RPIS:

Roles

Syllabus: Role of marketing

  • strategic role of marketing goods and services
  • Interdependence with other key business functions
  • production, selling, marketing approaches
  • types of markets – resource, industrial, intermediate, consumer, mass, niche

The strategic role of marketing is to maximise sales for an organisation through developing a group of strategies that design, plan, price, promote and distribute the company’s goods or services in an attempt to obtain or maintain a sustainable competitive advantage over their competitors.

Essentially: Who designs the products and plans the promotion strategy.

Changes in the role of marketing

PeriodName of ApproachDescription
1820 - 1920Production aproachBuild it and they will come
I've got it, come get it
1920 - 1960Selling approachBuild the product, then convince the consumer via promotion that they need to buy it
You need this because…
1960 - presentMarketing approachWith the consumer at the centre, determine their wants and create products which are responsive to the customers’ needs and desires
1972 - presentSocietal marketing conceptMarketing must consider the wider society context impacts and influences including the environmental impact of production and consumption
For Example: Ethee
1983 - presentRelationship marketing conceptMarketing must seek to develop long term customer relationships and repeat sales over time with a wider range of products. Interdependence with HR
For Example: Apple

Types of Markets (RIICMN)

A market is a group of individuals, organisations or both that:

  • need or want a product (goods or service)
  • have the money (purchasing power) to purchase the product
  • are willing to spend their money to obtain the product
  • are socially and legally authorised to purchase the product
There are 6 types of markets:
  • R - resource The market of a primary product or natural resource (e.g wool, iron, clay)
  • I - industrial The market for sale of input goods to other firms (e.g Sale of microchips to Sony)
  • I - intermediate The sale of finished goods to firms for a sale to a customer (e.g Sony selling speakers to JB Hi-Fi)
  • C - consumer The sale of goods for consumption by customer (e.g JB Hi-Fi sells speaker to customer)
  • M - mass Sale of broad, standard products to a mass market segmentation (e.g woolies selling toilet paper)
  • N - niche Sale to a small market segment (e.g Songbird candles)

Processes

Syllabus: marketing process

  • situational analysis – SWOT, product life cycle
  • market research
  • establishing market objectives
  • identifying target markets
  • developing marketing strategies
  • implementation, monitoring and controlling – developing a financial forecast; comparing actual and planned results, revising the marketing strategy

Marketing Processes - SMEIDI

  • Situational analysis
    • SWOT
    • product life cycle - The cycle through which revenue for a product moves, moving from rapid growth in an introduction phase then to a post maturity phase.
  • Market research - gathering and interpreting info about a market, a product or service to be offered in the market or about past, present or potential customers for a product.
    • Primary research (newly created for the purpose) eg Surveys, Product tests, Focus groups
    • Secondary research (already existing for other persons) eg ABS data, existing sales reports
    • Can be sourced internally or externally.
  • Establishing market objectives - set overall objective in relation to sales, market share, product range and geographic scope.
  • Identifying target markets - Using a number of attributes (geographic, demographic, psychographic and behavioural) to identify who are the specific customers that will purchase the goods or services in order to achieve the market objectives.
    • Primary Target Market - the segment of a market which a business believes will provide the best chance to sell
    • Secondary Target Market - an additional market which the business is going to target. This will provide a more difficult market to sell to, and may be targeting a smaller overall volume of sales
  • Developing marketing strategies - Develop the plan for the 7Ps of marketing in order to achieve the market objectives by selling the goods or services to those in the identified target market: Product, Price, promotion, Place (4Ps), People, Processes, Physical Evidence
  • Implementation, monitoring and controlling – developing a financial forecast; comparing actual and planned results, revising the marketing strategy

Influences

Syllabus: influences on marketing

  • factors influencing customer choice – psychological, sociocultural, economic, government
  • consumer laws
    • deceptive and misleading advertising
    • price discrimination
    • implied conditions
    • warranties
  • ethical – truth, accuracy and good taste in advertising, products that may damage health, engaging in fair competition, sugging

Influences on Marketing - FEC

F - Factors influencing customer choice - PEGS
  • Psychological (internal) - Personal individual factors within the person including perception, motives, attitudes and experiences.
  • Economic (external) - Influence of current state of the economy including GDP growth rate, wage increases, interest rates and exchange rates.
  • Government (external) - Influence of government actions in relation to taxes, subsidies and public service advertising.
  • Sociocultural (external) - Influence as a result of social groupings or interests including socio economic status, culture and subculture, gender and peer groups.
E - Ethical - TAPES
  • Truth in advertising - unethical and prohibited by the Australian Consumer Law
  • Accuracy and good taste in advertising - unethical and self regulated by industry with a range of Codes overseen by Ad Standards
  • Products that may damage health - may be unethical, may be legally regulated including prohibitions (tobacco) or self regulated (alcohol, junk food to children)
  • Engaging in fair competition - unethical to be unfair, and prohibited by competition law
  • Sugging - selling under the guise of market research is unethical, but not illegal
C - Consumer Laws - WIPD
  • Warranties
  • Implied conditions
  • Price discrimination
  • Deceptive and misleading advertising

Strategies

Syllabus: