Marketing Strategy in Service Business - amegaro@unisa.it - Programme • Marketing and Service Marketing: an overview • Marketing plan • New marketing strategies approaches: Relationship Marketing and Many-to-Many network; Experience marketing; Nonconventional marketing • New marketing vision: Service Research - from S-D logic & Service Science to service ecosystems & service systems Case studies Examples Project work Agenda: Lesson 3 • New approaches: Relationship Marketing and Many-toMany network; Experience marketing; Non-conventional marketing Examples From Traditional Marketing to Relationship Marketing 3.2 From Traditional Marketing to Relationship Marketing O Q O Q From traditional to Relationship Marketing A New Perspective of Marketing Relationship marketing involves a change in managing the relationship with customers and other stakeholders. This change involves the adoption of a collaborative logic, in the management of a business and in managing the relationships with other actors. ... to strategic relationships From exchange… From traditional to Relationship Marketing The exchange approach implies that the companies involved in the transaction are oriented to exclusively maximize subjective value. operator “A” operator “B” TransactionSearch for the subjective maximization of the value generated by the transaction. From traditional to Relationship Marketing The Relational Approach implies that companies involved in strategic relationships are oriented to create and share new value. operator “A” operator “B” RelationshipContribution to maximize total value of the relationship. From traditional to Relationship Marketing Relationship Marketing 3.1 The rational reasons why a new way of marketing is born can be found in the relationship with the target audience. Relationship marketing: origins Relationship marketing: example of prosumer Relationship marketing: example of prosumer Customer CUSTOMERS ORIENTATION After 1960... Relational Marketing (RM) Customer Relationship Management (CRM) ProviderCustomer The focus is on the relationships between two key actors After 1990... Customers Providers Many-to-many approach After 2000... Customers as the pivot, the focus of attention in the market Network orientation Focus on multilevelled networks of actors/ stakeholders Relationship marketing: origins Relationship Marketing PASSIVE Marketing ACTIVE Marketing Marketing = Selling Relationship Marketing Aim: to increase the value of relationships with customers through the enhancement of users’ loyalty Definition: Creation, development, maintenance and optimization of relationships between customers and organizations Selection and analysis of specific targets (not anymore broad segments) to reduce the asymmetry between the company and every single user through multi-channel strategies: from classic media (telephone/ print) to web communication Bidirectional relationships and increased knowledge of users Relationship Marketing Relationship Marketing: a new mindset Shfit to a collaborative approach to relationships that pursues total value maximization and subjective value maximization to improve: - Synergistic relationships and involvement in the value creation; - Long term partnerships that contribute to system’s well-being. A change in the managerial approach to relationships with users and stakeholder is needed Identification of strategies to establish durable relationships consumers-brands THROUGH the involvement of target users in long term programmes that provide immediate benefits and sense of belonging to brand Relationship Marketing ONE-TO-ONE: direct relations between consumers- companies and brand-targets ONE-TO-ONE RELATIONSHIPS • New technologies, social networks and IT systems contribute to engage customers in business decision- making • Personalization of relationships with users, seen as unique individual entities with specific needs. • Customers become partners of organizations and contribute to the design of value proposition for themselves, for the organizations, for other customers • Development and creation of relationships based on interactivity, connection and mutual learning Personalizing Relationships Personalizing Relationships • Creation of different targets with different needs for different actions and service offering; • Knowledge on users’ requirements, needs and tastes; • Bidirectional communication. To optimize relationships, personalized strategies are needed • Marketing mix – Personalizing product Product operational decisions concern attributes such as packaging, brand, materials Personalizing Relationships "Share a Coca-Cola" vs "Nutella is you“ Divergence of intent between the two brands: while the first - starting from the person who buys the drink - wants to involve other people, meaning the buyer as a sort of donor, the second stops with those who buy Nutella who, therefore, do not donate and he does not share, but keeps it for himself. Coca-Cola's choice could be defined as “social”. Nutella's choice as “individual”. Both, therefore, try to release a viral-emotional contamination, taking however - different paths at some point. • Marketing mix – Personalizing product Personalizing Relationships Personalizing Relationships • Marketing mix – Personalizing price Customizing the price means setting different prices for