Showing posts with label disaggregate marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disaggregate marketing. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 October 2007

Services Marketing

A service is the action of doing something for someone or something. It is largely intangible (i.e. not material). A product is tangible (i.e. material) since you can touch it and own it. A service tends to be an experience that is consumed at the point where it is purchased, and cannot be owned since is quickly perishes. A person could go to a café one day and have excellent service, and then return the next day and have a poor experience. So often marketers talk about the nature of a service as:

Inseparable - from the point where it is consumed, and from the provider of the service. For example, you cannot take a live theatre performance home to consume it (a DVD of the same performance would be a product, not a service).

Intangible - and cannot have a real, physical presence as does a product. For example, motor insurance may have a certificate, but the financial service itself cannot be touched i.e. it is intangible.

Perishable - in that once it has occurred it cannot be repeated in exactly the same way. For example, once a 100 metres Olympic final has been run, there will be not other for 4 more years, and even then it will be staged in a different place with many different finalists.

Variability- since the human involvement of service provision means that no two services will be completely identical. For example, returning to the same garage time and time again for a service on your car might see different levels of customer satisfaction, or speediness of work.

Right of ownership - is not taken to the service, since you merely experience it. For example, an engineer may service your air-conditioning, but you do not own the service, the engineer or his equipment. You cannot sell it on once it has been consumed, and do not take ownership of it.

Western economies have seen deterioration in their traditional manufacturing industries, and a growth in their service economies. Therefore the marketing mix has seen an extension and adaptation into the extended marketing mix for services, also known as the 7P's - physical evidence, process and people.

Lets now look at the remaining 3 p’s:

People

An essential ingredient to any service provision is the use of appropriate staff and people. Recruiting the right staff and training them appropriately in the delivery of their service is essential if the organisation wants to obtain a form of competitive advantage. Consumers make judgements and deliver perceptions of the service based on the employees they interact with. Staff should have the appropriate interpersonal skills, aptititude, and service knowledge to provide the service that consumers are paying for. Many British organisations aim to apply for the Investors In People accreditation, which tells consumers that staff are taken care off by the company and they are trained to certain standards.

Process

Refers to the systems used to assist the organisation in delivering the service. Imagine you walk into Burger King and you order a Whopper Meal and you get it delivered within 2 minutes. What was the process that allowed you to obtain an efficient service delivery? Banks that send out Credit Cards automatically when their customers old one has expired again require an efficient process to identify expiry dates and renewal. An efficient service that replaces old credit cards will foster consumer loyalty and confidence in the company.

Physical Evidence

Where is the service being delivered? Physical Evidence is the element of the service mix which allows the consumer again to make judgements on the organisation. If you walk into a restaurant your expectations are of a clean, friendly environment. On an aircraft if you travel first class you expect enough room to be able to lay down!
Physical evidence is an essential ingredient of the service mix, consumers will make perceptions based on their sight of the service provision which will have an impact on the organisations perceptual plan of the service.

Tuesday, 16 October 2007

Push and Pull Marketing

What is pull marketing?

Pull marketing is where you develop advertising and promotional strategies that are meant to entice the prospect to buy your product or service. Some classic examples are "half off!" or "bring in this coupon to save 25%" or "buy one get one free", etc.

With pull marketing, you are trying to create a sense of increased, time limited value so that the customer will come into your store to buy.

An example of this is a perfume product. Women do not request to smell a fragrance they never smelled before; it is simply "pushed" at them, through the right advertisement.

  • Applied to that portion of the supply chain where demand uncertainty is relatively small
  • Production & distribution decisions are based on long term forecasts
  • Based on past orders received from retailer’s warehouse (may lead to Bullwhip effect)
  • Inability to meet changing demand patterns
  • Large and variable production batches
  • Unacceptable service levels
  • Excessive inventories due to the need for large safety stocks

What is push marketing? Push marketing is where you develop advertising and promotional strategies geared toward your marketing and distribution channels to entice them in promoting your product. As consumers, you rarely see this type of marketing when it is directed to the distributors. It might include wholesale discounts, kickbacks, bonuses, and other types of support. It's all designed to have the retailer promote your product to the end users over a different product.

In recent years, I've seen a nearly exponential increase in the past decade - another type of push marketing is taking over. It's the referral and word of mouth marketing. When companies encourage happy customers to spread the word to their friends and families, that's a type of push marketing. Or, when companies make ads that are controversial, cheeky, or downright shocking, they create a little buzz - that's another type of push marketing.

An example of this is the car manufacturing company Toyota. Toyota only produces cars when they have been ordered by the customers.

  • Applied to that portion of the supply chain where demand uncertainty is high
  • Production and distribution are demand driven
  • No inventory, response to specific orders
  • Point of sale (POS) data comes in handy when shared with supply chain partners
  • Decrease in lead time
  • Difficult to implement
Online

Push/Pull is a newer model for e-business that relates to information delivery. Roughly put, a PUSH is information that is directly delivered to you. Direct Mail and E-Mail are good examples of PUSH information, delivered right to your mailbox. A Web Site is an example of PULL information, for anyone to view as they wish by browsing the address. The Viewer is in control of the PULL.

Combining these two forces is very effective in delivering your marketing message. "PULL" type marketing is LESS effective in originating new business, but is MORE effective in helping to "close" and also helping to "keep in touch."

Sunday, 2 September 2007

Disaggregate Marketing

The shift in focus from brands to customer relationships has radical implications
for several internal processes and structures.

Example: Kraft Foods e-magazine: Foods & Family

Processes

Brand Management

Disaggregate Marketing

Organization Structure and Leadership

Managers or teams are assigned to product categories or brands. Product or brand manager.

Managers or teams are assigned to segments of similar consumers. Segment Manager

Key Business Resources

Success is measured by volume of sales, dollar sales, market share and brand or product profitability.

Success is measured by customer-level or segment-level profitability and depth of relationship (share of wallet)

New Product development and innovation

Developing and testing of products based on product-related competencies. Given our resources, what else can we make?

Developing and testing products on the basis of segment needs. What else does this customer segment require? What else can we deliver to them as a part of the complete solution?

Key Brand Management Activities

Brand-led copy development: brand level promotional activities to boost volume or market share; trade marketing support; coordination with advertising agency.

Segment driven cross-promotional opportunities; coordination of communication of multiple brands; integration and presentation of product portfolio as complementary solution set; segment analysis and development on the basis of consumer data.

Training

Focus is on developing marketing skills; branding, message development, agency management.

Focus is on developing knowledge of consumer segment, consumer behaviour, and the data interpretation and management.