T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3341.1 | | SLPPRS::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Fri Aug 19 1994 16:20 | 5 |
| Well, a market is a building or place where merchandise is offered for
sale. Similarly, a marketing dept. is infrastructure that's used by
salespeople.
Mark
|
3341.2 | Quick and dirty marketing/selling | MROA::DHILL | | Fri Aug 19 1994 16:32 | 2 |
| Marketing pulls the customers into the car dealers; selling causes them
to drive off with new cars.
|
3341.3 | Harder than it Sounds | ASABET::LONDON | | Fri Aug 19 1994 16:46 | 23 |
| Marketing should include everything from market research to a sale -
and everything in between - advertising, promotion, pricing ...
Sales should be exactly the way it sounds - 1 small part - but the
most important part of marketing
The ultimate goal of marketing, the 4 P's or whatever you want to call
it is to increase sales.
Therefore, if marketing is amazing, selling will be simple.
Does this sound like Digital?
Now that marketing will be within each unit, my hope is that it will
substantially improve.
Marketing should know what customers will want in 3 years and create
demand for it now.
Sales should know what customers want today and sell as much of it as
they can.
Michael
|
3341.4 | Marketing | NWD002::RANDALL_DO | | Fri Aug 19 1994 17:09 | 39 |
| Here's what I learned in business school that marketing is.
4- Ps (the alliteration is a stretch)
Product. What will prospects buy? This task is to define demand
preferences, segment the general market, identify buying preferences in the
segments, and specify the product mix that will sell in the future.
Price. Estimate demand. Given the features and market
segments, and competition, how should a product be priced to maximize
revenue and profit?
Promotion. This is a PART of marketing's job, but this is what we
think marketing is. This is advertising, free promotion, product
information, trade shows, etc.
Distribution (I forget the word beginning with p that fit this
category, but it didn't fit anyway) How will this product be sold?
This is based on the above, and is to arrive at the way to sell a given
product or service that maximizes profitability. This answers the
question, which channel to use for each product.
Those four things are what marketing does in a marketing-oriented
company. The product manager is typically in charge, has a business
background, and makes all four decisions by developing a business plan
or market plan for the product. The first P is the most important one.
Without that, the others have a strong chance of failure.
Sales is the execution of part of the marketing plan. Sales is what
happens in the channel chosen. If direct sales is chosen, then the
company uses a sales force to sell the product, and supports the sales
force with promotion, a good product, at the right price. If an
indirect channel is chosen, then a smaller sales force sells to the
channel, and pricing and promotion are adjusted to fit the channel.
I can't speak for how this compares with Digital's marketing practice.
I've been part of the sales end.
Don Randall
|
3341.5 | | NPSS::BRANAM | Steve, Network Product Support | Fri Aug 19 1994 17:11 | 16 |
| Well, since I appreciated your analogy before, let me offer my
own take on this:
Marketing is demand creation.
Sales is demand fulfillment.
Without someone out there drumming up the customers, the sales
people have no one to sell to. In reality, sales people do some
marketing by trying to get their customers to buy more product,
but if marketing was accomplishing its goal, sales wouldn't have
time to do any marketing, they would be busy processing orders.
I see an ad for something at Sears, I don't go looking for the
guy I saw on TV, I go looking for the salesclerk. The salesclerk
needs to be aware of the ad, but doesn't have to do anything
to encourage me to buy.
|
3341.6 | Thanks for the good input | BABAGI::CRESSEY | | Fri Aug 19 1994 17:36 | 29 |
| > Marketing is demand creation.
> Sales is demand fulfillment.
All right! This definitely evens the score! Thanks!
Re: the four P's: I think the fourth P is "Place". If you're
starting a restaurant or renting a condo, this is critical. If
your business is Internet based, this needs to be redefined to
mean something like "place in cyberspace", but I have no idea
what that is....
Re: .1 through .4: Excellent stuff... thank you all, and keep
'em coming!
I note that Pricing is a marketing function. It seems to me
that if you set a price, and have a sales forecast based on
that price, you've got the first piece of the business systems
needed to run digital like a business: the revenue forecast.
I have seen (admittedly years ago) pricing of some DEC products
done like this: Well our cost is x dollars per unit, and upper
management is requiring a 40% margin, so I guess that means the
price has to be 1.666 times X. I don't know what marketing is,
but I know this ain't it. I hope this doesn't happen any more!
