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309545719 bsbmkg501-presentation-1

  1. 1. 1 BSBMKG501 IDENTIFY AND EVALUATE MARKETING OPPORTUNITIES PRESENTATION 1
  2. 2. 2 PRESENTATION OUTLINE At the end of this presentation you will know about: • Identifying marketing opportunities • Marketing terms and considerations to start: • Value, customer satisfaction, exchange and transaction • What are markets? • The marketing mix • Analyse information on market and business needs to identify marketing opportunities • Research potential new markets and assess opportunities to enter, shape or influence the market in terms of likely contribution to the business • Explore entrepreneurial, innovative approaches and creative ideas for business application • Develop ideas into potential marketing opportunities
  3. 3. 3 MARKETING The purpose of marketing is to create, communicate and deliver value to customers, and for that value to also benefit the business, and everyone interested in the business. • Marketing is a social science related to why humans behave the way do • Work with or modify that behaviour to make a profit for our business What makes people purchase goods? To answer this question you need to undertake these steps: Ask a question Do background research Construct a hypothesis Test your hypothesis by doing an experiment Analyse your data and draw a conclusion Communicate your results
  4. 4. 4 PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING In general we could consider the following to be the principles of marketing: • Clarify your business objectives • Use innovation and creativity to know and understand: • Your target group and your customers behaviour • Your USP (unique selling proposition) unless you can do this you cannot target your marketing properly and effectively - understand what makes your business or product different or unique • The business purpose • The market needs and how they will access your product, company and brand • Segment your customers, where do they belong, what matters to them? • Know your consumer buying behaviour – successful brands encourage the participation of their customers
  5. 5. 5 WHAT IS VALUE? Each person values something different. Don’t make assumptions about customers’ values. According to Kotler et. al., value is generally determined by a customer’s: • Needs - a state of felt deprivation. When you are not having a need met, you will try to either reduce the need, or look for something to fill that need • Wants - the form taken by human needs as they are shaped, how people choose to fill their needs • Demands - human wants backed by buying power, the product or service the customer thinks provides them the best possible value they can afford Consumers make buying choices based on perceptions of the value products deliver. Customers usually act on perceived value whether or not it is this accurate. Customer value is the difference between the value the customer gains from owning and using a product and the cost of obtaining the product. This perception of value can be changed by a number of forces, including the media, marketing, peer opinion, trends, price etc.
  6. 6. 6 CUSTOMER SATISFACTION Depends on a product’s perceived performance in delivering value relative to a buyer’s expectations: • What do buyers expect? • What was the perceived performance of the product? • How did these two compare? • If the performance is higher than the expectation, the customer is satisfied - if not, they are dissatisfied • Satisfied customers make repeat purchases, and tend to tell others about their good experience. Therefore, it is important to match customer expectations with product performance
  7. 7. 7 EXCHANGE AND TRANSACTION Exchange The act of obtaining desired object or service from someone by offering something of value in return. Central to marketing, and requires a few important conditions: • Two parties must be involved • Each must have something of value to the other • Each must want to deal with the other • Each must be able to accept or reject the other’s offer • They must be able to communicate with each other Transaction • The unit of measurement used in marketing • It is a trade of units of value between two parties • one party gives X to another party and gets Y in return • Not always involve money – sometimes we exchange goods or services (barter)
  8. 8. 8 WHAT ARE MARKETS? • A market is the set of all the actual and potential buyers of a product • Members of a market share common needs or wants • The size of a market will depend on the number of people who have a particular need or want and have the resources and willingness to exchange for them • When creating a marketing campaign you would look at these five market areas before product launch: Potential market - all the people who could buy your product Available market - all the people who can afford your product Qualified available market - those who can legally buy your product Target market- people your business is trying to service with your product Penetrated market current customers
  9. 9. 9 S.W.O.T ANALYSIS Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats is a method for considering the pros and cons of a situation: • Internally we look at strengths and weaknesses (factors that belong to the organisation) • Externally examine opportunities and threats (factors that belong to the situation and environment) • This is a first step to developing a strategy for achieving specific objectives and is useful for generating new ideas and opportunities
  10. 10. 10 THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE Product Development A strategy for promoting company growth by offering modified or new products to current market segments is developed Introduction New product is first distributed and made available for purchase Growth If successful, sales will start climbing quickly. Growth amongst competitors, distribution, profits etc. begin to grow Maturity Sales growth slows or levels off Decline Sales decline. Company must identify declining product and decide whether it should be maintained, harvested or dropped
  11. 11. 11 PRICING: INTERNAL FACTORS Marketing objectives • Price is often largely determined by the target market and positioning for the product. The clearer a firm is about its objectives, the easier it will be to set price Marketing-mix strategy • Pricing decisions must be coordinated with product design, distribution and promotion decisions to form a consistent and effective marketing program Costs • The company must cover all of its costs for producing, distributing and selling the product, and also deliver a fair rate of return for its effort and risk
