Difference between revisions of "Marketing"

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*[https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbjmSS6LZDGpTJILJbe8St2G7eOLYkoJV How to create a marketing plan]
 
*[https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbjmSS6LZDGpTJILJbe8St2G7eOLYkoJV How to create a marketing plan]
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== Marketing strategy ==
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*[https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/marketing-strategy.asp Marketing Strategy: What It Is, How It Works, and How to Create One], Investopedia
  
 
== Lead generation ==
 
== Lead generation ==

Revision as of 16:29, April 18, 2024

Marketing is the relationship-building aspect of business.

According to the book Contemporary Marketing Wired, "Marketing is the process of planning and executing the conception, pricing, promotion, and distribution of ideas, goods, services, organizations, and events to create and maintain relationships that will satisfy individual and organizational objectives."[1] The four key variables of marketing, which are often referred to as the 4 Ps of marketing, are product, place, promotion, and price.[2]

A seminary course description advises, "Marketing is much more than advertising and sales; it includes understanding the environment, consumer needs and behavior, assessing the value of the product, promotion, place and price."[3]

Several universities in the United States, such as the University of Georgia, offer a master's degree in Marketing, in addition to universities around the world, such as the Brazilian Institute of Information Science and Technology.[4][5]

Creating a marketing plan

Videos:

Marketing strategy

Lead generation

See also: Lead generation

Lead generation, in the field of marketing, is the action or process of creating consumer interest and/or inquiry into the products or services of a business or nonprofit. The leads generated contain the contact information and in some instances, the demographic information of the sales prospect who is interested in a particular product or service.

Emotionally manipulative ad campaigns

According to David Kupelian, marketing is the application of the knowledge of human psychology to the task of persuasion.[6]

  • The modern marketing revolution ... meant that, instead of touting a product's actual benefits, marketers instead would psychologically manipulate the public by associating their product with the fulfillment of people's deepest, unconscious needs and desires. (Want to sell liquor? Put a seductive woman in the ad.) Obviously, the marketers could never actually deliver on that promise – but emotional manipulation sure is an effective way to sell a lot of products.[7]

See also

The Marketing of Evil

External links

References

  1. http://iws.ohiolink.edu/moti/homedefinition.html
  2. http://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/dstools/paradigm/4pmark.html
  3. Management Courses - UTS
  4. Savard, Réjean (1 January 2001). Education and Research for Marketing and Quality Management in Libraries (in English). Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110962215. Retrieved on 25 June 2015. “The first Brazillian master's degree program started in 1970 with the covenant formed between the Brazilian Institute of Information Science and Technology (IBICT) and Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. In the following years, other programs were open in different states.” 
  5. Universities Offering Masters in Marketing Research Programs within the U.S. (English). Marketing Research Association. LBP. Retrieved on 25 June 2015.
  6. David Kupelian (2005). The marketing of evil: How radicals, elitists, and pseudo-experts sell us corruption disguised as freedom. WND Books, 99. ISBN 978-1-58182-459-9. 
  7. Brokeback Mountain - Rape of the Marlboro Man