Marketing mix
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The marketing mix is the set of controllable elements or variables that a company uses to influence and meet the needs of its target customers in the most effective and efficient way possible. These variables are often grouped into four key components, often referred to as the "Four Ps of Marketing."
These four P's are:
- Product: This represents the physical or intangible offering that a company provides to its customers. It includes the design, features, quality, packaging, branding, and any additional services or warranties associated with the product.
- Price: Price refers to the amount of money customers are willing to pay for the product or service. Setting the right price is crucial, as it not only affects the company's profitability but also influences consumer perception and purchasing decisions.
- Place (Distribution): Place involves the strategies and channels used to make the product or service accessible to the target market. It encompasses decisions related to distribution channels, retail locations, online platforms, and logistics.
- Promotion: Promotion encompasses all the activities a company undertakes to communicate the value of its product or service to the target audience. This includes advertising, sales promotions, public relations, social media marketing, and any other methods used to create awareness and generate interest in the offering.[1] The marketing mix has been defined as the "set of marketing tools that the firm uses to pursue its marketing objectives in the target market".[2]
Marketing theory emerged in the early twenty-first century. The contemporary marketing mix which has become the dominant framework for marketing management decisions was first published in 1984.[3] In services marketing, an extended marketing mix is used, typically comprising 7 Ps (product, price, promotion, place, people, process, physical evidence), made up of the original 4 Ps extended by process, people and physical evidence.[4] Occasionally service marketers will refer to 8 Ps (product, price, place, promotion, people, positioning, packaging, and performance), comprising these 7 Ps plus performance.[5]
In the 1990s, the model of 4 Cs was introduced as a more customer-driven replacement of the 4 Ps.[6] There are two theories based on 4 Cs: Lauterborn[who?]'s 4 Cs (consumer, cost, convenience, and communication), and Shimizu[who?]'s 4 Cs (commodity, cost, channel, and communication).
The correct arrangement of marketing mix by enterprise marketing managers plays an important role in the success of a company's marketing:[7]
- Develop strengths and avoid weaknesses
- Strengthen the competitiveness and adaptability of enterprises
- Ensure the internal departments of the enterprise work closely together
Emergence and growth
[edit]The origins of the 4 Ps can be traced to the late 1940s.[8][9] The first known mention of a mix has been attributed to a Professor of Marketing at Harvard University, James Culliton.[10] In 1948, Culliton published an article entitled, The Management of Marketing Costs[11] in which Culliton describes marketers as "mixers of ingredients". Years later, Culliton's colleague, Professor Neil Borden, published a retrospective article detailing the early history of the marketing mix in which he claims that he was inspired by Culliton's idea of "mixers", and credits himself with popularising the concept of the "marketing mix".[12] According to Borden's account, he used the term, "marketing mix" consistently from the late 1940s. For instance, he is known to have used the term "marketing mix" in his presidential address given to the American Marketing Association (AMA) in 1953.[13]
Although the idea of marketers as "mixers of ingredients" caught on, marketers could not reach any real consensus about what elements should be included in the mix until the 1960s.[14] Early schemas to define mix include:[15]
- 1961 Albert Frey defined two groups of the offering (product, brand, and price) and the method (advertising, sales promotion, personal selling, publicity, distribution channels, marketing research, strategy)
- 1962 Lazer and Kelley defined three groups of the goods mix (product, brand, and price), the distribution mix (channels and physical distribution), and the communication mix (advertising and sales).
