2. TOPIC OUTLINE
CHAPTER 1 Marketing Principles and Strategies
1.1 What Marketing and its Traditional Approaches?
1.2 Goals of Marketing
1.3 Contemporary approaches to marketing
CHAPTER 2 Customer Relationship
CHAPTER 3 Market Opportunity Analysis and Consumer Analysis
3.1 Strategic Marketing versus Tactical Marketing
3.2 The Marketing Environment
3.3 Marketing Research
3.4 Consumer and Business Markets
3.5 Market Segmentation, Market Targeting and Market Positioning
(STP)
CHAPTER 4 Developing the Marketing Mix
3. TOPIC OUTLINE
CHAPTER 5 Managing the Marketing Effort
5.1 Market Analysis (SWOT Analysis)
5.2 Marketing Planning
5.3 Marketing Implementation
5.4 Marketing Control
CHAPTER 6 Workshop and Presentation of Marketing
Plan
7. Making goods is one
thing; making sure that
they are bought is
another.
To facilitate the implementation of
the latter, a new tool was invented
which came to be known later as
marketing.
8. What is
defined as exchange activities
conducted by individuals or organizations
for the purpose of satisfying human wants
with the view of accomplishing individual
or organizational objectives.
9. Marketing are activities of a company
associated with buying and selling a
product or service. It includes
advertising, selling and delivering
products to people.
People who work in marketing
departments of companies try to get the
attention of target audiences by using
slogans, packaging design, celebrity
endorsement, etc.
10. Marketing is everything a company does to
acquire customers and maintain a
relationship with them. Even the small
tasks like writing thank-you letters, playing
golf with a prospective client, returning calls
promptly and meeting with a past client for
coffee can be thought of as a marketing.
The ultimate goal of marketing is to match
a company’s products and services to the
people who need and want them, thereby
ensuring profitability.
11. Purpose of
If we ask 100 business people this simple
question, we’ll get 100 different answers. Some
people would say marketing’s job is to get your
name out in the marketplace. Others would
say marketing positions your company or builds
your brand name. Most hope marketing
generates sales. Others would say that
marketing’s job is to generate leads that are
then handed over to the sales department. Still
others would say it’s to build brand
awareness, hoping people remember the name
when they go to buy. And there’s always the
group that just says marketing’s job is to make
money.
12. Purpose of
All of the answers are results of what
happens when your marketing and
advertising does what it supposed to do.
14. Basic Concepts of Marketing
Human Needs- refers to thing or service
that is required by a human being for the
health and well-being of his body and mind.
Human Want- are preferred products of an
individual that will satisfy his needs. It is
simply our desire.
Demand- it involves one’s need or want.
Wants become demand when backed up by
purchasing power. It also deals with the
market’s capacity to buy products that it
needs or wants.
15. Basic Concepts of Marketing [continued]
Product- is anything that can be offered to a
market to satisfy a need, wants or demands.
Product is not limited to tangible or physical
items or objects. It also includes experiences,
ideas, persons, organizations and
information.
Service- any activity or benefit that one
party can offer to another party that is
essentially intangible and does not result in
the ownership of anything.
16. Basic Concepts of Marketing [continued]
Customer Value- is the difference between the
values that the customer gains from owning and
using a product and the cost of obtaining the
product.
Customer Satisfaction- the extent to which a
product perceived performance matches a
buyer’s expectation. If performance exceeds
expectation, the customer is delighted.
Total Quality Management- programs
designed to constantly improve the quality of
products, services and marketing processes. It is
an approach in which all the company’s people
are involved in constantly improving the quality
of company’s operation.
17. Basic Concepts of Marketing [continued]
Exchange- refers to the trade of things or
service of value between buyer and seller
Relationship Marketing- the process of
creating, maintaining, and enhancing strong,
value-laden relationship which customers and
other stakeholders. The goal of relationship
marketing is to deliver long-term value to the
customer and thereby obtain customer
satisfaction and retention of customers.
18. Basic Concepts of Marketing [continued]
Market- the set of all actual and potential
buyers of a product or service. This refer to
people patronizing the company’s product or
availing various services.
2 categories of Market:
1. Consumer Market- purchases products for
its own personal consumption.
2. Industrial Market- purchases products in
order to produce another product