(I swear I am not making this up!)
Dave
|
3341.7 | More Marketing | GAVEL::ROBINS | | Fri Aug 19 1994 17:48 | 14 |
| Marketing is more than just demand creation. It is also demand
identification. In other words, the demand may already exist and is
just waiting to be uncovered. Another key marketing
distinction--"demand pull" and "demand push" (my terminology may be a
bit off since it's been a few years since my last marketing course).
Demand pull marketing involves creating a demand and then pulling
product through channels. Push marketing is creating a product and
trying to push it through channels without regard for demand. I've
only been here a short time but I think that this distinction may be
the difference between past and future marketing strategies at
Digital.
Larry
|
3341.8 | | SPECXN::PETERSON | Harlo Peterson | Fri Aug 19 1994 18:19 | 37 |
| re: .6
>I have seen (admittedly years ago) pricing of some DEC products
>done like this: Well our cost is x dollars per unit, and upper
>management is requiring a 40% margin, so I guess that means the
>price has to be 1.666 times X. I don't know what marketing is,
>but I know this ain't it. I hope this doesn't happen any more!
>(I swear I am not making this up!)
This is an appropriate strategy for certain types of markets. It
provides the minimum price that covers costs and gives a good, but not
perceived greedy or gouging, return on investment. It is appropriate for
near-monopoly type markets where there is not significant competition,
demand is large and not strongly price sensitive. Determining the
market clearing price where quantity demanded matches quantity supplied
is difficult with new products in an untested market so a cost plus
pricing strategy is a good starting point. You might be leaving money
on the table with this strategy but, even with a unique product in a
new market, you don't want to price too high as you may end up
attracting significant competition into your market.
Other types of markets require other types of pricing strategies. In a
commodity market with little product differentiation, the price is a
given and has already been set by the market interactions between
existing buyers and sellers. A new entrant to the market can't expect
to price significantly different than the market price. In commodity
markets, the market price is usually very close to the minimum required
to provide the minimum level of return necessary to keep suppliers in
the market. Price too high and nobody buys your product, price too low
and you don't get an acceptable rate of return. If you want to price
higher than market you have to offer something perceived to be a valued
differentiator.
I expect a good marketing group to understand all this and set an
appropriate price for a product based on business goals and the type
of market competing in. Profit maximization is not the only
consideration.
|
3341.9 | A thought to ponder... | GOEDUX::CORBETT_KE | | Fri Aug 19 1994 19:11 | 5 |
| As a sales person with MANY years of pounding the pavement, I wonder
why there are so many notes trying to define what marketing is and
there is no doubt what sales is.
Ken
|
3341.10 | The mechanics of a sale | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Blondes have more Brains! | Fri Aug 19 1994 19:19 | 24 |
| Ok, here's my simplistic shot at an analogy -- think as Digital's sales
and marketing groups as part of a vehicle repair shop.
The mechanic has a tool box, where he keeps all the things he
needs to get the job done - tools, rate books, technical manuals, and
little spare parts. The mechanic himself does the actual work, but he
can't function or succeed without the things in his box. Likewise, the
tool box is useless without a mechanic to implement and utilize the
items it holds. Neither one can repair a vehicle or bring in any money
without the other.
So should marketing and sales be tied; marketing should provide all of
the tools, such as advertising, product descriptions, other types of
propaganda, realistic competitive information and training, market
research that leads to saleable new products, selling tools such as
workable pricing systems, presentations, etc. The salesperson provides
the talent, time and expertise to utilize and implement these things,
thereby closing sales and bringing in revenue.
Unfortunately, the tie that binds marketing and sales got stuck in a
granny knot about 10 years ago, and it has been that way ever since.
M.
|
3341.11 | KISS | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Sun Aug 21 1994 13:02 | 14 |
|
I was going to ignore this whole thing, but my fingers got the
better of me.
Sales is the SCIENCE of a transaction.
Marketing is the ART of creating an environment where the
transaction can occur.
Everything else is addition. Have a nice day. :-)
the Greyhawk
|
3341.12 | ...AND TELL | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Mon Aug 22 1994 03:25 | 4 |
| Marketing tries to get the customer in the door (with a few bucks).
