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Core Marketing Concepts

Core Marketing Concepts

Needs, Wants, and Demands

  • Needs: Basic human requirements or states of felt deprivation.
    • Examples: Air, food, water, clothing, shelter, recreation, education.
  • Wants: When needs are directed to specific objects that might satisfy the need, shaped by culture and personality.
    • Example: Food is a need, but wanting biryani or pizza is a want.
  • Demands: Wants for specific products backed by an ability to pay (buying power).
    • Example: Many people desire a Rolls Royce car, but only a few can afford it.

Five Types of Needs

  • Stated needs: What the customer explicitly says they want (e.g., "I want an inexpensive car").
  • Real needs: The underlying need behind the stated need (e.g., "I want a car with low operating costs").
  • Unstated needs: Needs the customer expects to be fulfilled without explicitly stating them (e.g., "I expect good service from the dealer").
  • Delight needs: Needs that would enhance the customer's experience but are not expected (e.g., "I would like the car to have a built-in navigation system").
  • Secret needs: Needs that are not expressed, often due to social or psychological reasons (e.g., "I want my friends to see me as a savvy consumer").

Market Offerings and Value Propositions

  • Market Offering: A combination of products, services, information, and experiences offered to a target market to satisfy their needs.
  • Value Proposition: A set of benefits that the company promises to deliver to customers to satisfy their needs.

Brands

  • Brand: A name, term, design, symbol, or other feature that identifies and differentiates a company's offerings from those of competitors.

Customer Value and Satisfaction

  • Customer-Perceived Value: The customer's evaluation of the difference between the benefits and costs of a market offering, relative to competing offerings.
  • Customer Satisfaction: The extent to which a product's perceived performance matches or exceeds customer expectations.

Marketing Channels

  • Communication channels: Deliver and receive messages from target buyers (e.g., social media, email, websites).
  • Distribution channels: Display, sell, or deliver products to customers (e.g., distributors, wholesalers, retailers).
  • Service channels: Facilitate transactions and provide customer support (e.g., banks, insurance agencies, transportation companies).

Supply Chain

  • Supply Chain: The entire system of organizations, people, activities, information, and resources involved in moving a product or service from supplier to customer.
  • Partner Relationship Management: Working closely with partners in and outside the company to create greater value for customers.

Competition

Competition is about all external forces affecting a company's ability to attract and keep customers, not just direct rivals.

Key Aspects:

  • Direct Competitors: Similar products, same market (e.g., Coke vs. Pepsi).
  • Indirect Competitors: Different products, same need (e.g., coffee vs. tea).
  • Potential New Entrants: Possible future competitors.
  • Substitute Products/Services: Alternatives satisfying the same need (e.g., email vs. mail).
  • Power of Buyers: Customers' influence on prices.
  • Power of Suppliers: Suppliers' influence on prices.

The Marketing Environment

The marketing environment is all internal and external factors impacting a company's marketing efforts and customer relationships.

Key Components:

  • Microenvironment: Close to the company:
    • Company, Suppliers, Intermediaries, Customers, Competitors, Publics.
  • Macroenvironment: Larger societal forces:
    • Demographic, Economic, Natural, Technological, Political, Cultural factors.