Sunday, February 8, 2009

mginger





“Get 50% OFF on your favourite brand of apparels”

“Buy one drink at your favourite restaurant and get the other absolutely free”

“Shop for Rs 2000 or more & get flat 200 Rs OFF”

When each of these messages get that smile and excitement on your face we know we have achieved our target. Friends, mGinger has come a long way with you all and has become an inseparable part of your day to day life. But here’s something that many of you could be unaware of. Let’s peep into the other side of this SMS service. Have you ever thought of doing some business of your own? Could be anything like opening a small restaurant or may be a book store? There might be many who must have already given a shape to this dream and started their own business setups. So the bottom line is “why don’t you advertise with us?” It’s the local small scale businesses that are gaining a lot of attention these days and if you have a setup we have an SMS advertisement ready for you. Target your locality, select the income group, you have the option of sending it to youngsters, office goers or housewives at times and in few seconds your brand reaches thousands of mobile screens at a cost that’s as affordable as your monthly chaipani. Doesn’t this sound exciting to you? You’ve known mGinger for quite some time now & we are sure you’ve been benefited by the deals, discounts, mCoupons & more. Why not take it a step forward and include mGinger in your marketing plan? There have been so many advertisers who have opted for mobile marketing & their special offers promoted through mGinger SMS’s have managed to sell their products like hot cookies. Who knows you could have been one of their customers. Think about it…pick just a fraction of your advertisement budget, execute an SMS campaign in just 15 mins, and have not one not two but thousands of customers responding immediately to your campaign. Its time to enter the world of mobile advertising and witness a miraculous business growth. With millions and billions of mobile users imagine to which extent your business could flourish at a cost which won’t be too heavy on your pocket. So are you ready to join the mobile advertising generation? There have been advertisers who pat our backs and encourage us time and again. They have something to say about us. What? Just play the video & you’ll know.

http://mGinger.com/index.jsp?inviteId=೧೮೧೫೧೨೪

http://mGinger.com/index.jsp?inviteId=harishkumark99

http://mGinger.com/index.jsp?inviteId=9480088617

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Marketing

Marketing
Key concepts

Product / Pricing / Promotion
Distribution / Service / Retail
Brand management
Account-based marketing
Marketing effectiveness
Market research
Marketing strategy
Marketing management
Market dominance

Promotional content

Advertising / Branding
Direct marketing / Personal Sales
Product placement / Public relations
Publicity / Sales promotion
Underwriting

Promotional media

Printing / Publication / Broadcasting
Out-of-home / Internet marketing
Point of sale / Novelty items
Digital marketing / In-game
Word of mouth

Marketing is defined by the American Marketing Association as the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large. [1] The term developed from the original meaning which referred literally to going to market, as in shopping, or going to a market to sell goods or services.

Marketing practice tends to be seen as a creative industry, which includes advertising, distribution and selling. It is also concerned with anticipating the customers' future needs and wants, which are often discovered through market research.

Marketing is influenced by many of the social sciences, particularly psychology, sociology, and economics. Anthropology is also a small, but growing influence. Market research underpins these activities. Through advertising, it is also related to many of the creative arts. The marketing literature is also infamous for re-inventing itself and its vocabulary according to the times and the culture.

Contents

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[edit] Four Ps

Main article: Marketing mix

In the early 1960s, Professor Neil Borden at Harvard Business School identified a number of company performance actions that can influence the consumer decision to purchase goods or services. Borden suggested that all those actions of the company represented a “Marketing Mix”. Professor E. Jerome McCarthy, also at the Harvard Business School in the early 1960s, suggested that the Marketing Mix contained 4 elements: product, price, place and promotion.

  • Product: The product aspects of marketing deal with the specifications of the actual goods or services, and how it relates to the end-user's needs and wants. The scope of a product generally includes supporting elements such as warranties, guarantees, and support.
  • Pricing: This refers to the process of setting a price for a product, including discounts. The price need not be monetary; it can simply be what is exchanged for the product or services, e.g. time, energy, or attention.
  • Placement (or distribution): refers to how the product gets to the customer; for example, point-of-sale placement or retailing. This third P has also sometimes been called Place, referring to the channel by which a product or service is sold (e.g. online vs. retail), which geographic region or industry, to which segment (young adults, families, business people), etc. also referring to how the environment in which the product is sold in can affect sales.
  • Promotion: This includes advertising, sales promotion, publicity, and personal selling, branding and refers to the various methods of promoting the product, brand, or company.

These four elements are often referred to as the marketing mix,[2] which a marketer can use to craft a marketing plan.

The four Ps model is most useful when marketing low value consumer products. Industrial products, services, high value consumer products require adjustments to this model. Services marketing must account for the unique nature of services.

Industrial or B2B marketing must account for the long term contractual agreements that are typical in supply chain transactions. Relationship marketing attempts to do this by looking at marketing from a long term relationship perspective rather than individual transactions.

As a counter to this, Morgan, in Riding the Waves of Change (Jossey-Bass, 1988), suggests that one of the greatest limitations of the 4 Ps approach "is that it unconsciously emphasizes the inside–out view (looking from the company outwards), whereas the essence of marketing should be the outside–in approach".