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Marketing Management and Organization EWMBA 206.1

Agenda. IntroductionsWhat is Marketing? Marketing ConceptA Framework for Marketing Analysis and PlanningCaselets.BombardierPreview of the CourseSyllabus (What to expect?...And what is expected?). Some Perspective. What does Marketing mean in your company?When you think of industries traditionally associated with marketing which industries come to mind?7 Ads on CNN, Sunday morning

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Marketing Management and Organization EWMBA 206.1

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    1. Marketing Management and Organization EWMBA 206.1 Week 1 Fall 2009 Professor Ganesh Iyer

    2. Who am I My name is ganesh iyer. And I would like to tell you something about myself. I am originally from the city of Bombay in India. I have an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering and an MBA from the university of Bombay. I also have a Ph.D in marketing from the University of Toronto. I have seven years of corporate experience in a wide variety of marketing jobs and industries both in India and in North America. I have worked as a product manager. In the early part of my career I have handled the largest brand of alcoholic beverages in India. then in the later part of my career I swicthed to being a product manager for in the pharmaceutical industry when I began working for Boots Pharmaceuticals which with glaxos is one of the largest pharmaceutical conglomerate in Europe. In fact one of the brands that I handled was Advil some of you may recognize that as a headache tablet. Perhaps this change in my carreer was probably to make up for all the hangover headaches that I must have been responsible for as a product manager for alcoholic beverages. I have also worked as a sales manager and have handled large sales forces. Finally in Canada I have worked as a marketing research specialist before I joined the Phd program when I did projects for companies like Shell, McKinsey Consulting and Ault Foods. I have consulted for P&G and.. I have also provided consulting on competition and antitrust policy issues to various agencies. My research deals with economic analysis of marketing problems. During my Ph.D I got training in microeconomic theory, a frontier level mathematical theory of competitive analysis and strategy called game theory and industrial organization. And so I use these theoretical framework to attack various marketing problems. I am particularly interested in problems dealing with distrbution channels, retailing and customer service. In terms of teaching I have taught the principles and other advanced marketing management courses as also a course in marketing research. One thing that you will notice that I will often tend to get very excited in the class and you will have to get used to that. I love teaching this principles course and also my research and you will see that this translates into high energy levels in the class. So now enough about me. Lets us get to hear about each one of you. I would like each one of you to introduce yourself say a few sentences about yourself Who am I My name is ganesh iyer. And I would like to tell you something about myself. I am originally from the city of Bombay in India. I have an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering and an MBA from the university of Bombay. I also have a Ph.D in marketing from the University of Toronto. I have seven years of corporate experience in a wide variety of marketing jobs and industries both in India and in North America. I have worked as a product manager. In the early part of my career I have handled the largest brand of alcoholic beverages in India. then in the later part of my career I swicthed to being a product manager for in the pharmaceutical industry when I began working for Boots Pharmaceuticals which with glaxos is one of the largest pharmaceutical conglomerate in Europe. In fact one of the brands that I handled was Advil some of you may recognize that as a headache tablet. Perhaps this change in my carreer was probably to make up for all the hangover headaches that I must have been responsible for as a product manager for alcoholic beverages. I have also worked as a sales manager and have handled large sales forces. Finally in Canada I have worked as a marketing research specialist before I joined the Phd program when I did projects for companies like Shell, McKinsey Consulting and Ault Foods. I have consulted for P&G and.. I have also provided consulting on competition and antitrust policy issues to various agencies. My research deals with economic analysis of marketing problems. During my Ph.D I got training in microeconomic theory, a frontier level mathematical theory of competitive analysis and strategy called game theory and industrial organization. And so I use these theoretical framework to attack various marketing problems. I am particularly interested in problems dealing with distrbution channels, retailing and customer service. In terms of teaching I have taught the principles and other advanced marketing management courses as also a course in marketing research. One thing that you will notice that I will often tend to get very excited in the class and you will have to get used to that. I love teaching this principles course and also my research and you will see that this translates into high energy levels in the class. So now enough about me. Lets us get to hear about each one of you. I would like each one of you to introduce yourself say a few sentences about yourself

    3. Some Perspective What does Marketing mean in your company? When you think of industries traditionally associated with marketing which industries come to mind? 7 Ads on CNN, Sunday morning Geico lizard BOA Head-on Cialis Boeing Avodart Pillsbury

    4. Some Perspective A Historical Perspective In well-ordered states, storekeepers and salesmen are commonly those who are weakest in bodily strength and, therefore, of little use for any other purpose. - Plato Advertising ... is a meretricious endeavor in which psychological appeals to fear and shame are developed to bamboozle the public into purchasing essentially worthless packaged goods at bloated prices. - Thorstein Veblen

    5. Some Perspective (cont) A modern view Marketing Philosophy: Customer Orientation I came here with a view that you start the day with customers, that you start thinking about a company around its customers - Lou Gerstner, ex-Chairman IBM. Why does the customer want to buy from me? - Charles Schwab. Stop being a company with its face towards the CEO and ass towards the customer - Jack Welch, ex-CEO, G.E. Reaction to TQM--Reengineering--Competing for Future.