each customer, also possible thanks to Internet: • different prices depending on the quantity (eg. Reduction of shipping costs based on volumes of sales) • group prices: different prices for each group of customers with homogeneous characteristics (no shipping costs for Amazon Prime subscribers) Personalizing Relationships Pizza Hut Table https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvT0MCugb58 • Marketing mix – Personalizing place Personalizing Relationships Pizza Hut proposes this concept to indicate how ordering a pizza could become an experience in the near future. The concept is a restaurant table with multi-touch technology that allows you to customize, order and pay for the pizza you want with a few simple touches on your smartphone. You can pay by simply placing your smartphone on the table thanks to the next NFC technology and wait for the order, perhaps while we are playing on the table which in the meantime has transformed into the mega second screen of your smartphone. The new pizza experience is served. Special birthday promotions A clear communication plan must be created, because loyalty is a transversal process in which it is necessary to know and be known. • Marketing mix – Personalizing promotion Personalizing Relationships Everyone is much more than a customer Life stage defines a person’s major concern Customer Lifetime value Customer Relationship Management The sharing of a common language: that can enhance knowledge sharing and the exchange of information that increase marketing collaboration and the creation of a cohesive set of value Relationship Marketing Relationships can be developed over time through: A coherent culture: based on common trust and shared purposes that allow at reducing uncertainty and opportunistic behaviors of partners To retain customers (and obtain loyalty) is better than acquire new ones with the reduction of service quality The aim of relationship marketing is to establish, strengthen and renewover time stable and durable relationships with customers to create and regenerate constantly the production of mutual benefits Relationship Marketing Total Relationship Marketing 3.3 Many-to-many Marketing Many-to-many marketing is an expression that describes and analyses the network aspect of marketing. Fonte: Valdani E., Busacca B., Micro & Macro Marketing, 3/95. one-to-one © E. Gummesson 2003 many-to-many Customer Relationship Management (CRM) The customersupplier relationship in focus: one-to-one © E. Gummesson 2003 Marketing as Networks All stakeholders in focus: many-to-many Customer Relationship Management (CRM) The customersupplier relationship in focus: Marketing as Networks All stakeholders in focus: Some terms have been used to describe the voluntary links between firms and other economic entities, including network, "heterarchy" and "polycentric structure". However, the term "network" is now generally accepted to describe this emerging economic entity. The networks originate from the desire of different actors to be involved in a common process to enhance resources, skills and synergistic activities. Relationships exist if there is a network (in theory even composed only of the elementary link between two nodes), which in turn takes shape through the organization of the relationships between the nodes. Network These networks embed suppliers, partners, practitioners, individuals, banks, government agencies, operators and all those subjects who cannot be considered separately in their operational context, but must be involved in systems from which to benefit from collaboration, roles, rules and strategies. Network theory attempts to analyze the phenomena of sharing resources and objectives, in terms of organizational constructs including “nodes”, “links”, “aggregation forces”, “central control”, “dynamic equilibrium” and “structural variability”, used to explain the multiple contributions to value creation within the observed systems. Network RESOURCES - WHY? • Recurrent in our literature • Useful in practice (limited) Resource integration in S-D Logic Resources are not inherently “ valuable, ” but become more or less valuable depending on the context of their integration (Chandler and Vargo, 2011). Resources are not, they become (Zimmerman, 1951; Vargo & Lusch, 2014 ) RelationshipTime CapabilitiesInformation What is a Network? Endless definitions! Between these: "a specific set of links between a specific set of actors with the additional property that the characteristics of these links as a whole can be used to interpret the social behavior of the observed actor" Network Analysis principles • Actors (and their actions) are seen as interdependent, rather than autonomous and independent units; • the relational links between actors are channels for the transfer and/or flow of resources (tangible or intangible); • network-based models see the environment surrounding the network structure as a source of opportunities and constraints on the action of the actors (nodes) taken individually; • such models conceptualize a structure (social, economic, political, etc.) as a stable network of links between actors. Network Analysis principles • Actors linked with others through social ties • A bond establishes a correlation between at least one pair of actors • There is a transfer of resources (tangible / intangible: information, transactions, skills, services, etc.) • Behavioral interaction: an interaction emerges from the relationship! • Sometimes they are formal bonds (authority) • Sometimes they are informal, but based on strong attractiveness (weak ties such as: esteem, generosity, power, interest, friendship, etc.) Each Network is characterized by: 1. Presence of heterogeneous actors (nodes); 2. Relations (connections) between various elements (static condition, concerning the structure); 3. Common goal (equality); 4. Sharing of resources; 5. Existence of a government (be it centralized or widespread); 6. Willingness to define rules, principles, limits and boundaries; 7. Interactions between subjects inside and outside the Network (dynamic condition, concerning the system); 8. Sustainability orientation (long-term survival). These networks involve supplier and customer networks with dense and intricate connections, and are win-win based. The network view of decision making imply that many contributing actors more or less consciously support value creation processes, thus also supporting business competitiveness. System relationships lead business actors to a necessary mutual satisfaction for diffuse value creation and competitiveness. Network theories Istitutions (LocalGovernment) Detailers (Theme Parks, Cultural Heritage Business, Public dealers) Partners (consortia, trade associations) Customers (Turists) Destination Governance Destination Service Eco-System More win-win interactions, more value Network Value generation and Networks Fonte: Valdani E., Busacca B., Micro & Macro Marketing, 3/95. From relational and systemic point of view, competitive behaviour today seems to be based no longer upon dyadic relationships between actors, but rather upon a many-to-many relational and system pattern daily involving supplier and customer networks with dense and intricate connections, winwin based. Many-to-many Marketing A hospital is represented by its own interface (the administrative counter or the laboratory technician, or the specialist doctor), but all of these actors are part of a much wider relational network in which there are: doctors, nurses/health workers, auxiliary staff, administrative staff, electromedical equipment suppliers, diagnostic equipment suppliers, other generic suppliers of the Diagnostic Center, etc. The Patient, on the other hand, is embedded in a relational network composed by himself and his family, the general practitioner, the specialist doctor, the pharmacy, etc. Relationship between an hospital and the patients. Many-to-many Marketing Example: Healthcare The health system is composed by a complex network of actors who, in various ways, are configured as useful resources for the system itself. Institutional actors (ASL, hospitals, etc.), national and territorial entities (Regions, Municipalities, etc.), organizations (scientific societies, trade unions) and, last but not least, people (citizens, patients..) are all subjects which must necessarily participate in the efficiency and effectiveness of the service and therefore in the overall performance of the system. Many-to-many Marketing Example: Healthcare Many-to-many Marketing Example: Healthcare Many-to-many Marketing Example: Healthcare Actors 'Information' interests and resource integration potentialities Patients inform promptly and in detail about their needs and conditions Doctor acquire in time the latest updates on care, administrative procedures, diagnostic and prevention processes Pharmaceutical company understand what the real needs of the market are and / or propose reliable and quality solutions to customers Hospitals offer the right spaces and adequate professionalism to guarantee a high standard of quality to its users Universities acquire the evolution of needs from the healthcare context and consequently plan the various training courses Ministry of health define and sponsor practicable, accessible and strategic operational lines Government encourage the integration of the communication system, through the unification of databases, the simplification of application and payment procedures, the wide dissemination of information on loans, etc. Pharmacies, clinics, laboratories, diagnostic centers and general practitioners Promptly communicate with both territorial and national pharmaceutical distributors and warehouses; try to network (especially locally) Gummesson: has proposed a marketing based on interactions between related actors in networks focusing: • On relations – the existance of a relation is perceivable in case two or more parts are in contact; usually B2C relations represent the classic relation betweeen business and customer; • On interactions - interactions correspond to activated relations capable of representing a contact; • And on networks – a set of relations can identify a network, sometime this network can be very complex. Relations can be identified as lens capable of supporting the decision maker in understanding what is going on, supporting wise decisions. Total Relationship Marketing The introduction of this new philosophy facilitates the synergic development of the value generation and the definition of long-term relationships useful to the growth of the system (producer-customerretailer-[..]) intended as a whole. Classic market