| |Level: |ACL1 |Assignment Type |monthly | |Module Name: |Marketing fundamental |Assessor’s Name | | |Student’s Name: |Pradip Waghmare |Read Submission Date | 24/01/2012
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Table of Contents Introduction & Company profile: Type of business Geographic domain Culture of senior management Competitive situation Marketing Audit: External environment - Macro environment (PEST) Political‚ Governmental‚ and Legal forces: Political stability‚ Government regulations & deregulations. Changes in tax laws‚ Changes in patents(التراخيص) laws Level of government subsidies‚ Country to other countries relationships Trading policies& Import-export
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MKT370 – Marketing Policies Ben Bentzin ● Spring 2013 ● Unique: 5220 Administrative details Instructor: Ben Bentzin‚ Tel (512) 828-7070 Email: ben.bentzin@mccombs.utexas.edu Office: CBA 6.216 (6th floor of CBA North‚ top of the escalator) Please include “MKT 370:” in the subject line of any emails Amy Williams - arwilliams@utexas.edu Sec. 5220‚ Mondays/Wednesdays‚ 8:00a - 9:15a‚ UTC 1.102 By appointment on Mondays and Wednesdays only‚ typically from 9:30am to 10:30am. FIN 357 (or FIN 357H) and
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1.0 INTRODUCTION I as a Marketing Executive from 7 Eleven Company had given a task to conduct a marketing audit. I prepared a discussion paper which covers the topics such as appraising the processes and techniques used for auditing the marketing environments and applying organizational and environmental auditing techniques in a given situation. “The marketing audit is a basic part of the marketing planning process. It is conducted not only at the beginning of the process‚ but also at a series
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JBR-07662; No of Pages 7 Journal of Business Research xxx (2012) xxx–xxx Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect Journal of Business Research Green marketing ’ functions in building corporate image in the retail setting☆ Eunju Ko a‚ Yoo Kyung Hwang a‚ Eun Young Kim b‚⁎ a b Yonsei University‚ Department of Clothing & Textiles‚ Yonsei University‚ Seoul‚ Republic of Korea Chungbuk National University‚ Department of Fashion Design Information‚ 410 SungBong Ro‚ Cheongju‚ Chungbuk
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Chapter 12: Setting Product Strategy GENERAL CONCEPT QUESTIONS Multiple Choice 1. Marketing planning begins with the formulation of an offering to ________ target customers’ needs or wants. a. undermine b. meet c. capture d. compete with e. comprehend Answer: b Page: 318 Difficulty: Easy AACSB: Reflective Thinking 2. The customer will judge the offering by three basis elements: ________‚ services mix and quality‚ and price. a. performance b. salespeople
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Marketing is the process of communicating the value of a product or service to customers‚ for the purpose of selling that product or service. From a societal point of view‚ marketing is the link between a society’s material requirements and its economic patterns of response. Marketing satisfies these needs and wants through exchange processes and building long term relationships. Marketing can be looked at as an organizational function and a set of processes for creating‚ delivering and communicating
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Fail Pass Credit Distinction Max Mark Actual Mark Marketing environment Provides little or no description of the marketing environment and omits implications for the brand. Ignores or does not grasp the significance of information provided. Provides some description of the marketing environment and hints at implications for the brand. Takes into account all relevant information provided. Provides good description of the marketing environment and has good understanding of implications
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Title: Better by the Circle? The dynamic effect on the Marketing Concept. Abstract The marketing concept is an overarching concept that links the philosophies‚ practices and theories of marketing. It closely examines an organisations ability to analyse the needs of the customer and make informed decisions based on these needs. These decisions are based on evidence and work towards matching the organisations capabilities and the customer needs‚ ultimately‚ to satisfy both the organisation and the
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space which can pave the way for them to sneak in the minds of the consumers. Once settled in they begin playing with the brain eventually creating and modifying concepts called “needs” which would have never existed. The traditional concept of marketing was only about sales or meeting the “current needs” of a consumer. But the same cannot be felt‚ today with the number of firms on the rise in the same industry‚ state and even the same street. Everyone is in a race either to: * Capture a customer
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