Complete study notes for Units 1 & 2 — simple language, Indian examples, exam-ready
Basics, process, functions, marketing organisations, marketing management, micro & macro environment, environmental scanning & digital marketing — all in simple language.
Most people think marketing = advertising or selling. That is only a small part. Marketing is a much broader concept that connects businesses to their customers.
Marketing is 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.
— American Marketing Association (AMA)Amul understands Indians love dairy. So they create butter, cheese, ice cream — promote with their iconic 'Amul Girl' ads — keep prices affordable — and distribute across millions of shops. This entire process from understanding customer needs to delivering value = Marketing.
A basic human requirement — food, shelter, safety. Marketers don't create needs.
A specific way to satisfy a need, shaped by culture & personality.
A want backed by buying power — money + willingness to spend.
Need: Hunger → Want: Pizza → Demand: Person who actually goes to Domino's and buys a pizza. Not everyone who is hungry will buy pizza — only those who want it AND can afford it.
Kotler & Armstrong describe the marketing process as 5 steps that create value for customers and build strong relationships.
Research customer needs, market trends, and competitors before making any product.
Which customers will we serve? (Segmentation & Targeting) How do we position ourselves?
Design the 4 Ps — Product, Price, Place, Promotion — to deliver the promised value.
Create satisfied, loyal customers through excellent service and loyalty programs.
Loyal customers buy again, refer others, and spend more — creating long-term profit.
Step 1: Researched that Indians paid too much for data. Step 2: Target ALL Indians, especially tier-2/3 cities. Step 3: Free data + cheapest plans + SIM in every kirana shop. Step 4: Apps, customer care, loyalty offers. Step 5: 400 million+ loyal subscribers generating consistent revenue.
Marketing performs several critical functions connecting producers with consumers. (Reference: Ramaswami & Namakumari)
Gathering and analysing info about customers, trends, and competitors.
Developing plans — what to sell, to whom, at what price, how to promote.
Marketing tells R&D what features customers need — not the other way around.
Packaging attracts buyers; labels inform about ingredients, usage, price.
Name, symbol, or design that identifies and differentiates a product (Tata = Trust).
Setting the right price that covers costs, reflects value, and satisfies customers.
Communicating value through ads, personal selling, sales promotions, and PR.
Getting the right product to the right place — logistics, warehousing, channels.
After-sales service, warranties, and complaint resolution build long-term loyalty.
ITC has a distribution network reaching 6 million retail outlets across India. Whether you're in Mumbai or a small UP village, you find ITC's Bingo chips. This massive distribution reach is a key competitive advantage created by their distribution marketing function.
Selling focuses on the needs of the seller; marketing on the needs of the buyer. Selling is preoccupied with converting product into cash; marketing with satisfying the needs of the customer.
— Theodore Levitt| Basis | Marketing | Selling |
|---|---|---|
| Starting Point | Customer needs | Existing product |
| Focus | Buyer's needs | Seller's needs |
| Goal | Customer satisfaction | Convert goods to cash |
| Time Horizon | Long-term | Short-term |
| Means | Integrated marketing mix | Promotion & persuasion |
| Customer View | Central focus | Means to achieve sales targets |
Produce as much as possible efficiently. Assumes customers will buy whatever is available. (Ford: "any color as long as it's black")
Best quality product will attract customers automatically. Risk: Marketing Myopia (Kodak ignored digital cameras!)
Customers won't buy without aggressive promotion. Focus on sales volume. Works for insurance/unsought goods.
Success comes from being more effective at creating customer value than competitors. Modern approach. (Zomato, Asian Paints)
Organized by function — advertising, sales, research, digital. Most common structure.
Each region has its own team. E.g. SBI has separate marketing for North, South, East, West India.
Each product has its own team. E.g. HUL has separate brand managers for Dove, Lux, Lifebuoy, Surf Excel.
Organized by customer type. E.g. Microsoft: Consumer Division, Enterprise Division, Education Division.
Marketing management is the art and science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping, and growing customers through creating, delivering, and communicating superior customer value.
