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What can be marketed?

We satisfy our needs and wants by buying goods and services. Goods are items you can see and touch, such as a book, a pen, a folder etc.; they are physical, having form and substance. Whereas, services are provided for you by other people, such as; doctor, dentist, haircut and eating out at restaurants, they are intangible. When you purchase a good you thus get physical ownership of it, whereas when you purchase a service you gain ownership of nothing.
However this split was traditionally based on an economics based view and such a dichotomy between physical goods and intangible services is not given too much credence within contemporary marketing. It is only when you get down to individual adaptation of the marketing mix elements that such a consideration is required
Firstly Wehave to note that these are not discrete categories, as figure8 suggests there is in fact a continuum with a pure service as one terminal point and a pure commodity good as the other.
It is thus better to actually think in terms of goods and services in terms of what actually makes them different form each other because it is these factors that impact on the marketing mix. The goods and services continuum enables marketers to see the relative goods/services composition of total products. By determining a product's position on the continuum marketers can spot opportunities.
Goods and services are the outputs offered by businesses to satisfy the demands of consumer and industrial markets. They are best differentiated on the basis of four characteristics:
  • Tangibility: Goods are tangible products such as cars, clothing and machinery. They have shape and can be seen and touched. Services are intangible; hair styling pest control, and equipment repair, for example, do not have a physical presence.
  • Perishability. Allgoods have some degree of durability beyond the time of purchase. Services do not; they perish as they are delivered.
  • Separability: Goods can be stored for later use. Thus, production and consumption are typically separate. Because the production and consumption of services are simultaneous, services and the service provider cannot be separated.
  • Standardisation. The quality of goods can be controlled through standardisation and grading in the production process. The quality of services, however, is different each time they are delivered.

Secondly when one considers the real world such a split between goods and services is dearly tautologythey are both products. Marketers draw on the same set of principles and skills to market all products, whether they are apples, oranges or haircuts.
For example, a restaurant provides a physical good (prepared food), but also provides services in the form of ambiance, the setting and clearing of the table, waiting on table, etc. Indeed with the wider adoption of the marketing concept and the increasing competition in markets many products are now heavily reliant on services supplied as an integral element with a good - called an augmented productin order to be competitive.
This has led to some academics developing the Service Dominant Logic (SDL) approach to marketing. which focuses on this area as the substantive satisfier of needs.
To understand this concept of goods and services as products, let's take a look at how we define and examine products. Firstly we can describea"Product as abundle of attributes or characteristics. Let's take the humble staple of bread. Bread comes in many varieties, leavened and unleavened, white, wholemeal, brown, a mix of the two, sliced or unsliced, buns, baps or loaf, small, medium or large or it may be small - these are physical attributes of the bread.
These physical attributes all provide different benefits to the person who buys and/or eats the bread, e.g. a sliced loaf may be good value for money, good for your health or easy to use when making sandwiches. Note these physical attributes are aimed at satisfying people's needs. Bread primarily satisfies hunger - a physiological need in Maslow's Hierarchy, but can then be used to also satisfy secondary needs higher in the hierarchy - buying wholemeal bread for health benefits, or seeded bread for taste or aesthetics.
Indeed if we think about this a Product may have to satisfy many needs to be successful. Consider a diet soft drink. Primarily it has to quench thirst and taste good, but it is likely that it also has to below calorie, be convenient to drink and convey a suitable image. So the needs range from the simple, e.g. quench thirst, to the elaborate, e.g. convey suitable image. Some of these are fulfilled by basic product characteristics, but some needs require more than just productingredients, e.g. image is largely created by its advertising and the convenience of drinking is down to the size and design of the can or bottle.
Consumers considerall these factors simultaneously to reachajudgement on the value of what is termed The Total Product Offering (TPO) - this is the total package that makes up and surrounds the product including all supporting features such as branding packaging servicing and warranties, indeed the TPO includes all elements of the marketing mix so that marketers must design a complete, co-ordinated, cohesive and congruent package. If you look at figure nine you will see that the TPO consists of four levels; the core, the basic product, the augmented product and the perceived product. The core benefit is the central reason for the product to exist, it is the simplest possible answer to an expressed need no frills, no branding or packaging, no warranties or service promises, just the most basic reason why the product is needed.
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Core Benefit Product

There are very few instances of new core needs, there are however ever increasing and new ways of satisfying those core needs. E-mail, SMS text, messenger programs are new ways of satisfying the need to communicate, and have supplanted letters, faxes, telegrams, and public phone boxes as earlier ways to satisfy this communication need, but they haven't created a new need in themselves.

