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Holistic Marketing

Contents :
1. Introduction :
a. Definition
i. What is Marketed
ii. Marketing Concepts
iii. Trends in Marketing Practices
2. Integrated Marketing
3. Internal Marketing
4. Relationship Marketing
5. Social Responsibility Marketing
6. Holistic Marketing Mix
7. Future of Marketing
8. Conclusion
Introduction
Definition
The shortest definition of Marketing Management is “Meeting Needs Profitably”.
1. Whose Needs ? - The needs of the people, or the customers or consumers,
2. Who is trying to meet ? - The Producer, Marketer or the Company,
3. What is the Objective ? - With profit to the company, & satisfaction to the customers.
What is Marketed
Marketing people are involved in marketing the following 10 types of entities –
1. Goods – Physical products, consumer products, consumer durables
2. Services – Transport, repair & maintenance, legal, financial, consultancy, hotel,
specialised skills
3. Events – Trade shows, sports, world cups, vintage car rally, fashion shows, artistic
performance
4. Experiences – Theatres, opera, Disney-world, trekking, ocean cruise, cinema, music
concerts
5. Persons – Celebrity marketing, film stars, politicians, artists, performers, advertisers
6. Places – Cities, states, countries for tourism, leisure & place for industrialisation &
business
7. Properties – Ownership of tangible properties like real estate, house, apartment, farm
house, precious metals and intangible properties like financial portfolio of various securities
8. Organisations – Building up identity, image, reputation, and value in the minds of
consumers
9. Information – It can be produced, packaged & marketed as a product – text books,
encyclopaedias, magazines & journals on literature, science, technology, medicine info,
available thru internet
10. Ideas – The concept regarding a utility, business opportunity, advertising / marketing
ideas, scientific & technical, social, financial, psychological etc.
MARKETING CONCEPTS
The Marketing concepts under which organisations have conducted marketing activities
include :
1. Exchange Concept – Exchange of goods and services between two agencies called buyer
and seller, or exchange of goods and services for money or barter system.
2. Production Concept – Widely available and inexpensive, high production efficiency
3. Product Concept – Quality, performance, utility, innovative features etc.
4. Selling Concept – Aggressive selling and promotion effort. “The purpose of marketing is
to sell more stuff to more people more often for more money in order to make more profit”.
5. Marketing Concept – “Products/Production” oriented concept ( make & sell ) has
changed to “Consumer” oriented concept ( sense & respond ). Instead of “hunting” marketing
is gardening”. The job is not to find the right customer for the products, but the right
products for the customers. The perceptive contrast between the selling and marketing
concepts – selling focuses on the needs of the seller, marketing on the needs of the buyer.
6. Holistic Marketing Concept – Marketers in the current age are increasingly recognising
the need to have a more complete & cohesive approach that goes beyond traditional
application of marketing concepts. This concept is based on the development, design and
implementation of marketing programs, processes and activities that recognise their breadth
and inter-dependencies. Holistic Marketing recognises that “everything matters” with
marketing - and that a broad integrated perspective is often necessary. The important
components are :
a. Integrated Marketing,
b. Internal Marketing,
c. Relationship Marketing,
d. Social Responsibility Marketing.
We shall discus each one of these in the following.
Trends in Marketing Practices
The marketplace is not the same as it used to be. It is rapidly changing as a result of major,
sometimes interlinking societal forces that have created new behaviours, new opportunities &
new challenges, such as :
1. Globalisation,
2. Deregulation, Privatisation,
3. Technological Advances, The Internet Revolution,
4. Customer Empowerment, Customisation,
5. Market Fragmentation, Hightened Competition,
6. Retail Transformation, etc.
In response to this rapidly changing environments companies have restructured their
business & marketing practices in some of the following ways :
1. Reengineering : Appointing teams to manage customer-value-building processes &
break down walls between departments.
2. Outsourcing : Greater willingness to buy more goods & services from outside domestic
or foreign vendors.
3. Benchmarking : Studying “best practice companies” to improve performance.
4. Supplier Partnering : Increased partnering with fewer but better value-adding suppliers.
5. Customer Partnering : Working more closely with customers to add value to their
operation.
6. Merging : Acquiring or merging with firms in the same or complementary industries to
gain economy of scale & scope.
7. Globalising : Increased effort to “Think Global & Act Local”.
8. Flattening : Reducing the number of organisational levels to get closer to the customers.
9. Focusing : Determining the most profitable business & customers & focusing on them.
10. Accelerating :Designing the organisation & setting up processes to respond more quickly
to changes in the environment.
11. Empowering : Encouraging & empowering personnel to produce more ideas & take more
initiative.
Accordingly the role of marketing organisation is also changing. Traditionally, the marketers
have played the role of middlemen between the customers & the various functional areas of