    6. The Marketing Concept Two Components C: Customer Orientation The Marketing concept is to make profits through creating and keeping customers. Connection (Emotional Identification) C: Competitive Advantage The marketing concept is about satisfying the needs and wants of consumers more effectively than competitors.

    7. Caselet: New Coke Cola Category Share of Soft Drinks

    8. Cola Category (Sales Volume)

    9. Cokes Declining Performance

    10. Competitive Comparisons Advertising Coke: $34.4 million (1975) to $211.5 million (1993) Pepsi: $25.3 million (1975) to $147.3 million (1993) Distribution Coke stronger in fountain. But Pepsi growing in supermarkets. Pricing no differences Why the decline??

    11. Market Facts Baby Boomers respond to the Pepsi Generation and boost Pepsi sales. Pepsi sales surpass Coke in supermarkets by 1975.

    12. Market Facts Pepsi had Diet Pepsi and Mountain Dew since the 60s. Coke had Sprite and Tab. In 1982 made a departure in extending the Coke brand name for the first time - Diet Coke. Runaway success and becomes 3rd largest soft drink and had 5.2% m.s by 1984 (versus 22.5% for Coke and 19.1% for Pepsi).

    13. Brand Image Evolution

    14. The Pepsi Challenge Integrated Advertising/Promotion Campaign (1975 to 1984) a majority of consumers prefer Pepsi in blind taste tests Advertising hammered away on this promotion had booths in malls across U.S. by 79, Pepsi share in overall grocery was bigger than Coke In supermarkets and convenience store where the two brands were available side-by-side.

    15. Testimonials The company is obsessed about Coke losing the No.1 slot. Concern: Over the last ten years we moved by barely 3 tenths of a percent, the competition gained 4 points on us. Brian Dyson, Coca-Cola 1979 Confusion: If we have twice as many vending machines, dominate fountain, have more shelf space, spend more on advertising, and are competitively priced, why are we losing share? Roy Stout, Coca-Cola 1980 I am not going to sit on my ass and watch that. To do nothing means I am forever condemned to not touching my product even though I know I can make a better product and move with consumer tastes. Brian Dyson, Coca-Cola 1981

    16. Change to New Coke 1983 go-ahead to explore possibilities of reformulation. September 1984 found a formula that beat Pepsi in nationwide blind tests by 8 points. Even Pepsi exclusive drinkers preferred it. Decision to not introduce the new formula as a line extension. January 1985: Secret mission to introduce New Coke (after 200,000 taste tests).

    17. Change to New Coke Taste Tests blind taste tests for new formulation: Marked Coke vs. Pepsi ? TIED New Coke vs. Pepsi ? choose New Coke over Pepsi by over 8% what if this were a new Coke taste? test Direct test against branded and unbranded Pepsi But did not disclose that the product that they were testing would replace Old Coke. Overwhelming preference for new formulation over Pepsi in blind taste tests. A small minority (about 6%) will not get over the change. This loss will be more than compensated by Pepsi consumers switching to New Coke. In focus groups when participants knew that it was new coke about one in ten participants get upset.

    18. Change to New Coke April 23, 1985: Launch Press Conference in New York City. Coke PR line: Product improvement, necessary change to follow trends in consumer preferences. the best just got better. Absolutely no mention that New Coke beat Pepsi in taste tests.

    19. Pepsis Response Responded aggressively to Coke through advertising, public media Re-framed the change as a product withdrawal. Gave reporters list of questions to ask

    20. Pepsis Message ... After 87 years of going at it eyeball to eyeball, the other guy just blinked. Coca-Cola is withdrawing their product from the marketplace, and is reformulating brand Coke to be more like Pepsi. ... There is no question the long-term market success of Pepsi has forced this move. ... Maybe they finally realized what most of us have known for years. Pepsi tastes better than Coke. Letter by Roger Enrico, CEO Pepsi-Cola USA, to employees and published as full page ad on the morning of the New Coke introduction.

    21. Consumer Reactions A Surprise Many consumers did not perceive the introduction of New Coke as a product improvement, but as a loss of Coca Cola, a sentiment that was reinforced by the media coverage. Coca Colas toll-free number was flooded with calls from angry and deeply saddened consumers. Dear Chief Dodo: What ignoramus decided to change the formula of Coke? It was nice knowing you. You were my friend for most of 35 years. Yesterday I had my first taste of the new Coke and to tell the truth, if I had wanted a Pepsi, I would have ordered a Pepsi. Some hard-core drinkers stocked up Coke worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

    22. Consumer Reactions Organized groups of consumers that resisted the change received extensive news coverage. Old Coke Drinkers of America laid plans to file a class action lawsuit. Many bottlers also resisted the change. What was the problem? Why was this happening?

