Theme 1

    Cards (46)

    • Market
      Any place where buyers and sellers can meet e.g. the Amazon website, or a shopping mall
    • Needs
      Essential e.g. shelter or food
    • Wants
      Desires which are non essential, even if consumers consider them to be essential e.g Nike trainers
    • Marketing
      The aim is to help identify, anticipate and satisfy consumer needs and wants in a way that makes the business money (profit)
    • Market research
      The process of systematically gathering data from consumers which can be used to influence the business decisions
    • Customer needs to understand
      • Price
      • Quality
      • Choice
      • Convenience
    • Price
      The amount of money a customer is willing to pay for a product/service
    • Quality
      The standard of excellence that a customer expects from a product/service
    • Choice
      Customers often have a wide range of preferences and want to be able to choose from a variety of products or services
    • Convenience
      Customers value convenience because they want products/services that are easy to access and use
    • Benefits of understanding customers
      • Leads to greater sales
      • Ensures business survival
    • Market research
      The objective collection, compilation and analysis of information about a market
    • Purpose of market research
      • Reduces risk when launching new products or entering new markets
      • Identifies and understands the future needs and wants of customers
      • Identifies potential gaps (market niche's) in the market which can be exploited to increase the sales volume
      • Identifies competitors and gauges their potential strengths and weaknesses
    • Types of market research
      • Primary research
      • Secondary research
    • Primary research
      The process of gathering information directly from consumers in the target market using field research methods such as surveys, interviews etc
    • Secondary research
      The collection, compilation and analysis of data which already exists
    • Primary research methods

      • Surveys
      • Observation
      • Interviews
      • Test marketing
      • Focus groups
    • Quantitative data
      Based on numbers and could include financial reports, market data or summaries of data gained from primary research
    • Qualitative data

      Gathers descriptions or explanations based on conversations, discussions, impressions, and emotional feelings and is usually gathered through primary research
    • Limitations of qualitative data

      • Small and unrepresentative sample size
      • Bias in guiding respondents
      • Influence of others in focus groups
      • Expensive to hire specialist agencies
    • Limitations of quantitative data
      • Data may be out-of-date or irrelevant
      • Expensive to purchase market-specific secondary data
      • Incorrect conclusions drawn from data analysis
    • Social media for market research
      Provides businesses with incredible market research opportunities - speed, low cost, interactive relationship with customers, customer feedback
    • Market segmentation
      The process in which a single market is divided into sub markets or 'segments' where each segment represents a slightly different set of consumer characteristics
    • Interactive relationship with customers
      Helps to strengthen brand loyalty
    • Customers
      • Able to feedback quickly on products
      • Express innovative ideas about how they want the products to be changed
    • Customer feedback
      May help the firm to develop extension strategies in their product life cycle
    • Market segmentation
      The process in which a single market is divided into sub markets or 'segments'
    • Market segments
      • Represent a slightly different set of consumer characteristics
      • Firms often segment markets according to factors such as geographical location, demographics, behavior and lifestyle, age or gender
    • Crisp market segments
      • Dinner party snacks (Walkers Sensations, Pringles, Burts)
      • Health conscious crisps (Walkers lite, Walkers baked, Revita lite)
      • Lunch box value snacks (multipacks, hoola hoops etc)
    • Advantages of market segmentation
      • Recognises that consumers are not all identical - consumer groups do not all share the same tastes and preferences
      • Products and marketing activities can be altered to meet different needs of different groups of consumers and targeted more precisely
      • Less expensive and wasteful than marketing products at wide market segments
      • May increase loyalty if the consumer feels that their needs are being met which can lead to repeat purchases
    • Disadvantages of market segmentation
      • Not everyone within a segment will behave in the same way
      • May be difficult to identify a segment and consumers can belong to multiple segments at the same time
      • Segmentation requires more detailed market research which can prove costly (but beneficial) to the business
      • A segment may be identified but it may be too small and unprofitable to cater for
    • Market mapping
      A tool for identifying the position of a product within a market
    • Market map
      • A two-dimensional diagram that shows the attributes or characteristics of a product in comparison to rivals' products
      • Only two criteria can be chosen e.g. price (high/low) and quality (high/low), age (young/old) and income(high/low) etc
    • Saturated market
      No spaces left on the market map, indicating the market is saturated and there are no opportunities to exploit a market niche
    • Market niche
      The existence of a space on the market map may indicate the existence of a market niche
    • Usefulness of market mapping
      • Market gaps can be identified which may enable a business to come up with ideas for new products
      • Comparisons can be made between a business's products and those of its rivals - where are the business' products positioned about its rivals?
      • Market maps are simple to construct and offer a visual illustration of a products position in the market
    • Limitations of market mapping
      • A gap in the market may exist because it is not profitable to fill
      • Mapping a market may require primary research which can be expensive
      • Only two criteria can be chosen which may prove too simplistic
      • Markets are often dynamic and a market map only provides insight at a specific point in time
    • Competition
      Occurs when at least two businesses are providing goods/services to the same target market
    • Direct competition
      Businesses are targeting customers with exactly the same product as a competitor
    • Indirect competition

      Firms sell different products but compete with each other for the customers disposable income