companies that embrace the
marketing concept achieve superior performance. This was first demonstrated by companies
practicing a reactive market orientation understanding and meeting customers' expressed needs.
Some critics say this means companies develop only very basic innovations. Narver and his
colleagues argue that more advanced, high-level innovation is possible if the focus is on
customers' latent needs. Narver calls this a proactive marketing orientation.! Companies such
as 3M, Hewlett Packard, and Motorola have made a practice of researching latent needs
through a "probe-and-learn" process. Companies that practice both a reactive and a proactive
marketing orientation are implementing a total market orientation and are likely to be the most
successful.
Theodore Levitt of Harvard drew a perceptive contrast between the selling and marketing
concepts:
Selling focuses on the needs of the seller; marketing on the needs of the buyer. Selling is
preoccupied with the seller's need to convert his product into cash; marketing is with the idea
of satisfying the needs of the customer by means of the product and the whole cluster of things
associated with creating, delivering, and finally consuming it.
The Holistic Marketing Concept
Without question, the trends and forces defining the 21st century are leading business firms
to a new set of beliefs and practices. Today's best marketers recognize the need to have a
more complete, cohesive approach that goes beyond traditional applications of the marketing
concept. "Marketing Memo: Marketing Right and Wrong" suggests where companies go
wrong-and how they can get it right in their marketing.
Wrong" suggests where companies go wrong-and how they can get it right in their marketing.
The holistic marketing concept is based on the development, design, and implementation of
marketing programs, processes, and activities that recognizes their breadth and
interdependencies. Holistic marketing recognizes that "everything matters" in marketing-and
that a broad, inte grated perspective is often necessary. Holistic marketing is thus an approach
that attempts to recognize and reconcile the scope and complexities of marketing activities.
Figure provides a schematic overview of four broad components characterizing holistic
marketing: relationship marketing, integrated marketing, internal marketing, and performance
marketing. We'll examine these major themes throughout this book. Successful companies will
be those that can keep their marketing changing with the changes in their marketplace and
marketspace. "Breakthrough Marketing: Nike" describes how that company has successfully
changed and thrived through the years.
Relationship marketing
Relationship marketing has the aim of building mutually satisfying long term relationships with
key parties –customers, suppliers, distributors, another market patterns-in order o earn and
retain their business. Relationship marketing builds strong economic, technical, and social ties
among the parties.
Integrated marketing
The marketer’s task is to devise marketing activities and assemble fully integrated marketing
programs to create, communicate, and deliver value for consumers. The marketing program
consists of numerous decisions on value enhancing marketing activities to use. Marketing
activities come in all forms.
Internal marketing
Holistic marketing incorporates internal marketing, ensuring that everyone in the organization
embraces appropriate marketing principles, especially senior management. Internal marketing
is
the task of hiring, training, and motivating able employees who want to serve customers well.
MARKETING ENVIRONMENT
Marketing Environment
The marketing environment consists of the task environment and the broad environment. The
task environment includes the actors engaged in producing, distributing, and promot ing the
offering. These are the company, suppliers, distributors, dealers, and the target customers. In
the supplier group are material suppliers and service suppliers, such as marketing research
agencies, advertising agencies, banking and insurance companies, transportation companies,
and telecommunications companies. Distributors and dealers include agents, brokers,
manufacturer representatives, and others who facilitate finding and selling to customers.
The broad environment consists of six components: demographic environment, eco nomic
environment, physical environment. technological environment, political-legal environment,
and social-cultural environment. Marketers must pay close attention to the trends and
developments in these environments and make timely adjustments to their marketing strategies.
Companies and their suppliers, marketing intermediaries, customers, competitors, and publics
all operate in a macroenvironment of forces and trends, increasingly global, that shape
opportunities and pose threats. These forces represent "noncontrollable," which the company
must monitor and to which it must respond.
Within the rapidly changing global picture, the firm must monitor six major forces:
demographic, economic, social-cultural, natural, technological, and political-legal. We'll
describe these forces separately, but marketers must pay attention to their interactions because
these will lead to new opportunities and threats. For example, explosive population growth
(demographic) leads to more resource depletion and pollution (natural), which leads consumers
to call for more laws (political-legal), which stimulate new technological solutions and
products (technological), which, if they are affordable (economic), may change attitudes and
behavior (social-cultural). "Breakthrough Marketing: Google" describes how that company has
successfully capitalized on the new marketing environment.
