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The core marketing concepts
Date: 2015-10-07; view: 506.
Text B
The core marketing concepts are needs, wants, demands, products, exchange, transactions, markets.
The most basic concept underlying marketing is that of human needs. Ahuman need is a state of felt deprivation. Human beings have many complex needs. They include basic physical needs for food, clothing, warmth, and safety; social needs for belonging and affection; and individual needs for knowledge and self-expression. These needs are not invented. They are a basic part of the human makeup.
When a need is not satisfied, a person will do one of two things- look for an object that will satisfy it or try to reduce the need. People in industrial societies may try to find or develop objects that will satisfy their desires. People in less-developed societies may try to reduce their desires and satisfy them with what is available.
A second basic concept in marketing is that ofhuman wants- the form taken by human needs as they are shaped by culture and individual personality. A hungry person in Bah may want mangoes, suckling pig, and beans. A hungry person in the United States may want a hamburger, French fries, and a Coke. Wants are described in terms of objects that will satisfy needs. As a society evolves, the wants of its members expand. As people are exposed to more objects that arouse their interest and desire, producers try to provide more want-satisfying products and services.
But people have almost unlimited wants and limited resources. Thus, they want to choose products that provide the most satisfaction for their money. When backed by buying power, wants becomedemands.
Human needs, wants, and demands suggest that there are products available to satisfy them. Aproduct is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption and might satisfy a need or want. The concept of product is not limited to physical objects. Anything capable of satisfying a need can be called a product. In addition to goods and services, products include persons, places, organizations, activities, and ideas. A consumer decides which entertainers to watch on television, which places to go on a vacation, which organizations to contribute to, and which ideas to support. To the consumer, these are all products. If at times the term product does not seem to fit, we could substitute such terms as satisfier, resource, or offer. All describe something of value to someone.
Consumers view products as bundles of benefits and choose products that give them the best bundle for their money. Thus, a Ford Festiva means basic transportation, a low price, and fuel economy. A Mercedes means comfort, luxury, and status. Given their wants and resources, people choose the product whose benefits add up to the most satisfaction.
Exchange is the act of obtaining a desired object from someone by offering something in return. Exchange is only one of many ways people can obtain a desired object
Exchange is also the core concept of marketing. For an exchange to take place, several conditions must be satisfied. Of course, there must be at least two parties, and each must have something of value to the other. Each party must also want to deal with the other party; each must be free to accept or reject the other's offer. Finally, each party must be able to communicate and deliver.
These conditions simply make exchange possible. Whether exchange actually takes place depends on the parties' coming to an agreement. If they agree, we must conclude that the act of exchange has left both of them better off (or at least not worse off): After all, each was free to reject or accept the offer. In this sense, just as production creates value, exchange creates value. It gives people more consumption possibilities.
Whereas exchange is the core concept of marketing, a transaction is marketing's unit of measurement. Atransaction consists of a trade of values between two parties. In a transaction, we must be able to say that A gives X to В and gets У in return. For example, you pay Sears $400 for a television set. This is a classic monetary transaction. But not all transactions involve money. In abarter transaction, you might trade your old refrigerator in return for a neighbor's secondhand television set. A barter transaction can also involve services as well as goods—for example, when a lawyer writes a will for a doctor in return for a medical exam. A transaction involves at least two things of value, conditions that are agreed upon, a time of agreement, and a place of agreement.
In the broadest sense, the marketer tries to bring about a response to some offer. And the response may be more than simply "buying" or "trading" goods and services in the narrow sense. A political candidate, for instance, wants a response called "votes," a church wants "membership," a social-action group wants "idea acceptance." Marketing consists of actions taken to obtain a desired response from a target audience toward some product, service, idea, or other object.
The concept of transactions leads to the concept of a market. Amarket is the set of actual and potential buyers of a product.
As the number of persons and transactions increases in a society, the number of merchants and marketplaces also increases. In advanced societies, markets need not be physical locations where buyers and sellers interact. With modern communications and transportation, a merchant can easily advertise a product on late evening television, take orders from hundreds of customers over the phone, and mail the goods to buyers on the following day without having had any physical contact with them.
A market can grow up around a product, a service, or anything else of value. For example, a labor market consists of people who are willing to offer their work in return for wages or products. In fact, various institutions, such as employment agencies and job-counseling firms, will grow up around a labor market to help it function better. The money market is another important market that emerges to meet the needs of people so that they can borrow, lend, save, and protect money. The donor market has emerged to meet the financial needs of nonprofit organizations.