This is a vital conceptandone that is overlooked at some peril. Marketers must be sure that their products will satisfy a need in its most basic sense. Products that fail to offer a sound core benefit are usually failures. Consider the fate of the Sinclair C5, as shown in figure 10. Whilst revolutionary in concept and design, it failed to satisfy some core needs of drivers; a sense of safety, a sense of comfort and little carrying capacity. As a result the product and Sinclair research in turn - failed.
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Basic product

The basic product is the product stripped down to its essentials, and is often referred to as the FAB; Features, Attributes and Benefits. Features are qualities or characteristics of a product, whereas attributes are features presented in away that add value from the customers perspective. Benefits are the favourable results customers expect to obtain by using a product.
Product attributes reside in the product and can be tangible in the product or intangible - a service aspect of the product. Benefits reside in the customer and are always abstract they are often the result of a cluster of product attributes, some of which may be abstract attributes. Benefits can be seen as being Functional - deriving from product features and attributes, Symbolic – deriving from performance expectations and Experimental - deriving from actual usage of the product.
For example, a drink may have high caffeine content (a concrete attribute), whilst a computer has a quad core processor making it able to multi-task and get more done, faster; we would characterise this intangible attribute by using the term performance."
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Marketing's role in the business

The modern concept of Marketing is that it delivers added value through customer satisfaction and quality. Customer satisfaction is the result of a product meeting or exceeding the buyers needs and expectations. Importantly We must also realise that customers today want far more than just products and services, they also want value.

Value interms of the quality being commensurate with the price and with the overall cost of acquisitiona concept that goes beyond basic price to incorporate delivery and other additional charges. Value in terms of a product or service that exceeds expectations. Value in terms of the brand reputation of the supplier; a reputation for quality can enhance a firms competitiveness, whereas a slip in quality can damage a firms image and ability to compete. Equally quality in areas such as Customer service can be palpable in terms of competitive advantage. Figure 4 shows a conceptual model for value and hints at the complexity involved, this is a primary reason why traditional economics based theory can never explain purchasing behaviour.
Customers who believe that they have received value are more likely to remainsatisfied with the company and continue their relationships. In order to deliver this marketing has four major goals:
  • To develop deep understanding of customers needs, operating procedures and decision making processes.
  • To formulate value propositions that meets customers needs and creates a differential advantage.
  • To move from successful transactions with customers to long-term relationships based upon loyalty and trust.
  • To understand that superior value requires superior knowledge, skills, systems and marketing assets.

A key concept within the role of Marketing in a business is that of Customersatisfaction and feedback. Information is the foundation of understanding customer wants and needs and it is the successful companies that make every attempt to ensure the satisfaction of their customers, by astutely and assiduously collecting this information. One of the best ways to find out whether or not customers are satisfied is to obtain customer feedback
For many businesses this is actually a main use of their website, where customers can leave unconstrained comments and suggestions about products, services and experiences. In it no accident that customer complaints are excellent sources of customer feedback. Indeed many customers often feel greater loyalty after a conflict has been resolved than if they had never complained at all From this we can safely conclude that customer service and satisfaction have key roles in marketing. Indeed we should also be able to see that personal selling also has a key role within marketing if we extend the service metaphorpersonal selling is often a key aspect of such service, especially for products with large intangible service elements to them.
So what other areasina business does marketing have impact upon? Let's explore this using the customer service concept as a basis. There is a major change in the way companies organise themselves as firms switch from product-based to customer-based structures. A key driver of this change is the advent of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) - the marketing concept is central to CRM – which is underpinned by information systems convergence, the development of supporting software and organisational structure and training which combine to significantly improve the implementation of Relationship Marketing principles.
So already we have three main issues that can enable (or hinder) the development of the organisational issues of culture and communication, management metrics and cross-functional integration, especially between marketing and information technology. So we can see that as companies have moved towards
amore marketing orientedway of operating, the issues within marketing and thus the values associated with marketing have become increasingly important in all functional and operational areas of those businesses. In essence we are back to Regis McKenna - "Marketing is everything.
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Objectives setting

