Marketing Management

Höfundur Svend Hollensen

Útgefandi Pearson International Content

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781292291444

Útgáfa 4

Höfundarréttur 2020

4.790 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Brief Contents
  • Contents
  • Guided tour
  • Preface
  • Digital resources
  • Chapter 1: Introduction
  • 1.1: Introduction
  • 1.2: The marketing management process
  • Marketing strategy
  • Marketing plan
  • Strengths of the hierarchical approach to marketing planning
  • Weaknesses of the hierarchical approach to marketing planning
  • 1.3: The traditional (transactional) marketing (TM ) concept versus the relationship marketing (RM )
  • The traditional (transactional) marketing concept
  • The relationship marketing (RM) concept
  • Importance of customer retention: a case study of how to bridge the gap between TM and RM
  • 1.4: Balancing the transactional and relationship concepts throughout the book
  • 1.5: How the RM concept influences the traditional marketing concept
  • Product
  • Price
  • Distribution
  • Communication (promotion)
  • 1.6: Different organisational forms of RM
  • 1.7: Summary
  • Case study 1.1: Hunter Boot Ltd: the iconic British brand is moving into exclusive fashion
  • Part I: Assessing the competitiveness of the firm (internal)
  • Part I: Video case study: BYD electrical cars: the Chinese electric car manufacturer is considering
  • Introdution to Part I
  • Chapter 2: Identification of the firm’s core competences
  • 2.1: Introduction
  • From capability to advantage
  • 2.2: Roots of competitive advantage
  • 2.3: The resource-based view (RBV)
  • Resources
  • Competence
  • Exhibit 2.1: Honda’s competences in small engines
  • 2.4: Market orientation view (MOV) compared to the resource -based view
  • Exploitation versus exploration
  • 2.5: The value chain-based view (VBV)
  • The value chain
  • Exhibit 2.2: Nike’s value chain
  • Customer value proposition (CVP)
  • Exhibit 2.3: The value chain of Acme Axles, Inc.
  • 2.6: Value shop and the ‘service value chain’
  • Combining the ‘product value chain’ and the ‘service value chain’
  • 2.7: Internationalising the value chain
  • International configuration and coordination of activities
  • 2.8: The virtual value chain
  • Online customer value proposition (OCVP)
  • 2.9: Experiential marketing
  • Augmented reality (AR)
  • 2.10: Artificial intelligence (AI) and its influence on marketing
  • Exhibit 2.4: IKEA’s use of AR
  • 2.11: Summary
  • Exhibit 2.5: Harley-Davidson’s use of AI in New York
  • Case study 2.1: Electrolux
  • Chapter 3: Development of the firm’s competitive advantage
  • 3.1: Introduction
  • 3.2: General sources of competitive advantage
  • Economies of scale (efficiencies of global scale and volume)
  • Economies of scope (transfer of resources, experience, ideas and successful concepts across products
  • Time-based competition (TBC)
  • 3.3: Introduction of a holistic model of competitiveness: from macro to micro level
  • Individual competitiveness and time-based competition
  • 3.4: Analysis of national competitiveness (Porter’s diamond)
  • Factor conditions
  • Demand conditions
  • Related and supporting industries
  • Firm strategy, structure and rivalry
  • Government
  • Chance
  • The ‘double diamond’ and ‘multiple diamond’ framework
  • 3.5: Competition analysis in an industry
  • Market competitors
  • Suppliers
  • Buyers
  • Substitutes
  • New entrants
  • Strategic groups
  • The collaborative ‘five sources’ model
  • 3.6: Value chain analysis
  • The competitive triangle
  • Competitive benchmarking
  • 3.7: Blue ocean strategy and value innovation
  • Value innovation
  • 3.8: The sharing economy
  • Exhibit 3.1: Value innovation at hotel chain Formule 1
  • 3.9: Summary
  • Analysis of national/regional competitiveness
  • Competition analysis
  • Value chain analysis
  • Case study 3.1: Nintendo Switch: Is this the ‘Blue Ocean’ come-back
  • Part II: Assessing the external marketing situation