  12. 12. 12 THE MARKETING MIX “…the set of controllable marketing variables the company blends to produce the response it wants in the target market.” – Kotler et al (2007) It refers to the various elements making up the practice of marketing in its totality. Often referred to as the ‘Four P’s’: • Product - Quality and features. Why do your customers need what you are selling? What are the perceived benefits of your product? Product is a good service, idea, place or person - whatever is for sale whatever we are selling. Considered to include core - benefits the product offers the customer, actual which is the physical product and augmented the whole package including warranty, delivery and after sales options for example • Price - List price, discounts, allowances etc. what will make them part with their money? What the customer is willing to exchange for the product that they want. Consider price as well as all the costs, time, social, lifestyle for example • Place - Retailers, locations, warehousing where do your customers go to fulfil their needs? How available is the product to your customers? This relates to channels of distribution as well as actual places the product is available from • Promotion - Advertising, personal selling, sales promotions. All activities, actions taken to let customers know about the product benefits and how this product fits their needs
  13. 13. 13 THE MARKETING MIX The extended marketing mix In recent years, the marketing mix has been extended to include people, process and physical evidence. This is largely as a result of the marketing of services: • People: important particularly in the marketing of services • Process: customers migrate to other service providers when the process is not providing customer value • Physical evidence: entails examining every aspect that customers use in their perceptual field to assess such a service Target market intended position Price People Product Process Place Physical evidence Promotion
  14. 14. 14 ETHICS AND REGULATION IN MARKETING Marketing imposes a great deal of influence on the social landscape. The onus is on you to behave in a responsible way to use your power wisely. Your decision as a business owner or operating in business is to be ethical and to do the right thing, always. You cannot use your position to disadvantage any person or group of people. Good ethical practice involves providing accurate and balanced information, fair prices to encourage competition and reasonable inclusive behaviour. There are a range of ethical and legal boundaries in the Australian marketing landscapes. Ethical issues include: Unfair pricing Financial responsibility and accountability Planned obsolescence and deceptive practices Consumerism Environmentalism Globalisation Corporate social responsibility
  15. 15. 15 LAW AND REGULATION IN MARKETING Marketing is governed by various legislation and peak body regulations: Australian Consumer Law 2011 Competition and Consumer Act 2010 - commonwealth law formerly Trade Practices 1974 Fair Trading Acts Privacy laws Protection of Intellectual Property, Trademarks and Copyright Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) Australian Communication and Media Authority (ACMA) Do Not Call Register Australian Advertising Standards Bureau (ASB) ACMA Australian e- marketing Code of Practice Australian Direct Marketing Association (ADMA) Code of Practice Australian Marketing Institute (AMI) Code of Conduct Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA) Code of Ethics Australian and New Zealand Standard Industrial Classification Anti-Discrimination Act National Classification Scheme SPAM Act enforced by ACMA
  16. 16. 16 LAW AND REGULATION IN MARKETING Advertising media is regulated by internal and external bodies: Internal regulators •Australian Publishers Bureau (APB) •Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA) •Advertising Federation of Australia (AFA) •Federation of Australian Radio Broadcasters (FARB) •Commercial Television Industry Code of Practice External regulators •Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) •Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (replaces Trade Practices Act 1974) •Privacy Legislation •Australian Communication and Media Authority (ACMA)
  17. 17. 17 MARKETING OPPORTUNITIES • The aim of marketing is to attract customers • Good information is the foundation for good marketing • In the real world, marketers collect and analyse data to understand the requirements of their markets and find products to match them • Finding new markets can provide opportunities to improve sales volume, growth, market share and profitability • Before entering a new market, thorough research must be done to balance potential advantages against risks in entering the new market • New markets can be similar to, or radically different from the existing market the organisation currently operates in
  18. 18. 18 MARKETING OPPORTUNITIES • Organisations seeking to penetrate new markets must first define the market and research its characteristics • They must then find new or existing products which match the requirements of this market • Alternatively, an organisation can start with a product and find new markets for it • Organisations sometimes create new opportunities by entering a market with deliberate intentions of changing it. • E.g. Apple introduced the iPad into the personal computer market with the intention of changing the market • An organisation will only make the decision to enter new markets if the benefits outweigh the risk, a risk versus benefit analysis must be part of any research into a new market
  19. 19. 19 INNOVATION • Entrepreneurs have ideas and see opportunities which they develop into businesses • Anyone can adopt an entrepreneurial approach to their marketing by developing their ideas and being alert for new opportunities For Example: • In 1938 Heublein purchased the U.S. rights to Smirnoff vodka • At that time, sales were slow until they changed the product to use whiskey corks • In Kentucky, sales rocketed as the distributor started marketing Smirnoff as ‘white whiskey, no taste, no smell’
  20. 20. 20 INNOVATION Entrepreneurial ideas come from creative thinking. Generating entrepreneurial ideas can come from a range of activities: • Brainstorming, mind mapping and other idea generation techniques • Looking at an organisation’s competitors ‘What are they trying to achieve, and how can we do it better?’ • Customers, sales representatives, other personnel and suppliers These and other sources foster ideas that have the potential to be turned into marketing opportunities.
  21. 21. 21 INNOVATION Once an organisation has explored entrepreneurial, innovative ideas it must then develop them into marketing opportunities. This requires them to: • Identify the market and its requirements • Specify the product if a new product is being developed • Plan the marketing campaign • Test the marketing plan • Refine the marketing plan • Implement the marketing plan What is a marketing plan? A written plan to describe and direct the marketing activities of the organisation. It is a road map that helps business decide where they are, where they want to go and how they will get there. It helps clarify how to appeal to your audience and what they need. It can include strategies, budgets and goals.
  22. 22. 22 PRESENTATION SUMMARY Now that you have completed this presentation you will know about: • Identifying marketing opportunities • Marketing terms and considerations to start: • Value, customer satisfaction, exchange and transaction • What are markets? • The marketing mix • Analyse information on market and business needs to identify marketing opportunities • Research potential new markets and assess opportunities to enter, shape or influence the market in terms of likely contribution to the business • Explore entrepreneurial, innovative approaches and creative ideas for business application • Develop ideas into potential marketing opportuniti

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