— Philip Kotler — Marketing Management| State | Description | Task | Indian Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative Demand | Consumers dislike the product | Convert | Dentist visits |
| No Demand | Unaware or uninterested | Create | Organic food (early days) |
| Latent Demand | Strong need, no product yet | Develop | Affordable smartphones (Xiaomi Redmi) |
| Declining Demand | Demand falling | Revitalize | BSNL landlines |
| Irregular Demand | Seasonal variation | Synchronize | ACs (summer spike) |
| Full Demand | Demand = Supply | Maintain | — |
| Overfull Demand | Demand > Supply | Demarket | COVID-19 vaccines |
| Unwholesome Demand | Harmful products | Counter-market | Anti-tobacco campaigns |
Forces close to the company that directly affect its ability to serve customers. Company has some control over these.
All departments (Finance, R&D, HR, Production) affect marketing. All must work together — "total company" thinking.
Provide resources needed to produce. Supplier problems hit marketing directly. (Chip shortage → Maruti couldn't deliver cars)
Firms that help promote, sell, and distribute — resellers, distributors, ad agencies, banks.
Most critical element. Five types: Consumer, Business, Reseller, Government, International markets.
Companies must understand competitor strengths, weaknesses, and strategies to build competitive advantage.
Any group with interest in the company — media, government, local community, investors, internal employees.
When Coca-Cola's plant in Kerala was accused of depleting groundwater, local citizens, environmental groups, and media (all "publics") created massive negative pressure. Coca-Cola had to shut down the plant — showing how powerful publics can be.
Larger societal forces that affect the entire micro environment. Generally uncontrollable — companies must adapt to them.
Age, gender, population, family size, urbanisation. India's 65% youth population shaped brands like boAt, Zomato, Dream11.
GDP growth, income levels, inflation, interest rates. Rising incomes brought Starbucks to India; economic stress created Re.1 shampoo sachets.
Values, lifestyle, health consciousness. Growing health trend created demand for HealthifyMe, Organic India, protein supplements.
New tech creates new markets, destroys old ones. Internet destroyed travel agencies; Jio disrupted telecom; AI is now changing marketing.
Resources, climate, sustainability. Growing eco-awareness drives eco-friendly packaging. Samsung markets water-saving washing machines.
Laws, government policies. GST changed all pricing strategies in 2017. FSSAI regulates food labelling and claims.
Environmental scanning is the systematic process of monitoring and analysing the external environment to identify opportunities and threats. It is like a company doing a regular health check-up of the world around it.
Examines Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Environmental, Legal macro factors systematically.
Internal Strengths & Weaknesses + External Opportunities & Threats. Most widely used tool.
Existing rivals, new entrants, substitutes, supplier power, buyer power — analyses industry competition.
Systematic gathering and analysis of competitor information.
Kodak Failure: Kodak actually invented the digital camera in 1975, but their environmental scanning failed — they ignored the digital trend to protect their film business. Result: Kodak went bankrupt in 2012. Jio Success: Reliance scanned demographic (young population), economic (rising incomes), technological (4G affordable), social (internet appetite) trends — and identified the perfect moment for a data revolution in India.
Digital marketing is the use of internet, social media, search engines, email, mobile apps, and websites to promote products and engage with customers. Over 750 million Indians use the internet — digital marketing is now essential, not optional.
Making your website visible on Google. SEO = free organic rankings. SEM = paid Google ads.
Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, WhatsApp. Zomato's witty Twitter/Instagram presence is legendary.
Blogs, videos, podcasts to attract customers. Myntra's fashion blog drives traffic to their store.
Targeted personalised emails. Amazon sends "You viewed these laptops" emails — high conversion rate.
Partnering with social media creators. boAt became India's #1 audio brand through YouTube/Instagram influencers.
Netflix personalises thumbnails based on your preferences. Spotify Wrapped uses listening data. Data = power in digital marketing.
Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) means all channels — TV, social media, PR, personal selling — must work together with one unified message. Fevicol's 50 years of consistent 'strongest bond' messaging is a perfect example of IMC done right.
Marketing planning process, BCG Matrix, Ansoff Matrix, STP framework, Corporate Orientation, Market Segmentation, Targeting, Positioning, and the detailed 4Ps + 7Ps Marketing Mix.
Marketing planning is the structured process of researching and analysing the marketing situation, developing and documenting marketing objectives, strategies and programmes.
— Ramaswami V.S. & Namakumari S. — Marketing Management Planning ControlThink of it like planning a road trip — you decide the destination (objective), choose the route (strategy), and plan what to do at each stop (tactics). Marketing without planning is driving without a map.