External factors/environment are classified into two parts:
MICRO ENVIRONMENT: Example- Customers, Public, Suppliers and competitors etc.
COMPETITION ANALYSIS
Why It Matters
v Product offerings
v Pricing models
v Marketing and promotion tactics
v Distribution channels
v Customer service
v Market share
v Brand reputation
v Customer loyalty
v Unique selling propositions (USPs)
v Strengths
v Weaknesses
v Opportunities
v Threats
Benefits
• Better decision-making
• Improved product offerings
• Competitive pricing
• More targeted marketing campaigns
• Increased customer satisfaction
Example
If you're a new coffee shop:
1. B2B (Business-to-Business)
B2B (Business-to-Business) companies are businesses that sell their products or services to
other businesses rather than to consumers. Here are some examples of B2B companies and
industries:
- Technology: Companies that provide technology solutions such as software, hardware, and
IT services to other businesses.
Consulting: Companies that provide expertise and advice to other businesses in areas such as
management, finance, and marketing.
Logistics and Supply Chain: Companies that provide transportation, warehousing, and other
logistics services to other businesses.
Professional Services: Companies that provide services such as accounting, legal, and
engineering services to other businesses.
v Caterpillar (Manufacturing)
v Dell Technologies (Technology)
v Accenture (Consulting)
v FedEx (Logistics)
v PwC (Professional services)
v IBM (Technology)
Note that some companies can be both B2B and B2C, as they can sell to both businesses and
consumers.
Higher Profit Margins: B2B companies often have higher profit margins compared to B2C
companies, as they can charge more for their specialized products and services.
Long-term Relationships: B2B companies often build long-term relationships with their
customers, leading to more predictable and consistent revenue streams.
Fewer Customers: B2B companies typically have fewer customers than B2C companies, but
those customers tend to make larger and more frequent purchases.
Complex Products and Services: B2B companies often provide specialized and complex
products and services that require a high level of expertise and knowledge.
Specialized Marketing: B2B companies can target specific industries and businesses, allowing
for more specialized and effective marketing efforts.
Higher Costs: B2B companies may have higher costs associated with providing specialized
products and services, as well as higher marketing and sales expenses.
Greater Competition: B2B companies may face greater competition from other businesses
that provide similar products or services to other businesses.
Dependence on Key Customers: B2B companies may be more dependent on a small number
of key customers, which could be a risk if they were to lose those customers.
2. B2C (Business-to-Consumer)
B2C (Business-to-Consumer) companies are businesses that sell their products or services
directly to consumers. Here are some examples of B2C companies and industries
Retail: Companies that sell physical goods such as clothing, electronics, and home goods to
consumers.
E-commerce: Online businesses that sell products to consumers through the internet.
Food and Beverage: Companies that produce and sell food and beverages to consumers.
Entertainment: Companies that provide entertainment services such as movies, music, and live
events to consumers.
Hospitality: Companies that provide accommodation, food and drink, and other services to
travellers.
Personal Services: Companies that offer personal services such as salons, spas, and fitness
centres to consumers.
- Netflix (Entertainment)
- Marriott (Hospitality)
- Lululemon (Retail)
- Uber (Transportation)
Note that some companies can be both B2B and B2C, as they can sell to both businesses and
consumers.
- High Volume of Sales:B2C companies can sell to a large number of consumers, resulting in
high sales volume.
- Short Sales Cycles: B2C transactions are typically quick and easy, with a shorter sales cycle
compared to B2B.
- Lower Costs: B2C companies often have lower costs due to the smaller number of
intermediaries involved in the transaction.
- Simplified Marketing: B2C companies can target consumers directly, simplifying their
marketing efforts.
- Lower Profit Margins: B2C companies often have lower profit margins compared to B2B
companies, due to the need to price products competitively for consumers.
- Greater Competition: B2C companies face greater competition from other businesses that sell
similar products or services to consumers.
- Greater Marketing Expenses: B2C companies may need to invest more in advertising and
marketing to reach and attract consumers.
- Customer Support Expenses: B2C companies may face higher expenses associated with
providing customer support and addressing customer complaints and issues.
3. D2C (Direct-to-Consumer)
Direct-to-consumer (D2C) refers to a business model in which a company sells its products
directly to consumers, bypassing traditional retail channels such as department stores,
supermarkets, and other physical retailers. This typically means that a company will sell its
products online, either through its own website or through e-commerce platforms. The
company may also sell its products through its own physical store or showroom, but the focus
is on cutting out middlemen and reaching customers directly. This business model allows
companies to have more control over the sales process and to build a direct relationship with
their customers, which can help to increase brand loyalty and customer satisfaction.
