MINDFUL MARKETING
Transformative Consumer Research & Marketing
SHALINI BAHL, PH.D., THE REMINDING PROJECT
INTERNAL DATA POINTS
➤ Your Mind (Thoughts)
➤ Your Heart (Emotions)
➤ Your Body (Sensations)
MARKETING IN EL SALVADOR
What do you love about marketing?
What do you dislike about marketing?
Interconnectedness
MINDFUL MARKETING ORIGINS
MindfulnessMovement
Transformative
Consumer Research
Marketing 3.0
Mindful
Marketing
ChangingEnvironment
Economic
Nature
Consumers
Social
Technology
Continuous Change Cause & Effect
MARKETPLACE REALITIES
MINDFUL MARKETING: THE CASE OF PATAGONIA
ROADMAP
1. Changing Environment
2. Mindfulness
3. Transformative consumer
research
4. Marketing 3.0
5. Mindful Marketing
1. What
2. The checklist
3. 3 Levels
4. Mindful Marketing Plan
CHANGING
ENVIRONMENT
Nature, Social,Economic,
Technology, Consumers
ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS
“Americans use almost six timesthe resources that would be available in
a sustainable ecosystem”
~ Worldwatch Institute 2013
Health care costs Associated with obesity
were estimated at
$147 BILLION
SOCIAL COSTS
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015
Costs of obesity-related absenteeism
in business were up to
$6.38 BILLION
BUSINESS COSTS
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015
SHIFTING TECHNOLOGY
“Around 90 percent of consumers surveyed trust recommendations from people they
know. Moreover, 70 percent of consumers believe in customer opinions
posted online. The research by Trendstream/ Lightspeed Research interestingly
shows that consumers trust strangers in their social network more than they trust
experts.”
~ Kotler et al 2011
EMERGING CONSUMER TRENDS
SpendShiftby
SPEND SHIFTERS
SpendShiftby
SPEND SHIFTERS
SpendShiftby
TRENDS IN CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
INDESTRUCTIBLE
Optimistic and resilient people are leveraging hardship into
opportunity.
SpendShiftbyJohnGerzema&MichaelD’Antonio
RETOOLING
Fiercely self-reliant, we retain our faith in our core traditions and
actively seek to better our communities and ourselves.
LIQUID LIFE
We are adopting a more nimble, adaptable, and thrifty approach to
life.
COOPERATIVE CONSUMERISM
Crisis has prompted people to collaborate to solve problems and
create new options.
FROM MATERIALISM TO THE MATERIAL
Old status symbols no longer appeal as purpose, character,
authenticity, and creativity become pathways to the new good life.
SPEND SHIFTERS
SpendShiftby
HOW ARE THE
ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES
IMPACTING YOUR
BUSINESS?
NATURE SOCIAL ECONOMIC
TECHNOLOGICAL CONSUMER
Mindful Check-in
Mind
Body
Heart
“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our
response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.”~Viktor E. Frankl
MINDFULNESS
Living with awareness and
intentionality
“The faculty of voluntarily bringing back a
wandering attention, over and over again, is the
very root of judgment, character, and will. No
one is compos sui (master of himself) if he have
it not. An education which should improve this
faculty would be the education par excellence.
— William James, the father of modern psychology
W H AT I S M I N D F U L N E S S
Image: Unknown
MINDFULNESS: A SUPERPOWER
MINDFULNESS
“Mindfulness is
the awareness that
arises from paying
attention on
purpose, in the
present moment,
non-judgmentally”
~ Dr. jon Kabat-Zinn
TRIANGLE OF AWARENESS
AWA R E N E S S
T H O U G H T S
B O D Y
S E N S AT I O N S
E M O T I O N S
G
entle
Curiosity
N
on-Judgm
ent
Intentional Attention
MINDFULNESS
Practicing
Mindfulness
Changes The Brain
Structurally &
Functionally
PRACTICE MINDFULNESS: 3 WAYS
Integrate
Meditation
Way of Being
DESIGNATED PRACTICE
Awareness of Breath
FOCUS & AWARENESS
Mindful Break: Sensory Walking (Optional)
See
Hear
Smell
Touch
TRANSFORMATIVE
CONSUMER
RESEARCH
Research that benefits consumer
welfare and quality of life for all being
WHAT IS TRANSFORMATIVE
CONSUMER RESEARCH
Transformative Consumer
Research is a movement that
seeks to encourage, support, and
publicize research that benefits
consumer welfare and quality of
life for all beings affected by
consumption across the world
TCR: ESSENTIAL QUALITIES
➤ Focus on developing solutions to
consumer problems rather than
just seeking methods to influence
behavior (Mick 2006)
➤ Has ‘an immediate practical
orientation’ (Baker, 2011)
➤ Adopts a transdisciplinary
approach
➤ Involves all stakeholders such as
consumers, activists, policy
makers and businesses
“A major determinant of consumption-
induced problems is mindlessness.