Top management decides which businesses to be in and how to allocate resources. (Tata Group → Motors, Steel, TCS, Hotels)
Each SBU develops its own competitive strategy. (Tata Motors plans to compete vs Maruti, Hyundai, Mahindra)
Specific plans for individual products. (Tata Nexon EV team plans their own campaign, pricing, targets)
The BCG Matrix classifies business units or products based on Market Growth Rate vs Relative Market Share. Helps decide where to invest, maintain, or exit.
High Growth, High Share
Invest heavily to maintain leadership
High Growth, Low Share
Invest or divest — decision needed
Low Growth, High Share
Generate cash — fund Stars & QMs
Low Growth, Low Share
Consider divesting or repositioning
Stars: Jio's digital services (JioCinema, JioFiber) — fast-growing OTT market, strong position. Cash Cows: HUL's Lifebuoy soap — slow soap market, but market leader generating massive cash. Question Mark: Tata Nexon EV when launched — fast-growing EV market, low initial share → became a Star. Dogs: BSNL's landline services — shrinking market, declining share.
Existing Products, Existing Markets. Sell more to current customers through promotions, better distribution.
Coca-Cola offering combo packs and bigger bottles in Indian markets where they already sell.
Existing Products, New Markets. Sell current products in new geographies or new customer segments.
Patanjali expanded from Haridwar to all of India and then international markets with the same products.
New Products, Existing Markets. Develop new products for existing loyal customers.
Amul kept creating new products (ice cream, cheese, chocolate, protein) for their existing dairy-loyal customers.
New Products, New Markets. Entering completely new territory — highest risk, highest potential reward.
ITC diversified from cigarettes into FMCG (Aashirvaad, Sunfeast, Bingo), Hotels, and Agribusiness.
STP is the core of all marketing strategy. Every marketing plan must answer three fundamental questions. Think of it as a funnel — you start with the whole market and end with a laser-focused strategy.
Divide the entire market into distinct groups of buyers with different needs.
Evaluate each segment and select which ones to pursue.
Create a clear, distinct place in target customer's mind vs competitors.
Segmentation: Divided market by values/lifestyle — found a large group of "India-conscious, natural-products" buyers. Targeting: Targeted this large, underserved "swadeshi, Ayurveda" segment. Positioning: "Natural, Indian, Affordable" vs multinationals like HUL and P&G. Result: Rs. 30,000 crore revenue in just a few years.
Dividing the market by location — country, region, city, rural vs urban, climate.
Parachute coconut oil is a market leader in South & West India where coconut oil is traditional, but in North India mustard oil dominates. McDonald's sells McAloo Tikki in India but beef burgers in USA — geographic + cultural segmentation.
Dividing by age, gender, income, occupation, education, family size, lifecycle stage.
Age: Horlicks has Junior Horlicks (children), Women's Horlicks (women), Horlicks Lite (elderly) — same brand, different products for different ages. Income: Maruti offers Alto (low income), Swift (middle), Baleno (upper-middle) — three segments, three products.
Dividing by lifestyle, values, personality, interests, attitudes, and social class.
Royal Enfield targets people who see motorcycling as a lifestyle — adventure, freedom, masculine identity, brotherhood. Not commuters. This psychographic focus is why Royal Enfield can charge 3-4x the price of a regular motorcycle and still have waiting lists.
Dividing by occasions, benefits sought, user status, usage rate, loyalty.
Cadbury Dairy Milk positioned for celebrations — birthdays, festivals, exam results. "Kuch Meetha Ho Jaaye."
Colgate: Regular (clean), Sensitive (pain relief), Whitening (white teeth), Total (all-round) — same category, different benefits.
Airlines segment heavy flyers (business class lounges, loyalty points) vs infrequent travelers (standard economy).
Starbucks Rewards tracks loyal customers and gives free drinks, early access, personalised offers.
Ignore differences, target whole market with one offer. Economies of scale, but may not satisfy anyone perfectly. (Tata Salt)
Target multiple segments with separate offers. Higher coverage, higher cost. (HUL: Lux, Lifebuoy, Dove, Pears — each for different segment)
Large share of one small segment. Deep knowledge, strong position, lower resources needed. (Paper Boat = traditional Indian drinks niche)
Tailoring to specific individuals or local groups. (Nike By You custom shoes, Starbucks personalised drinks)
Rolex uses concentrated marketing — targeting only the ultra-premium luxury watch segment. They NEVER compete in budget or mid-range segments. By focusing all resources on one premium segment, they built one of the world's most powerful luxury brands. A niche approach done perfectly.
