Monday, February 28, 2011

Marketing Management(For 2003 and Earlier Batches) - 2

Marketing Management(For 2003 and Earlier Batches) - 2

Q 7. What is the difference between Market Segmentation & Concentrated Marketing?
Answer 7)
Market Segmentation is the breaking up of a large market into smaller groups based on Geographic, Demographic, Psycho graphic & Customer characteristic factors.
This is done to get a more detailed description of people in segments so that the marketing mix can be optimized.

The following are the major types of Segmentation -

• Geographic

This divides the market into countries, states, cities, and urban & rural areas. The population density in each area is important.

• Demographic

This is the segmentation based on the people & their characteristics.
E.g.: Age, Sex, buying power etc
This is a commonly used segmentation. The data needed can be easily acquired by surveys.

• Psycho graphic

Elements like social class, personality traits, life styles etc are the basis of this segmentation. This is the psychological factor in a market.

• Product-Customer characteristics

This is based on the customer’s relation to the product.

Concentrated marketing implies that the organization focuses its attention on one market segment & develops one marketing mix for that segment. The single segment can vary in size from very large to very small. Rolls Royce caters to the super luxury segment of the market for cars - a relatively small segment of the total market. The Maruti 800 on the other hand concentrates on the much larger economy minded segment of the market.

A firm that is trying to enter a market dominated by a few large firms may gain easier entry by targeting a smaller segment that the existing competitor is overlooking. The survival of small firms depends more & more on their ability to concentrate on their ability to concentrate on those specialized market segments that are not attractive to their larger rivals.

If a firm concentrates on a segment so small that only one firm can make profit, potential rivals may continue to ignore it. On the other hand, marketers who identify & focus on small segments that develop into large segments attract rivals who also want to cater to that segment. Many firms want to concentrate on the segment of the mass market that has the most people. This is sometimes referred to as the Majority Fallacy. Stiff competition among the competitors for the big segments develops when smaller segments are left untouched.

Q 8. What are the 4 criteria for effective use of Market segmentation?

Answer 8)
Market Segmentation is categorized into the following four types for effective usage. They are -

1. Geographic Segmentation
2. Demographic Segmentation
3. Psycho graphic Segmentation
4. Product-Customer characteristics Segmentation

1. Geographic Segmentation
Marketers who practice geographic segmentation divide the mass market into geographic units such as nations, regions, states, urban agglomerations and rural areas, and neighborhoods. Climate and terrain are other possible segmentation variables. No matter which variable is used, marketers must also have a good understanding of population density & market density.
Dividing a market solely on geographic variables tends to result in the creation of a large segment that is too heterogeneous for effective marketing. Thus marketers also use other types of segmentation variables along with those related to geography.

2. Demographic Segmentation
Demography is the study of population statistics, such as the number of births, deaths, marriages & age groupings. In demographic segmentation markets are identified on the basis of statistical data like age, sex, buying power, expenditure patterns, occupation, education & the stage in the family life cycle. This approach to segmentation is most frequently used because demographic variables are easy to measure through observation & surveys. Census data can also be used.

3. Psycho graphic Segmentation
Psycho graphic variables like social class, personality characteristics & lifestyles are used to supplement the main variables like geography & demography.

4. Product-Customer characteristics Segmentation
In Product-Customer characteristics Segmentation, the market is divided on the basis of one or more characteristics of the consumer’s relationship to the product. Examples of this relationship include the consumer’s amount of usage of the product, type of usage of the product, brand loyalty & benefits sought from the product.

Marketers must make two major decisions about Segmentation variables –
•Which category/categories of variable to use?
•How many in each category to use?

Marketers sometimes use more than one category of Segmentation variables in segmenting a market. The greater the number of variables used to segment a market, the greater the number of segments created & the more detailed the description is of people in each segment. For example using only age place more people in a segment than if age, income, race & sex were used. Thus the major advantage of multivariate segmentation is that it provides more information about the people in a particular segment. This should help in developing more satisfying marketing mixes for them. The drawback is that the sales potential will be limited.

