General concepts Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four P’s?

A

Product
Place
Promotion
Price

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2
Q

What is customer analysis analogous to?

A

Marketing research

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3
Q

What are the basic assumptions of a market with demand-side focus?

A

Firms have a set of resources available for providing offers that can satisfy customer demand
The better it satisfies customer demand, the more sales it will generate

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4
Q

What is the consequence of a demand-side focused market?

A

For a firm to excel, it needs to know who the customers are and what they want

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5
Q

What is the ‘marketing concept’?

A

That the customer who determines what a business is. What the customer thinks s/he is buying, and what s/he considers value is decisive.

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6
Q

What are the five questions that guide (customer) market analysis?

A
What does the market buy?
Why does it buy?
Who buys?
How do they buy? Where? When?
How much does the market buy?
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7
Q

What are the three stages of a good?

A

Production
Exchange
Use/Consumption

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8
Q

What is benefit in use?

A

The actual value derived from a product or service in the context in which it is being used

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9
Q

Who can be seen as involved in the purchasing process?

A
An organization
Initiator
Influencer
Decider
Buyer
User
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10
Q

What are the five steps in the decision-making process?

A
Need/problem recognition
Information search
Evaluation of alternatives
Purchase decision
Post-purchase evaluation
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11
Q

How can you define market potential?

A

The total market reachable by tour product/service

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12
Q

What are the five sources of untapped demand?

A
Awareness
Availability
Ability to use
Benefit deficiency
Affordability
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13
Q

What is industry analysis?

A

Identifying and analyzing networks and other factors influencing the dynamic of a company’s position in the market

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14
Q

Name Porter’s five forces

A
Threat of new entry
Supplier bargaining power
Customer bargaining power
Substitutes
Competition (Industry rivalry)
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15
Q

Which factors contribute to competition and rivalry within an industry?

A
Low concentration/equal players
Slow growth
High fixed costs
Lack of differentiation
Capacity growth in large increments
Homogeneous competitors
High strategic stakes
Barriers to exit
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16
Q

Which factors defer new entry?

A
All barriers to entry
Economies of scale
Product differentiation
Capital requirements
Switching costs
Access to distribution channels
Cost disadvantages independent of scale
Government policy
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17
Q

How can one deal with potential substitutes?

A

Put a ceiling on prices
Price-performance tradeoffs
Focus on production function

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18
Q

What are some danger signals to watch out for when looking at potential substitutes?

A

Substitutes with improving price/performance ratio

Substitutes in high-profit industries

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19
Q

When do suppliers possess power?

A

If their industry is more concentrated than yours
The products are unique, differentiated, or involve switching costs
There are no real substitutes
There is threat of forward integration
You are an unimportant customer

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20
Q

When does the buyer possess power?

A

The industry is concentrated or purchases large volumes
The products are standardized or undifferentiated
The products represent a significant share of costs
Risk of backward integration
Your product is unimportant
Your product does not save money for the buyer

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21
Q

What is an exchange relationship?

A

A pattern of interactions and the mutual shaping of behavior over time between a seller and a buyer

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22
Q

What are the main reasons that firms have relationships?

A
Increased productivity
Reduced uncertainty
Resource access
Information
Innovation
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23
Q

How can one easily define efficiency for a company?

A

Producing things the right way

By asking: how much product X can one produce from a given amount of inputs?

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24
Q

How can one easily define effectiveness of a company?

A

Producing the right things

By asking: how can we produce value for our customers?

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25
Q

Define positive connectedness

A

When exchange in one relation leads to exchange in others

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26
Q

Define negative connectedness

A

When exchange in one relation reduces exchange in others

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27
Q

What is the ARA model?

A

A network model consisting of
Actors control and depend on resources
Resources are linked together by activities
Activities are performed through the knowledge and skills of actors

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28
Q

What is the difference between informal and formal bonds?

A
Informal bonds are characterized by intangible exchanges.
Trust
Commitment
Knowledge
Experience
Personal relations
Formal bonds are characterized by their tangible nature, often in the form of written documents
Contracts
Warranties
Ownership
Certifications
Joint ventures
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29
Q

What characterizes resources?