  • Part II: Video case study: Müller yogurts are penetrating the US market by the Muller Quaker Joint
  • Introduction to Part II
  • Chapter 4: Customer behaviour
  • 4.1: Introduction
  • Types of E-Commerce
  • 4.2: Consumer B2C decision making
  • Determinants of consumer involvement
  • The consumer buying process
  • 4.3: Influences on consumers’ decision making
  • Needs
  • Perception
  • Memory
  • Attitudes
  • Socio-demographic variables
  • Family life cycle (FLC)
  • Social networks
  • Exhibit 4.1: Example of loyalty: store loyalty versus brand loyalty
  • 4.4: Organisational B2B decision making
  • Identifying buyers in organisational markets
  • Buying situations
  • 4.5: Influences on the buying process
  • Environmental forces
  • Organisational forces
  • Group forces
  • Individual forces
  • 4.6: Customer-perceived value and customer satisfaction
  • Measuring customer satisfaction/customer value
  • Customer satisfaction, loyalty and bonding
  • Increasing customer skills through investments in customers
  • 4.7: Customisation – tailoring the offer to the individual customer
  • The challenges of customisation
  • 4.8: 3-D Printing – a possible new industrial revolution in customisation
  • 4.9: Gamification and its use for marketers
  • Exhibit 4.2: Coca Cola Israel increases its sales of their mini bottle through a ‘Mini Me ’3-D P
  • 4.10: Summary
  • Exhibit 4.3: Niantic brings ‘Pokémon Go’ games to McDonald’s and Starbucks
  • Case study 4.1: Spotify: The online music-streaming company is growing fast but is suffering financi
  • Chapter 5: Competitor analysis and intelligence
  • 5.1: Introduction
  • 5.2: Who are our competitors?
  • 5.3: How are the competitors interacting?
  • 5.4: How do we learn about our competitors?
  • Proactive or reactive CI
  • Formal or informal CI
  • Exhibit 5.1: McDonald’s and Burger King in an asymmetric interaction
  • Why the internet is a good source of CI
  • Types of CI available
  • 5.5: What are the strengths and weaknesses of our competitors?
  • 5.6: Market commonality and resource commonality
  • 5.7: What are the objectives and strategies of our competitors?
  • Assessing competitors’ current strategies
  • The four Ps
  • 5.8: What are the response patterns of our competitors?
  • Exhibit 5.2: Role play in CI as a predictor of competitive behaviour
  • 5.9: Six steps to competitor analysis
  • 1: Identifying your company’s competitors
  • 2: Identifying the information required and the information sources of competitor intelligence
  • 3: Analysing strengths and weaknesses of competitors with respect to the market requirements
  • 4: Assessing the company’s competitive position vis-à-vis key competitors
  • 5: Investigating the goals and long-term strategies of competitors
  • 6: Selecting the company strategies to compete against the competitor, locally and globally, taking
  • 5.10: How can we set up an organisation for competitor analysis and CI?
  • Exhibit 5.3: Counterintelligence done by Johnson Controls against Honeywell
  • Expanded human resources/single responsibility
  • 5.11: Summary
  • Case study 5.1: Cereal Partners Worldwide (CPW): The no. 2 world player is challenging the no. 1 –
  • Chapter 6: Analysing relationships in the value chain
  • 6.1: Introduction
  • 6.2: The value net
  • Exhibit 6.1: Value chain of Braun (Oral-B) electric toothbrush
  • 6.3: Relationships with customers
  • Exhibit 6.2: Value net of Braun (Oral-B) electric toothbrush
  • Developing buyer–seller relationships – the marriage metaphor
  • Buyer–seller relationships in a cross-cultural perspective
  • Distance reduction in international strategic alliances
  • The nature of the customer and the behaviour spectrum
  • Implications for relationship marketing strategies
  • Behavioural conditions in buyer–seller relationships
  • Exhibit 6.3: Speedo’s relations with its retailers
  • Relationships in B2B markets versus B2C markets
  • One-to-one marketing relationships
  • Bonding in buyer–seller relationships
  • 6.4: Relationships with suppliers