-Bahl et al, 2016
MINDFUL CONSUMPTION
“The ongoing practice
of paying attention,
with acceptance, to
internal stimuli (bodily
sensations, emotions,
and thoughts) and
external stimuli and
their effects on the
consumption process.”
~ Bahl et al 2016
MINDFUL CONSUMPTION
Mindful consumption
does not involve guilt,
shame or any dogma
but encourages
consumers to examine
their choices and the
consequences of their
choices.
Figure 1: Transformative Potential of Mindful Consumption
Attention
Body Sensations,
Thoughts, Feelings,
& External Stimuli
Acceptance
Non-Judgment
Compassion
Flexibility of Mind
}Awareness
Inner & Outer
Stimuli
}Insight
Impermanence +
Transient Self + Causes
of Suffering
Weakening
Attachments
to Habitual
Behaviors
Transformative
Choices &
Experiences
Domains of Transformation: Consumer (Health & Addiction, Family Matters, Financial Well-Being, Materialism), Society (Multiculturalism, Education,
Political Engagement), Environment (Sustainability, Waste)
MINDFUL CONSUMPTION
~ Bahl et al 2016
MARKETING
3.0
Human & Values Centered
Marketing
Marketing
3.0
HUMAN & VALUES-CENTERED
EVOLUTION OF MARKETING 3.0
Marketing
2.0
CONSUMER-CENTERED
Marketing
1.0
PRODUCT-CENTERED
“Any customer can have a car
painted any color that he wants so
long as it is black.” Ford
“Customer is king”
“Provide solutions to address
problems in the society.”
Marketing3.0:FromProductstoCustomerstotheHumanSpiritbyKotleretal2011
Marketing
3.0
HUMAN & VALUES-CENTERED
DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS OF MARKETING 3.0
Marketing
2.0
CONSUMER-CENTERED
Marketing
1.0
PRODUCT-CENTERED
Objective: Sell products
Enabling Forces: Industrial Revolution
Value Proposition: Functional
Consumer Interaction: One-to-many transactions
Objective: Retain consumers
Enabling Forces: Information technology
Value Proposition: Functional & emotional
Consumer Interaction: One-to-one relationships
Objective: Make the world a better place
Enabling Forces: New wave technology
Value Proposition: Functional, emotional & spiritual
Consumer Interaction: Many-to-many collaborations
Marketing3.0:FromProductstoCustomerstotheHumanSpiritbyKotleretal2011
MINDFUL
MARKETING
Intentional, Inclusive,
& Holistic
MINDFUL MARKETING
“Mindful marketing transforms mindful consumption to a business
and societal opportunity by generating win-win solutions that
consider the triple bottom lines of planet, people, and profit.”
~Sheth et al. , 2011
MINDFUL MARKETING
The ongoing practice of
making marketing
decisions with
awareness that arises
from paying attention
to internal and external
data points, with
acceptance (non-
judgment, compassion
and flexibility of mind).
MINDFUL MARKETING
Mindful Marketing is:
1. Intentional instead of habitual
2. Includes all stakeholders
affected and not just
shareholders
3. Embraces disagreements &
different perspectives
4. Solves cause of problems and
not just symptoms
5. Uses individual & collective
emotional intelligence & not
just rational mind.
MINDFUL MARKETING CHECKLIST
Bringing attention with non-
judgment, compassion &
flexibility of mind to:
Why - Intentions
Who - Affected stakeholders
What do we know
Multiple perspectives
Our assumptions
Resources
How - All Options
Internal data points
MINDFUL MARKETING PLAN
ATTENTION WITH ACCEPTANCE
4 P’s
Why
Intentions
Who
Stakeholders
What
Know &
Assume
How
Options
Internal
data points
Mind, heart,
body
Product
Price
Promotion
Place
MINDFUL MARKETING LEVELS
Level 1
Mindfulness at Individual Employee-Level
Level 2
Mindfulness at Marketing Mix-Level
Level 3
Mindfulness at Organization-Level
MINDFUL MARKETING AT EMPLOYEES LEVEL
Mindfulness at Employees-Level
Level 1
MINDFUL MARKETING MIX: PRODUCT
Level 2
“We live in times of limited resources but unlimited desire to consume them. The
answer though is real simple: to consume less as a consumer; to make a better
designed product as a manufacturer.”