A

Includes objects, artifacts, money, people
Controlled by actors
Needed to perform and used in activities
Heterogeneous. Value and properties depend on the context in which they are used
Availability and control over a resource can vary

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30
Q

What characterizes activities?

A
They are performed by actors
They transform resources
They conduct exchanges (transfer resources)
Linked in chains or cycles
Can be routinized
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31
Q

Define resource ties

A

What brings resources together to activate them and create value

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32
Q

What are some examples of resource ties?

A
Product interfaces
Synergies
Interferences
Standards
Adaptations
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33
Q

Name the three types of network connections

A

Actor bonds
Resource ties
Activity links

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34
Q

What do actors typically do?

A

Interact
Establish exchange relationships
Control resources
Perform activities

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35
Q

What is the role of resources?

A

Used and transformed to something of use through activities

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36
Q

What do activities accomplish?

A

Transform or transfer resources

37
Q

Name the three ways of analyzing markets

A
Industry analysis (Porter's five)
Customer analysis (five marketing research q's)
Network analysis
38
Q

Define market segment

A

A market segment consists of a group of customers who share similar sets of needs and wants

39
Q

What is STP?

A

Segmentation -> Targeting -> Positioning

40
Q

Name four common segmentation bases

A

Geographic
Demographic
Psychographic
Behavioral

41
Q

Name the five criteria for successful segmentation

A
Measurable
Substantial
Accessible
Differentiable
Actionable
42
Q

What differs business segmenting from consumer segmenting?

A

A business consists of a group of people with a goal.
Within the group there is a designated group to make decisions on purchases for the group as a whole.
Targeting the purchasing unit is probably more effective than the organization as a whole

43
Q

What is important to consider when segmenting businesses?

A
Firm demographics
Business culture
Usage behavior
Characteristics of the purchasing unit
Characteristics of the individual decision maker
44
Q

What are the underlying assumptions of the STP model?

A

That a market exists
That identifying a market is possible
That the market is reachable

45
Q

What is a possible outcome of releasing a new product?

A

Uses of the product differ greatly from the intended use

46
Q

Define market construction

A

Defining a new market based on a new product or the new use of an existing product that creates a previously non-existent segment of specific users

47
Q

Complete the sentence:

Stable markets allow for …

A

segmentation using descriptive methods

48
Q

Complete the sentence:

Changing or forming markets require …

A

more of constructive practices

49
Q

Name three possible constructive efforts

A

Market structure
Market behavior
Market meanings

50
Q

Define market structure

A

The number and construction of market participants

51
Q

Define market behavior

A

Modes of exchange and/or use

52
Q

Define market meaning

A

Understanding of products and their uses

53
Q

What is effectual logic?

A

The entrepreneurial mindset of shaping the world rather than predicting it. ‘What effect will this have?’

54
Q

Describe effectual logic

A

Open ended view of the future
Means oriented in terms of taking action
Affordable loss is considered when starting a venture, not expected return
Outsiders are useful partners
The unexpected is a resource to be leveraged

55
Q

Define predictive logic

A

Future is a continuation of the past
Goal oriented in terms of taking action
Expected return considered when evaluating risk
Outsiders are competitors
The unexpected is something to be avoided

56
Q

What are the four entrepreneurial principles

A

The patchwork quilt principle
The affordable loss principle
The bird-in-hand principle
The lemonade principle

57
Q

Explain the patchwork quilt principle

A

Create something new with existing means

58
Q

Describe the affordable loss principle

A

Committing in advance to what one is willing to lose

59
Q

Describe the bird-in-hand principle

A

Negotiate with those who commit, adjust goals to accommodate them

60
Q

Describe the lemonade principle

A

Appropriate contingency and leverage surprise

61
Q

What is the effect of effectual logic?

A

Uncertainty is reduced through controlling the future

62
Q

Which elements affect the value of an offering?

A

Features

Price

63
Q

What defines the relative value of an offering?

