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Introduction
Soma Giri
Disclaimer: - Some of the images and content have been taken from different online sources and this presentation is intended only for knowledge sharing but not for any profitable reasons
Marketing is management processes for identifying, anticipating and satisfying consumers requirements profitably
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
Satisfying needs and wants through an exchange process Philip Kotler The process of planning and executing the conception, pricing, promotion and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organizational objectives.
Exchange Process
Industrial Revolution 1930 1950 Present
PRODUCTION ERA
Sale ERA
Marketing ERA
Evolution of Marketing
Firm/ Company
Production (to 1960s) Selling (1950 - 1960s) Marketing (1970 Present) Customer Experience (1998 Present)
The
Customers
Prevailed from the time of the industrial revolution until the early 1950's The idea that a firm should focus on those products that it could produce most efficiently and that the creation of a supply of low-cost products would in and of itself create the demand for the products. The key questions that a firm would ask before producing a product were: Can we produce the product? Can we produce enough of it? At the time, the production concept worked fairly well because the goods that were produced were largely those of basic necessity and there was a relatively high level of unfulfilled demand. The production concept prevailed into the late 1920's.
Around this time (Mass Production), firms began to practice the sales concept (or selling concept), under which companies not only would produce the products, but also would try to convince customers to buy them through advertising and personal selling. Before producing a product, the key questions were: Can we sell the product? Can we charge enough for it? The sales concept paid little attention to whether the product actually was needed; the goal simply was to beat the competition to the sale with little regard to customer satisfaction. Marketing was a function that was performed after the product was developed and produced, and many people came to associate marketing with hard selling. Even today, many people use the word "marketing" when they really mean sales.
1970s till 1980s Focus was the product and the effectiveness The development and research was at the forth front because of changed needs it was important to produce the right things and to be innovative that means that the best product wins, which means getting the most sales Product concepts seeks to achieve result via product excellence. And emphasis on quality assurance Myopia when organization love product its leads to marketing myopia because the focus is on product rather the customers needs
It starts with consumer want and ends with satisfaction of those wants It is rest on four pillars and they are target market, costumer need, integrated marketing and profitability Profit through consumer satisfaction What do customers want? Can we develop it while they still want it? How can we keep our customers satisfied? In response to these discerning customers, firms began to adopt the marketing concept, which involves: Focusing on customer needs before developing the product Aligning all functions of the company to focus on those needs Realizing a profit by successfully satisfying customer needs over the long-term
When firms first began to adopt the marketing concept, they typically set up separate marketing departments whose objective it was to satisfy customer needs.
Marketing Promotes Product Awareness to the Public Marketing Helps Boost Product Sales Marketing Builds Company Reputation
Helping in Production Development More Social satisfaction Impact towards National Economy