Define marketing?
Marketing can be defined as knowing customers and their problems, innovating solutions to these problems and communicating and delivering them to a carefully defined target market more effectively than your competitors and in a manner that maintains or improves society’s wellbeing.
What is a function needs matrix?
Needs should be matched by benefits not features.

What is the difference between sales and marketing?
What is SPIN and the 7 stages of selling?
SPIN
7 stages
What are the main differences between B2B and B2C selling?
B2B
What are SMART objectives?
Specific
Measurable
Aspirational
Realistic
Time bounded
Explain the role of marketing management at the different business levels?
At the corporate level
At the business level
At the product level
What are key steps in business planning?

What are the important steps in marketing planning?
Porters 5 forces:
Porter’s value chain

What are the important parts of the marketing audit?
External
Macro
Markets
Competition
Internal
BCG matrix (market share vs growth rate)
How do change marketing depending on BCG matrix?
Stars
Question mark
Cash cow
Dog
What are the main drivers of change?
How to create a strategic advantage?
How to compete?
Direction of growth
Method of growth: acquisition vs organic

How to link marketing to NPI?

Describe tools that can be used alongside a roadmap?

Explain porter’s competitive strategy
strategic target vs strategic advantage
Cost leadership
Differentiation
Focus

Explain the different ways the 4Ps can be used
Product:
Price:
Place:
Promotion:
What is needed in an effective marketing strategy?
Explain the difference between the classical view of brands and modern view?
Classical view:
Brand is a lifeless object that can be manipulated - it has no inherent life of its own. Assumes humans are rational and it is the functional side of the brand that is important.
Was not working because:
Modern view:
Complexity of consumer motivations:
Brands are actually the public face of your Strategy in Action
Describe the brand identity prism
Owner perspective
User perspective
Link facets

What is a yield based manufacturing process? Give examples.
Manufacturing where the product can vary in quality. This feeds into the price and marketing strategy for that product. For example they may be sold in different markets, sold under different brands.
Examples of yield based manufacturing:
Sometimes the same product is sold differently:
Why did Dyson choose Japan as a market?
Invented digital motor that was much more expensive. To bring down unit cost and achieve economies of scale created other products: fan, hand dryer, hair dryer.
Draw the product life cycle
Stages:

Explain the different buyer types over the product life cycle?
