We may view marketing generally as resting on six
inter-connected platforms. These are the building blocks of marketing, which are: needs, wants, and demands; products;
value and satisfaction: exchange, transactions and relationships; market; marketing and marketers. We shall attempt
to run through each of these
platforms.
NEEDS, WANTS, AND DEMANDS
Lets us start by differentiating between needs, wants and
demands. The purpose of this is to shed light on the frequent
accusations by marketing critics that "marketers get people to buy things
they don't want". We should get it clear that marketers do not create
needs. In actual fact, needs pre-exist marketers. However, marketers, along
with other influential in the society, influence wants. For Stance, they may
suggest that a particular type of car such as a Mercedes Benz V-boot would satisfy a person's need for social status. In this case, marketers
do not create the need for social status, but try to point out how a particular
good would satisfy that need.
Thus, marketers try to influence demand by making the product
attractive, affordable and easily available.
We now go to the distinction
between needs, wants and demands:
A human need is a state of felt deprivation of some basic
satisfaction. Out of necessity, people require food, clothing, shelter,
safety, belonging, esteem, and a few other things for survival. Note that these
needs are not created by the society
or by marketers. They naturally exist in the composition of human biology and human condition.
Human wants are desires for specific satisfaction of these
deeper needs. For example, a man in the city might need food and wants fried
rice and chickens; needs clothing and wants a French suit; needs esteem
and buys a Mercedes Benz car. In another environment, these needs are satisfied
differently. For instance, in a typical rural environment, a man might satisfy
his hunger with pap or eko or akamu; his clothing needs with simple buba and
sokoto; and his esteem with a shell necklace. People's needs maythe be few, but
their wants are many. These
wants are continual y being shaped and re-shaped by social forces and
institutions such as churches, schools, families, and business corporations.
Demands are
wants for specific products that are backed up by an ability and • willingness to buy them. Hence, wants
become demands only when backed up by purchasing power. For example,
many people desire Mercedes Benz cars, but only a few, are real y able and willing to buy one. It is therefore
imperative for companies to measure not only how many people want their
product, but more importantly,
how many of them would actually be willing and able to buy it.
PRODUCTS
People normal y satisfy their needs
and wants with products. Products can be defined broadly to cover anything
that can be offered to someone to satisfy a need or want. Normal y, we conceive of a product as a physical
object, such as a car, a radio or a television set. However, we often use the
expression products and services to distinguish between physical objects
and intangible ones.
If one critically looks at
physical products, one realizes that their importance lies not so much in
owning them as in using them to satisfy our wants. For example, we don't buy a
car just to admire it, but because it is a source of service called transportation. Hence, physical
products are real y vehicles that deliver services to us.
VALUE AND SATISFACTION
Very often, consumers face a wide variety of products and
services that might satisfy a given need. How then do they choose among
these variety of goods and services:
Normally, consumers make buying choices based on their perceptions of
the value that various products and services deliver.
Customer value is the difference between the values the
customer gains from owning and
using a product and the costs of obtaining the product. For example, DHL customers gain a number of
benefits. The most obvious are fast and reliable package delivery.
In addition, these customers may
also receive some status and image values. For example, using DHL usual y makes both the package sender and
the receiver feel more important. However, when deciding whether to send
a package through DHL,
customers often weigh these and other values against the money, effort, and psychic
costs of using the service. Furthermore, they will compare the value of using
DHL against the value of using other courier services such as EMS, Red star and Fedex, and then select the
one that gives them the greatest desired value.
Customer
satisfaction is the extent to which a product's perceived performance matches a
buyer's expectation. If the products performance falls short of expectations,
the buyer is dissatisfied. If performance matches or exceeds expectations, the
buyer is satisfied or delighted. Business-minded marketing companies usual y go out of their way to keep their
customers satisfied. You should note that satisfied customers make repeat
purchases, and they tell others about their good experiences with the product.
The key is to match customer
expectations with company performance. This is why smart companies aim to
delight customers by promising only what they can deliver, and then delivering more
than they promise.
EXCHANGE AND TRANSACTION AND RELATIONSHIPS
The mere fact that people have needs
and wants, and can place value on products is necessary, but not
sufficient to define marketing. You should realize that marketing exists when
people decide to satisfy needs and wants in a certain way that is called
exchange. Exchange is one of the four different ways in which a person can
obtain a product he or she wants.