B2G MARKET
If your business is looking for sales prospects, consider the federal government. It is,
quite simply, the largest business prospect around, with the federal discretionary budget
exceeding $1.6 trillion.
B2G includes an extremely wide range of opportunities. A small business may provide
services to a local municipality. Or when a top defense contractor delivers billions of
dollars worth of equipment to the Department of Defense, that too is B2G.
The B2G market is huge. The federal government alone spends $18.2 to $42.6 billion
per day with outside contractors. The General Services Administration (GSA) regulates
and coordinates federal B2G transactions, and a government contract is commonly
awarded following bids submitted in response to a request for proposal (RFP).
Small businesses secure a decent proportion of local, state, and federal spending. At the
federal level, the current goal is to direct 23% of prime contracting to small businesses.
In many situations, the law requires a government entity to select the lowest bid.
However, the agency must screen prospects to ensure that the winning bidder is indeed
capable of providing the product or service.
At every level of government, almost all departments and agencies must procure goods
and services.
Every year, the Veterans Administration (VA) spends billions of dollars on its
community care network. The VA spends much of this money on professional services.
VA projects often grant special status to veteran-owned businesses.
D2C (Direct-to-Consumer) companies are businesses that sell their products or services
directly to consumers, bypassing traditional retail channels. Here are some examples of D2C
companies and industries
- E-commerce: Online businesses that sell products to consumers through their own website
or online marketplace.
- Subscription Services: Companies that offer recurring deliveries of products such as meal
kits, beauty products, and clothing.
- Digital Products: Companies that sell digital products such as music, e-books, and software
to consumers.
- Home Care: Companies that sell home cleaning, maintenance and home services directly to
consumer.
- Health and Wellness: Companies that sell health-related products and services directly to
consumers
- Greater Control over the Customer Experience: D2C companies can create a stronger
connection with their customers by controlling the entire purchasing process, from product
development to delivery.
- Increased Profitability: By cutting out intermediaries, D2C companies can increase their
profit margins and retain more control over pricing.
- Data Collection and Analysis: D2C companies can gather valuable data on their customers
through direct interactions and online tracking, which can inform product development and
marketing decisions.
- Faster Time-to-Market: D2C companies can bypass traditional retail channels, which can
allow them to bring new products to market more quickly.
- Limited Distribution: D2C companies must rely on their own distribution channels, which
can limit their reach and make it harder for them to reach new customers.
- Greater Marketing Costs: D2C companies must rely on digital marketing to reach customers,
which can be expensive and competitive.
- Higher Costs for Customer Acquisition: D2C companies must spend more on customer
acquisition to build a direct relationship with customers, which can be costly.
- Lack of Established Brand: D2C companies may not have the same level of brand recognition
as established retail brands, which can make it harder to attract customers.
UNIT-2
Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning: Concept; Levels of Market
Segmentation, Basis for Segmenting Consumer Markets; Consumer Behavior,
The Rise of Consumer Democracy, Stimulus Response Model of Consumer
Behavior, Buyer’s Cultural, Social, Personal, and Psychological Characteristics
particularly in Indian context, Consumer Buying Decision Process, Business
Customer’s Buying Decision Process, and Traditional vs. Experiential
Marketing’s View of Customer
1. Demographic Segmentation:
(a) Age
Infant- new born to 1 yr. Child- 1-12 yr. Adolescent- 12 to 15 Teens- 16-19
Youth- 20-35
Examples:
(b) Income
Low income
Low middle income
Middle income
Upper middle income and high income group
(b) Gender (Raymond, Femina and Titan Raga etc.) (c) Occupation (Banks)
(f) Family size (Joint vs Nuclear family and the purchasing power)
2. Geographic Segmentation
Here the market divided into countries, states, regions, and cities. Example:
LG & Samsung
MTR
Nirma & Ghari detergent
2. Psychographic Segmentation
AIO (Activities Interests & Opinions)
4. Behavioural Segmentation
Buyers are divided into 4 groups and Buyer’s Purchase decision role
based on:
Targeting
There is only one winning strategy. It is to carefully define the target market and direct a
superior offering to that target market." - Philip Kotler
The process of choosing one or more market segment to maximize the profit is called
targeting. In the process of market targeting a company can choose the following marketing
patterns.
