Marketing.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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Where advertising reaches a mass audience, personal or direct selling focuses on one customer at a time.
That kind of individual attention makes direct sellingexpensive, but it also makes it effective.
As the costs of personal selling have risen, the utilization of salespeople has changed.
Simple transactions are completed byclerks.
Salespeople are now used primarily where the products are complex and require detailed explanation, customized application, or careful negotiation over priceand payment plan.
But whether the sale involves an automobile or a customized computer network, personal selling involves much more than convincing the customerof the product’s benefits.
The salesperson helps the customer identify problems, works out a variety of solutions, assists the buyer in making decisions, and providesarrangements for long-term service.
Persuasion is only part of the job.
A much more important part is problem solving.
Because the selling process has become much more complicated, most companies now provide extensive training for the sales force.
The average length of the initialtraining program is four months.
A training program for new members of the sales force teaches them about such matters as company history, selling and presentationtechniques, listening skills, the manufacture and use of the company’s products, and the characteristics of both the industry and its customers.
Moreover, because thesales force plays such a critical role in the marketing process, most companies provide on-going training for all members of the sales force to help them deepen theirproduct knowledge and improve their interpersonal and negotiating skills.
With the increasing complexity of business problems and products, effective sales solutions often require more knowledge than any one person can master.
As a resultmany companies now use sales teams to service their largest and most complicated accounts.
Such teams might include personnel from sales, marketing,manufacturing, finance, and technical support.
VII SALES PROMOTION
The purpose of sales promotion is to supplement and coordinate advertising and personal selling; this has become increasingly important in marketing.
While advertisinghelps build brand image and long-term value, sales promotion builds sales volume.
Sales promotions are designed to persuade consumers to purchase immediately byproviding special incentives such as cash rebates, prizes, extra product, or gifts.
Promotions are an effective way to spur sales, but because they involve discountcoupons and contests with valuable prizes, they are also expensive and so reduce profits.
VIII RELATIONSHIP BUILDING
In the past, most advertising and promotional efforts were developed to acquire new customers.
But today, more and more advertising and promotional efforts aredesigned to retain current customers and to increase the amount of money they spend with the company.
Consumers see so much advertising that they have learnedto ignore much of it.
As a result, it has become more difficult to attract new customers.
Servicing existing customers, however, is easier and less expensive.
In fact, it isestimated that acquiring a new customer costs five to eight times as much as keeping an existing one.
To retain current customers, some companies develop loyalty programs such as the frequent flyer programs used by many airlines.
A marketer may also seek to retaincustomers by learning a customer’s individual interests and then tailoring services to meet them.
Amazon.com, for example, keeps a database of the types of bookscustomers have ordered in the past and then recommends new books to them based on their past selections.
Such programs help companies retain customers not onlyby providing a useful service, but also by making customers feel appreciated.
This is known as relationship building.
IX DISTRIBUTING THE PRODUCT
Some products are marketed most effectively by direct sale from manufacturer to consumer.
Among these are durable equipment such as computers, office equipment,industrial machinery and supplies, and consumer specialties such as vacuum cleaners and life insurance.
The direct marketing of products such as cosmetics andhousehold needs is very important.
Formerly common “door to door products,” these are now usually sold by the more sophisticated “house party” technique.
Many types of products and services now use direct mail catalogs or have a presence on the World Wide Web.
Because many people are extremely busy, they may findit simpler to shop in their leisure hours at home by using catalogs or visiting Web sites.
Comparison shopping is also made easier, because both catalogs and e-commerce sites generally contain extensive product information.
For retailers, catalogs and the Web make it possible to do business far beyond their usual trading areaand with a minimum of overhead.
More than 95 percent of the leading 1,000 companies in the United States sell products over the Internet.
Television is a potent tool in direct marketing because it facilitates the demonstration of products in use.
Direct sale of all kinds of goods to the public via home-shoppingclubs broadcasting on cable television channels is gaining in popularity.
Some companies also use telephone marketing, called telemarketing, a technique used in sellingto businesses as well as to consumers.
Most consumer products, however, move from the manufacturer through agents to wholesalers and then to retailers, ultimatelyreaching the consumer.
Determining how products should move through wholesale and retail organizations is another major marketing decision.
Wholesalers distribute goods in large quantities, usually to retailers, for resale.
Some retail businesses have grown so large, however, that they have found it moreprofitable to bypass the wholesaler and deal directly with the manufacturers or their agents.
Wholesalers first responded to this trend by changing their operations tomove goods more quickly to large retailers and at lower prices.
Small retailers fought back through cooperative wholesaling, the voluntary banding together ofindependent retailers to market a product.
The result has been a trend toward a much closer, interlocking relationship between wholesaler and independent retailer.
Retailing has undergone even more changes than wholesaling.
Intensive preselling by manufacturers and the development of minimum-service operations, such as self-service in department stores, have drastically changed the retailer’s way of doing business.
Supermarkets and discount stores have become commonplace not only forgroceries but for products as diversified as medicines and gardening equipment.
More recently, warehouse retailing has become a major means of retailing higher-priced consumer goods such as furniture, appliances, and electronic equipment.
The emphasis is on generating store traffic, speeding up the transaction, and rapidlyexpanding the sales volume.
Chain stores—groups of stores with one owner—and cooperative groups have also proliferated.
Special types of retailing, such as vendingmachines and convenience stores, have also developed to fill multiple needs.
See Retailing.
Transporting and warehousing merchandise are also technically within the scope of marketing.
Products are often moved several times as they go from producer toconsumer.
Products are carried by rail, truck, ship, airplane, and pipeline.
Efficient traffic management determines the best method and timetable of shipment for anyparticular product.
X SERVICES AND MARKETING
Marketing efforts once focused primarily on the selling of manufactured products such as cars and aspirin.
But today the service industries have grown more importantto the economy than the manufacturing sector.
Services, unlike products, are intangible and involve a deed, a performance, or an effort that cannot be physicallypossessed.
Currently, more people are employed in the provision of services than in the manufacture of products, and this area shows every indication of expandingeven further.
In fact, more than eight in ten U.S.
workers labor in such service areas as transportation, retail, health care, entertainment, and education.
In the UnitedStates alone, service industries now account for more than 70 percent of the gross national product (GNP, the total of all goods and services produced by a country) and are expected to provide 90 percent of all new jobs by 2012..
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