the organisation. In a networked enterprise, every functional area can interact directly with
customers. Thus marketing needs to integrate all the customer-facing processes so that
customers a single face (Integrated Marketing) & hear a single voice (Integrated Marketing
Communications) when they interact with the company.
Integrated Marketing
One of the major tasks of marketers is to “integrate” all the marketing activities &
programmes like “creating”, “communicating” & “delivering” value to the customers. The
Famous Marketing Mix – the Four Ps, as devised by McCarthy constitute the traditional
marketing activities in four broad groups as given below in details :
1. Products – Design, Features, Brand Name, Models, Style, Appearance, Quality,
Warranty, Package (design, type, material, size, appearance & labelling), Service ( pre-sale,
after sale, service standards, service charges), Returns.
2. Price – Pricing Policies, List Price, Margins, Discounts, Rebates, Terms of Delivery,
Payment Terms, Credit Terms, Instalment Purchase Facility, Resale Price, Maintenance
prices.
3. Place – Channels of Distribution ( channel design, types of intermediaries, location of
outlets, channel remuneration, dealer-principle relation, etc.), Physical Distribution
(transportation, warehousing, inventory levels, order processing, etc.)
4. Promotion – Personal Selling, Selling Expertise, Size of Sales Force, Quality of Sales
Force, and Marketing Communications - Advertising (media-mix, media vehicles, and
programmes), sales promotions, publicity & public relations, direct & interactive marketing).
Now, these traditional concepts of Four Ps represent the sellers’ view of the marketing tools
available to influence buyers. In holistic marketing one has to see also the buyers’ point of
view, where each of these tools will deliver the customers’ benefit or value. Robert Lauterborn
suggested the buyers’ Four Cs as follows :
Product = Customer Solution, Price = Customer Cost,
Place = Convenience, Promotion = Communication
Thus the successful companies are those who can meet (1) customer needs (2) economically,
(3) conveniently & (4) with effective communication. Two broad concepts of integrated
marketing are as follows :
1. Several different marketing activities are used to create, communicate & deliver
customer value,
2. All marketing activities coordinated to maximise their joint efforts.
Or in other words, the design & implementation of one activity is done with all other activities
in mind. The business of running a successful organisation is to integrate the system for
management of demand, resources & network. Integrated marketing communication is a case
in point.
Internal Marketing
Internal marketing ensures that everyone in the organisation adopts appropriate marketing
principles and the top management should see it happen. This is the management task of
hiring, training & motivating the employees to serve the customers well. Smart & successful
companies understand that there is as much activity outside the company as inside. For it
makes no sense to promise excellent services before the company’s service staff is ready to
provide. Internal marketing must happen in two levels as follows :
1. At the first level, all the marketing functions like, sales force, market research, customer
service, product management, advertising, etc. must go together, i.e., all the personnel
should work in tandem or unison for common goal.
2. At the second level, “marketing” must be embraced by other departments for a common
goal of the organisation. All the relevant functional departments like Finance, HR,
Operations, Logistics, Systems, etc. must coordinate each other to have a marketing
orientation. Only trying to meet individual department’s target & norms and not supporting
the marketing objectives will take the company nowhere. One has to bear in mind that it’s
marketing that earns revenue.
Internal marketing requires that everyone in the organisation buy into the concepts & goals
of marketing, and engage themselves in selecting, creating, communicating & delivering
customer value. Only when all the employees realise that their jobs are to create, serve &
satisfy the customers does the company become an effective marketer.
Relationship Marketing
The development of deep, enduring relationships with all the people or firms involved directly
or indirectly in the firm’s marketing activities is appearing as a key goal; of marketing. This is
the concept of Relationship marketing – it aims at building mutually satisfying long-term
relationships with key parties like customers, financiers, suppliers, distributors & of course
the stakeholders, in order to earn & retain their business. It also builds strong economic,
technical & social binding amongst the parties. There are four key constituents of marketing
are :
1. Customers
2. Employees
3. Marketing Partners : Channels, Suppliers, Distributors, Dealers, Retailers, Agencies,
etc.
4. Financial Community : Shareholders, Stakeholders, Financiers, Investors, Analysts, etc.
5. Another key constituent is the Society : well-wishers, scientists, professors,
environmentalists.
The ultimate goal of relationship marketing is the building of a unique company asset called
a marketing network, which consists of the company & its supporting stakeholders as listed
above with whom it has built manual profit relationships. Interestingly, today, the
competition is not between companies as such, but between the carefully built marketing
networks – whoever has a better network wins. So the principle is simple – build an effective
network, & the profits will follow. But the practice is not so. The development & building of a