2. Multi-segment specialization
Positioning is creating an identity in the minds of the target market. The concept of
popularized by advertising professionals Al Ries and Jack Trout through their best seller
book “Positioning- a battle for your mind”.Positioning starts with a product. A piece of
merchandise, a service, a company an institution or even a person.......But positioning is not
what you do to a product. Positioning is what you do to the minds of the prospect. That is
your position the product in the mind of the prospect.
Positioning is the act of designing the company's offering and image to occupy a distinctive
place in the minds of the target market. The goal is to locate the brand in the minds 01
consumers to maximize the potential benefit to the firm. A good brand positioning helps
guide marketing strategy by clarifying the brand's essence, what goals it helps the consumer
achieve, and how it does so in a unique way. Everyone in the organization should under,
stand the brand positioning and use it as context for making decisions.
The result of positioning is the successful creation of a customer-focused value proposition, a
cogent reason why the target market should buy the product. Table 10.1 shows how three
companies-Perdue, Volvo, and Domino's-have defined their value proposition given their
target customers, benefits, and prices. Positioning requires that similarities and differences
between brands be defined and communicated. Specifically, deciding on a positioning
requires determining a frame of reference by identifying the target market and the
competition and identifying the ideal points- of-parity and points-of-difference brand
associations. "Breakthrough Marketing: UPS" chronicles how UPS has successfully
positioned itself against a formidable opponent, FedEx.
1. Identifying key benefits of a product and matching them with customers’ needs.
5 Competitor-based positioning.
The strategy involves using competitors’ alternatives to differentiate products and highlight
their advantages. It helps brands distinguish their products and show their uniqueness.
Example: Dettol Vs Savlon, Medimix soap Vs Margo soap, Hamam soap Vs Rexona soap,
Maruti Breeza Vs Hyundai Creta.
Difference
determining where your brand or product stands concerning other brands or products on the
market.
Market segmentation divides the market into different subgroups. A market segment consists
of customers who have similar needs and wants. Targeting involves deciding which customer
segment or market the firm should target. Positioning determines where your brand or
product stands concerning others on the market. Positioning is a vital part of marketing
strategy, as it influences how customers perceive your product offering. Segmentation,
targeting, and positioning make up the STP marketing model.
Understanding consumer behaviour is pivotal for businesses aiming to tailor their products,
services, and marketing strategies to meet their target audience's evolving needs and
preferences. Numerous factors influence consumer behaviour, shaping the decision-making
process. Here are key elements that play a significant role:
1. Cultural Influences:
o Subcultures and Social Classes: Individuals often identify with specific subcultures or social
classes that impact purchasing decisions. Cultural norms, values, and societal expectations
contribute to shaping consumer preferences.
2. Social Factors:
o Reference Groups: People are influenced by those around them, including family, friends,
colleagues, and social media connections. Reference groups contribute to shaping opinions and
influencing purchasing choices.
3. Personal Factors:
o Lifestyle and Personality: Consumer lifestyle, interests, and personality traits influence the
products and brands they choose. Marketers often segment audiences based on lifestyle choices
to create targeted campaigns.
4. Psychological Factors:
Motivation and Perception: Consumers are motivated by various needs, and factors like
advertising, packaging, and personal experiences shape their perception of products.
Understanding these psychological elements helps businesses create compelling marketing
messages.
5. Economic Factors:
o Income and Economic Conditions: Economic factors, such as income levels and economic
stability, significantly impact purchasing power. Changes in economic conditions can influence
consumer spending habits and choices.
6. Marketing Strategies:
o Advertising and Promotions: The way products are marketed, including advertising messages,
promotions, and branding, has a direct impact on consumer perceptions. Effective marketing
strategies can create a positive image and influence purchasing decisions.
7. Technological Advancements:
o Digital Influence: The rise of digital platforms and e-commerce has transformed consumer
behaviour. Online reviews, social media recommendations, and the ease of online shopping
significantly impact how consumers research and make purchasing decisions.
8. Cognitive Dissonance:
9. Environmental Concerns:
o Global Events and Crises: External events, such as economic downturns, pandemics, or
natural disasters, can profoundly impact consumer behaviour. Responses to these events may
lead to shifts in spending patterns and priorities.
Post-purchase doubts may occur after a significant purchase. Marketing efforts focus on
minimising dissonance by reassuring buyers of their wise choices.