The first way
is self-production. For instance, a hungry person can relieve hunger through
hunting, fishing, or fruit gathering. The person does not have to interact with
anyone else. In this particular case therefore, there is no market and no
marketing.
The second
way is coercion. Here, the hungry person can wrest food from another person forcefully. Hence, no benefit is
offered to the other party.
The third way
is begging. In this instance, the hungry person can approach someone and beg for food. The supplicant has
nothing tangible to offer except gratitude.
The fourth
way is exchange. Here, the hungry person can approach someone who has food and
offer some resource in exchange, such as money, another good or some service
(as in trade by barter).
Marketing evolves from this last
approach to acquiring products i.e. exchange. Formal y stated, exchange is the act of
obtaining a desired product from someone by offering something in return. Thus,
exchange is the defining concept underlying marketing. For exchange to
take place, Kotler (1984), lists five conditions that must be satisfied:
(i)
There
are at least two parties;
(ii)
Each
party has something that might be of value to the other party.
(iii)
Each
party is capable of communication and delivery
(iv)
Each party is
free to accept or reject the offer.
(v)
(v) Each party believes it is appropriate or
desirable to deal with the other party
These five conditions make exchange
possible. Whether exchange actual y takes place however, depends on the
parties coming to an agreement. If they agree, it is often concluded that the act of exchange has left both
of them better off, or at least not worse off. This is in the sense that
each was free to reject or
accept the offer. Hence, exchange creates value just as production creates
value. It gives people more consumption possibilities.
Whereas exchange is the core
concept of marketing, a transaction consists of a trade of values between two
parties. In a transaction, for instance, we should be able to say that one
party gives X to another party and gets Yin return.
Transaction marketing is pail of the larger idea of relationship
marketing. Aside from creating short-term transactions, marketers need
to build long-term relationships
with valued customers, distributors, dealers, and suppliers. They need to
build strong economic and social ties by promising and consistently delivering
high-quality products, good service, and fair prices. Marketing is rapidly
shifting from trying to
maximise the profit on each individual transaction to maximizing
mutually beneficial relationships with consumers and other parties. Here, the
operating assumption is: build good relationships and profitable transactions
will follow
M A R K E T S
A market is the set of actual and
potential buyers of a product. Generally, these buyers share a particular need
or want that can be satisfied through the exchange. It is thus clear that the size
of a market depends on the number of people who exhibit the need, have the
resources to engage in exchange, and are willing to offer these resources in
exchange for what they want.
The term market originally stood for the place where buyers and sellers gathered to exchange their goods,
such as a village square. Economists often use the term to refer to a
collection of buyers and sellers who transact in a particular product class, as
in the yam market, the cattle market or the grain market.
However, marketers see the sellers as constituting an
industry and the buyers as constituting a market.
You can observe from the
figure that sellers and buyers are connected by four arrows. The sellers
send products, services, and communications to the market: in return, they receive money and
information. The inner loop shows an exchange of money for goods: the
outer loop shows an exchange of information. This concept of markets finally
brings us full circle to the concept of marketing.
MARKETING AND MARKETERS
Marketing means managing markets to bring about exchanges for the purposes of satisfying human needs and wants. If one party is more actively seeking an exchange than the other party, we call the first a marketer, and the second party a prospect. A marketer is someone seeking a resource from someone else and willing to offer something of value in exchange. Usually, the marketer is seeking a response from the other party, either to sell something or buy something.
Hence, the marketer can be a seller or buyer.
Let us imagine that several
people want to buy a very attractive house that has just been put up for
sale. You will notice that each would-be buyer will try to market himself
or herself to be the one the
seller selects. Thus, these buyers are doing the marketing. It could so
happen that both the seller and the buyer are actively seeking an exchange, and
in this instance, it is said that both of them are marketers. This situation is then referred to as one
of mutual marketing.
Normally,
exchange processes involve some work. For example, sellers need to search for
buyers, identify their needs, design good products and services, set prices for them, promote these goods and services, as well as store and deliver
them. Activities such as product development, research, communication,
distribution, pricing and service are core marketing activities.
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