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What Is Marketing?

When you consider the functional areas of business—accounting, finance, management, marketing, and operations—marketing is the one you probably know the most about. After all, as a consumer and target of all sorts of advertising messages, you’ve been on the receiving end of marketing initiatives for most of your life. What you probably don’t appreciate, however, is the extent to which marketing focuses on providing value to the customer. According to the American Marketing Association, marketingmarketingSet of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers and for improving customer relationships. is a set of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers and for improving customer relationships.[298]

In other words, marketing isn’t just advertising and selling. It includes everything that organizations do to satisfy customer needs:

  • Coming up with a product and defining its features and benefits

  • Setting its price

  • Identifying its target market

  • Making potential customers aware of it

  • Getting people to buy it

  • Delivering it to people who buy it

  • Managing relationships with customers after it has been delivered

Not surprisingly, marketing is a team effort involving everyone in the organization. Think about a typical business—a local movie theater, for example. It’s easy to see how the person who decides what movies to show is involved in marketing: he or she selects the product to be sold. It’s even easier to see how the person who puts ads in the newspaper works in marketing: he or she is in charge of advertising—making people aware of the product and getting them to buy it. But what about the ticket seller and the person behind the counter who gets the popcorn and soda? What about the projectionist? Are they marketing the business? Absolutely: the purpose of every job in the theater is satisfying customer needs, and as we’ve seen, identifying and satisfying customer needs is what marketing is all about.

If everyone is responsible for marketing, can the average organization do without an official marketing department? Not necessarily: most organizations have marketing departments in which individuals are actively involved in some marketing-related activity—product design and development, pricing, promotion, sales, and distribution. As specialists in identifying and satisfying customer needs, members of the marketing department manage—plan, organize, direct, and control—the organization’s overall marketing efforts.

Figure 9.2, “The Marketing Concept” is designed to remind you that, to achieve business success, you need to do three things:

  1. Find out what customers or potential customers need.

  2. Develop products to meet those needs.

  3. Engage the entire organization in efforts to satisfy customers.

Figure 9.2. The Marketing Concept

The Marketing Concept

At the same time, you need to achieve organizational goals, such as profitability and growth. This basic philosophy—satisfying customer needs while meeting organizational goals—is called the marketing conceptmarketing conceptBasic philosophy of satisfying customer needs while meeting organizational goals., and when it’s effectively applied, it guides all of an organization’s marketing activities.

The marketing concept puts the customer first: as your most important goal, satisfying the customer must be the goal of everyone in the organization. But this doesn’t mean that you ignore the bottom line; if you want to survive and grow, you need to make some profit. What you’re looking for is the proper balance between the commitments to customer satisfaction and company survival. Consider the case of Medtronic, a manufacturer of medical devices, such as pacemakers and defibrillators. The company boasts more than 50 percent of the market in cardiac devices and is considered the industry standard setter. Everyone in the organization understands that defects are intolerable in products that are designed to keep people alive. Thus, committing employees to the goal of zero defects is vital to both Medtronic’s customer base and its bottom line. “A single quality issue,” explains CEO Arthur D. Collins Jr., “can deep-six a business.”[299]

Declaring that you intend to develop products that satisfy customers and that everyone in your organization will focus on customers is easy. The challenge is doing it. As you can see in Figure 9.3, “Marketing Strategy”, to put the marketing concept into practice, you need a marketing strategymarketing strategyPlan for selecting a target market and creating, pricing, promoting, and distributing products that satisfy customers.—a plan for performing two tasks:

  1. Selecting a target market

  2. Developing your marketing mix—implementing strategies for creating, pricing, promoting, and distributing products that satisfy customers

We’ll use Figure 9.3, “Marketing Strategy” as a blueprint for our discussion of target-market selection, and we’ll analyze the concept of the marketing mix in more detail in the next major section of the chapter.

Figure 9.3. Marketing Strategy

Marketing Strategy

As we saw earlier, businesses earn profits by selling goods or providing services. It would be nice if everybody in the marketplace was interested in your product, but if you tried to sell it to everybody, you’d spread your resources too thin. You need to identify a specific group of consumers who should be particularly interested in your product, who would have access to it, and who have the means to buy it. This group is your target markettarget marketSpecific group of customers who should be interested in your product, have access to it, and have the means to buy it., and you’ll aim your marketing efforts at its members.