Market Segmentation
Product Development
Consumer insights guide product development by aligning features, pricing, and positioning
with the preferences and needs of the target audience.
Building brand loyalty hinges on grasping consumer preferences and evolving with changing
trends. Successful businesses use consumer behaviour insights to foster lasting relationships.
Enrolling in an Effective Communication Course can further enhance your ability to connect
with consumers on a deeper level. This course provides the skills to craft compelling messages
and engage your audience, ensuring your brand remains relevant and trusted amidst changing
market dynamics.
Pricing Strategies
Consumer behaviour influences pricing decisions, determining whether a market can sustain
premium pricing, value-based pricing, or penetration pricing strategies.
Distribution Channels
Consumer behaviour influences the preferred channels for product acquisition. Businesses
optimise distribution networks based on where and how consumers prefer to make purchases.
Five- Stage Model of the Consumer Buying Process
Stage 1: Need recognition
The buying process starts when the buyer recognizes a problem or need triggered by internal
or external stimuli. The first stage in the consumer decision-making process for a consumer is
to figure out what they need. The most important thing that leads someone to buy a product
or service is their need for it. All buying decisions are based on what people need.
Finding out what the customer needs is the first move to evaluating the Consumer Decision
Making Process. Finding out what needs and wants the target market has can help with many
marketing decisions.
People are usually skeptical when they have to choose between options. So they need all the
facts before they spend their money. After figuring out their need, the potential consumer
moves on to the second stage: searching for and gathering information.
The buyer considers all the benefits and drawbacks of the purchase at this stage of their
decision- making process. Because of changing styles and online shopping sites, consumers
know much more about what they want to buy and can make better choices.
Consumers can get information from many different places, like books, magazines, the
Internet, and reviews of products by other people. It’s important to make a purchase decision,
so the consumer shouldn’t be in a hurry when learning about the products and brands on the
market.
You may also check out this guide to learn how to build your own Customer Journey Map.
Here are some places where you can find information:
At this stage, the consumer compares options based on price, product quality, quantity,
value-added features, or other essential factors. Before choosing the product that best
meets your needs, look at customer reviews and compare prices for the alternatives.
After finding helpful information, the consumer chooses the best product on the market
based on their taste, style, income, or preference.
After going through the above stages, the customer decides what to buy and where to buy
it. The consumer makes a smart choice to buy a product based on his needs and wants
after he has looked at all the facts.
Needs and wants are often sparked by marketing campaigns, recommendations from
friends and family, or sometimes by both.
In the last stage of the consumer decision-making process, the consumer evaluates or
analyzes the product they bought. They look at how helpful the product is, how satisfied
they are with it, and how much it is worth to meet their needs.
If consumers know that the product they bought was worth what they paid for and met
their expectations, they will stick with that product.
The processes for making decisions for organisations and consumers are quite different from
each other. There are eight stages in a business buying process:
Problem recognition is the first and most essential step of the business buying process. In this
step, a company recognises a problem or need that requires to be solved by acquiring a
particular product or service. This step can be a result of internal or external factors.
• It can arise as a result of the company’s choice to launch a new product in response to market
demand. This will require the procurement of new materials and machinery.
• The company may have breakdowns, which calls for the procurement of new parts for
machine repairs. Even while machinery has a lifespan, it eventually needs to be replaced.
Sometimes the procured material is rejected because it is of poor quality. This causes the
business to procure from a different provider urgently.
The marketers that the organisation places in the market should act as the external fact-
informers; i.e., they should inform the organisation about the performance of the product in
the market and any improvements that need to be made immediately, as well as details
about the products of its competitors. This will serve as an external motivator for the
business to make rational purchases in order to maintain its level of competition.
The second step involves determining the quantity and quality of the product and thus
preparing a general need description. If the items are standard, the business buying process
presents limited problems. However, in the case of complex products, to define them, the
buyer may have to work with other people like engineers, consultants, users, etc. The team
defining the item may want to rank the importance of price, durability, reliability, and other
attributes required in it. Thus, in the second step of the business buying process, the buyers
can get help from the alert business marketer in defining their needs by providing them
information regarding the value of characteristics of different products.
After receiving input from the second step, the buying organisation must prepare technical
specifications for the required parts. At this step, the technical and other value- related
specifications of the productare examined. These requirements need to matchthe
organisational needs. The suppliers may offer products with broader applications but at a
higher price. The product value analysis helps in reviewing product requirements and
actual specifications to reduce waste. The marketer must collaborate with his technical and
financial partners to assess the feasibility of the project and to explain the services they can
provide to create and supply the product.