~ Co-founder David Hieatt of Howie’s Hand-Me-Down Line
MINDFUL MARKETING MIX: PRODUCT & PRICE
Level 2
“Blu's process has been developed to add transparency and to reduce surprises as the
project evolves. This is critical, because every site brings its own unique set of
challenges that must be considered by professionals. We work hard to identify those
challenges and costs as early as possible in the process with Blu's Design Services.”
MINDFUL MARKETING LEVELS: PRICE
Level 2
We have saved students more than $700 Million. BookRenter has never wavered from
our mission to make education more affordable for all students. Every day, we focus on
delivering students the best prices, the most flexible options, and the best service on
earth.
MINDFUL MARKETING MIX: PROMOTION
Level 2
“Join the movement to look up from your phone and live for the moment. Pledge to
engage more, connect more, share more, explore more.”
MINDFUL MARKETING MIX: PROMOTION
Level 2
"The world is becoming an increasingly noisy place and sometimes whispering can be
more effective than shouting. No one has ever created an ad quite like this and we
hope viewers will enjoy this rare moment of calm.” Acton Smith, Founder of Calm
MINDFUL MARKETING LEVELS: PLACE & PROMOTION
Level 2
"Our mission is to promote and perpetuate the street food movement," Resnick
MINDFUL MARKETING AT ORGANIZATION LEVEL
Level 3
“How you climb a mountain is more important than reaching the top.”
~Yvon Chouinard, Founder Patagonia
MINDFUL MARKETING AT ORGANIZATION LEVEL
Level 3
"Basically, our mission is to make the best-quality product with the least amount of
harm. It's very hard to produce a high-quality product without high-quality employees."
~ Setnicka, Patagonia Spokesperson
MINDFUL MARKETING AT ORGANIZATION LEVEL
Level 3
"We sort of look at growth in this company the way we look at a life cycle. If any one
component grows too much or too fast, it throws the system out of balance,"
~ Setnicka, Patagonia Spokesperson
MINDFUL MARKETING AT ORGANIZATION LEVEL
“We want people to look
at their own lives, and
live in an examined way,
and again, question
whether you really just
want that product, or do
you really need it because
it’s cold this winter.”
~Sheahan, Former Patagonia
CEO
Level 3
MINDFUL MARKETING PLAN
ATTENTION WITH ACCEPTANCE
4 P’s
Why
Intentions
Who
Stakeholders
What
Know &
Assume
How
Options
Internal
data points
Mind, heart,
body
Product
Price
Promotion
Place
COMPARING TRADITIONAL & MINDFUL MARKETING
Traditional Marketing Mindful Marketing
Mission, Vision &
Values
Maximize Sales, Profitability &
Shareholders’ Value
Make the world a better
place for all beings -
Triple Bottom Line
Customer
Segmentation, Targeting,
Positioning
Customer Empowerment
& Collaboration
Marketing Mix
1. Product
2. Price
3. Promotion
4. Place
- Products designed to maximize
profitability & satisfy customer
needs
- Price doesn't include
environment & social costs
- Promotion of mindless
consumption, excess information
- Easier access to mindless
consumption
- Product designed for
well being of all
stakeholders
- Transparency of price,
including hidden costs
- Promoting mindful
consumption
- Easier access to repairs,
recycle, reuse, & sharing
REFERENCES
Marketing 3.0: From Products to Customers to the Human SpiritMindfulness Resources
by Kotler et al 2011
Spend Shift: How the Post-Crisis Values Revolution Is Changing the Way We Buy, Sell,
and Live by John Gerzema & Michael D’Antonio
Mindfulness: The Transformative Potential for Consumer, Societal, and Environmental
Well-Being by Bahl et al 2016
Mindful consumption: a customer-centric approach to sustainability by Sheth et al 2011
Mind the gap: The mediating role of mindful marketing between market and quality
orientations, their interaction, and consequences by Malhotra et al 2012
FUNDES: Becoming a strategically mindful nonprofit by Bucher et al 2016
CONTACT INFORMATION
Email: Shalini@RemindingProject.com
Website: RemindingProject.com
Mindfulness Community: http://mindfuluniverse.com
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/shalinibahl
Twitter: https://twitter.com/shalinibahl
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DowntownMindfulness/
Slide Share: http://www.slideshare.net/ShaliniBahl
LOOK CLOSER. SENSE DEEPER. LEAD SMARTER.