Marketing means working with markets to bring about exchanges for the purpose of satisfying human needs and wants. Thus, we return to our definition of marketing as a process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want by creating and exchanging products and value with others.
Exchange processes involve work. Sellers must search for buyers, identify their needs, design good products, promote them, store and deliver them, and set prices for them. Such activities as product development, research, communication, distribution, pricing, and service are core marketing activities.
Although we normally think of marketing as being performed by sellers, buyers also perform marketing activities. Consumers do "marketing" when they search for the goods they need at prices they can afford. Company purchasing agents do "marketing" when they track down sellers and bargain for good terms. A seller's market is one in which sellers have more power and buyers must be the more active "marketers." In a buyer's market, buyers havemorepower and sellers have to be more active "marketers." In the early 1950s, the supply of goods began to grow faster than the demand. Most markets became buyer's markets, and marketing became identified with sellers trying to find buyers.
I. Key terms:
Need
| - нужда - that which occurs when a person feels deprived of food, clothing, or shelter; the basic force that motivate a person to do something.
| Want
| - потреба - a need that is shaped by a person's knowledge, culture, and individual characteristics.
| Demand
| - попит - human wants that are backed by buying power.
| Transaction
| - угода, ділова операція - a trade between two parties that involves at least two things of value, agreed-upon conditions, a time of agreement, and a place of agreement.
| Exchange
| - обмін - the trade of things of value between buyer and seller so that each is better off after the trade.
| Market
| - ринок - a group of potential customers with similar needs and sellers offering various products (that is, ways of satisfying those needs) or a group of sellers and buyers who are willing to exchange goods and/or services for something of value.
|
II. Vocabulary notes:
evolve,v.
1) (cause to) unfold; develop – розвивати(ся), розгортати;
2) be developed, and (usu) gradually – розвиватися, еволюціонувати; виділяти (газ, тощо), випускати, видихати; розкривати, виявляти;
| evolution,n.
1) evolving; process of opening out or developing – еволюція, поступовий розвиток;
2) development of more complicated forms of life from earlier and simpler forms – розвиток, процес заміни;
3) movement according to plan - розгортання (сюжету, думки); пересування, маневр.
| reduce,v.
1) (to) make less; make smaller in size, number, degree, price, etc. - знижувати, зменшувати; скорочувати; послабляти, полегшувати; to reduce speed – зменшувати швидкість; to reduce pressure – знижувати тиск; to reduce prices – знижувати ціни; to reduce staff - скорочувати штат; to reduce taxes – знижувати податки; to reduce temperature – знижувати (збивати) температуру; to reduce expenses – скорочувати видатки; to reduce pain – полегшувати біль;
2) bring or get to a certain condition, way of living, etc. – перетворювати, обертати (на щось); to reduce to ashes – спалити дощенту; to reduce to order – навести порядок, упорядкувати; to reduce to tears – довести до сліз; to reduce to nothing – звести нанівець; to reduce to silence – примусити замовкнути;
3) change (to another form) – спрощувати, укорочувати, доводити (до певного стану); to reduce equation/argument/statement to its simplest form; to reduce to an absurdity - довести до абсурду;
| reduction,n.
1) reducing or being reduced; instance of this – знижка, зменшення, скорочення; reduction of wages – скорочення заробітної плати; a reduction in/of numbers – скорочення кількості; reductions in prices; price reductions – зниження ціни; a reduction of punishment – юр. пом'якшення покарання;
2) copy, on a small scale, of a picture, map, etc. – зменшена копія;
| provide,v.
1) provide for sb/sth. – make ready, do what is necessary for – давати, надавати; вживати заходів; приготуватися; provide against sth. – take steps to guard against.
2) provide sth. (for sb.); provide sb. with sth. – give, supply (what is needed, esp. what a person needs in order to live) – постачати, забезпечувати (чимось); to provide sb. with money – забезпечувати грошима; to provide sb. with a good education – дати комусь добру освіту;
3) stipulate - передбачати (щось - for).
| acquisition,n.
acquiring; sth. acquired – надбання, здобуття; придбання;
| acquire,v.
gain by skill or ability, by one's own efforts or behavior – набувати, здобувати; одержувати досягати; оволодівати;
| consumption,n.
using up, consuming (of food, energy, materials, etc.); the quantity consumed – споживання, витрачання; затрата, витрата;
| consume,v.
