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Acquire foundational Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing- knowledge of marketing- information management to information management to understand its nature and understand its nature and scope scope Marketing Marketing Indicator Indicator

Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

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Page 1: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Acquire foundational Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing-knowledge of marketing-

information management toinformation management tounderstand its nature and understand its nature and

scopescope

MarketingMarketing

Indicator Indicator

1.031.03

Page 2: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Three types of information Three types of information used in marketing decision used in marketing decision makingmaking•Customer Customer

•Marketing mixMarketing mix

•Business EnvironmentBusiness Environment

Page 3: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Customer InformationCustomer Information

Page 4: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Marketing MixMarketing Mix

• Basic Products• Product Features• Services• Product packaging• Guarantees• Repairs• Credit Choice• Discounts• Promotion Methods

Page 5: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Business EnvironmentBusiness Environment

Page 6: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Why is Marketing Information Why is Marketing Information Needed?Needed?

• To identify potential customers, potential products, marketing opportunities, solve marketing problems, implement marketing plans, and monitor marketing performance.

Page 7: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

The Impact of Marketing The Impact of Marketing Information on MarketersInformation on Marketers

• Marketing research is used when a business needs to solve problems.

• Helps answer questions about what to produce, at what price to sell the products, who will buy the products, and how to promote the products

• Helps businesses plan their future operations to increase sales and profits.

• Understand markets.• Companies keep track of what happening in current markets.

Page 8: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Ways Marketers Use Ways Marketers Use Marketing InformationMarketing Information• Analysis----the process of summarizing, combining, or

comparing information so that decisions can be made. • Report• Examples include

– Planning a promotional budget.– Effectiveness of one retailer in a channel of distribution.– Costs of marketing activities for national and international

activities.

• Example: Stouffer’s Lean Cuisine—13 years of market research– Develop product– Test package design– Hold pilot sales in large cities

• Track what is happening in current markets– Determine major competitors– What major competitors are offering– Which products consumers prefer– Customer satisfaction with product

Page 9: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Information contained in sales and expense reports that is monitored for marketing decision-making.• Market Share Analysis — the percentage of all

sales within a market that is held by one brand / product or company. Normally measured by sales revenue or sales volume (the number of units sold)

• Sales Volume Analysis — A detailed study of an organization's sales, in terms of units or revenue, for a specified period .

• Accounting Information– Spending– Profitability

• Sales– Discount on sale?– What expenses went into each sale?

• Cost• Inventory• Payroll

– Commission on sale?

Page 10: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Information in reports provided by salespeople that is monitored for use in marketing decision-making.• Request/complaint reports• Lost sales reports• Call reports• Activity reports• Retail audits – measure market sales, competitor’s sales, market share, prices, special offers, stock levels by week or day to day

• Product information– types of products that sell best at various times of year; colors or sizes of products customers prefer

Page 11: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Information about customers that is monitored for marketing decision-making.• Demographic data (age, gender, ethnicity)• Buying habits (time of day, repeat products, amount spent—full price or on sale, types of products)– Ex: Diapers and beer purchased by men on Thursdays and Saturdays

– Ex: Saturday is day most people do major grocery shopping

• Credit record– Job– Income level– Marital status

• Customer requests (what products or varieties are requested that you don’t carry)

• Receipts (is a certain neighborhood or ZIP code frequenting your establishment more than others)

Page 12: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Explain information about competitors that is monitored for marketing decision-making.• USP’s (unique selling points) of our product vs. competition to find our advantage. Is that advantage sustainable?

• Financial records for public companies (GE, Ford, Apple)

• Insight into company’s strengths, weaknesses, and future plans (new products, marketing campaigns)

• Market share analysis• Sales volume data

Page 13: Marketing Obj. 1.03 pp

Procedures for identifying information to monitor for marketing decision-making.•Identify needed data•Create a plan for collecting, storing and analyzing data

•Compile a list of secondary sources providing needed data

•Retrieve needed data•Analyze/use data