For instance, The 100 cc bike “Freedom” was designed and developed by LML’s Kanpur
factory, which invited the help of various companies for the design and supply of many
parts. In addition to Daclin designing and providing the frame, Sriram provided the piston,
Borg Warner of Germany provided the cam chain, and MRF was enlisted to create the tires.
The technology components for changes to the gear system were given by the British
company Prodrine.
The next step in buying for a business is to identify the most suitable vendors. The
organisational buyers evaluate the potential vendors and suppliers based on the
effectiveness and quality of their products and services. In general, the vendors’
dependability, market standing, and financial situation are taken into consideration. Some
vendors are removed from the consideration list because they can’t deliver by the specified
time or have a bad reputation for their brands. Finally, the approved list, from which the
final suppliers are chosen, contains the qualified vendors. It is necessary to distribute
brochures and place advertisements in particular media, such as trade publications. This
stage consists only of compiling a list of qualified vendors.
In the fifth stage, vendors are invited to submit their price quotes. To provide their
quotations, the suppliers employ catalogues or sales representatives. When purchasing
expensive and complex things, it is possible to ask vendors for written proposals, compare
those proposals and choose the best vendor based on the results. The requested proposal
from vendors should include both technical and marketing information. The effectiveness of
the oral presentations depends on the vendor’s ability to gain the organisation’s buyer’s
trust by showcasing their capabilities and possibilities.
For instance, A well-known multinational corporation (MNC) that produces soaps wants
potential vendors to go through three stages: qualified vendor, approved vendor, and chosen
vendor. The provider must exhibit expertise in technology, good financial health, cost
efficiency, following high-quality standards, and innovation to be approved. When a vendor
meets these requirements, they submit a sample lot for approval. When a supplier receives
approval and displays high product uniformity, ongoing quality improvement, and JIT
delivery capabilities, the vendor is designated as a “select supplier.”
During this step in business buying process, several ideas are evaluated based on their
relevance. The buying centre is prepared tochoose the vendor for organisational buying
after carefully examining the various vendor proposals. It is usually done with the
compilation of a list of the necessary vendor attributes and their significance.
At this point, the vendor analysis not only focuses on the technical aspects but also considers
reliability, punctuality, price, credit offers, etc.
The purchaser places an order with the chosen vendor by listing technical specifications,
required quantity, expected time of delivery, return policies, and warranties. However,
in the case of repair, maintenance, and operating products, the buyer instead of using
periodic purchase orders, may use blanket contracts. A blanket contract is a contract
that creates a long-term relationship under which the supplier makes a promise to the
buyer to resupply goods when required at agreed prices for a determined time period.
In present times, various large buyers are practising vendor-managed inventory. Under this,
the buyers turn over ordering and inventory responsibilities to their suppliers. Here, the
buyers share information related to sales and inventory, directly to the major suppliers.
After that, the suppliers monitor inventories and automatically replenish the stock as
per the requirement. Such a system is used by various suppliers and retailers such as
Croma, Big Bazaar, E-Zone, Walmart, etc.
Another model of consumer behavior, called the stimulus-response or “black box” model,
focuses on the consumer as a thinker and problem solver who responds to a range of external
and internal factors when deciding whether or not to buy. These factors are shown in Figure
1, below:
As illustrated in the figure above, the external stimuli that consumers respond to include the
marketing mix and other environmental factors in the market. The marketing mix (the four
Ps) represents a set of stimuli that are planned and created by the company. The
environmental stimuli are supplied by the economic, political, and cultural circumstances of a
society. Together these factors represent external circumstances that help shape consumer
choices.
The internal factors affecting consumer decisions are described as the “black box.” This
“box” contains a variety of factors that exist inside the person’s mind. These include
characteristics of the consumer, such as their beliefs, values, motivation, lifestyle, and so
forth. The decision-making process is also part of the black box, as consumers come to
recognize they have a problem they need to solve and consider how a purchasing decision
may solve the problem. As a consumer responds to external stimuli, their “black box” process
choices based on internal factors and determine the consumer’s response–whether to
purchase or not to purchase.
