Basic Marketing: A Global Managerial Approach

(Nandana) #1
Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e


  1. Evaluating Opportunities
    in the Changing Marketing
    Environment


Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002

94 Chapter 4


You saw in the last chapter that using segmenting and positioning to narrow
down to a specific marketing strategy takes a real understanding of what makes cus-
tomers tick. You also saw that developing a competitive advantage and a strategy
that offers customers superior value takes an understanding of the capabilities of
your own company and of competitors. This chapter takes this thinking further. As
the UPS case shows, a marketing manager must analyze customer needs and choose
marketing strategy variables within the framework of the marketing environment
and how it is changing.
A large number of forces shape the marketing environment. To help organize
your thinking, it’s useful to classify the various forces as falling into either (1) the
direct market environment or (2) the external market environment. The direct
environment of any generic market or product-market includes customers, the com-
pany, and competitors. The external market environment is broader. The variables
of the external market environment fall into four major areas:


  1. Economic environment.

  2. Technological environment.

  3. Political and legal environment.

  4. Cultural and social environment.
    In the short run, the marketing manager doesn’t control the variables of the mar-
    keting environment. That’s why it’s sometimes useful to think of them as uncontrollable
    variables. On the other hand, the marketing manager can and should carefully con-
    sider the environmental variables when making decisions that can be controlled. For
    example, a manager may not be able to do anything to offset the strengths of a spe-
    cific competitor, but the manager can select strategies that lead the firm into a new
    product-market where that firm does not compete, or where competition in general is
    not as strong. In this chapter, we’ll look at these marketing environment variables in
    more detail. We’ll see how they shape opportunities—limiting some possibilities and
    making others more attractive.


trucks a year—from 21 differ-


ent factories to 6,000 dealers


across North America. Now a


Ford dealer who wants to find


a metallic blue Mustang con-


vertible can instantly do it


online. The UPS system also


reduces transit time for a new


Mustang from 16 days to 12.


That frees up $1 billion worth


of inventory and saves Ford


$125 million a year in inventory


carrying costs.


These successes are earn-
ing profits for UPS, but it still
must cope with the challenges
of a weakened economy.
However, even when demand

for package deliveries is low
UPS has a profit advantage
over competitors who are less
efficient. A weak economy
may even help the UPS strate-

gic business unit that offers
logistics consulting services
because customer firms have

an even greater need to pare
costs. That is one reason the
market for logistics consulting
services is expected to grow
threefold by 2005. Moreover,

the trend toward free trade is
helping UPS expand revenue
from both international air-
freight and the broker
services it now offers to help

firms cope with local
customs laws.^1

The Marketing Environment

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