- 1957 John Howard defined four groups of product, price, channel, and promotion[15][16]
The 4 Ps, in its modern form, was first proposed in 1960 by E. Jerome McCarthy, who presented them within a managerial approach that covered analysis, consumer behavior, market research, market segmentation, and planning.[17] Phillip Kotler popularised this approach and helped spread the 4 Ps model.[18][2] McCarthy's 4 Ps have been widely adopted by both marketing academics and practitioners.[19]
The prospect of extending the marketing mix first took hold at the inaugural AMA conference dedicated to Services Marketing in the early 1980s, and built on earlier theoretical works pointing to many important limitations of the 4 Ps model.[20] Taken collectively, the papers presented at that conference indicate that service marketers were thinking about a revision to the general marketing mix based on an understanding that services were fundamentally different from products, and therefore required different tools and strategies. In 1981, Booms and Bitner proposed a model of 7 Ps, comprising the original 4 Ps extended by process, people and physical evidence, as being more applicable for services marketing.[21]
Since then, there have been a number of different proposals for a service marketing mix (with various numbers of Ps); most notably the 8 Ps, comprising the 7 Ps above, extended by 'performance'.[5]
McCarthy's 4 Ps
[edit]The original marketing mix, or 4 Ps, as originally proposed by marketers and academic Philip Kotler and E. Jerome McCarthy, provides a framework for marketing decision-making.[6] McCarthy's marketing mix has since become one of the most enduring and widely accepted frameworks in marketing.[22] McCarthy's 4 Ps has remained influential in marketing theory and practice, serving as a cornerstone for analyzing and optimizing marketing strategies in various industries.[23]
Category | Definition/Explanation/Concept | Typical Marketing Decisions |
---|---|---|
Product | A product refers to an item that satisfies the consumer's needs or wants.
Products may be tangible (goods) or intangible (services, ideas, or experiences). |
|
Price | Price refers to the amount a customer pays for a product.
Price may also be a consumer's expectation for getting a certain product (e.g. time or effort). Price is the only variable that has implications for revenue. Price is the only part of the marketing mix that talks about the value for the firm. Price also includes considerations of customer perceived value. |
|
Place | Refers to providing customer access
Considers providing convenience for consumers. |
|
Promotion | Promotion refers to marketing communications
May comprise elements such as: advertising, PR, direct marketing and sales promotion. |
|
Product refers to what the business offers for sale and may include products or services. Product decisions include the "quality, features, benefits, style, design, branding, packaging, services, warranties, guarantees, life cycles, investments and returns".[26]
Price refers to decisions surrounding "list pricing, discount pricing, special offer pricing, credit payment or credit terms". Price refers to the total cost to a customer to acquire the product, and may involve both monetary and psychological costs such as the time and effort spent in acquisition. Distribution channels taken into consideration including retailer, wholesaler, Business to Business or Business to Customer .[26]
Place is defined as the "direct or indirect channels to market, geographical distribution, territorial coverage, retail outlet, market location, catalogues, inventory, logistics, and order fulfillment". Place refers either to the physical location where a business carries out business or the distribution channels used to reach markets. Place may refer to a retail outlet, but increasingly refers to virtual stores such as "a mail order catalogue, a telephone call centre or a website. Example, firms that produce luxury goods like Louis Vuitton employ an intensive placement strategy by making their products available at only a few exclusive retailers. In contrast, lower priced consumer goods like toothpaste and shampoo, typically employ an extensive placement strategy by making their products available to as many different retailers as possible."[26]
Promotion refers to "the marketing communication used to make the offer known to potential customers and persuade them to investigate it further".[26] Promotion elements include "advertising, public relations, direct selling and sales promotions."
Modified and expanded marketing mix: "Seven P's"
[edit]By the 1980s, a number of theorists were calling for an expanded and modified framework that would be more useful to service marketers. The prospect of expanding or modifying the marketing mix for services was a core discussion topic at the inaugural AMA Conference dedicated to Services Marketing in the early 1980s, and built on earlier theoretical works pointing to many important problems and limitations of the 4 Ps model.[20] Taken collectively, the papers presented at that conference indicate that service marketers were thinking about a revision to the general marketing mix based on an understanding that services were fundamentally different from products, and therefore required different tools and strategies. In 1981, Booms and Bitner proposed a model of 7 Ps, comprising the original 4 Ps plus people, process, and physical evidence, as being more applicable for services marketing.[21][27]
Category | Definition/ Explanation | Typical Marketing Decisions |
---|---|---|
People | Human factors who participate in service delivery.[28]
Service personnel who represent the company's values to customers. Interactions between customers. Interactions between employees and customers.[29] |
|
Process | The procedures, mechanisms and flow of activities by which service is delivered. |
|
Physical evidence | The environment in which service occurs.