1) eat or drink – з'їдати, випивати, поглинати;
2) use up; get to the end of; destroy by fire or wastefulness – споживати, витрачати; знищувати, винищувати; розтринькувати, марнувати, переводити (час, гроші, тощо);
3) to be filled with (envy, hatred, greed) – бути охопленим (заздрістю, ненавистю, жадобою); to be consumed with grief – бути пригніченим горем.
| consumer, n.
person who uses goods – споживач; consumer goods/consumer commodities – those which directly satisfy human needs and desires (e.g. food and clothing), (opp. to capital goods, e.g. factory equipment) – споживчі товари, товари широкого вжитку;
| support,v.
1) bear the weight of; hold up or keep in place – підтримувати, підпирати;
2) strengthen; help (sb. or sth.) to continue – надавати сили, морально підтримувати; захищати, сприяти, надавати допомогу; підтверджувати; to support a claim/a political party;
3) provide for (financially, etc.) – допомагати (матеріально); підсобляти; утримувати (сім'ю, тощо);
4) endure – витримувати, терпіти, зносити.
| bargain,n.
1) agreement to buy, sell or exchange sth., made after discussion; sth. obtained as the result of such an agreement – торгівельна угода; договір про купівлю; домовленість; to make (to close, to strike) a bargain (with sb. over sth.) – укласти угоду; домовитися, прийти до згоди; a good (bad, losing) bargain – вигідна (невигідна, збиткова) угода; to bind a bargain – дати завдаток; to be off (with) one's bargain – анулювати угоду; a bargain is a bargain – договір паче грошей;
2) sth. offered, sold or bought cheap - вигідна покупка, задешево куплена річ; to buy at a bargain – купити дешево; into the bargain – на додачу, до того ж; to make the best of a bad bargain – не занепадати духом у біді; that's a bargain! – згода, домовились;
| bargain,v.
1) bargain (with sb. for sth.) – talk for the purpose of reaching an agreement (about buying or selling sth., doing a piece of work, etc.) – торгуватися, вести переговори;
2) bargain about/bargain over/bargain for – be ready or willing to accept or agree to – домовлятися; чекати, передбачати;
3) make a condition – укласти угоду (договір); прийти до згоди; bargain off - збути з рук, здихатися.
|
III. Answer the following questions:
1. What are the core marketing concepts?
2. What kinds of need do human beings have? Are they invented?
3. Give the definition of the second basic concept in marketing.
4. Are human wants the same in different countries? Why or why not?
5. Why do people want to choose products that provide the most satisfaction for their money?
6. How do consumers view products? Give examples.
7. What is a product?
8. Is the concept of a product limited to physical objects? Give your reasons.
9. What are the conditions necessary for an exchange to take place?
10. What is marketing's unit of measurement?
11. Give examples of monetary and barter transactions. What is the difference between them?
12. What do you know about the concept of a market? Is it necessarily a physical location where buyers and sellers interact?
13. Where can a market grow up?
14. What are the core marketing activities?
15. Prove that there is a difference between a seller's market and a buyer's market.
IV. Find in the text the following words and word combinations and translate the sentences in which they are used:
felt deprivation; affection; individual personality; fuel economy; add up; substitute; to accept or reject an offer; to leave sth. better off; to create value; to bring about a response; to bargain for good terms.
V. Find English equivalents to the words and word combinations given below:
лежати в основі; складний; безпека; причетність; людська натура (характер); створювати предмети; зростати; збуджувати інтерес; підкріпляти; купівельна спроможність; розглядати сукупність вигод (благ); розважальні програми (передачі); співробітничати; підтримувати ідеї; підходити; отримувати бажаний предмет; приходити до угоди; одиниця виміру; грошові (бартерні) операції (угоди); заповіт; передові суспільства; взаємодіяти; агенція з працевлаштування; виникати; розробка продукції; ціноутворення.