  • Reverse marketing
  • 6.5: Relationships with complementors/partners
  • Y coalitions
  • Exhibit 6.4: Irn-Bru’s distributor alliance (Y coalition) with Pepsi Bottling Group (PBG in Russia
  • X coalitions
  • Co-branding
  • Ingredient branding
  • 6.6: Relationships with competitors
  • Exhibit 6.5: Value net – cooperation/coopetition between competitors within each airline alliance.
  • 6.7: Internal marketing (IM ) relationships
  • 6.8: Summary
  • Case study 6.1: ARM : challenging Intel in the world market of computer chips
  • Part III: Developing marketing strategies
  • Part III: Video case study: Nivea: Segmentation of the sun-care market
  • Introduction to Part III
  • Chapter 7: SWOT analysis, strategic marketing planning and portfolio analysis
  • 7.1: Introduction
  • 7.2: Corporate mission
  • 7.3: Swot analysis
  • Conditions for an effective and productive SWOT analysis
  • SWOT-driven strategic marketing planning
  • 7.4: Corporate objectives
  • 7.5: Corporate growth strategy
  • Market penetration
  • Market development
  • Geographic expansion
  • Product development
  • Diversification
  • 7.6: SBU marketing strategy/portfolio analysis
  • Product life cycle (PLC)
  • 7.7: Introduction to portfolio models
  • 7.8: The Boston Consulting Group’s growth–share matrix – the BCG model
  • Market growth rate
  • Relative market shares
  • Strategy implications of BCG
  • The relationship between the BCG model and the concept of PLC
  • The advantages of the BCG model
  • The disadvantages of the BCG model
  • 7.9: General electric market attractiveness –business position matrix (ge matrix)
  • Compiling the GE matrix
  • Advantages and disadvantages of the GE matrix
  • 7.10: International portfolio analysis
  • 7.11: Portfolio analysis of supplier relationships
  • Why are there so many advocates of the relationship focus in marketing?
  • Strategic implications of the supplier’s portfolio
  • 7.12: Summary
  • Case study 7.1: William Demant hearing aids
  • Chapter 8: Segmentation, targeting, positioning and competitive strategies
  • 8.1: Introduction
  • Pitfalls with segmentation
  • Factors favouring market segmentation
  • Factors discouraging market segmentation
  • Requirements for effective market segmentation
  • Two common segmenting methods
  • Identifying segmentation variables
  • 8.2: Segmentation in the B2C market
  • Exhibit 8.1: Segmentation in the pet food market
  • The sociodemographic variables
  • Behaviouristic variables
  • Psychographic variables
  • Benefits-sought variables
  • Multidimensional segmentation
  • 8.3: Segmentation in the B2B market
  • Exhibit 8.2: Segmentation in work (‘salty snacks in the workplace’)
  • Bonoma and Shapiro’s (1983) macro-/micro-segmentation process
  • A relationship approach to B2B segmentation
  • 8.4: Target marketing
  • Undifferentiated (mass) marketing
  • Differentiated marketing
  • Concentrated (niche) marketing
  • 8.5: Positioning
  • Exhibit 8.3: Björn Borg’s brand positioning and business modelling in the international apparel m
  • 8.6: Generic competitive strategies
  • Cost leadership
  • Differentiation
  • Differentiation focus
  • Cost focus
  • 8.7: Offensive and defensive competitive strategies
  • Exhibit 8.4: Good-enough markets in China – the case of Duracell batteries
  • Offensive strategies
  • Defensive strategies
  • 8.8: Summary
  • Case study 8.1: LEGO Friends: One of the world’s largest toy manufacturer moves into the girls’
  • Chapter 9: CSR strategy and the sustainable global value chain
  • 9.1: Introduction
  • Definition of CSR
  • 9.2: Different levels of ethical behaviour
  • 9.3: Social marketing as part of CSR
  • 9.4: Cause-related marketing
  • 9.5: Identification of stakeholders in CSR
  • Exhibit 9.1: Examples of cause-related marketing campaigns
  • 9.6: Drivers of CSR
  • Long-term benefit drivers of CSR
  • 9.7: The sustainable global value chain (SGV C)
  • 9.8: CSR and international competitiveness
  • CSR benefits
  • CSR costs
  • 9.9 The Triple Bottom Line (TBL)