Sales tries to get the customer out of the door (minus those bucks).
;-)
|
3341.13 | fire | ANNECY::HOTCHKISS | | Mon Aug 22 1994 04:01 | 24 |
| Oh dear,we do have a problem..
re .0
Digital does not make the difference-we are so tainted by years of
technical superiority that marketing has no place in most
outfits.Marketing in Digital is mainly poor merchanidising
re .1
Joke,right?
re .2
Right in line 1,deadly wrong in line 2.Sales is no more important than
any other piece.Marketing is the whole chain from research to inception
to delivery.If you have a great product,great sales,great after sales
service but a lousy receptionist to answer customer queries,then the
marketing machine is bust.
Additionally,marketing should know what customers want today just as
much as sales folk
re .4
top of the class-I'll bet you aren't in marketing though
re .6
No,unfortunately I can corroborate that you aren't making this
up-more's the pity
Now,maybe I am a little jaundiced because I live in France where the
translation of the word marketing means merchandising and advertising
only
|
3341.14 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Mon Aug 22 1994 08:56 | 3 |
| If a so-called Marketing Professional or a Sales Professional has to
have an answer to "What is the difference between Marketing & Sales"
it's no wonder this company is in the shape it's in!
|
3341.15 | You Know We're in Trouble When... | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Mon Aug 22 1994 09:16 | 1 |
|
|
3341.16 | A practical perspective on Marketing | MR4DEC::DTOMPKINS | | Mon Aug 22 1994 10:41 | 29 |
| As a veteran marketing person, I would agree that most, if not all, of
the analogies in preceding replies do a good job of distinguishing
Marketing from Sales, at least in a theoretical sense. Let me try to
supplement these with a practical perspective, gained through personal
experience.
Rarely does a Marketing group have in its control all elements of the
"marketing mix". And, what a corporation really expects of Marketing
tends to change over time.
When a company is growing rapidly and profitably, Marketing is asked to
get out its crystal ball, and figure out what the company needs to be
doing to sustain this growth in the ensuing 2 to 3 years. Marketing
strategies and long range plans tend to be the most-sought outcomes of
the Marketing effort.
When growth falters, or profits disappear, Marketing is told to stop
worrying about the future, and help Sales close business NOW. Measures
of success center on involvement with, and responsiveness to, the Field.
I've seen this happen at Digital, and at other companies. Therefore,
my analogy for Marketing is "the corporate amoeba"...we must change
shape to meet the changing needs of the company. Many Marketing
organizations, and Marketing people, are unwilling or unable to make these
adaptations when called on. Having this kind of versatility and
responsiveness is important for long-term success in this often
misunderstood and undervalued profession.
Dennis Tompkins
|
3341.17 | Shucks, it's the right thing! | BABAGI::CRESSEY | | Mon Aug 22 1994 11:56 | 35 |
| Re: .8
This is an excellent note. I learned something from both
your treatment of when cost-plus is appropriate and from
your description of the limits of its appropriateness.
After reading it, I've concluded two things:
The case I had in mind was a case where the Digital name on the
front cover provided so much perceived value added that it could
be thought of as a near monopoly. It was packaged training on
subjects like VAX system manager. Your note persuades me that
maybe cost plus pricing was OK in that circumstance.
Second, in a near monopoly situation, the first two "P"s:
product and pricing may be carried on fairly successfully
by someone with little marketing background, and little
conscious awareness of why what they are doing works.
("Shucks, I'm just doin' the right thing!"). If the person's
focus is engineering, that person may move on to the next issue,
which could be something like applying mass production techniques
to drive down per unit cost.
If the market changes while the successful not-marketing
marketer isn't watching, then behaviour that was previously
successful may have become unadapted. The behaviour won't
change until feedback that says that change is called for
gets through.
Something like that may have happened to Digital over the last
10 years.
Dave
|
3341.18 | .16 Good Thoughts | ASABET::LONDON | | Mon Aug 22 1994 11:57 | 7 |
| .16
I like your perspective.
Never heard it quite that way.
|
3341.19 | Who -- Me-e-e? | BABAGI::CRESSEY | | Mon Aug 22 1994 11:58 | 5 |
| Whatever made you think that the original question came
from someone in Marketing or Sales?