Positioning is not what you do to a product. Positioning is what you do to the mind of the prospect.
— Ries & Trout — Positioning: The Battle for Your MindPositioning is designing the company's offering and image to occupy a clear, distinctive, and desirable place in the target customer's mind — relative to competitors.
| Error | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Underpositioning | No clear brand identity — customers don't know what makes you special | Generic "me-too" brands with no distinct identity |
| Overpositioning | Too narrow — missing a larger market opportunity | Positioning as only for "elite athletes" |
| Confused Positioning | Too many different claims — customers are confused | Kingfisher Airlines — tried to be both luxury and budget. Led to failure. |
| Irrelevant Positioning | Positioning on something customers don't care about | Claiming best packaging when customers care only about taste |
| Doubtful Positioning | Claims too extraordinary to be believed | "Lose 10 kg in 7 days!" |
Fevicol's positioning: "The strongest bond." Every ad for 50 years shows Fevicol creating unbreakable bonds — in funny, extreme situations (elephant pulling a Fevicol-joined truck). They never show the product being used normally — they always emphasise extreme strength. This consistent, memorable positioning has made Fevicol synonymous with "strongest adhesive" in India. This is world-class positioning.
Consumers prefer affordable, available products. Focus: Efficiency. Problem: Ignores quality and choice desires. (Old government utilities)
Best quality product wins automatically. Problem: Marketing Myopia — ignores market shifts. (Kodak and digital cameras)
Customers won't buy without aggressive selling. Short-term focus. (High-pressure insurance sales)
Be more effective at creating customer value than competitors. Start with customer needs. (Asian Paints — complete home decor solution, not just paint)
Balance three things: Company profits + Customer wants + Society's long-term wellbeing. Example: Tata Group — contributes profits to Tata Trusts (charity), operates with community welfare in mind. The Tata Nano was conceived to safely replace dangerous overloaded two-wheelers — societal benefit built into the product concept.
The marketing mix is the set of controllable, tactical marketing tools that a firm blends to produce the response it wants in the target market.
— Philip Kotler — Principles of MarketingWhat you offer to satisfy customer needs. Goods, services, experiences, ideas.
What customers pay. The only revenue-generating element. Reflects value.
How the product reaches customers. Distribution channels and logistics.
How you communicate value. Advertising, PR, social media, personal selling.
All 4 Ps must be CONSISTENT and reinforce each other. A luxury product needs luxury pricing, luxury distribution (exclusive), and luxury promotion. A mismatch = marketing failure. (Kingfisher Airlines tried luxury + budget = confused = failed)
The fundamental benefit. What need does it really satisfy? (Hotel room core = REST and SLEEP, not the bed or decor)
The tangible features, design, quality, brand name, packaging. (Hotel room = bed quality, AC, Wi-Fi, TV, cleanliness)
Extra services beyond expectations. (Hotel = 24hr room service, loyalty points, free breakfast, airport pickup)
Low sales, high cost, losses. Goal: Create awareness. Spend on promotion.
Rapid sales rise, profits growing. Goal: Maximize market share. Expand distribution.
Peak sales, heavy competition, plateau profits. Goal: Defend market share. Modify product/mix.
Sales & profits fall. Goal: Reduce expenditure or exit. Consider repositioning.
Introduction (1983 — created instant noodles in India) → Growth (1990s — iconic snack) → Maturity (2000s — fierce competition) → Near-Death (2015 — banned by FSSAI over lead controversy) → Comeback (2015-16 — "Miss you too, Maggi!" — one of marketing's greatest comebacks). A product that went through all stages and came back from extinction!
Total cost + markup. Simple but ignores customer value. (Cost Rs.200 + 50% = Price Rs.300)
Price based on perceived customer value. Most sophisticated. (Starbucks charges Rs.400 for Rs.40 cost coffee — selling the experience)
Price based on competitors. Used in commodity markets. (Petrol — IOCL, BPCL, HPCL all same price)
Launch high, reduce later. Captures maximum revenue per segment. (Apple iPhone — Rs.1 lakh launch, discounts after 12 months)
Launch low to capture large market share fast. (Jio — free for 3 months, then cheapest in market = 400 million users)
Prices that feel lower — Rs.999 instead of Rs.1000. Prestige pricing — Rs.50,000 perfume signals luxury.