Q 11. For marketing purposes, it is useful to see learning as involving 5 major concepts. What are these concepts? Explain each one.

Answer 11)
The strategic plan lays out the companies overall mission & objectives. Within each business unit, marketing plays a role in helping to accomplish the overall strategic objectives. This involves five major concepts as follows -

A) Target consumers

Target consumers are the driving force of the entire marketing strategy. The company specifies the total market, divides it into segments, selects the most lucrative segments & focuses on servicing these. It creates a marketing mix made up of factors within its control - product, price, place & promotion. To find the optimum mix, the company uses marketing analyses, planning, implementation & control. Through these activities the company keeps its tabs on the marketing environment & adapts to changes in the environment. A company needs to focus on the target consumers if it wants to succeed. Before it can satisfy consumers, it needs to understand their needs. Thus, marketing needs a careful analysis of consumers. The universe of potential consumers is vast & within this universe, a company needs to identify the segments that it is best equipped to service & satisfy.

B) Demand Measurement & Forecasting

The company needs to make of the current & future size of the market & its segments. To do so, it will need to identify all competing products, estimate their sale & determine whether the market is large enough to profitably support another entrant.

Equally important is future market growth. Companies need to enter market that shows strong growth potential. This may depend on the growth rate of certain demographic categories like age groups, income & nationality groups. Growth may also be related to large developments in the environments, such as economic conditions, and lifestyle changes. For example, the growth in market size in educational material will depend upon the current birth rates, and the projected attitudinal changes to education of children. Forecasting the effect of these environmental forces is difficult, but it must be done in order to make decisions about the market. The companies marketing information specialists probably will use complex techniques to measure & forecast demand.

C) Market Segmentation

Suppose the demand forecast looks good. The company must now decide its strategy to enter the market. The marketer has to decide which segment of the market offers the best opportunity for achieving the company objectives. Consumers can be grouped in many ways based on geographic, demographic or Psycho graphic factors. The process of dividing the market into distinct groups of buyers who may require separate products or market mixes is called Market Segmentation.

Every market has Market segments. But not all ways of segmenting markets are equally important. A market segment consists of users who respond in similar ways to similar marketing efforts.


D) Market targeting

After the company has identified the market segments, it can enter one or many market segments. Market targeting involves evaluating each market segments attractiveness & selecting one or more segments to enter. A company with limited resources might decide to serve only a single segment at times, very profitably. Most new companies start with addressing one segment & then adding segments, as their strategy proves successful.

E) Market Positioning

After a company has decided which segments to target, it must decide what positions it wants to occupy in those segments. A products position is the place the product occupies in the consumers mind, in relation to competition. If the products position were to be perceived to be no different from others products, the consumer would have no need to buy it. Through the process of market positioning, the marketer arranges for the product to have a clear, distinctive place in the minds of the consumer. In positioning the product, the company first identifies possible competitive advantages on which to build the position.

To gain competitive advantage, the company must offer greater value to the chosen target of customers either by charging lower prices or by offering more benefits to justify the higher prices. But, if the company positions its products as offering greater value it must deliver the extra value.

Thus, effective positioning begins with actually differentiating the companies marketing offer so that it gives more value than they are offered by the competition.

Once the company has chosen the desired position, it must take strong steps to deliver & communicate that position to target consumers. The companies entire marketing program should support the chosen positioning strategy.

Q 12. The most useful way to classify products is according to whether they are consumer products or industrial products. What are some other ways to classify products into groups?

Answer 12)

The most Common basis for classifying consumer products is based on buyer behavior. The classification is based on differences in the buying behavior of the people who buy products (how they perceive and buy the products) not on the differences in the products themselves. The system works because many consumers behave alike in buying a given type of product. This helps marketers in making generalization to guide development of their marketing mixes. Four classes of consumer products are (1) Convenience products (2) Shopping products (3) Specialty products (4) Unsought products.