  • 9.10: Poverty (BOP market) as a ‘market’ opportunity
  • The poor as consumers
  • The poor as marketers of products and services
  • Exhibit 9.:2: Grameen Danone Foods opens plant in Bangladesh
  • 9.11: The ‘green’ market as a business opportunity
  • Enviropreneur marketing
  • Global warming (climate change)
  • Exhibit 9.3: Unilever’s introduction of ‘Comfort One Rinse’ saves water
  • Segmenting the ‘green’ consumer market
  • 9.12: Summary
  • Case study 9.1: YouthAIDS: social marketing in a private, non-profit organisation
  • Part IV: Developing marketing programmes
  • Part IV: Video case study: Tequila Avión: A premium tequila is introduced
  • Introduction to part IV
  • The extended marketing mix
  • Participants
  • Process
  • Physical evidence
  • Chapter 10: Establishing, developing and managing buyer–seller relationships
  • 10.1: Introduction
  • 10.2: Building buyer–seller relationships in B2B markets
  • 10.3: Relationship quality
  • 10.4: Building buyer–seller relationships in B2C markets
  • Exhibit 10.1: Husqvarna’s consumer wheel
  • Exhibit 10.2: Employee commitment drives value at Southwest Airlines
  • 10.5: Managing loyalty
  • Steps in a loyalty-based relationship strategy
  • Exhibit 10.3: Developing service loyalty at Volkswagen
  • 10.6: The crm path to long-term customer loyalty and advocacy
  • Stage 1: Customer acquisition (the courtship)
  • Stage 2: Customer retention (the relationship)
  • Stage 3: Strategic customer care (the marriage)
  • Stage 4: Customer advocacy (the marriage)
  • 10.7: Key account management (kam)
  • Implementation of KAM
  • Customer-complaint management in KAM
  • The dyadic development of KAM
  • KAM effectiveness and performance
  • 10.8: Summary
  • Case study 10.1: Dassault Falcon: the private business jet, Falcon, is navigating in the global corp
  • Chapter 11: Product and service decisions
  • 11.1: Introduction
  • What is a product?
  • Importance of service
  • 11.2: The components of the product offer
  • 11.3: Service strategies
  • Characteristics of services
  • The Service-Dominant logic (S-D logic)
  • Global marketing of services
  • Categories of service
  • Determining the service quality gap
  • Exhibit 11.1: Hilti is selling the ‘use’ – not the product
  • After-sales services (AS)
  • Full-service contracts
  • e-Services
  • Service in the business-to-business market
  • 11.4: New product development (NPD )
  • The multiple-convergent process model
  • Product platform/modularity in NPD
  • 11.5: The product life cycle
  • Limitations of the product life cycle
  • Technological life cycle
  • Crowdsourcing
  • Exhibit 11.2: Threadless T-shirt crowdsourcing business
  • 11.6: New products for the international market
  • Developing new products/cutting the time-to-market
  • Degrees of product newness
  • 11.7: Product cannibalisation
  • Conditions for successful cannibalisation
  • 11.8: Product positioning
  • 11.9: Branding
  • Branding decisions
  • Exhibit 11.3: Roundup – a global brand for multiple markets
  • Exhibit 11.4: Kellogg is under pressure to produce Aldi’s own-label goods
  • 11.10: Brand equity
  • Definitions of ‘brand equity’
  • 11.11: Implications of the internet for product decisions
  • Customisation and closer relationships
  • Dynamic customisation of product and services
  • 11.12: Global mobile app marketing
  • 11.13: Internet of Things (IoT) and its use for marketers
  • Exhibit 11.5: Google’s use of IoT in form of the smart thermostat, Nest
  • What opportunities does IoT provide for future marketers?
  • The marketer’s use of IoT
  • 11.14: ‘Long tail’ strategies
  • 11.15: Summary
  • Case study 11.1: Tinder – the famous dating app brand is facing increasing competition from e.g. B
  • Chapter 12: Pricing decisions
  • 12.1: Introduction
  • 12.2: Pricing from an economist’s perspective
  • Competitor price response
  • Exhibit 12.1: Johnnie Walker whisky faced positive price elasticity in Japan
  • 12.3: Pricing from an acc ountant’s perspective
  • Break-even market share
