Midterm Open Questions Flashcards
Environmental Scanning
Smart marketing managers take a proactive rather than a reactive approach to the publics and forces
in their marketing environment.
– Determine the environmental areas that need to be monitored
– Determine how the information will be collected, including information sources, the information
frequency, and who will be responsible
– Implement the data collection plan
– Analyze the data and use them in the market planning process
Explain the model of buyer behavior.
The company that really understands how consumers will respond to different product features, prices,
and advertising appeals has a great advantage over its competitors.
Their starting point is the model of buyer behavior.
– This figure shows that marketing and other stimuli enter the consumer’s “black box” and produce
certain responses.
– Marketers must determine what is in the buyer’s black box.
– The black box has two parts: First, a buyer’s characteristics influence how he or she perceives and
reacts to the stimuli; Second, the buyer’s decision process itself affects outcomes.
The marketing stimuli consist of the four Ps: product, price, place, and promotion.
Other stimuli include major forces and events in the buyer’s environment: economic, technological,
political, and cultural
All these stimuli enter the buyer’s black box, where they are turned into the set of observable buyer
responses shown on the right: product choice, brand choice, dealer choice, purchase timing, and
purchase amount.
Selective disortion
Selective distortion is the tendency to twist information into personal meanings and interpret
information in a way that will fit our preconceptions.
What factors do convention planners think the most important when choosing a destination?
- availability hotels & facilities
- ease of transportation
- Transportation costs
- distance from attendees
- climate
- recreation
- sights & cultural activities
What is “Incentive travel”? Discuss the function of this trip based upon “Herzberg dual factor
theory”.
Incentive travel:
- reward for achieving or exceeding a goals
- destination and hotel should be special to the tourists
-> climate, recreational facilities, sightseeing opportunities
-> average expenditure is increasing
current trend: keep trips short, focus on getting employees back
Segmentation criteria
- Geographic
- Demographic
- phychographic
- behavirorial
Explain what is “Undifferentiated marketing”, “Differentiated marketing” & “Concentrated marketing”.
Undifferentiated marketing: - focusses on what is comment in the needs of consumers
- provides cost economies
- difficult to develop a product that satisfy all or even most consumers
Differentiated marketing:
- company targets several market segments & designs separate offers for each
( actor hotel operates under twelve trade names & manages several hotels)
Concentrated marketing:
- firm pursues a large share of one or a few small markets
(four seasons, the company can enjoy many operative economies)
Overall interpretation of “Positioning Map”
Perceptual mapping, a research tool, is sometimes used to measure a brand’s position.
– This slide is an example of hotels plotted on the attributes of price and perceived service.
– On this map we see there is a correlation between service and price; as price goes up, so does
service.
Perceptual maps can also be developed using consumers’ perceptions of a number of product attributes.
– Increased competition or an ineffective positioning strategy can make repositioning necessary.
– Perceptual maps provide data supporting the need for repositioning.