Siva
Siva
Siva
st century.
current marketing mix into the 21
B Y C H E K I T A N S . D E V A N D D O N E . S C H U LT Z
E X E C U T I V The
E four Ps are no longer a relevant marketing mix because they dont reflect 21st century
b rie f ing
market realities. This article focuses on a new customer-centric marketing mix that includes
solutions, information, value, and access. Using this model to respond to customer questions,
marketers can respond better to current market dynamics. They also will be better able to offer new opportunities that
lead to different conclusionschanging the way we relate to customers.
terms of what it does (develop new products or sell the products the firm has made), could we define it in terms of what
customers expect (solutions to problems)? Would this new and
different approach suggest new opportunities, lead to different
conclusions, and change the way we relate to customers? We
believe it will. Our purpose here is to explain why and how.
At the same time, distribution channels began to consolidate. Retail category killers emerged and began driving
down the power of manufacturers in the marketplace. At
about the same time, technology reared its market-disrupting
head. This was reflected in the ability of a competitor to
almost instantly replicate any product, product improvement,
or differentiation factor. Thus, all products became pretty
much the same: There were lots of them and retailers and
channels could drive prices down. Thats how Wal-Mart grew
into the biggest retailer in the world in only a few years of
operation. The market changed from the historic marketer in
control to retailer in control. Today, we argue it is now
customer in control. Customers now have a wide variety of
choices from a wide variety of suppliers with a multitude of
retail choices among a broad set of products and services that
are pretty much alike. Most products and services today are
being sold at continuously declining prices or at least at continuously declining margins to the marketing organizations.
The problem, of course, is that most marketing
organizations persist in trying to manage the
supply side of the firm. Thats what traditional
four Ps marketing is all about: manipulating
price, product, place, and promotion to make better use of the tools and resources available to the
primary reason
to rethink the four
Ps is that changing marketplace dynamics simply make
the
Driven by Demand
Beginning in the late 1970s, the marketers ability to
produce products began to outstrip the consumers ability
to buy and use them. Thus, marketers hit the wall of oversupply and felt the impact that it has on traditional
marketing theory.
Exhibit 1
Supply chain
Agents &
brokers
Distributors
Retailers
Manufacturer
Consumers/End users
Exhibit 2
Demand chain
Solution
seeking:
Wants/need
desires
Recognized/
unrecognized
Consumers/
End users
Appropriateness
of solution
Marketing/sales
Knowledge of
solution
Production
Value/sacrifice
to obtain
R&D
Access to
solution
Admin
Intermediaries
bviously, our
inside-out-based
promotion model is broken,
if not irrelevant.
word-of-mouth marketing, the primary source of information
for most customers today. Interestingly, new research from the
United Kingdom shows that word-of-mouth support for a
product or service occurs more among new users than among
established customers. Thus, the people most likely to advocate for a new product or service are those who have just
adopted or purchased it. Yet thats not the model we use in
our marketing and communication programs, particularly
when we begin to develop brand value or brand equity models. The assumption is that the longer customers are retained,
the more value they have as advocates. While intuitively
appealing, the evidence is beginning to show that it simply
isnt true.
In an emerging trend, marketers now devote resources to
maintaining and monitoring chat rooms. Understanding how
customers search, sort, digest, and use information thus
becomes a research priority. Again, the goal is to provide the
Exhibit 3
WHATS NEXT
March/April
in Marketing Management?
ompanies are constantly striving to differentiate themselves