VI. Memorize the following terms and use them in your own sentences:
a. Need
| - 1) потреба; 2) pl. нестатки; запити, потреби; 3) нужда, злидні, бідність; 4) недостача; 5) біда, важке становище. To each according to his needs - кожному по потребам.
| | identify needs
| - визначати потреби;
| | meet/satisfy/suit the needs
| - задовольнити потреби;
| | evaluate needs (requirements)
| - оцінювати потреби;
| | estimate needs
| - підраховувати потреби;
| | examine needs (requirements)
| - розглядати потреби;
| | reduce needs (requirements)
| - скорочувати потреби;
| | review the needs
| - переглядати потреби;
| | study needs
| - вивчати потреби;
| | needs analysis
| - аналіз потреб;
| | borrowing needs
| - потреби у кредит;
| | capacity needs
| - потреби в розширенні виробничих потужностей;
| | consumer needs
| - потреби споживачів;
| | daily needs
| - повсякденні потреби;
| | essential needs
| - основні (істотні) потреби;
| | personal needs
| - особисті потреби;
| | social needs
| - суспільні потреби;
| | subsidy needs
| - необхідність у субсидіюванні;
| | unit manpower needs
| - необхідні витрати праці на одиницю продукції;
| | unmet needs
| - потреби, що є незадовільними;
| | urgent needs
| - початкові (вкрай необхідні) потреби.
| |
| b. Demand
| 1) вимога, наполегливе прохання; 2) пред'яв-лення вимоги; 3) потреба; 4) попит, supply and demand – пропозиція і попит; 5) юр. заявка; претензія, позов.
| | analyze demand
| - аналізувати попит;
| | create demand
| - створювати попит;
| | determine demand
| - визначати попит;
| | eliminate demand
| - ліквідувати попит;
| | estimate demand
| - оцінювати попит;
| | meet/satisfy/grant/supply demand
| - задовольняти попит;
| | reduce demand
| - скорочувати (знижувати) попит;
| | stimulate demand
| - стимулювати попит;
| | study demand
| - вивчати попит;
| | demand for advances
| - попит на кредит;
| | demand for bank funds
| - попит на банківський кредит;
| | demand for currency
| - потреба підготовки;
| | demand for money
| - попит на гроші; потреба в грошах;
| | demand for no-ceiling cost of living raise
| - вимога необмеженого підвищення заробітної плати у відповідності до зміни індексу прожиткового мінімуму;
| | demand keeps pace with supply
| - попит не відстає від пропозиції;
| | demand outdistances supply
| - попит переганяє пропозицію;
| | demand pulls inflation
| - інфляційний попит;
| | active demand
| - пожвавлений попит;
| | aggregate/composite demand
| - сукупний попит;
| | business demand
| - попит підприємств (наприклад, на товари);
| | consumer demand
| - попит споживачів;
| | current demand
| - поточний попит;
| | elastic demand
| - еластичний попит;
| | emergency demand
| - надзвичайний попит;
| | expected demand
| - очікуваний попит;
| | fixed demand
| - постійний попит;
| | job demand
| - попит на робочі місця;
| | keen demand
| - великий попит;
| | overall demand
| - загальний попит;
| | poor demand
| - невеликий попит;
| | prospective demand
| - майбутній попит;
| | stable demand
| - постійний попит;
| | wage demand
| - вимога підвищення заробітної плати.
| | |
| d. Transaction
| - 1) (the -) ведення (ділових операцій); 2) справа; угода; 3) юр. урегулювання суперечки шляхом компромісу; мирова угода; international transaction – міжнародний акт; 4) pl. праці, протоколи (наукового товариства).
| | cancel a transaction
| - анулювати угоду;
| | conclude a compensation transaction
| - заключати компенсаційну угоду;
| | initiate a transaction
| - пропонувати угоду;
| | make/carry out/effect/conclude/close/enter into/ Ам. consummate a transaction
|
- здійснювати, заключати угоду;
| | settle a transaction
| - розраховуватися за угодою;
| | withdraw from a transaction
| - відмовлятися від угоди;
| | foreign exchange transaction
| - угода з іноземною валютою;
| | accounting transaction
| - бухгалтерська операція, проводка;
| | banking transaction
| - банківська угода;
| | basic transactions
| - основні операції (у платіжному балансі);
| | bear transaction
| - гра на зниження (бірж.);
| | bull transaction
| - гра на підвищення (бірж.);
| | business transaction
| - ділова операція;
| | cash transaction
| - угода за готівку;
| | current transactions
| - поточні операції, поточні рахунки ( у платіжному балансі);
| | exchange transactions
| - валютні операції;
| | forward transaction
| - строкова угода, форвардна угода;
| | inventory transactions
| - операції з товарно-матеріальними цінностями;
| | issuing transactions
| - емісійні операції;
| | market transactions
| - ринкові угоди;
| | monetary transaction
| - грошова угода, грошова операція;
| | round transaction
| - закінчена торгівельна угода;
| | stock exchange transaction
| - фондова операція.