Mindful Marketing: Intentional, Inclusive & Integrated Marketing That Benefits All Stakeholders

  • 1.
    MINDFUL MARKETING Transformative ConsumerResearch & Marketing SHALINI BAHL, PH.D., THE REMINDING PROJECT
  • 2.
    INTERNAL DATA POINTS ➤Your Mind (Thoughts) ➤ Your Heart (Emotions) ➤ Your Body (Sensations)
  • 3.
    MARKETING IN ELSALVADOR What do you love about marketing? What do you dislike about marketing?
  • 4.
    Interconnectedness MINDFUL MARKETING ORIGINS MindfulnessMovement Transformative ConsumerResearch Marketing 3.0 Mindful Marketing ChangingEnvironment Economic Nature Consumers Social Technology Continuous Change Cause & Effect MARKETPLACE REALITIES
  • 5.
    MINDFUL MARKETING: THECASE OF PATAGONIA
  • 6.
    ROADMAP 1. Changing Environment 2.Mindfulness 3. Transformative consumer research 4. Marketing 3.0 5. Mindful Marketing 1. What 2. The checklist 3. 3 Levels 4. Mindful Marketing Plan
  • 7.
  • 8.
    ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS “Americans usealmost six timesthe resources that would be available in a sustainable ecosystem” ~ Worldwatch Institute 2013
  • 9.
    Health care costsAssociated with obesity were estimated at $147 BILLION SOCIAL COSTS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015
  • 10.
    Costs of obesity-relatedabsenteeism in business were up to $6.38 BILLION BUSINESS COSTS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015
  • 11.
    SHIFTING TECHNOLOGY “Around 90percent of consumers surveyed trust recommendations from people they know. Moreover, 70 percent of consumers believe in customer opinions posted online. The research by Trendstream/ Lightspeed Research interestingly shows that consumers trust strangers in their social network more than they trust experts.” ~ Kotler et al 2011
  • 12.
  • 13.
  • 14.
  • 15.
    TRENDS IN CONSUMERBEHAVIOR INDESTRUCTIBLE Optimistic and resilient people are leveraging hardship into opportunity. SpendShiftbyJohnGerzema&MichaelD’Antonio RETOOLING Fiercely self-reliant, we retain our faith in our core traditions and actively seek to better our communities and ourselves. LIQUID LIFE We are adopting a more nimble, adaptable, and thrifty approach to life. COOPERATIVE CONSUMERISM Crisis has prompted people to collaborate to solve problems and create new options. FROM MATERIALISM TO THE MATERIAL Old status symbols no longer appeal as purpose, character, authenticity, and creativity become pathways to the new good life.
  • 16.
  • 17.
    HOW ARE THE ENVIRONMENTALCHANGES IMPACTING YOUR BUSINESS? NATURE SOCIAL ECONOMIC TECHNOLOGICAL CONSUMER
  • 18.
    Mindful Check-in Mind Body Heart “Between stimulusand response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.”~Viktor E. Frankl
  • 19.
  • 20.
    “The faculty ofvoluntarily bringing back a wandering attention, over and over again, is the very root of judgment, character, and will. No one is compos sui (master of himself) if he have it not. An education which should improve this faculty would be the education par excellence. — William James, the father of modern psychology
  • 21.
    W H ATI S M I N D F U L N E S S Image: Unknown
  • 22.
  • 23.
    MINDFULNESS “Mindfulness is the awarenessthat arises from paying attention on purpose, in the present moment, non-judgmentally” ~ Dr. jon Kabat-Zinn
  • 24.
    TRIANGLE OF AWARENESS AWAR E N E S S T H O U G H T S B O D Y S E N S AT I O N S E M O T I O N S G entle Curiosity N on-Judgm ent Intentional Attention
  • 25.
  • 26.
    PRACTICE MINDFULNESS: 3WAYS Integrate Meditation Way of Being
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
    Mindful Break: SensoryWalking (Optional) See Hear Smell Touch
  • 30.
    TRANSFORMATIVE CONSUMER RESEARCH Research that benefitsconsumer welfare and quality of life for all being
  • 31.
    WHAT IS TRANSFORMATIVE CONSUMERRESEARCH Transformative Consumer Research is a movement that seeks to encourage, support, and publicize research that benefits consumer welfare and quality of life for all beings affected by consumption across the world
  • 32.