Convenience Products:

Convenience products are low-priced, nationally advertised items like cigarettes, toffee, razor blades and matchboxes. They are bought frequently but consumers rarely shop actively for them because they are low value items whose price and quality do not justify active involvement. Convenience products are widely available at may outlets.
Three subclasses are:

1. Staple Products: Like milk, bread, eggs, butter which are bought routinely because the family regularly consumes them. The decision to buy these products is programming after the first time when the consumer puts them on his list of regular items.
2. Impulse Products: Purchases of impulse products are absolutely unplanned exposure to the product triggers the want. The desire to buy staple products may cause the consumer go to the shopping. The desire to buy impulses is a result of the shopping trip. This is why impulse products are located where they can be easily noticed. Stardust and Savvy magazines, toffees and chocolates (placed at a child’s eye-level) are example of impulse products.
3. Emergency Products: purchases of emergency products result from urgent and compelling needs. Often a consumer pays more than if this need had been anticipated. Hotels permit shops vending toothbrushes and shaving blades set up in their lobbies to cater to travelers who have forgotten theirs at home are an example.

Shopping Products:

These products involve price and quality comparisons. Shoppers spend more time, cost and effort to compare because they perceive a higher risk in buying these products. Shopping products may be homogeneous or heterogeneous.

1. Homogeneous Shopping Products: are products considered to be alike. A person who thinks all leading color Television brands are very similar, will limit shopping effort to price comparisons. Thus sellers tend to engage in price competition. Manufacturers also may stress differences in design and try to distinguish between the physical product and its product related services. One might setup service centers to differentiate its products from rivals. A retailer might advertise that the Color TV’s price includes 6 months or free interest financing. Consumer who want to stretch their disposable incomes are more likely to consider a product as a homogeneous shopping production than as a convenience product.

2. Heterogeneous Shopping Products: are considered unlike or non-standardized. Consumers shop for the best price quality combination. Price often is secondary to style & quality when price comparison is difficult to make. Using price to compare clothing, jewelry, cars, furniture & apartments is tough because quality & style carry within each product class. A couple searching for a flat may spend a lot of time comparing decor, floor plans, and distance from stations so on. Once they find the right one price becomes important. If the rent is reasonable compared to the alternatives they probably will lease it.

Special Products:

Consumers will make a special effort to buy special products. For this products consumers have strong convictions as to brand, style or type. Mitsubishi lancer, Ray ban glasses, leica cameras & Johnny walker scotch whisky are examples. Consumers will go out of their way to locate & buy these products because they perceive quality & other benefits in owning them. There is no comparison-shopping. Doctors, Lawyers & Accountants who enjoy a large following are selling special products. Marketers try to crate specialty status for their products with advertising phrases like “Accept no substitutes”, “Insist on the real thing”, & so on. They build customer loyalty when consumers consider their brands to be specialty products. A specialty product can be less intensively distributed than a convenience or shopping product because buyers will search to find it.

Unsought Products:

Unsought products are products potential buyers do not know exist or do not yet want. There are two types - Regular Unsought products & New Unsought products.
Life insurance, lawyer’s services in contesting a will, a wreath & a doctor’s service in an emergency are regular unsought products. These are existing products that consumers do not want to know although they may eventually purchase them. Marketers face a tough challenge in persuading consumers who buy their New Unsought products. The marketer’s task here is to inform target consumers of the products existence & stimulate demand for it. Oral Polio, Vaccine was once a New Unsought product. But heavy promotion & acceptance of the product practically eradicated Polio.

Q14. Briefly describe the major differences between one-price policy & flexible price policy?


Answer 14)

A marketer has to decide whether to sell a product at the same price to all buyers or at different prices to different buyers. The choice is between a one price policy and flexible price policy.