The space where customers and service personnel interact. Tangible commodities (e.g. equipment, furniture) that facilitate service performance. Artifacts that remind customers of a service performance.[31] |
|
People are essential in the marketing of any product or service. Personnel stand for the service. In the professional, financial, or hospitality service industry, people are not producers, but rather the products themselves.[32] When people are the product, they impact public perception of an organization as much as any tangible consumer goods. From a marketing management perspective, it is important to ensure that employees represent the company in alignment with broader messaging strategies.[33] This is easier to ensure when people feel as though they have been treated fairly and earn wages sufficient to support their daily lives.
Process refers to a "set of activities that results in delivery of the product benefits". A process could be a sequential order of tasks that an employee undertakes as a part of their job. It can represent sequential steps taken by a number of various employees while attempting to complete a task. Some people are responsible for managing multiple processes at once. For example, a restaurant manager should monitor the performance of employees, ensuring that processes are followed. They are also expected to supervise while customers are promptly greeted, seated, fed, and led out so that the next customer can begin this process.[33]
Physical evidence refers to the non-human elements of the service encounter, including equipment, furniture and facilities. It may also refer to the more abstract components of the environment in which the service encounter occurs including interior design, colour schemes and layout. Some aspects of physical evidence provide lasting proof that the service has occurred, such as souvenirs, mementos, invoices and other livery of artifacts.[32] According to Booms and Bitner's framework, the physical evidence is "the service delivered and any tangible goods that facilitate the performance and communication of the service".[33] Physical evidence is important to customers because the tangible goods are evidence that the seller has (or has not) provided what the customer was expecting.
Lauterborn's 4 Cs (1990)
[edit]Robert F. Lauterborn proposed a 4 Cs classification in 1990.[34] His classification is a more consumer-orientated version of the 4 Ps[35] that attempts to better fit the movement from mass marketing to niche marketing:[34]
4 Ps | 4 Cs | Definition |
---|---|---|
Consumer wants and needs
|
A company will only sell what the consumer specifically wants to buy. So, marketers should study consumer wants and needs in order to attract them one by one with something they want to purchase.[34][36] | |
Price is only a part of the total cost to satisfy a want or a need. The total cost will consider for example the cost of time in acquiring a good or a service, a cost of conscience by consuming that or even a cost of guilt "for not treating the kids".[34] It reflects the total cost of ownership. Many factors affect cost, including but not limited to the customer's cost to change or implement the new product or service and the customer's cost for not selecting a competitor's product or service.[37] | ||
In the era of Internet,[36] catalogues, credit cards and phones, consumers neither need to go anywhere to satisfy a want or a need nor are they limited to a few places to satisfy them. Marketers should know how the target market prefers to buy, how to be there and be ubiquitous, in order to guarantee convenience to buy.[34][38] With the rise of Internet and hybrid models of purchasing, Place is becoming less relevant. Convenience takes into account the ease of buying the product, finding the product, finding information about the product, and several other factors.[citation needed] | ||
While promotion is "manipulative" and from the seller, communication is "cooperative" and from the buyer[34] with the aim to create a dialogue with the potential customers based on their needs and lifestyles.[38] It represents a broader focus. Communications can include advertising, public relations, personal selling, viral advertising, and any form of communication between the organization and the consumer[citation needed]. |
Shimizu's 4 Cs: in the 7Cs Compass Model
[edit]Koichi Shimizu, a professor at Josai University proposed a 4 Cs classification of marketing mix in 1973. Then in 1979, it was expanded to the 7Cs Compass Model.[39] The 7Cs Compass Model is a framework of co-marketing, which is a marketing strategy where business entities collaborate closely in their marketing efforts. Also the co-creation marketing of a company and consumers are contained in the co-marketing. Co-marketing (or collaborative marketing) is a marketing practice where two companies cooperate with separate distribution channels, sometimes including profit sharing. It is frequently confused with co-promotion. Also commensal (symbiotic) marketing is a marketing on which both corporation and a corporation, a corporation and a consumer, country and a country, human and nature coexist.[40][41][42][43][44][45][46]
The core of 4Cs is the corporation itself (company and non profit organization) Other elements include competitors, organizations, and stakeholders within the corporation. The company has to think of compliance and accountability as important. The competition in the areas in which the company competes with other firms in its industry.