| | | | | | | | | |
VII. Match the Ukrainian and English equivalents:
a.
| 1) потреби в грошах
| 1) vital needs
|
| 2) потреби в імпорті
| 2) domestic (home) requirements (needs)
|
| 3) потреби у кредиті
| 3) demand (needs) for money (cash); cash requirements
|
| 4) можливі потреби
| 4) credit requirements, borrowing needs
|
| 5) потреби внутрішнього ринку
| 5) staff (personnel) requirements
|
| 6) потреби в персоналі
| 6) real needs
|
| 7) потреби у робочій силі
| 7) heavy requirements
|
| 8) потреби у товарах
| 8) requirements for goods; purchase requirements
|
| 9) життєво-необхідні потреби
| 9) potential needs
|
| 10) гострі потреби
| 10) labor (man-power, employment) requirements
|
| 11) реальні потреби
| 11) import requirements (needs)
|
|
|
| b.
| 1) великий попит
| 1) inelastic demand
|
| 2) внутрішній попит
| 2) diminishing (falling, sagging, declining) demand
|
| 3) зовнішній попит
| 3) primary demand
|
| 4) вторинний попит
| 4) unpopular goods
|
| 5) жорсткий попит
| 5) heavy (great, stray, keen) demand
|
| 6) невеликий попит
| 6) thin (narrow, restrictive) market limited demand
|
| 7) обмежений попит
| 7) home (domestic) demand
|
| 8) підвищений попит
| 8) demand for consumer goods
|
| 9) попит, що знижується
| 9) marketable goods
|
| 10) попит на товари загального споживання
| 10) external demand
|
| 11) попит на товари першої необхідності
| 11) after-market demand
|
| 12) товари, що користуються попитом
| 12) poor (slight) demand
|
| 13) товари, що не користуються попитом
| 13) keen demand
|
|
|
| c.
| 1) взаємовигідна угода
| 1) collateral loan business
| | 2) зовнішньоторговельна угода
| 2) Dutch bargain
| | 3) вигідна угода
| 3) cash business (transaction); spot business (transaction)
| | 4) угода, що вигідна для однієї сторони
| 4) mutually beneficial transaction
| | 5) двостороння угода
| 5) bilateral transaction, two-way business
| | 6) довгострокова угода
| 6) contract (transaction) on a mutually advantageous basis
| | 7) інкасова угода
| 7) foreign trade transaction
| | 8) касова угода
| 8) long-term agreement
| | 9) комплексна угода
| 9) profitable transaction, remunerative business, good bargain
| | 10) ломбардна угода
| 10) collection business
| | 11) угода на взаємовигідній умові
| 11) package deal
|
VIII. Fill in the blanks from the words below. Translate the sentences into Ukrainian:
demand, n.; affection; evolve; reduce; provide (3); acquisition; consumption; consuming; involve; bargain, v. (2); support.
1. The manager _____ with the farmer for a supply of milk and butter.
2. The American Constitution was planned, the British Constitution _____.
3. This young businessman has gained _____ of his colleagues.
4. A clause in this agreement _____ that the tenant shall bear the coast of all repairs to the building.
5. Production costs have been _____ by 10 percent.
6. Mr. Smith will be a valuable _____ to the staff of their company.
7. The _____ of gas didn't go down when the tax was raised.
8. The employee _____ that they shouldn't have to work on Saturday afternoons.
9. Have you _____ against an oil shortage next winter?
10. This is time - _____ work, it would be difficult for you to cope with it alone.
11. The judge rejected the accusation against the defendant as it was not _____ by proofs.
12. The company is deeply _____ in debt.
13. The _____ for fuel this month exceeds the supply.
14. A modern business enterprise is often a complex system requiring a lot of capital, which is _____ by public when they buy shares in the company.
IX. Synonyms and antonyms. Complete the following table:
Word
| Synonym
| Antonym
| satisfying (Adjective)
|
|
| efficiency (Noun)
|
|
| obtain (Verb)
|
|
| satisfy (Verb)
|
|
| reduce (Verb)
|
|
| core (Adjective)
|
|
| accept (Verb)
|
|
| occur (Verb)
|
|
| profit (Noun)
|
|
| expand (Verb)
|
|
| agent (Noun)
|
|
| encourage (Verb)
|
|
| popular (Adjective)
|
|
| demand (Noun)
|
|
| buy (Verb)
|
|
| emerge (Verb)
|
|
| manage (Verb)
|
|
| stable (Adjective)
|
|
|
|