One Price Policy:

All customers who buy a seller’s products under the same conditions, in the same quantities and at the same time pay the same price under a one-price policy. This makes it easy to administer prices and eliminates the risk of losing customer goodwill due to a differential price treatment. But there is no room for tailoring the price to customer. This can be a big problem, especially in industrial marketing where prices re often negotiable between buyer and seller.
Flexible Price Policy:

Different customers, who buy a seller’s product under the same conditions, in the same quantities and at the same time, pay different prices under a flexible, or variable, price policy. Price is more active marketing mix element. Marketers who practice different pricing set two or more prices for a product in order to appeal to different market segments, based upon the segment’s price elasticity of demand for the product. Thus lower prices are set for the more price elastic market segments and higher prices are set for the more price inelastic market segments.

Different pricing can be based upon differences in products, customers, locations and time. An appliance manufacturer that sets different prices on different models of the same basic product is differentiating on a product basis. Lesser of space in office buildings who charge different prices per square foot based upon floor lever are differentiating on a location basis. Hotels that offer discounts to customers over the age of sixty are differentiating on a customer basis.

Flexible pricing is widely practiced in industrial to enable salespeople to tailor their prices to a prospect’s situation. This is often referred to as price shading. Flexible pricing exists in practically all-sales transactions the involve trade-ins.

Marketers who engage in flexible pricing should pricing should try to ensure that customers can be segmented into different segments based on price elasticity of demand for the product. They should also ensure that customers who pay lower prices couldn’t resell the product for a higher price, that rivals cannot price them in those segments.

Several risks are associated with flexible pricing. There is potential loss of customer’s goodwill if some buyers learn they paid more than others buyers. Also, salespeople tend to be overly optimistic that price reductions will help them increase sales. Thus their productivity suffers when they devote too much time and price negotiation and not enough to non-price elements in their offerings. They may make downward price adjustments routinely, whether it helps to close sales or not. There is also less central control over the price when sales people operate under flexible price policy.





Q 16. What is the difference between a short and a long channel of distribution?

Answer 16)

In Short channels of distribution there are no intermediaries or middlemen between the producer & the final buyer. These are much more common in industrial than in consumer products marketing because industrial buyers are usually concentrated geographically, buy in large quantities, buy products with a high unit value, buy complex products that require after sale service, and insist on dealing directly with producers.

Short channels are sometimes used for consumer products. For example Eureka Forbes & Real value use door-to-door sales persons for their vacuum cleaners & fire extinguishers respectively. Some products like magazines are also sold directly by mail. Although most services are sold directly by the producer to the consumer, agent middlemen are common in marketing airline tickets & tourist places.

Producers may choose to sell directly for several reasons. They may believe they can do a better job than available middlemen. Also they can have greater control over the distribution of their products when they handle the job themselves. Acceptable middlemen may be unavailable or unwilling to handle the producer’s product. Producers of bulky products may not want to transport to middlemen, but may wish to send directly to the final buyer. Producers who have only a few customers may not use middlemen at all. Nor will producers with complex products requiring after-sales-service or training regarding use.

Producers who use Short channel of distribution are also able to keep in direct contract with their final buyers. This makes it easier to keep tabs on buying behavior and customer’s changing wants. Thus conducting marketing research and making adjustments to the marketing mix are easier.

In Long channel of distribution the producer entrusts some part(s) of the distribution task to independent middlemen. The producer, however, must work closely with the middlemen to ensure final buyer satisfaction.

In consumer products marketing the producer -> retailer -> ultimate consumer channel is common for shopping products like cars, clothing and home appliances. The producer – wholesaler-retailer-ultimate consumer channel is common for convenience products channels for convenience products tend to be long because consumers want to buy them with a minimum of effort. Thus producers have to sell through a very large number of outlets. Industrial channels are fairly common for industrial products except installations and products manufactured to the buyer’s specifications. Generally, however, indirect channels for industrial products are shorter than consumer product channels.

Marketing Management(For 2003 and Earlier Batches) - 1
Q1. How can a marketer circumvent those uncontrollable forces that limit his decision-making ability?