During rain or peak hours, demand exceeds supply. Uber automatically raises prices — this discourages some riders (reducing demand) AND motivates more drivers to come online (increasing supply). Market equilibrium is reached through pricing. This is demand-based dynamic pricing.
Manufacturer
Carries bulk stock
Breaks bulk
Kirana / Supermarket
Final buyer
Product everywhere — every possible outlet. For convenience goods. (Coca-Cola — within "arm's reach of desire")
Some chosen intermediaries. For shopping goods. (Samsung phones — only authorised dealers and Croma/Reliance Digital)
Very few dealers, one per territory. For luxury/specialty goods. (Rolex — only exclusive authorised dealers)
Paid, non-personal communication. TV, radio, print, outdoor, digital. (Amul Girl campaign — running since 1966!)
Short-term incentives — discounts, coupons, contests, free samples, loyalty programs.
Most expensive but most effective for complex products. (Pharma Medical Representatives visiting doctors)
Building positive image, handling crises. (Nestle's PR campaign to bring back Maggi after the 2015 ban)
Direct connection with individual customers — email, telemarketing, SMS. (HDFC personalised loan offers)
Social media, SEO, influencer marketing, content, apps. Fastest growing promotion channel.
TV ad (emotional gifting scene) + Diwali gift boxes in stores (sales promotion) + PR stories about Cadbury Diwali traditions + Influencer posts on Instagram + Direct emailers to corporate clients for bulk gifting. All elements together = one powerful, unified Diwali campaign. This is Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC).
For service businesses (hospitals, airlines, banks, restaurants), the original 4 Ps are not enough. Booms & Bitner added 3 more Ps:
All human actors in service delivery — employees, customers, other people in the environment. In services, people ARE the product. (IndiGo crew's efficiency and friendliness is a key competitive advantage)
Procedures and flow of activities delivering the service. Must be efficient and customer-friendly. (McDonald's standardised process: order → payment → wait → collect → eat. Same experience globally)
Environment where service is delivered + any tangible cues. Since services are intangible, physical evidence helps customers evaluate quality. (Apple Stores — glass facade, minimalist interior, wooden tables, blue-shirted Geniuses = everything communicates Apple's brand values)
Product (ride-hailing, Ola Auto/Bike/Electric) + Price (surge pricing, Ola Pass) + Place (app, 250+ cities) + Promotion (refer & earn, TV ads) + People (driver training, ratings) + Process (GPS tracking, multiple payment options) + Physical Evidence (clean vehicles, in-app receipt, driver rating system).
While marketers think in 4 Ps, customers think in 4 Cs (Robert Lauterborn). Smart marketers think from both perspectives simultaneously:
| 4 Ps (Company View) | 4 Cs (Customer View) | What This Means |
|---|---|---|
| Product | Customer Solution | What problem does this solve for me? |
| Price | Customer Cost | Total cost to me — money + time + effort, not just price tag |
| Place | Convenience | How easy is it for me to get this product? |
| Promotion | Communication | Is the company talking to me in a way that resonates? |
Customer Solution: Anything you want to buy, found easily. Customer Cost: Competitive prices + Prime saves time and money. Convenience: Delivered to your door in hours. Communication: Personalised recommendations, easy search, trusted reviews. Amazon optimised for the customer's perspective and became the world's largest retailer. This is the power of the 4 Cs thinking.
Structured process of developing marketing objectives, strategies and programmes.
Portfolio tool classifying products as Stars, Cash Cows, Question Marks, or Dogs.
Growth strategy tool — Penetration, Market Dev, Product Dev, Diversification.
Segmentation → Targeting → Positioning: the core marketing strategy process.
Set of benefits promised to deliver to satisfy customer needs better than competitors.
Product, Price, Place, Promotion — tactical tools to implement marketing strategy.
Introduction → Growth → Maturity → Decline stages of a product's market life.
Launch at high price then lower — capture maximum revenue from different segments.
Launch at low price to quickly capture large market share.
Stocking product in as many outlets as possible (for convenience goods).
Integrated Marketing Communications — all promotion tools with one unified message.
Balancing company profit, customer wants, and society's long-term wellbeing.
Marketing Management (MBA 205) · Semester II · MBA First Year
References: Kotler & Armstrong · Ramaswami & Namakumari · Kotler, Keller, Koshy & Jha