relationships: R. 1. Supplier and customer R. 2. The customer - supplier - competitor R. 3. Network - distribution channels Total Relationship Marketing Gummesson’s 30 Relationships Special market relationships R. 4. Full-time marketers and part-time marketers R. 5. Customer and service provider R. 6. Many-headed customer and many-headed supplier R. 7. Relationship to the customer's customer R. 8. Close and distant relationship R. 9. Not satisfied customer R. 10. Monopoly relationship: customer or supplier as prisoner Total Relationship Marketing Gummesson’s 30 Relationships Special market relationships R. 11. Customer as "member" R. 12. E-relationship R. 13. Parasocial relationships, with symbols and objects (as the brand) R. 14. Noncommercial relationship R. 15. The green relationship R. 16. The law-based relationship R. 17. The criminal network Total Relationship Marketing Gummesson’s 30 Relationships Mega relationships R. 18. Personal and social networks R. 19. Mega marketing - the real "customer" is not always found in the marketplace R. 20. Alliances change the market mechanism R. 21. The knowledge relationship R. 22. Mega alliances change the basic conditions for marketing R. 23. Mass media relationship Total Relationship Marketing Gummesson’s 30 Relationships Nano relationships R. 24. Market mechanisms are brought inside the company R. 25. Internal customer relationships R. 26. Quality providing a relationship between operations management and marketing R. 27. Internal marketing - relationships with the employee market R. 28. Two-dimensional matrix relationship R. 29. Relationship to external providers of marketing services R. 30. Owner and financier relationship Total Relationship Marketing Gummesson’s 30 Relationships in sum… (if you look for wise decisions to plan a marketing strategy) put on your nose the network eyeglasses! Total Relationship Marketing Experience Marketing 3.4 • Experiences can turn the moment of consumption into a memorable event • Experiential reframing of the processes of delivery and brand management Marketing as experience The «traditional» marketing strategies (STP- segmentation, positioning and targeting) and tactics (the 4 Ps) are reread the lens of experience which permeates service with a totalizing experience Mehrabian and Russell, 1974; Pine and Gilmore, 1998; Schmitt, 1999; Addis, 2007 THROUGH Marketing as experience Experiential or sensory marketing starts from an assumption that each of us is driven to purchase by a mix of conscious and unconscious components. While the former are more easily analyzed because they are linked to the rational sphere, the latter are more hidden but exert a strong influence on many of our habitual behaviors. Consider that the word "know", synonym of knowing (and knowledge is often the basis of every decision, therefore also of a purchase), has its roots in the physical experience of tasting. Marketing as experience “Today, customers take functional features and benefits, product quality and a positive brand image as a given. Products, communications and marketing campaigns should “dazzle” their senses, touch their hearts, and stimulate their minds. They want products, communications, and campaigns that they can relate to and that they can incorporate into their lifestyles” (p. 57) “ To provide customers with engaging and attractive experiences can allow companies at gaining the edge over competitors, in a way that the “simple“ satisfaction cannot guarantee» Schmitt (1999), Experience Marketing Schmitt’s Model (1999) Creation of experiences for the mind that stimulate intellectual, creative and problem- solving capabilities The first «level» that builds the sensorial experiences by using the 5 senses (taste, smell, touch, hearing and sight) Emotional experiences related to the brand that evoke and recall emotions and customers’ internal feelings Impact on corporeal experiences, lifestyles, interactions Connection of individuals with themselves, other individuals and culture. This level all-encompasses the features of the other levels. Sense Think Feel Relate Act Evergreen brand which symbolizes the american way of life The company turned a drink into a state of mind, a status symbol, a cult product for youngsters worldwide The brand embodies the value of friendship, fun, happiness Coca Cola Marketing as experience https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbgrHnbgoDU Marketing as experience https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=SPRITE+SHOWER Non-conventional Marketing 3.5 Set of marketing strategies and tactics aimed at: • Generating emotions • Memorability (awareness) • Uniqueness • Create surprise • Involve recipients (engagement) Non-conventional marketing Guerriglia marketing (from spanish) is the definition coined by the American advertising Jay Conrad Levinson in 1984 in his book of the same name, to indicate a form of non-conventional and low-cost advertising promotion obtained through the creative use of aggressive means and tools that leverage the imaginary and feelings in end users. • Unpredictability • Originality • Strong psychological approach • Subversion of the pre-established order • Be everywhere and anyway Guerrilla Marketing principles Antonietta Megaro amegaro@unisa.it THANK YOU. 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