Answer 1)
Marketers solve problems through the Planning, Implementing & controlling phases of their work. Basically they face two problems to achieve -

• Determining Goals
• Developing Plans

Before Marketers can even attempt to find a solution, they must recognize that a problem exists. This is not always easy. Often symptoms are mistaken for problems. For example, a Marketer who is concerned with declining sales may describe the decline as a problem & may assume that the product is nearing the end of its product life cycle, whereas the decline may be a symptom of problems like poor servicing, overpricing etc.

Effective Marketers try to anticipate problems. The solution is usually the result of searching for & sifting through raw information.

The performance of the marketing function can be viewed as being concerned essentially with problem solving & decision making throughout the three stages of planning, implementing & controlling the marketing function.

The most significant change in recent times in the business environment is the recognition that information gathering is crucial. Since the primary function of marketing is to assess want-satisfying opportunities & match resources to them, the knowledge that flows from information is important for marketing.

Today, the need for efficient management of information is greater than ever. Thus information is the foundation & major source for the problem solving & decision making that marketing executives confront daily. To grasp the nature of information fully, we need to understand the manners in which systematic data gathering pulls together the information needed for decision-making.

Data Information:
Data and information are not the same. Information is data that have been converted to a useful form for decision-making. It is relevant, timely, accurate, cost-effective and reduces risk in decision making

Marketing managers face an immense volume of raw data coming from many kinds of internal and external sources such as accounting records, reports from sales force, government statistics and so on. If these data are to be useful, the data flow must be managed.





Data Classification:
Data can be classified as external or internal. External data are generated outside the firm. Examples are competitor’s sales, customer buying habits, media rates, and middlemen in the marketing channels. Internal data are generated from with the firms. Examples are call reports by the company sales force, credit records, sales data.

Data can also be classified as recurrent and non-recurrent. Sales persons collect recurrent data routinely in every day operations as sales data. Non-recurrent data are collected to deal with the special problem.

Cost and Value of Information:
Managers must consider the cost of collecting and converting the data into information when specifying their informational needs. Rarely will all information they want be available. The cost of additional information must be weighed against its value for planning, implementation and controlling market information.

In general, information should be sought if the firm has no better use for the funds and if the expected value of the information exceeds expected costs, but determining the value of information is difficult.


Q 4. How do Data & Information differ?

Answer 4)

Datum means fact. The plural of the word Datum is Data. Thus Data means facts. In the context of management principles, Data generally means facts or unevaluated facts or messages or numbers. Data can be in numbers or alphabets. In business organizations, the word data is used to represent facts that describe events or entities. For example - The amount of sales per week is Data. It is just a fact or figure that represents an event - “Sales in a week”.

Data is generally in unorganized form. Data to be more meaningful needs to be organized. When Data is organized in a meaningful manner then it is called as Information.

To understand the difference between Data & Information, we shall consider the following example -
Week 1 - Sale is Rs. 4,00,000.
Week 2 - Sale is Rs. 5,00,000.
Week 3 - Sale is Rs. 7,50,000.
Week 4 - Sale is Rs. 10,00,000.

In the above example, the sales figures per week are Data. They represent events.
When the above Data is analyzed & we say that sales are showing improvement over previous week for the last 3 weeks, it becomes Information.

Information is used at different places within the business organization. The scope, content & presentation of information differs depending on the level at which the information would be put into use.
Based on the location at which information is used, the information is classified as -
• Strategic Information
• Tactical Information
• Operational Information

• Strategic Information
The top management of a business organization is involved in Strategic activities. These activities include Strategic planning, Goal setting, Policymaking & so on. The information that is needed to support these activities can be termed as Strategic Information.

• Tactical Information
The middle management of a business organization is involved in tactical activities. The information support for such activities is provided by the Management Information Systems through tactical information. Tactical information is collected from internal as well as external sources.

• Operational Information
Operational Information deals with the information requirements of the operational level. Typically the Operational Information is generated as a result of the data processing activities using data generated through internal sources.



Q 5. What is the basic purpose of a Marketing Information System?

Answer 5)

Marketing information is “a structured and interacting complex of persons, machines and procedures designed to generate and orderly flow of pertinent information collected from intra and extra company resources for use as the basis for decision making in specific responsibility areas of marketing management ”.