A

Other available offerings
Your resources (and skills)
Preferences
Situation at hand

64
Q

Complete the sentence:

Value has no …

A

objective existence, it can only be estimated

65
Q

What is economic value?

A

The monetary worth of a product or service in nominal terms

66
Q

What is the difference between exchange value and value in use?

A

Exchange relationships are convenient for estimating economic value, since they involve assigning monetary values of offerings. However, the relation may only vaguely reflect the value a customer derives from the offering. Its value in use depends on whom, how, and in what context the product/service is being utilized

67
Q

Define the two basic value equations

A

Customer value = customer benefits - cost of purchase

Customer perceived value = customer perceived benefits - perceived sacrifice

68
Q

Name the six aspects of the lifecycle costs of a purchase

A
Price paid
Acquisition costs
Usage costs
Maintenance costs
Ownership costs
Disposal costs
69
Q

Which four things can customer benefits derive from?

A

Features
Perceived product benefits relative to other offerings
Service
Company or brand benefits

70
Q

What are the four different pricing strategies one can employ?

A

Rapid skimming
Slow skimming
Rapid penetration
Slow penetration

71
Q

What other than the product/service can contribute to value creation?

A

Product related services
Total capability of the supplier
Interaction between buyer and seller
Interaction between buyer/seller and third parties

72
Q

Name six features that lead to value creation in B2B

A
Length of customer lead time
Service to avoid future problems
Effectiveness of after sales support
Smooth administrative routines
Product documentation
Trust in supplier
73
Q

What are the components of value contributions for a customer?

A

Contribution from suppliers
Cost management
Asset utilization
Revenue growth

74
Q

What is cost management comprised of?

A

Direct costs

Indirect costs

75
Q

What does EVC stand for?

A

economic value calculation

76
Q

What are two ways of assessing value?

A

EVC

Experimentation

77
Q

Name the three different value propositions

A

All benefits - full list, risk of value assertion
Favorable points of difference - recognizes that there are alternatives, risk of value presumption
Resonating focus - one or two points that will deliver value to the customer, requires customer value research

78
Q

Which components comprise the building blocks of a value offering?

A

How do our value elements compare with those of the next best alternative?
Points of parity - elements with the same performance
Points of difference - elements that make the offering unique, either superior or inferior
Points of contention - elements that are in disagreement with customers

79
Q

State the value equation

A

ValueF - PriceF > ValueA - PriceA

Value = Benefits - Costs

80
Q

What are the eight steps of the value analysis?

A
  1. Identify all value elements
  2. Calculate the magnitude
  3. Translate value elements into money
  4. Consider various ways of exploiting the value elements. Clarify circumstances and assumptions
  5. Build the value models
  6. Evaluate the various options
  7. Forge value propositions
  8. Create the capabilities necessary and get the job done!
81
Q

What are the four typical characteristics of a service?

A

Intangibility
Inseparability
Variability
Perishability

82
Q

Name the seven P’s of service marketing

A
Product
Price
Promotion
Place
People
Process
Physical evidence
83
Q

How do services add value to a product?

A

The context and content of the service around the product creates added value.
Cup of coffee at home
Cup of coffee from a stand
Cup of coffee at Starbucks/barista style place with nice atmosphere

84
Q

Name the three distinct co-creation phenomena

A

Encouraging/allowing customer participation in the value creating process
Seeking and encouraging customer participation in product /service design and development
Joint participation of customer experiences by service providers and service receivers

85
Q

When is value produced?

A

By paying attention to conditions of use, indirect costs, etc.
Attention to value creation
Result: move from value-in-exchange to value-in-use

86
Q

How do the twin value paradoxes relate to the paradox of choice?

A

Customers have more choices that yield less satisfaction
Companies have more strategic options that yield less value
They are both a manifestation of the paradox of choice

87
Q

What three changes are redefining the role of the consumer?

A

Isolation to connectedness
Unaware to informed
Passive to active

88
Q

What are the four parts of the DART model?

A

Dialogue - learn together
Access - allowing participation
Risk assessment - co-creators also assume risk?
Transparency - reduce asymmetries