Dave
|
3341.20 | Sales to Market | ASABET::LONDON | | Mon Aug 22 1994 11:59 | 6 |
| Does anyone have an opinion on whether a marketer should have sales
experience?
I have my thoughts, but I'd like to hear yours.
Michael
|
3341.21 | Who, Me-e-e-e? | BABAGI::CRESSEY | | Mon Aug 22 1994 12:26 | 6 |
| Reply .19 should have had a reference back to .14
My mistake.
Dave
|
3341.22 | A yes vote. | ASABET::EARLY | Why plan a comeback? Just do it! | Mon Aug 22 1994 14:00 | 26 |
| > Should a marketer have sales experience?
IMHO, absolutely (if not sales, then at least some type of related
field experience).
o I believe that those in marketing who have sold before have a
better appreciation for customer environments, and what the
selling organization needs to be successful.
o Having done it yourself gives you a better sense for what will and
will not be accepted or useful in the field.
o From having done it, one usually develops a fairly wide circle of
field acquaintences that can be drawn upon for input concerning
ideas on products or ways to better support the field in
selling to customers.
o From having done it, one also has customer acquaintances who can
also act as good sounding boards for testing product
development ideas or marketing campaigns.
Although working in sales itself is probably best, in my view having
worked in the field in a similar capacity (like sales support or DC)
is an acceptable prerequisite as well.
|
3341.23 | Marketing and Sales | WMOIS::DIXON | | Mon Aug 22 1994 14:44 | 4 |
| .20 Should someone in Marketing have sales experience?
Don't frame the thought just to marketing. I suggest anyone in
management MUST have sales experience!
|
3341.24 | How are we doing? | NWD002::RANDALL_DO | | Mon Aug 22 1994 20:43 | 9 |
| Now for the real question. Those in Marketing only reply...
How are we doing? Or phrased differently, does Digital's marketing
group do marketing in the same way that the best in class does?
We don't get rave reviews from the outside - how about from the inside.
Constructive evaluations and ideas, please.
|
3341.25 | Willing and able, but... | CHEFS::SMITHJ1 | | Tue Aug 23 1994 12:37 | 19 |
| I'm in Marketing (UK Digital Consulting).
My answer to .24 is yes, when we're allowed to. The biggest problem I
have experienced is always having a sales person as head of marketing
with the mindset that marketing's role is to deliver leads. So, we
only get to run promotional campaigns!
In my marketing team we have the skills and experience to do all the
things referred to in other notes:
- market research
- portfolio management
- channel strategy
- promotion
- etc
but we only get budget and brownie points for doing promotion!
Regards, Jenny
|
3341.26 | Leland??? | ASABET::LONDON | | Tue Aug 23 1994 12:41 | 5 |
| Leland is that you? - MCI
We talked in Cedar Rapids about sales needs.
|
3341.27 | Marketing in the field... | GLDOA::WERNER | | Wed Aug 24 1994 09:06 | 21 |
| RE .25
I've been in both Sales and field based marketing (which I perceive to
be your role). It appears to me that the further one is away from the
Corporate flag pole, the further the term (and job) marketing is away
from the classic definitions and the more it is related to generating
leads.
I too was in field based markeitng for a couple of years, back when we
had Regional Marketing groups. While I did some market research, the
majority of my time was devoted to lead generation activities -
seminars, trade shows and sales calls. This was percieved to be
marketing by the field sales management, for who field based marketing
worked.
IMHO Digital's marketing (in the classic sense) is turning around and
getting better, witness the new ad campaign. We still have a long way
to go and we still need better research and guidance from marketing to
the product planning people.
OFWAMI :^)
|
3341.28 | -1 is totally right on | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Wed Aug 24 1994 12:28 | 8 |
|
Hey Norm, glad to see you've survived. Give me a call.
Folks, -1 is right on. We used to work together when we were in
field marketing many many moons ago. Werner knows exactly of what he
speaks. He was Mr. AutoFact.
the Greyhawk
|
3341.29 | a Marketing experience !!! | FHOHUB::EYAK::DEVINE | | Thu Sep 01 1994 14:32 | 23 |
|
I received an 'event attendee report' in the mail on friday 8/26
from Digital.
it was a lead from a trade show on which the attendee (a vp from
a manufacturing company here in Michigan) had checked the boxes..
