A | B |
Marketing | The process of planning, pricing, promoting, selling, and distributing ideas, goods, or services to create exchanges that satisfy customers. |
Goods | Tangible items that have monetary value and satisfy your needs and wants. |
Services | Intangible items that have monetary value and satisfy your needs and wants. |
Marketing Concept | The idea that a business should strive to satisfy customers' needs and wants while generating a profit for the firm. |
Distribution | The process of deciding how to get goods in customers' hands. |
Financing | Getting the money that is necessary to pay for setting up and running a business. |
Marketing Information Management | Getting information about customers, trends, and competing products. |
Pricing | Decisions on how much to charge for goods and services in order to make a profit. |
Product/ Service Management | Obtaining, developing, maintaining, and improving a product or a product mix in response to market opportunities |
Promotion | The effort to inform, persuade, or remind potential customers about a business's products or services. |
Selling | Providing customers with the goods and services they want. |
Customer Relationship Management | An aspect of marketing that combines customer information with customer service and marketing communications. |
Utility | The adds value to a product. |
Form Utility | Changing raw materials or putting parts together to make them more useful. |
Place Utility | Having a product where customers can buy it. |
Time Utility | Having a product available at a certain time of year or a convenient time of day. |
Possession Utility | The exchange of a product for money. |
Information Utility | Providing information to consumers. |
Market | All people who share similar needs and wants and who have the ability to purchase a given product. |
Consumer Market | Consumers who purchase goods and services for personal use. |
Industrial Market | All businesses that buy products for use in their operations. (B2B) |
Market Share | Percentage of the total sales volume generated by all companies that compete in a given market. |
Target Market | The group that is identified for a specific marketing program. |
Customer Profile | Lists information about the target market, such as age, income level;, ethnic background, etc. |
Marketing Mix | Four basic marketing strategies called the four Ps: product, place, price, and promotion |
Product | Choosing what product to make and sale, Including design and packaging. |
Place | The means of getting the product into the consumer's hands. |
Price | Strategies include determining list price as well as discounts and promotional pricing. |
Promotion | Strategies deal with communicating about the product. |