Marketing Concepts In your own words‚ define the following marketing concepts and provide a relevant real world example to accompany each definition. Concept Definition Example Need what a person is thinking and feeling and what motivates them to satisfy that need. A person can be satisfied by wearing a fashionable coat‚ which meets their needs and wants of looking great and staying warm. Benefit motivating a consumer to buy a product that satisfies them in more than one way. A
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The marketing concept is a managerial philosophy that an organization should try to satisfy customers’ needs through a coordinated set of activities that also allows the organization to achieve its goals. The marketing concept strives to satisfy customers by determining what buyers want and then by using that information. Businesses also have to alter‚ adapt‚ and develop new products to continue earnings profits. By being customer oriented‚ objectives of a business‚ such as‚ increasing profits
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INTRODUCTION Marketing intermediaries can be defines as an individuals or firms such as Agents‚ Distributors‚ Wholesalers‚ Retailers that links the producers to other intermediaries or the ultimate buyers to buy the goods from the manufactures/producers in order to satisfy their customers. It also helps the firms to promote‚ sell‚ and make available goods and service to the customers through contractual arrangement. Each intermediaries receives the items at one pricing point and move it to
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Marketing is a social and managerial process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating and exchanging value with others. Marketing involves building and managing profitable exchange relationships with customers. The role of marketing is to understand consumers‚ create value‚ and build strong customer relationships. All of these steps form the basis for the fourth step‚ building profitable customer relationships and create customer delight. In the final step‚
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STYLE GUIDELINES FOR LILYDALE MARKETING UNITS (including PRESENTATION REQUIREMENTS AND HINTS) All marketing units taught at Swinburne’s Lilydale campus place great emphasis on the development of written and oral communications skills. These communications and presentation skills are regarded as essential by prospective employers. Besides‚ marketing is basically all about communication - if you cannot communicate effectively‚ you cannot market successfully!). This section sets out style guidelines
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little shopping effort. These products are purchased regularly‚ usually with little planning‚ and require wide distribution. a. Convenience b. Specialty c. Branded d. Shopping e. Unsought ____ 3. The convenience product marketing strategy includes: a. wide distribution of the product b. higher than ordinary prices c. few retail outlets other than convenience stores d. significantly lower promotion budgets e. products that are not easily substitutable ____
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Describe the limitations and constraints of marketing For this task I will be talking about the how different legal policies can cause problems for different companies and make them have to do things in different ways as to what they would have originally liked to. Legal The first limitation and constraint that I will be talking about will be the legal ones. This would be acts such as the sale and supply of good act. What this means is that when a company is advertising a products to the public
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The Limitations and Constraints of Marketing Sales of Goods Act 1979: The Sales of Goods Act enforces a strict set of rules that retailers and sellers must abide by. When an individual buys goods they enter into a contract with the seller of these goods. The Sales of Goods Act means that goods must be as described‚ of satisfactory quality and fit for purpose. This means‚ for example‚ if something was advertised as the colour red and when it was purchased was in fact the colour blue‚ the Sales of
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P2-describe the limitations and constraints of marketing Limitations and constraints include; Sales of Goods Act 1979 Trade Descriptions Act 1968 Consumer Credit Act 2006 Data Protection Act 1968 Voluntary constraints Direct Marketing Association (DMA) Pressure groups and consumerism Acceptable language Sales of goods act 1979 The sales of goods act needs sellers to trade goods that are as they advertised and described. The good or service has to be of satisfactory quality. Effectively
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