The forecasts of market and sales will be the guidelines to determine the objectives and the marketing strategy and programme. An example of a specific statements are: decrease the cost of the sales force as a percentage of sales, improve advertising awareness by 5% amongst the target age 18–25 or improving company image by 2% in the general public. These statements have to be quantified and a time horizon has to be set. If you need to set objectives you are best advised to research the SMART objectives framework a discussion of which lies outside the scope of this book.
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Strategic marketing programme

The last step of the strategic marketing planning process is the formulation of a strategic marketing plan and budget for each target market, which have to be approved by the organisations board of directors. This is the stage at which the specific formulation of the marketing mix is undertaken.
However, it is worth remembering that many of the concepts, as well as many of the specific techniques, will work equally well whether they are directed at goods or services. In particular, developing a marketing strategy is much the same for goods and services, in that it involves selecting target markets and formulating a marketing mix. Theodore Levitt suggested that "instead of talking of goods and of 'services, it is better to talk of "tangibles and "intangibles". Levitt also went on to suggest that marketing a physical product is often more concerned with intangible aspects (frequently the product service elements of the total package) than with its physical sales after service is very important inservice sector properties.
Marketing tactics will be developed besides the action programmes, detailing what are to be done, when by whom at what costandover what period of time. When the objectives have been set, the marketing managers have to refine the strategic marketing plan, which will have a 5-10 year timeframe to the annual marketing plan, which has a one year timeframe, and then turn it over to the operational marketers to implement.
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Segmentation, Targeting & Positioning

You will recall that it was earlier stated that the essence of the marketing concept is the idea of placing customer needs at the centre of the organizations decision-making. At the heart of the marketing concept is a process of STP figure twenty-one. This starts with trying to understand the market by segmenting it.
Markets are rarely simple; they are complex consisting of a variety of buyers with disparate motives, backgrounds all leading to different needs and wants. Markets also have disparate macro-environment factors affecting them; different levels and types of competition and several other factors also mean that markets are rarely homogeneous.
This means as marketers we need to adopt an approach that considers such factors as increased competition, better-informed and-educated customers and, most importantly, changing patterns of demand. It is this later factor that has primarily given rise to the need to segment markets. This stems from the fact that higherstandards of living and a trendtowards individualism has meant that consumers are now more able to exercise their choice in the marketplace. Witness the growth of consumerism in emerging markets - China is a good case in point where increased growth in Western style luxuries and other Fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) has been rampant in the last decade as more liberal market controls have been introduced.
Market segmentation can be defined as the process of breaking down the total market for a productor service into distinct sub-groups or segments where each segment may conceivably represent a separate target market to be reached with a distinctive marketing mix. Segmentation and the subsequent strategies of targeting and positioning start by recognizing that increasingly, within the total demandmarket for a product, specific tastes, needs and demand may differ. It breaks down the total market for a productor service into individual clusters of customers, or segments. Here, customers who share similar demand preferences are grouped together within each segment. STP is used to;

  1. Segment; determine which kinds of customers exist, then
  2. Target; select which ones we are best off trying to serve and, finally,
  3. Position; implement our segmentation by optimizing our products/services for that segment and communicating that we have made the choice to distinguish ourselves that way.

Generically, there are three approaches to marketing and this reflects into the STPneeds of each strategy. In the undifferentiated strategy, all consumers are treated equally and the company makes no effort to satisfy particular groups. This usually only works for commodities where the product is standard and where one competitor really cant offer much more any other. Here there is little to no need for segmentation.
In the concentrated strategy, one firm chooses to focus on one of several segments that exist while leaving other segments to competitors. All low cost or budget airlines follow a concentrated strategy. They therefore need to understand the particular segment they are operating in depth but not the wholemarket.
In contrast, most scheduled airlines follow the differentiated strategy: They offer a variety of classes and tickets, geared to convenience, prestige, etc. in an effort to capture as much of the disparate needs of travellers as they can. They need to understand the whole market and to be able to segment it on differing customer needs.
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