Like the economic man model, this model also assumes that regardless of what happens
inside the black box (the consumer’s mind), the consumer’ response is a result of a conscious,
rational decision process. Many marketers are skeptical of this assumption and think that
consumers are often tempted to make irrational or emotional buying decisions. In fact,
marketers understand that consumers’ irrationality and emotion are often what make them
susceptible to marketing stimuli in the first place.
A common way for marketers to think about consumer behavior today is as a set of activities
a person goes through in order to solve problems. This problem-solving process is triggered
when a consumer identifies some unmet need. For instance, a family consumes all of the milk
in the house, or a birthday party is coming up and a gift is needed, or a soccer team is
planning an end-of-season picnic. Each buying scenario presents a problem the buyer must
solve. These problems can involve two types of needs: physical (such as a need for milk, a
birthday gift, or picnic food) or psychological (for example, the need to feel secure, the need
to be loved, or the need to have fun).
This problem-solving process also involves needs and wants. A need is a basic deficiency for
an essential item. You need food, water, air, security, and so forth. A want places specific,
personal criteria on how a need must be fulfilled. To illustrate, when we are hungry, food is a
need. When we have a specific food item in mind, that item is a want. That difference is
illustrated by the familiar scenario of standing in front of a full refrigerator and complaining
that there is nothing to eat.
Most of marketing is in the want-fulfilling business, not the need-fulfilling business. Swatch
and Timex do not want you to buy just any watch. They want you to want their brands of
watches. Likewise, H&M wants you to desire their brand of clothing when you shop for
clothes. On the other hand, the American Cancer Association markets to you in the hope that
you will feel the need to get a checkup, and it doesn’t care which doctor you go to. But in the
end, marketing is mostly about creating and satisfying wants.
This model of consumer behavior acknowledges that both rational and irrational factors may
shape a buyer’s purchasing decisions. It also recognizes that internal and external factors play
a role in the decision process. In fact, the problem-solving model helps us map a consistent
process individuals go through as they make buying decisions. When marketers understand
this process and the factors that influence it, they can take action to influence buyer
perceptions and behavior at various stages of the process.
Real-World Examples
Let's break down Buyer’s Cultural, Social, Personal, and Psychological Characteristics
with a focus on the Indian context. These factors heavily influence consumer buying
behavior in India, given its diverse cultures, social systems, and economic segments.
1. Cultural Factors
These are the deep-rooted values, traditions, and beliefs that guide consumer behavior.
Regional Cultures:
• Preferences vary by region. For example, South Indian consumers often favor gold
jewelry, while Punjabis may prefer luxury cars and high-end fashion.
Cultural Shift:
• Urbanization and Western influences are changing buying patterns, especially among
millennials and Gen Z.
• Rise in health-conscious buying (organic food, fitness products).
2. Social Factors
Social influences come from family, reference groups, social roles, and status.
Family:
Reference Groups:
• Peer groups, influencers, and celebrities (Bollywood stars, cricketers) play a huge
role in shaping preferences, especially in fashion, gadgets, and automobiles.
Social Class:
• Rising middle class and aspirational lower-income groups are key drivers of
consumption.
• Luxury brands appeal to upper-class status-seeking consumers in metros
3. Personal Factors
These include age, occupation, lifestyle, economic status, and personality traits.
• Young consumers (18-35 years) are tech-savvy, favoring e-commerce, gadgets, and
fast fashion.
• Older consumers (50+) focus more on security, health products, and traditional
investments like gold or property.
Occupation:
• Professionals and business owners often opt for luxury products and branded
goods.
• Students lean toward affordable technology, fast food, and fashionable clothing.
Lifestyle:
• Rapid urbanization and nuclear families have increased demand for convenience
products, ready-to-eat meals, and domestic appliances.
• Health and wellness have led to growth in organic food, fitness wearables, and yoga
classes.
Income Levels:
• Rising disposable incomes in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities have made them new growth
hubs for FMCG, automobiles, and mobile phones.
4. Psychological Factors
Motivation:
In India, buying decisions are influenced by a complex mix of tradition and modernity,
with regional, religious, and cultural diversity shaping behavior. Understanding these factors
helps businesses design better marketing strategies, customize products, and engage
specific consumer segments.
Key Characteristics:
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Experiential Marketing
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Feature
Communication Focus
Medium Targeting Measurability Cost
Traditional Marketing
Product and brand awareness TV, radio, print, billboards Broad, mass audience Difficult to track ROI
Experiential Marketing
Two-way (interactive)
*THE END*