    TCR: ESSENTIAL QUALITIES ➤Focus on developing solutions to consumer problems rather than just seeking methods to influence behavior (Mick 2006) ➤ Has ‘an immediate practical orientation’ (Baker, 2011) ➤ Adopts a transdisciplinary approach ➤ Involves all stakeholders such as consumers, activists, policy makers and businesses
  • 33.
    “A major determinantof consumption- induced problems is mindlessness. -Bahl et al, 2016
  • 34.
    MINDFUL CONSUMPTION “The ongoingpractice of paying attention, with acceptance, to internal stimuli (bodily sensations, emotions, and thoughts) and external stimuli and their effects on the consumption process.” ~ Bahl et al 2016
  • 35.
    MINDFUL CONSUMPTION Mindful consumption doesnot involve guilt, shame or any dogma but encourages consumers to examine their choices and the consequences of their choices.
  • 36.
    Figure 1: TransformativePotential of Mindful Consumption Attention Body Sensations, Thoughts, Feelings, & External Stimuli Acceptance Non-Judgment Compassion Flexibility of Mind }Awareness Inner & Outer Stimuli }Insight Impermanence + Transient Self + Causes of Suffering Weakening Attachments to Habitual Behaviors Transformative Choices & Experiences Domains of Transformation: Consumer (Health & Addiction, Family Matters, Financial Well-Being, Materialism), Society (Multiculturalism, Education, Political Engagement), Environment (Sustainability, Waste) MINDFUL CONSUMPTION ~ Bahl et al 2016
  • 37.
    MARKETING 3.0 Human & ValuesCentered Marketing
  • 38.
    Marketing 3.0 HUMAN & VALUES-CENTERED EVOLUTIONOF MARKETING 3.0 Marketing 2.0 CONSUMER-CENTERED Marketing 1.0 PRODUCT-CENTERED “Any customer can have a car painted any color that he wants so long as it is black.” Ford “Customer is king” “Provide solutions to address problems in the society.” Marketing3.0:FromProductstoCustomerstotheHumanSpiritbyKotleretal2011
  • 39.
    Marketing 3.0 HUMAN & VALUES-CENTERED DEFININGCHARACTERISTICS OF MARKETING 3.0 Marketing 2.0 CONSUMER-CENTERED Marketing 1.0 PRODUCT-CENTERED Objective: Sell products Enabling Forces: Industrial Revolution Value Proposition: Functional Consumer Interaction: One-to-many transactions Objective: Retain consumers Enabling Forces: Information technology Value Proposition: Functional & emotional Consumer Interaction: One-to-one relationships Objective: Make the world a better place Enabling Forces: New wave technology Value Proposition: Functional, emotional & spiritual Consumer Interaction: Many-to-many collaborations Marketing3.0:FromProductstoCustomerstotheHumanSpiritbyKotleretal2011
  • 40.
  • 41.
    MINDFUL MARKETING “Mindful marketingtransforms mindful consumption to a business and societal opportunity by generating win-win solutions that consider the triple bottom lines of planet, people, and profit.” ~Sheth et al. , 2011
  • 42.
    MINDFUL MARKETING The ongoingpractice of making marketing decisions with awareness that arises from paying attention to internal and external data points, with acceptance (non- judgment, compassion and flexibility of mind).
  • 43.
    MINDFUL MARKETING Mindful Marketingis: 1. Intentional instead of habitual 2. Includes all stakeholders affected and not just shareholders 3. Embraces disagreements & different perspectives 4. Solves cause of problems and not just symptoms 5. Uses individual & collective emotional intelligence & not just rational mind.
  • 44.
    MINDFUL MARKETING CHECKLIST Bringingattention with non- judgment, compassion & flexibility of mind to: Why - Intentions Who - Affected stakeholders What do we know Multiple perspectives Our assumptions Resources How - All Options Internal data points
  • 45.
    MINDFUL MARKETING PLAN ATTENTIONWITH ACCEPTANCE 4 P’s Why Intentions Who Stakeholders What Know & Assume How Options Internal data points Mind, heart, body Product Price Promotion Place
  • 46.
    MINDFUL MARKETING LEVELS Level1 Mindfulness at Individual Employee-Level Level 2 Mindfulness at Marketing Mix-Level Level 3 Mindfulness at Organization-Level
  • 47.
    MINDFUL MARKETING ATEMPLOYEES LEVEL Mindfulness at Employees-Level Level 1
  • 48.
