Marketing is the process by which companies determine what products
or services may be of interest to customers, and the strategy to use in sales,
communications and business development. It is an integrated process through
which companies create value for customers and build strong customer
relationships in order to capture value from customers in return.
Marketing
is used to identify the customer, to keep the customer, and to satisfy the customer. With
the customer as the focus of its activities, it can be concluded that marketing management is one of the major components of business
management. The evolution of marketing was caused due to mature markets and over-capacities in the last 2-3 centuries.
Companies then shifted the focus from production to the customer in order to stay profitable.
The
term marketing concept holds
that achieving organizational goals depends on knowing the needs and wants of target markets and delivering the desired
satisfactions. It proposes that in order to satisfy its organizational
objectives, an organization should anticipate the needs and wants of consumers
and satisfy these more effectively than competitors.
FURTHER DEFINITIONS
Marketing
is defined by the American Marketing Association (AMA) as "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." The term developed from the
original meaning which referred literally to going to a market to buy or sell
goods or services. Seen from a systems point of view, sales process
engineering views marketing as "a
set of processes that are interconnected and interdependent with other functions,
whose methods can be improved using a variety of relatively new
approaches."
The
Chartered
Institute of Marketing defines marketing as "the
management process responsible for identifying, anticipating and satisfying
customer requirements profitably." A different concept is the value-based marketing which states the role of marketing to contribute to
increasing shareholder value. In this context, marketing is
defined as "the management
process that seeks to maximise returns to shareholders by developing
relationships with valued customers and creating a competitive advantage."
Marketing
practice tended to be seen as a creative industry in the past, which included advertising, distribution and selling. However, because the academic
study of marketing makes extensive use of social sciences, psychology, sociology, mathematics, economics, anthropology and neuroscience, the profession is now widely
recognized as a science, allowing numerous universities to offer
Master-of-Science (MSc) programmes. The overall process starts with marketing
research and goes through market segmentation, business planning and execution,
ending with pre and post-sales promotional activities. It is also related to
many of the creative arts. The marketing literature is
also adept at re-inventing itself and its vocabulary according to the times and
the culture.
Evolution of marketing
An
orientation, in the marketing context, relates to a perception or attitude a
firm holds towards its product or service, essentially concerning consumers and
end-users. Throughout history marketing has changed considerably as consumer
tastes are changing faster.
EARLIER APPROACHES
The
marketing orientation evolved from earlier orientations namely the production
orientation, the product orientation and the selling orientation.
Orientation
|
Profit driver
|
Western European timeframe
|
Description
|
Production
|
Production methods
|
until the 1950s
|
A firm focusing on a production
orientation specializes in producing as much as possible of a given product
or service. Thus, this signifies a firm exploiting economies of scale, until the minimum efficient
scale
is reached. A production orientation may be deployed when a high demand for a
product or service exists, coupled with a good certainty that consumer tastes
do not rapidly alter
|
Product
|
Quality of the product
|
until the 1960s
|
A firm employing a product
orientation is chiefly concerned with the quality of its own product. A firm
would also assume that as long as its product was of a high standard, people
would buy and consume the product.
|
Selling
|
Selling methods
|
1950s and 1960s
|
A firm using a sales orientation
focuses primarily on the selling/promotion of a particular product, and not
determining new consumer desires as such. Consequently, this entails simply
selling an already existing product, and using promotion techniques to attain
the highest sales possible.
Such
an orientation may suit scenarios in which a firm holds dead stock, or
otherwise sells a product that is in high demand, with little likelihood of
changes in consumer tastes diminishing demand.
|
Marketing
|
Needs and wants of customers
|
1970 to present day
|
The 'marketing orientation' is perhaps the most common orientation
used in contemporary marketing. It involves a firm essentially basing its
marketing plans around the marketing concept, and thus supplying products to
suit new consumer tastes. As an example, a firm would employ market research
to gauge consumer desires, use R&D to develop a product attuned to the
revealed information, and then utilize promotion techniques to ensure persons
know the product exists.
|
Contemporary approaches
Recent approaches in marketing is the relationship marketing with focus on the customer, the business marketing or industrial marketing with focus on an organization or institution and the social marketing with focus on benefits to the society. New forms of
marketing also uses the internet and are therefore called internet marketing or more generally e-marketing,
online marketing, search engine
marketing, desktop advertising
or affiliate marketing. It tries to perfect the segmentation strategy used in traditional marketing. It
targets its audience more precisely, and is sometimes called personalized
marketing
or one-to-one marketing.
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