The 7Cs Compass Model extends the 4Cs classification (commodity, cost, communication, channel) with three additional classifications. The 4Cs model provides a demand/customer co-creation alternative to the well-known 4Ps supply side model (product, price, promotion, place) of marketing management.[47]
"P" category (narrow) | "C" category (broad) | "C" definition |
---|---|---|
(C1) Corporation | ||
Product | (C2) Commodity | (Latin derivation: commodus=both convenient and happy): Co-creation goods and services. The goods and services created by corporations and consumers together. Commodity here is different from commoditization. Product out is useless. It is no good to buy it because we made it. |
Price | (C3) Cost | (Latin derivation: constare= It makes sacrifices together): Producing cost, selling cost, purchasing cost and Costs for society and the global environment. |
Promotion | (C4) Communication | (Latin derivation: communis=sharing of meaning) : marketing communication: Better to use communication than promotion. Promotion has the meaning of pushing forward, but communication has the meaning of communicating with each other. Communications can include advertising, sales promotion, public relations, publicity, personal selling, corporate identity, internal communication, IMC, MIS, SNS,. |
Place | (C5) Channel | (Latin derivation: canal) : marketing channels. Flow of goods. |
(C6) Consumer |
The compass of consumers and circumstances (environment) are:
- (C6) Consumer – (Needle of compass to consumer)
- The factors related to consumers can be explained by the first character of four directions marked on the compass model. These can be remembered by the cardinal directions, hence the name compass model:
- N = Needs
- S = Security: The keywords not found in other models.
- E = Education: (consumer education)
- W = Wants
- (C7) Circumstances – (Needle of compass to circumstances )
- In addition to the consumer, there are various uncontrollable external environmental factors encircling the companies. Here it can also be explained by the first character of the four directions marked on the compass model:
These can also be remembered by the cardinal directions marked on a compass. The 7 Cs Compass Model is a framework in co-marketing (symbiotic marketing). It has been criticized for being little more than the 4 Ps with different points of emphasis. In particular, the 7 Cs inclusion of consumers in the marketing mix is criticized, since they are a target of marketing, while the other elements of the marketing mix are tactics. The 7 Cs also include numerous strategies for product development, distribution, and pricing, while assuming that consumers want two-way communications with companies.
Digital Marketing Mix
[edit]Digital marketing mix is fundamentally the same as Marketing Mix, which is an adaptation of Product, Price, Place and Promotion into digital marketing aspect.[48] Digital marketing can be commonly explained as 'Achieving marketing objectives through applying digital technologies'.[49]
Product
[edit]Thanks to the interaction and connection of the Internet, product has been redefined as "virtual product" in the digital marketing aspect, which is regarded as the combination of tangibility and intangibility. Through the form of digital, a product can be directly sent from manufacturers to customers.[50] For example, customers could buy music in the form of an MP3 rather than buy it in the form of a physical CD. As a result, when a company is making strategy for Internet marketing, it is necessary to understand how to vary their products in the online environment. Here are some indications of adapt the product element on the Internet.[49]
- Modifying the core product: In this case, it particularly refers to the products that can be remodeled into digital forms including movies, music, books and other publishing etc. Take Netflix as an example. The wide use of Internet has changed its form of products from selling and renting DVDs through retail stores into selling and renting video online.
- Providing digital products: In order to gain market shares in the Internet, companies need to widen its product range. For example, a psychological counseling could offer online consultation via video calls.
- Building the whole product: Apart from selling products online, Amazon.com also provides a paid subscription service called Amazon Prime, with which customers could enjoy free delivery and videos on Amazon.
- Conducting online research: The Internet offers a low-cost and convenient way of making marketing researches, which is helpful for companies to find out what products or services do customers prefer.