    MINDFUL MARKETING MIX:PRODUCT Level 2 “We live in times of limited resources but unlimited desire to consume them. The answer though is real simple: to consume less as a consumer; to make a better designed product as a manufacturer.” ~ Co-founder David Hieatt of Howie’s Hand-Me-Down Line
  • 49.
    MINDFUL MARKETING MIX:PRODUCT & PRICE Level 2 “Blu's process has been developed to add transparency and to reduce surprises as the project evolves. This is critical, because every site brings its own unique set of challenges that must be considered by professionals. We work hard to identify those challenges and costs as early as possible in the process with Blu's Design Services.”
  • 50.
    MINDFUL MARKETING LEVELS:PRICE Level 2 We have saved students more than $700 Million. BookRenter has never wavered from our mission to make education more affordable for all students. Every day, we focus on delivering students the best prices, the most flexible options, and the best service on earth.
  • 51.
    MINDFUL MARKETING MIX:PROMOTION Level 2 “Join the movement to look up from your phone and live for the moment. Pledge to engage more, connect more, share more, explore more.”
  • 52.
    MINDFUL MARKETING MIX:PROMOTION Level 2 "The world is becoming an increasingly noisy place and sometimes whispering can be more effective than shouting. No one has ever created an ad quite like this and we hope viewers will enjoy this rare moment of calm.” Acton Smith, Founder of Calm
  • 53.
    MINDFUL MARKETING LEVELS:PLACE & PROMOTION Level 2 "Our mission is to promote and perpetuate the street food movement," Resnick
  • 54.
    MINDFUL MARKETING ATORGANIZATION LEVEL Level 3 “How you climb a mountain is more important than reaching the top.” ~Yvon Chouinard, Founder Patagonia
  • 55.
    MINDFUL MARKETING ATORGANIZATION LEVEL Level 3 "Basically, our mission is to make the best-quality product with the least amount of harm. It's very hard to produce a high-quality product without high-quality employees." ~ Setnicka, Patagonia Spokesperson
  • 56.
    MINDFUL MARKETING ATORGANIZATION LEVEL Level 3 "We sort of look at growth in this company the way we look at a life cycle. If any one component grows too much or too fast, it throws the system out of balance," ~ Setnicka, Patagonia Spokesperson
  • 57.
    MINDFUL MARKETING ATORGANIZATION LEVEL “We want people to look at their own lives, and live in an examined way, and again, question whether you really just want that product, or do you really need it because it’s cold this winter.” ~Sheahan, Former Patagonia CEO Level 3
  • 58.
    MINDFUL MARKETING PLAN ATTENTIONWITH ACCEPTANCE 4 P’s Why Intentions Who Stakeholders What Know & Assume How Options Internal data points Mind, heart, body Product Price Promotion Place
  • 59.
    COMPARING TRADITIONAL &MINDFUL MARKETING Traditional Marketing Mindful Marketing Mission, Vision & Values Maximize Sales, Profitability & Shareholders’ Value Make the world a better place for all beings - Triple Bottom Line Customer Segmentation, Targeting, Positioning Customer Empowerment & Collaboration Marketing Mix 1. Product 2. Price 3. Promotion 4. Place - Products designed to maximize profitability & satisfy customer needs - Price doesn't include environment & social costs - Promotion of mindless consumption, excess information - Easier access to mindless consumption - Product designed for well being of all stakeholders - Transparency of price, including hidden costs - Promoting mindful consumption - Easier access to repairs, recycle, reuse, & sharing
  • 60.
    REFERENCES Marketing 3.0: FromProducts to Customers to the Human SpiritMindfulness Resources by Kotler et al 2011 Spend Shift: How the Post-Crisis Values Revolution Is Changing the Way We Buy, Sell, and Live by John Gerzema & Michael D’Antonio Mindfulness: The Transformative Potential for Consumer, Societal, and Environmental Well-Being by Bahl et al 2016 Mindful consumption: a customer-centric approach to sustainability by Sheth et al 2011 Mind the gap: The mediating role of mindful marketing between market and quality orientations, their interaction, and consequences by Malhotra et al 2012 FUNDES: Becoming a strategically mindful nonprofit by Bucher et al 2016
  • 61.
    CONTACT INFORMATION Email: Shalini@RemindingProject.com Website:RemindingProject.com Mindfulness Community: http://mindfuluniverse.com LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/shalinibahl Twitter: https://twitter.com/shalinibahl Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DowntownMindfulness/ Slide Share: http://www.slideshare.net/ShaliniBahl LOOK CLOSER. SENSE DEEPER. LEAD SMARTER.