  • 12.4: A pricing framework
  • Firm-level factors
  • Product factors
  • Environmental factors
  • Market factors
  • 12.5: Market value-based pricing versus cost-based pricing
  • Value-based pricing
  • Value pricing based on ‘total cost of ownership’
  • 12.6: Pricing services versus physical products
  • 12.7: Pricing new products
  • Skimming vs penetration pricing
  • Exhibit 12.2: Value-based pricing in Bossard – the ‘15/85 rule’
  • Market pricing
  • 12.8: Price changes
  • 12.9: Experience curve pricing
  • 12.10: Product line pricing
  • Freemium
  • 12.11: Price bundling
  • 12.12: Dynamic pricing for different segments
  • Geographic segments
  • Usage segments
  • Time segments (off-peak pricing)
  • Demographic segments
  • 12.13: Subscription-based pricing
  • Subscription pricing strategies
  • Exhibit 12.3: Dollar Shave Club
  • 12.14: Relationship pricing
  • Establishing global pricing contracts (GPCs)
  • 12.15: Pricing on the internet
  • 12.16: Communicating prices to the target markets
  • 12.17: Summary
  • Case study 12.1: Harley-Davidson: How should the pricing strategy be affected by the new EU tariffs
  • Chapter 13: Distribution decisions
  • 13.1: Introduction
  • 13.2: The basic functions of channel participants
  • 13.3: Distributor portfolio analysis
  • 13.4: Developing and managing relationships between manufacturer and distributor
  • 13.5: External and internal determinants of channel decisions
  • Customer characteristics
  • Nature of the product
  • Nature of demand/location
  • Competition
  • Legal regulations/local business practices
  • 13.6: The structure of the channel
  • Market coverage
  • Channel length
  • Control/cost
  • Degree of integration
  • 13.7: From single-channel to omnichannel strategy
  • 13.8: Managing and controlling distribution channels
  • Screening and selecting intermediaries
  • Contracting (distributor agreements)
  • Motivating
  • Controlling
  • Termination
  • 13.9: Implications of the internet for distribution decisions
  • 13.10: Blockchain technology and its influence on marketing and SCM
  • The marketer’s use of the blockchain
  • The use of blockchain technology in SCM provides trust
  • 13.11: Online retail sales
  • Exhibit 13.1: Maersk’s use of blockchains in their shipping
  • 13.12: Smart phone marketing
  • Benefits of m-marketing
  • Location based app services
  • 13.13: Channel power in international retailing
  • Exhibit 13.2: The ‘Banana Split’ model
  • 13.14: Mystery shopping in retailing
  • 13.15: Summary
  • Case study 13.1: Bosch Indego: how to build B2B and B2C relationships in a new global product market
  • Chapter 14: Communication decisions
  • 14.1: Introduction
  • 14.2: The communication process
  • Opinion leadership
  • Buyer initiative in the communication process
  • Key attributes of effective communication
  • Other factors affecting communication
  • Push versus pull strategies
  • Mass customisation, one-to-one marketing and the push-pull strategy
  • 14.3: Communication tools
  • Advertising
  • Public relations
  • Exhibit 14.1: LEGO Ninjago’s 360-degree marketing communication
  • Exhibit 14.2: Ambush marketing strategy – Dutch brewery vs Anheuser Busch’s Budweiser during the
  • Sales promotion
  • Direct marketing
  • 14.4: Personal selling
  • The steps in personal selling
  • Assessing salesforce effectiveness
  • 14.5: Trade fairs and exhibitions
  • 14.6: Social media marketing
  • Web 2.0
  • Social media
  • From ‘Bowling’ to ‘Pinball’
  • The 6C model of social media marketing
  • 14.7: Categorisation of social media
  • The four Social Media categories
  • 14.8: The social media funnel
  • 14.9: Development of the social media marketing plan
  • Step 1: Conduct a social media audit (where are we today?)
  • Step 2: Create social media marketing objectives
  • Step 3: Choose the most relevant social media platforms to work with
  • Step 4: Get social media inspiration from industry leaders, competitors and key opinion leader in th
  • Step 5: Create a content and time plan for the company’s social media efforts