How do marketers identify target markets? First, they usually identify the overall market for their product—the individuals or organizations that need a product and are able to buy it. As Figure 9.3, “Marketing Strategy” shows, this market can include either or both of two groups:

  1. A consumer marketconsumer marketBuyers who want a product for personal use.—buyers who want the product for personal use

  2. An industrial marketindustrial marketBuyers who want a product for use in making other products.—buyers who want the product for use in making other products

You might focus on only one market or both. A farmer, for example, might sell blueberries to individuals on the consumer market and, on the industrial market, to bakeries that will use them to make muffins and pies.

Geographic segmentationgeographic segmentationProcess of dividing a market according to such variables as climate, region, and population density.—dividing a market according to such variables as climate, region, and population density (urban, suburban, small-town, or rural)—is also quite common. Climate is crucial for many products: try selling snow shovels in Hawaii or above-ground pools in Alaska. Consumer tastes also vary by region. That’s why McDonald’s caters to regional preferences, offering a breakfast of Spam and rice in Hawaii, tacos in Arizona, and lobster rolls in Massachusetts.[301] Outside the United States, menus diverge even more widely (you can get seaweed burgers in Japan).[302]

Likewise, differences between urban and suburban life can influence product selection. As exhilarating as urban life can be, for example, it’s a hassle to parallel park on crowded city streets. Thus, Toyota engineers have developed a product especially for city dwellers (at least in Japan). The Japanese version of the Prius, Toyota’s hybrid gas-electric car, can automatically parallel park itself. Using computer software and a rear-mounted camera, the parking system measures the spot, turns the steering wheel, and swings the car into the space (making the driver—who just sits there—look like a master of urban survival skills).[303]

Dividing consumers by such variables as attitude toward the product, user status, or usage rate is called behavioral segmentationbehavioral segmentationProcess of dividing consumers by behavioral variables, such as attitude toward the product, user status, or usage rate.. Companies selling technology-based products might segment the market according to different levels of receptiveness to technology. They could rely on a segmentation scale developed by Forrester Research that divides consumers into two camps: technology optimists, who embrace new technology, and technology pessimists, who are indifferent, anxious, or downright hostile when it comes to technology.[304]

Some companies segment consumers according to user status, distinguishing among nonusers, potential users, first-time users, and regular users of a product. Depending on the product, they can then target specific groups, such as first-time users. Credit-card companies use this approach when they offer promotional gifts to college students in order to induce them to get their first card. Once they start using it, they’ll probably be segmented according to usage. “Heavy users” who pay their bills on time will likely get increased credit lines.

Typically, marketers determine target markets by combining, or “clustering,” segmenting criteria. What characteristics does General Motors look for in marketing the Hummer H2? Two demographic variables come to mind: sex and age. Buyers are likely to be males ranging in age from about thirty to fifty-five. Because the Hummer can go off-road and performs well on rugged terrain, geography could also be a factor. Income—a socioeconomic factor—is clearly important: Hummers are expensive to buy, maintain, and run. As for psychographics, potential Hummer owners could be people who value prestige and the material rewards of success. (Given the vehicle’s low gas mileage, we’d have to assume that most of them aren’t particularly concerned about the environment.) Finally, it would help to know what other vehicles they own; Ferrari owners might be worth targeting.



[298] American Marketing Association, “Marketing Glossary Dictionary,” http://www.marketingpower.com/mg-dictionary.php? (accessed May 21, 2006).

[299] Michael Arndt, “High Tech—and Handcrafted,” BusinessWeek Online, July 5, 2004, http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_27/b3890113_mz018.htm (accessed May 21, 2006).

[300] Hyundai Motor America, “Special Programs: College Graduate Program,” http://www.hyundaiusa.com/financing/specialoffers/collegegraduate.aspx (accessed May 21, 2006).

[301] “McDonald’s Test Markets Spam,” Pacific Business News, June 11, 2002, http://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/stories/2002/06/10/daily22.html (accessed May 21, 2006).

[302] “The Super McDonalds,” Halfbakery, http://www.halfbakery.com/idea/The_20Super_20McDonalds (accessed May 21, 2006).

[303] “Coolest Inventions 2003: Parking-Space Invader,” Time (Online Edition), http://www.time.com/time/2003/inventions/invprius.html (accessed May 21, 2006).

[304] Rob Rubin and William Bluestein, “Applying Technographics,” Forrester Research, http://www.forester.com/ER/Marketing/0,1503,84,FF.html (accessed May 21, 2006).

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