An MIS gives marketing managers accurate, timely and relevant information to make better decisions. It cannot however, reduce decision-making to an exact science. The experience, intuition and judgment of the marketing managers also play a part. But it is the relevant, timely and accurate information that is the key to good decision-making. This includes monitoring of key environmental variables.

MIS Design & Organization:

The objectives information managers & information users set for a firms MIS influence its design & how its functions will be performed. Although there is no one best model, the following functions are always performed by an MIS –

1. Data gathering
2. Data processing
3. Data analyzing
4. Storing & retrieving data
5. Evaluating information
6. Disseminating information to Marketing managers

The input is raw data. The output is relevant marketing information to decision-makers. It is a variable tool for planning, implementing & controlling the marketing effort.

A MIS has a Recurrent Data Subsystem (RDS) and a Non-Recurrent Data Subsystem (NDS). The RDS routinely performs all MIS functions on useful, recurrent, internal & external data. This provides a continuous flow of data into the system for conversion to relevant information. The RDS is usually computerized & has access to many sources of data.

The NDS that is not routinized handles non-recurring internal & external data generated because of special problems or to access market opportunity.

Q 6. What are the 2 major types of stages in Marketing Research Design? How do they differ?

Answer 6)

The Marketing Research Design specifies the overall framework & the specific procedures for collecting & analyzing the data. This is the most important step in the research process. Research design can be classified by -
1.Function
2.Methodology

1. Function
There are four major categories in Market Research Design by function. They are -

• Exploratory research

This is conducted when researchers need more information about the problem or opportunity, when tentative hypotheses may be formulated more specifically or when new hypotheses are needed. The purpose of such research is to gather data that suggest meaningful research questions.

Researchers often use the Focus Group interview technique in exploratory research. A moderator leads six to twelve people through unstructured questions on the given topic to develop hypotheses that might lead to more specific research topics. A firm, to identify potential market segments may, for example, interview groups of potential users in different segments with distinct profiles to establish which groups to interview further. Once the problem or the opportunity is clearly defined, researchers try to describe a market or a part (segment) of a market by developing summary statistics on it.

• Descriptive Research

The task here is to find adequate methods for collecting & measuring data.

• Casual Research

This is conducted to test hypotheses about the relationship between dependent variables. For example, descriptive research may describe that a price reduction leads to increased sales of a product but does not say definitely that the price cut was the actual cause of the increase in sales. Sales may have increased because of other factors like decrease in competitors marketing efforts. Casual research on the other hand, tries to show either that the price cut (Independent Variable) is not the cause of increased sales (Dependent Variable) or vice versa. This requires the researchers to keep all factors other than price & sales constant. This is hard to do naturally.

• Predictive Research

It is used to predict forecasts future values such as numbers of votes, sales revenues etc. Political pollsters like MARG - India Today have for years, used a predictive model to forecast how many seats each party will win in a coming election. Similarly, Marketers try & estimate sales volume in different market conditions in order to predict the performance of a particular brand/product.

2. Methodology

Marketing research can be categorized according to Methods as well. The four methods under this are -

• Historical Research
• Survey Research
• Experimental Research
• Motivational Research

• Historical Research

This involves using past experiences to find solutions to marketing problems. In most marketing research, the preliminary exploration stage involves Historical Research.

• Survey Research

This involves obtaining data from respondents in person, by telephone or by mail.

• Experimental Research

This focuses on observing the effects that controlled changes in the independent variables like advertising & pricing have on a dependent variable (normally sales). This is done by attempting to hold all other factors but the one being studied constant.

• Motivational Research

This is based on the theories of behavioral sciences especially psychology. It tries to understand & analyze major consumer motives - motives that consumers are often unaware of. Direct questioning is therefore replaced by free discussions on a topic. Trained psychologists analyze the discussion & attempt to determine the consumer’s motives. Focus group interviews, projective & depth-interviewing techniques are the tools often used in Motivational Research.

No comments:

Post a Comment