  • Step 6: Test, evaluate and adjust your social media marketing plan
  • 14.10: Developing a viral marketing campaign
  • 14.11: Summary
  • Exhibit 14.3: Fox Business (Trish Regan) is selling a political statement
  • Case study 14.1: Orabrush Inc.: how a ‘pull’ B2C YouTube marketing strategy helped consumers to
  • Part V: Organising, implementing and controlling the marketing effort
  • Part V: Video case study: Pret A Manger: How to control the expansion of an international restaurant
  • Introduction to part V
  • Chapter 15: Organising and implementing the marketing plan
  • 15.1: Introduction
  • 15.2: Marketing audit
  • 15.3: Building the marketing plan
  • Title page
  • Table of contents
  • Executive summary
  • Introduction
  • Situational analysis
  • Marketing objectives and goals
  • Marketing strategies and programmes
  • Budgets
  • Implementation and control
  • Conclusion
  • 15.4: Organising the marketing resources
  • Organisational structure
  • Vertical or horizontal organisation?
  • Centralised or decentralised organisation?
  • Bureaucratic or adaptive organisation?
  • Organisational forms
  • Transition from a product-focused to a customer-focused structure
  • Organisational culture
  • 15.5: Implementation of the marketing plan
  • Issues in marketing implementation
  • Planning and implementation are interdependent processes
  • 15.6: The role of internal marketing
  • The internal marketing approach
  • The internal marketing process
  • Implementing an internal marketing approach
  • Exhibit 15.1: Merger of Mars’ European food, pet care and confectionery divisions
  • 15.7: Summary
  • Case study 15.1: DJI Technology Co. Ltd.
  • Chapter 16: Budgeting and controlling
  • 16.1: Introduction
  • 16.2: Budgeting
  • Profitability analysis
  • Customer-mix budgets
  • 16.3: Social media metrics
  • Non-financial social metrics
  • Other ‘operational’ non-financial social metrics
  • Financial social metrics
  • Other ‘operational’ financial social metrics
  • 16.4: Customer profitability and customer lifetime value
  • Realising the full profit potential of a customer relationship
  • Customer retention
  • Increasing CLTV
  • Acquisition costs
  • 16.5: Controlling the marketing programme
  • Exhibit 16.1: Simulation of firm X’s customer value (cumulative sales for firm X over periods 1 to
  • Design of a control system
  • Feedforward control
  • Key areas for control in marketing
  • Overall economic value with successful implementation of CRM
  • 16.6: Summary
  • Case study 16.1: Huawei smartphones: expanding into the international markets for smartphones
  • Appendix: Market research and decision support system
  • A.1: Introduction
  • A.2: Data warehousing
  • A.3: Data mining
  • A.4: The customer information file
  • A.5: Linking market research to the decision-making process
  • A.6: Secondary research
  • Advantages of secondary research
  • Disadvantages of secondary research
  • Internal data sources
  • External data sources
  • Secondary data used for estimation of foreign market potential
  • A7: Primary research
  • Qualitative and quantitative research
  • Triangulation: mixing qualitative and quantitative research methods
  • Research design
  • Problems with using primary research
  • A.8: Online (internet) primary research methods
  • Advantages of online surveys
  • Disadvantages of online surveys
  • Online quantitative market research (email and Web-based surveys)
  • Online qualitative market research
  • A.9: Other types of market research
  • Ad-hoc research
  • Continuous research (longitudinal designs)
  • Sales forecasting
  • Scenario planning
  • A.10: Setting up a marketing information system (MIS)
  • A.11: Marketing research based on Web 2.0
  • A.12: Summary
  • Glossary
  • Index
  • Back Cover

Additional information

Veldu vöru

Leiga á rafbók í 365 daga, Leiga á rafbók í 180 daga, Rafbók til eignar, Leiga á rafbók í 90 daga

Aðrar vörur

0
    0
    Karfan þín
    Karfan þín er tómAftur í búð