    23. Cokes Retraction July 1985: Comeback of original formula as Coke Classic announced. Hype actually did the overall Coke brand good love you more if harder to get syndrome. Emphasis from brands to category (megabrand strategy). January 1986: Coke Classic becomes flagship brand.

    24. What can we learn from this? Even a marketer as experienced as Coke can misread its customers. Two Questions When people consume Coke what do they really consume? Did Coke really have a problem?

    25. Corporate Shares

    26. Total Cola Shares

    27. How was Coke actually doing? Diet Coke was one of the main reasons for the decline in regular Coke Coke is lighter than Pepsi Pepsi is sweeter than Coke Should we be surprised that Coke drinkers converted more enthusiastically to the diet version? Obsession on the Coke vs. Pepsi rivalry blinded management on the real reason for Cokes decline. It wasnt taste----it was Diet Coke.

    28. The Pepsi Challenge Despite the Pepsi taste tests...did Coke really have a taste problem? consumers in mall prefer the taste of Pepsi (58%). only 67% of ALL consumers are cola drinkers Pepsi was stronger than Coke but with non-cola drinkers. depending on who you sample you can get very different results. There is a market research lesson here. Form of Marketing Myopia: Obsession about competition leading to a misreading of consumer behavior

    29. Homework What if Coca-Cola made the product change gradually and did not announce the change? The Canadian new coke experience

    30. Connection1984 "There is a twist to this story which will probably keep professors puzzled for years The simple fact is that all the time and money and skill poured into consumer research on the new Coca-Cola could not measure or reveal the deep and abiding emotional attachment (connection) to original Coca-Cola felt by so many people." Don Keough, President Coca-Cola.

    31. Connection2004 Neuromarketing evidence (Neural Correlates of Behavioral Preference for Culturally Familiar Drinks, Neuron 2004, v.44, October) Effect of Brand Knowledge on Brain Activation

    32. Connection More than four million of children under five die in sub-Saharan Africa every year. In sub-Saharan Africa, child mortality rates are running at an average rate of 172 deaths per 1000 babies born, compared with 9 per 1000 in developed regions. Please donate to the red cross.

    33. Connection Emotional Identification

    34. Caselet: Apple Computers Identifying the competitor Apple 1980s - a tremendous success story: Introduced computers that anybody could learn to use had a stranglehold on the US educational market, so kids got exposed to Apple much earlier than competitive products Better products and better advertising price premium reflecting the product advantage and the stronger loyalty of its customers Where did they go wrong?

    35. What can we learn from this? Apple didnt understand who their competition was Who did Apple think was their competition? In fact, competition changed over time Apples perceived vs. actual competition Apples strengths good at designing customer interfaces Apple was superior because of its operating system and software. What was the best way to leverage Apples strength?

    36. Key Takeaways What do these two caselets tell us? Coke misread their customers emotional value for the product. Mis-read the emotional connection that customers had with Coke. Coke executives did not make the Coke brand versus Coke corporate distinction. Marketing Myopia: Obsession about competition leading to a misreading of consumer behavior.

    37. Key Takeaways Understanding the market and customer needs is a firms most difficult task. Using relevant quantitative and qualititative customer analysis tools is a critical skill. Consumers often consume more than the physical product.

    38. Key Takeaways Apple Werent really sure who the competition was. licensed their system for the first time very late. the horse already bolted Technically superior operating system the hardware/software interface Microsoft which was technically behind understood the market and the need for an open Windows platform. network effects icon-based

    39. Summary Successful marketing strategy entails two principles. Designing products, services, and programs that emphasize attributes which: which customers value and connect to. provide a sustainable differential advantage over competitors.

    40. Analysis Framework

    41. Course Summary Use a consistent analysis framework so you see the link between different sessions. Cases which involve integrating more than one of the four elements of the Marketing Strategy Mix Expose you to through cases to decision situations which involve the application of the specific marketing strategies. Analytical decision tools (MDS, conjoint analysis, product line design etc.)

    42. Course Summary Each session = case + lecture / in class activity Go through case prep notes in syllabus or given to you prior to class. Performance Evaluation Class participation

    43. Course Summary Two best out of three Group assignment Session 3, Marketing Myopia Session 5, Optical Distortion. Session 7, Calyx and Corolla. Final Exam

    44. Administrative Details Course Information Course pack available at: https://www.study.net/default.asp Course website: http://faculty.haas.berkeley.edu/giyer/ewmba206.html Contact Details Office Room F69, 510-643-4328 email= giyer@haas.berkeley.edu Cell 925-788-1769 Course Management: Houman Modarres, Tel (415) 577-2151, modarres@gmail.com Shubhranshu Singh, Tel (510) 543-1405, shubranshu_singh@haas.berkeley.edu

    45. Expectations Please prepare the case and readings. Please stick to a constant seat in the class as far as feasible and use a name card.

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