strong relationship requires a deep understanding of the capabilities & resources of different
groups as well as their needs, goals & desires. Relationship marketing involves the right kind
of relationships with right constituent groups, like Customer Relationship Management
(CRM) with customers, Partner Relationship Management (PRM) with other partners. Since
these being separate subjects themselves, are beyond the scope of this article.
Social Responsibility Marketing
Holistic marketing incorporates social responsibility marketing. This involves broader
concerns of the society at large, like social, legal, ethical & environmental in the context of
marketing activities. Companies operate in a society, and so do their customers and hence
they should never forget its contribution to the company. It requires that marketers carefully
consider the role they are playing in terms of social welfare. Companies need to evaluate
whether they are truly practicing ethical & socially responsible marketing. Several factors are
driving the companies to practice higher level of corporate social responsibility, such as :
1. Rising customer expectations,
2. Changing employees expectations,
3. Govt. Legislation & pressure,
4. Investor interest in social criteria,
5. Changing business procurement criteria.
Business success and continually satisfying the customers & other stakeholders are closely
linked to adoption & implementation of high standard of business & marketing conduct. The
most admired companies in the world adhere to a code of serving people’s interests, not only
there own. The following are the most important factors of socially responsible marketing :
1. Legal Behaviour : Companies operate within the law of the land, and they must impart
the employees with adequate knowledge of law & how to practice them. We have Govt. laws,
Society laws, and the organisations must ensure the employees know & observe relevant law,
and restrain themselves from practicing illegal, antisocial, corruptive, anticompetitive
practices.
2. Ethical Behaviour : Companies must evolve & adopt a properly written code of conduct
based on the social & cultural ethics, decency, tradition & legal practices, and ensure that all
concerned are responsible in observing these guidelines. Today customers are well aware of
the social, cultural, ecological & environmental affairs in their day-to-day lives.
3. Social Responsibility Behaviour : As said above, the customers also want to know what
the firm’s contribution to the society is, or what the company’s social conscience is while
dealing with customers & the stakeholders.
4. Cause Related Marketing : Contribution to the society can be enormous, and hence
companies choose a particular area of society for a particular cause. The examples are :
a. Health awareness - Heart Diseases, AIDS, Cancer, Diabetic, Obesity, Old age, etc.
b. Running children’s home, old age home, rehabilitation centre, women’s home, etc.
c. Infrastructure - rural housing, hospitals, preserving archaeological places, maintaining
roads & parks, homes for endangered species;
d. Educational scholarship for the poor & needy, higher education facility, Institutes;
e. Treatment for destitute, food for the starving;
f. Information legal & technical help during the hour of need;
g. Volunteerism & Philanthropy.
The list can be endless. Reputed companies even have their own charitable trusts, and also
have special cause related marketing plans. Cause-related marketing is the concept where
the specific cause is directly or indirectly linked to the particular revenue transaction. The
company has at least one non-economic social objective and uses the revenue generated from
the designated sales. This concept is also known as Corporate Societal Marketing (CSM). The
CSM can include other activities like traditional & strategic philanthropy & volunteerism.
5. Social Marketing : Some marketing is conducted to directly address a social problem or
cause. Social marketing is done mainly by NGOs, Non-Profit or Govt. organisations to further
a cause, such as “No smoking”, “Say NO to Drugs”, etc.
The Holistic Marketing Matrix
HOLISTIC MARKETING
INTEGRATED INTERNAL RELATIOSHIP SOCIAL RESPONSIBITITY
MARKETING MARKETING MARKETING MARKETING
Products & Services Top Management Customers Community
Communications Marketing Department Partners Legal, Ethics
Channels Other Department Channels Environment

The Future of Marketing


The top management is slowly recognising that the marketing in the older method is getting
wasteful and is demanding more accountability. There are a number of imperatives (must do)
to achieve marketing excellence, as presented below : Marketers must -
1. be “Holistic” and not in bits & parts, i.e., not sectional or departmental.
2. achieve larger influence in the company if they are to be the main architect of business
strategies.
3. continuously create new ideas if the company is to prosper in a hyper-competitive
economy.
4. strive for customer insight & treat customers differently, but appropriately.
5. build their brands thru performance, more than thru promotion.
6. go electronic & win thru building superior information & communication systems.
In these ways, modern marketing will continue to evolve & confront new challenges &
opportunities. As a result, the coming years will see the demise of - - - & the rise of :

No The Demise of The Rise of


1 The marketing department Holistic marketing
2 Free-spending marketing ROI (return on investment) marketing
3 Marketing intuition Marketing science
4 Manual marketing Automated marketing

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