Lecture 1: Introduction Flashcards
Customer Value
Benefits gained from purchasing and consuming a product/service – Costs incurred
OR: Positive and negative consequences of purchasing and consuming a product/service
Value Drivers
Factors that the customer weighs while purchasing and consuming a product/service.
Value drivers are factors that increase the worth of a product, service.
Calculating Value
Value = f (value drivers) = f (sum of value drivers that are benefits – sum of value drivers that are costs)
Fundamental Principles of Marketing (First Principle)
First Principle: Related to Consumers
We don’t see products in terms of their attributes but as solutions for delivering customer value
The value of your product is largely based on how it solves problems/provides solutions for consumers
Fundamental Principles of Marketing (Second Principle)
Second Principle: Related to Competitors
Competing products satisfy the same/similar needs as your product.
Any technology that accomplishes the same goal.
Note: it can compete with a product in a different category.
For instance, Macbook doing better than Dell but still doesn’t do as well against smartphones.
E.g., Macbook (Microsoft, Dell, the biggest competitor is actually smartphones, a different product category), Coke (Pepsi, biggest competitor in India was actually tea).
Fundamental Principles of Marketing (Third Principle)
Third Principle: Relate to The Company
Consumers will purchase the product that gives them the highest perceived value. Therefore, the firm should know the value drivers of consumers (what drives your consumers to buy, what do they value) and the competitors who are satisfying those value drivers or similar ones.
Bearing these two things in mind, the firm should then design a product/service that satisfies the value drivers of consumers better than their competitors.
Fundamental Principles of Marketing: Summary
The starting point for Marketing is:
1. Do you know your consumers’ value drivers (explicit and implicit)?
2. Do you know your competitors?
3. Do you know how to sell your product to consumers and convince them to buy it over your competitors.
Note: By realizing who you are really competiting with, you make the appropriate product offering changes and that helps you stay competitive.
Price Customization
On the Demand Curve:
Triangle Y:
Money left on table, meaning if you charge a higher price, certain people would still have been willing to pay for your product.
Triangle X:
On the other hand, if you had charged a even lower price, there would have been more people who would buy your product. And so you’re losing some of the passed up profit.
So the idea of price customization is how can we minimize money left on the table and passed up profit (the sizes of the triangles X and Y).
In theory if you can perfect price customization, then both X and Y should be zero.
Price Discrimination
A pricing strategy that charges customers different prices for the same product or service based on what the seller thinks they can get the customer to pay: airlines
Using the term discount instead of Surcharge influences how consumers react.
Example: Gas stations in the US used to say there was a surcharge for using a credit card instead of cash. Credit card companies sued the cash stations and now its worded as a cash discount, even though its the same thing.
Cost Explanation
Consumers generally are more OK with being charged at a higher price when they are convinced that the company has to spend more money in making a product.
Or provide a choice: give people the sense of choice in how much money
want to actually spend (pay in increments), even though the end product is the same.
Managing Customer Value Approach
Traditional view of marketing vs MCV approach
Experience oriented in MCV Approach:
- Consider the customers experience, and not just immediate experience
but long term experience. How do you cultivate and create value and maintain value for your customers.
-Create this connection between the company and the consumers,
what they’re going through, create a emotional identification with the brand.
Value in MCV Approach:
- Value is quantifiable.
-We can measure it, we can manipulate it thereby influence it, and
we can scientifically study it.
Customer is sometimes king in MCV Approach:
- If customers don’t actually know certain values that you are capable of creating for them, then you can actually influence them in some very powerful ways.
MCV looks at the bottom line, the long term profitability of your company.
MCV considers effectiveness and efficiency of lots of marketing functions.
-Not just advertising or promotion, but also pricing of your product.
-How do you price it properly?
- The features of your product.
- All of those are actually part of marketing.They’re not subsidiary to marketing.
In the MCV Approach, marketing as deeply embedded in the organization’s operations. It’s the starting point, not the end point of the whole process.
Marketing: A Working Definition
Marketing = The process of value creation
Primarily to the customer (VTC: Value To Customer)
But also to the organization (VOC: Value Of Customer): generating value for the organization
How to Create and Manage Value
Marketing Strategy
A marketing strategy is about creating value effectively.
Your environmental analysis will shape your understanding of how to create value. To create value, you have to figure out what are your customers value drivers and what is the competitive landscape in which you operate and lastly what is your company good at and not so good at, your strengths and your constraints.
The process of segmentation, targeting and positioning as STP.
Once you’ve decided what kind of value you want to create and how to create that value you have to produce the product (design and manufacture it), place it, meaning distribute the product effectively, price the product, and finally promote the product.
Marketing Myopia
By narrowly just looking at your product you lose sight of the competitive landscape and your consumers value drivers.