Markets
Market – where buyers and sellers come together
Marketing – techniques that sellers undertake
Brand – distinguish, differentiate, create image. Beneficial in mass market to be able to charge premium prices
NICHE; small market with specific needs
- Charge premium prices
- Avoid competition
- NOT spreading risk
- Larger firms can easily overrun
MASS; produce in large quantities to mass
- Lower unit cost allowing economies of scale to be exploited
- Higher profit margins
- High advertising costs
- Fierce competition
Market size – value/volume. Calculated by total sales of business, fluctuate
Market share – sales/total sales X 100. Market leader influence strategy of others and objectives
ONLINE RETAILING
Consumer:
- Global fashion
- 24/7 (USP)
- Distance is no object
- Delivery cost
- Alienate markets, elderly
- Quality
Business:
- Save costs
- Global market
- Gather consumer info, be able to use direct marketing
- Website crashes, cause huge losses
- Cannot tap into certain markets
Markets change because of:
- SIZE: grow or shrink affected by PLC
- NATURE: product/service providing, consumer perceptions and trends
- NEW: develop with technology
How businesses can adapt to change:
- Develop a niche
- Continuous improvement
- Investment
- Market research
- Flexibility
COMPETITION
Business -Under pressure to get customers and can adopt methods such as:
- Lower prices, better quality, advertise and promote, offer extras adding value
- Reduce profit potential
- Make barriers into market
Consumer
- Choice, in absence of competition consumers may be exploited
Risk – action taken by business and outcome unknown Uncertainty – external influences beyond control
Product orientation – focuses on production process, products design, quality and performance
Market orientation – continuously identifies, reviews and analyses consumer needs. More engaged with effective marketing:
- Respond quickly to change
- Confident in product launch
- Anticipate change from research/trends
- Meet and compete with rivals
Influences of market orientation:
- Nature of product
- Policy decisions
- Views of those in control
- Nature and size of market
- Degree of competition
THREE purposes of market research:
- Identify and indicate customer wants and needs
- Quantify likely demand
- Insight into consumer behaviour
DATABASE – stores client info, easily searched and found facility
SOCIAL NETWORKING – global reach, cheap and analyses trends
WEBSITE – surveys, cheap and available 24/7
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH – attitudes, beliefs and intentions QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH – measured and statistical
Primary research:
- Questionnaires
- Posta surveys
- Focus group
- Test marketing
Secondary research:
- Internal data
- External data
SEGMENTATION
Geographic
- Different needs depending on where they live and different wants culturally Demographic
- Age, gender, income, social class, ethnicity, religion
Psychographic
- Attitudes, opinions and lifestyle, difficult to collect data type Behavioural
- Loyalty or impulse
BENEFITS
- Meet specific needs
- Increase revenue
- Avoid wasting resources
- Gain loyalty
Market positioning – conceptions consumers hold can use, benefits of products, USP, attributes of product, origin or classification
Market map – two dimensional, helpful for individual brands not corporate. Can only compare two feature
Competitive advantage
- Design – differentiation
- Quality – premium price
- Promotion – personalise advertisement
- Customer service – exceed and deliver encouraging sales
- Ethical stance – segment
Differentiation; gain competitive edge
- Flexible pricing – create perceived high quality allowing premium pricing
- Recognition – more appealing, higher sales revenue and less advertising
- Product range – each market
- Brand development – use, overcome competitor
Adding value
- Bundling
- Customer service
- Packaging
- Frequent buyer offers
- Customisation