Price
[edit]Price concerns about the pricing policies or pricing models from a company. Due to the wide use of the Internet, many applications could be found in both consumer's and producer's perspective. From consumers' side, the Internet enables people to make a comparison to real-time prices before they make a consumption decision, which is time-saving and effort-saving for the consumers.[51] As for the suppliers, they can adjust prices in the real-time and provide higher degree of price transparency with customers. Besides, the Internet is more likely to ease the pressure on price because online-producers do not have to put budget on renting a physical store.[49] Hence, making new or adjusting pricing strategies is essential for the company that wants to enter the Internet market.
Place
[edit]With the application of the Internet, place is playing an increasingly important role in promoting consumption since the Internet and the physical channels become virtual.[48] The major contribution from the Internet to the business is not only making it possible to selling products online, but also enabling companies to build relationships with customers.[51] Furthermore, since the convenience of navigating from one site to another, place from the digital marketing perspective is always linked with promotion, which means retailers often use third-party websites such as Google search engine to guide customers to visit their websites.[49]
Promotion
[edit]Promotion refers to selecting the target markets, locating and integrating various communication tools in the marketing mix. Unlike the traditional marketing communication tools, tools in digital marketing aim at engaging audiences by putting advertisements and content on the social media, including display ads, pay-per-click (PPC), search engine optimisation (SEO), influencers etc.[49] When creating online marketing campaigns, Chaffey and Smith suggested that they can be separated into six groups:[52]
- Search marketing, including search engine optimisation(SEO), pay-per-click(PPC).
- Online PR, encouraging positive comments about one's products or services while reducing negative comments.
- Online partnerships, building relationships between third-party webs to promote products or services.
- Interactive advertising
- Opt-in e-mail advertising
- Social media marketing, starting and participating in customer to customer, customer to company interaction through social media.
The Internet Mix
[edit]The Internet Mix, was first proposed by Sidney (Sid) Peimer in a 2004 article in Bizcommunity, where he identified the Internet Mix as consisting of three elements:[53]
- Sell (trade)
- Tell (inform)
- Dwell (entertain)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ McCarthy, Jerome E. (1964). Basic Marketing. A Managerial Approach. Homewood, IL: Irwin.
- ^ a b Kotler, P., Marketing Management, (Millennium Edition), Custom Edition for University of Phoenix, Prentice Hall, 2001, p. 9.
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- ^ Shimizu, Koichi (2022)"7Cs Compass Model of Co-marketing in the Sustainable era", (Japanese), Gogensha Book Company in Tokyo. (ISBN 978-4-86434-156-1)
- ^ Solis, Brian (2011) Engage!: The Complete Guide for Brands and Businesses to Build, Cultivate, and Measure Success in the New Web, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 201–202.
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- ^ McCarthy, Jerome E. (1975) Basic Marketing: A Managerial Approach, fifth edition, Richard D. Irwin, Inc., p. 37.
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- ^ a b c d e Chaffey, Dave; Ellis-Chadwick, Fiona (2012). Digital marketing: strategy, implementation of and practice (5th ed.). Harlow: Pearson Education.
- ^ Pastore, A; Vernuccio, M (2004). Marketing, Innovazione e Tecnologie Digitali. Una lettura in ottica sistemica. Padua(IT): Cedam.
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- ^ Peimer, Sidney (5 Feb 2004). "Rules of the road when taking your business for a spin on the infobahn". www.bizcommunity.com. Archived from the original on 20 June 2023. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
Further reading
[edit]- Everyday Finance: Economics, Personal Money Management, and Entrepreneurship. Cengage Learning (published 2008). January 1, 2008. ISBN 9781414429298. Archived from the original on August 28, 2017.
- John A. Quelch; Katherine E. Jocz (Winter 2008). "Milestones in Marketing" (PDF). Business History Review. 82 (4). The President and Fellows of Harvard College: 827–838. doi:10.1017/S0007680500063236. S2CID 154290687.
- John A. Quelch; Katherine E. Jocz (2012). All Business is Local: Why Place Matters More than Ever in a Global, Virtual World. Penguin. p. 4.
- Four P's, Four C's And The Consumer Revolution
External links
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