X have salesman call
x send literature
x interresed in moving to Alpha AXP
I gave him a call on Monday 8/29 and explained who I was and why
I was calling..
He chuckled and said my call was timely, he had just taken delivery
of his HP server. The 'attendee' report was from the Uniforum show
in MARCH this year and I was the FIRST person from digital who had
contacted him...
this is scarry !!
/kd
|
3341.30 | Ya gets what ya plans for (Popeye) | ASABET::EARLY | Why plan a comeback? Just do it! | Thu Sep 01 1994 16:34 | 48 |
| re: -1
It is scary, but it has been happening for a long time. I think it has
something to do with our history with trade shows and why we go to
them. Lots of times I hear people say that we go to trade shows to
make sure "the world knows what we have to offer". Although some
people talk about "increasing sales" as the result of trade shows, I've
always felt like we go to them as an educational mission.
Another company I worked for went to trade shows to "CLOSE ORDERS".
Everything we did was focused on making the trade show a closing event.
We layed out the booth to maximize traffic flow and had just as much
space devoted to "Closing Booths" as we did to display areas. We
brought literature and order forms to the show. (When did you ever see
this at a show Digital participated in?)
Closing business and tracking leads were taken very seriously and
measured DAILY against goals.
Sales people on the floor participated in two contests at every trade
show; An award for the person who closed the most business and an
award for the person who wrote the most leads. Awards were given out
daily and for the "total show".
The result: We wrote millions of dollars worth of business at every
trade show we went to (and our products were not $5 items either). AND
ALL Leads from the trade show were in the hands of either:
o The right sales rep
o The right Unit Manager OR
o (Worst case) the right District Manager
WITHIN 24-48 HOURS of when the lead was WRITTEN (not after the show was
over).
When I was in the field, our Region was trying to get DECworld leads
for MONTHS after the show ended.
In my opinion we get what we plan for. If you go to a show to educate
people about what you have, that's what you'll do. If we really went
there to sell something, leads wouldn't be bubbling up 4 months after
the show was over.
/se
|
3341.31 | Sales is not our strong point... | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Fri Sep 02 1994 07:09 | 20 |
| I was at a trade show in New York in April for four days
demoing. In that time we generated over 100 leads. Due to
the nature of the product I work on (production workflow)
each lead represents an opportunity for add on sales for
client/server environments and consultancy services. Most
leads represented new prospects and not the existing
customer base.
When we tried to find out who to give them to (I'm from
engineering Europe) we were pretty much told that it
wasn't clear who the sales force was anymore due to
the (coming) reorganisations and we would have to follow
up ourselves.
We tried approaching various US regional sales offices and
sent some leads to various parties but we couldn't find
anybody who felt they owned the issue...
I threw the leads away last week.
|
3341.32 | | HLFS00::CHARLES | chasing running applications | Fri Sep 02 1994 07:29 | 8 |
| >Sales is not our strong point...
I think you're making a mistake Roelof.
It's not that sales is not our strong point, but we only want to sell
to customers who come banging on our door and beg on their knees if
they can buy something from us.
Charles
|
3341.33 | | VANGA::KERRELL | Hakuna matata! | Mon Sep 05 1994 04:34 | 7 |
| re.31:
Why were Digital even at a trade show when we didn't have anyone in
sales ready to follow through any leads? Perhaps collecting leads was
not an objective and someone forgot to tell everyone in the booth?
Dave.
|
3341.34 | You Tell Me... | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Mon Sep 05 1994 09:20 | 9 |
|
>Why were Digital even at a trade show when we didn't have anyone in
>sales ready to follow through any leads? Perhaps collecting leads was
Due to the reorganisations it appeared that we didn't have anyone
in sales, period. From other anectodes in this conference this
may still be the situation in real life (vs DECspeak). I just
don't have a clue what the actual sales force is, how its goaled
today and how effective it is.
|
3341.35 | needs a lot of work | ASABET::SILVERBERG | My Other O/S is UNIX | Wed Sep 07 1994 08:55 | 6 |
| re: We had the U.S. area sales management team supporting the show to
process the leads. Clearly, this is an area that concerns us at every
show, and usually does not get executed well.
Mark
|