“Marketing Thinking” by AlexanderRepiev

Alexander Repiev

Marketing Thinking

or

Clientomania

Knowledge is a tool, not an end in itself.
Leo Tolstoy

To teach not thoughts, but thinking.

Immanuil Kant

Published in Russian in 2006
Has been translated into English
Available at Amazon.com /

This provocative book is not a traditional compendium of marketing definitions, schemes, diagrams, and matrices. It’s an exciting story about marketing thinking, a fairly elusive substance, which is akin to the musical ear. The absence of that “ear” turns a Harvard graduate into a useless and even dangerous marketing robot. Its presence makes even a rough-and-ready shop keeper into a bullet-biter and achiever.

Now that we have entered a brave new world of the turbulent “new economy,” marketing battles will be won not by “instrumentalists.” They will be won by marketing thinkers, by those who can think and feel like the Client and for the Client, by those who can live and breathe the Client, by those infected with Clientomania, by those bristling with disciplined creativity and inventiveness.

This book is both philosophic and pragmatic. It offers no easy formulas, but rather a guidance on how to acquire marketing thinking and apply it to a gamut of daunting marketing chores.

The book’s provocative highlights are:

–Corporate & personal dangers of pseudo-marketing

–The way marketing decisions are, and must be made

–Make-or-break importance of marketing thinking in marketing decision making

–A magnified-glass look at His Majesty the Client

–The Living Man and his RESOURCES, such as interestedness, attention, memory, etc., a subject normally ignored by marketing and especially branding texts

–The Buying Man viewed from a slew of angles

–Segmentation based on Client insights

–“A well-selling product or a well-known ‘brand’?” looks at the many prejudices and stupidities associated with the now-so-fashionable branding fantasias

– Marketing communications – everything communications, advertising being a dubious choice

Preface

I HAVE BEEN NURTURING this book for years. Most ideas it incorporates have resulted from decades of my experience as a practical marketer, copywriter, consultant, and teacher. Some have been prompted by my spells in seemingly irrelevant domains such as the navy, physics, foreign service, translations, and even stunt horse riding. Other valuable sources of inspiration have been business memoirs of successful practitioners, and discussions in various business audiences and Internet forums.

Throughout my marketing career, I have tantalizingly been groping for answers to two questions. The first one is:

What predetermines the success of a practical marketer? – Knowledge and experience? Skills and habits? Just testosterone and good luck? Or something else?

As to marketing knowledge, I have repeatedly been frustrated by the fact thatvenerable compendiaof marketing “learnedness” have been of no help whatsoever with my practical tasks, especially in Russia. Moreover, steeped in the strict scientific tradition, I have searched in those texts forsigns of scientific knowledge, i.e., for valid empirical postulates and tried-and-true theories, which would enable me to predict something in practice – this is a hallmark of real scientific knowledge. I was in for a shocking revelation:There is NO scientific knowledge in marketing!

As to experience, I have come across many an “experienced” marketing chair-polisher and number cruncher, good for nothing, to say the least, as a moneymaker for his organization.

As to testosterone and good luck – well, both might come in handy in whatever endeavor, provided the testosterone is tempered by acumen and reasoning, of course!

I have gradually and painfully arrived at the following answer to this question:

А practical marketer will hardly ever be successful unless he is endowed with a special marketing thinking.

This thinking is akin to the musical ear: some people have it, others don’t. My experience has shown that some can develop a marketing “ear,” whereas others are hopelessly deaf to marketing “music.”

I am dead sure now that practitioners without marketing thinking may be dangerous; and that the principal reason behind marketing failures is exactly the absence of marketing thinking in marketers and CEOs involved, or even in an entire organization.

The second question is:

Why has a marketer’s success nothing to do with his formal marketing education?

The answer is simple. At universities and business-schools, marketing students largely grow intellectual “fat,” not intellectual “muscles.” To use Kant’s words:

Current marketing education is about “thoughts,” not “thinking.” It is rather about pseudo-marketing, not marketing.

Hence, we have hordes of marketing robots laden with useless “thoughts” and all too few creative marketing “thinkers.”

What’s in this book

The book offers no easy formulas, but rather a guidance on how to acquire marketing thinking and apply it to a gamut of marketing chores. It is both philosophic and pragmatic.

The book consists of three Parts.

Part 1 begins with an introduction to the current problems of marketing, or rather pseudo-marketing. These include primarily ghettoization of academia and their irresponsibility to the marketing practitioner. Among its “derivative” maladies are scholasticism and bureaucracy. A section on decision-making in marketing leads the reader up to the make-or-break importance of marketing thinking, which is a subject of a separate section. After an overview of qualities a creative marker should display, the reader is introduced to marketing thinking “techniques.” The last section discusses in some detail the extremely important theme of selling points.

Part 2 is called “Your Client.” It starts with insights into the Living Man. One section is devoted to an issue that is generally overlooked in academic marketing texts – that of the resources of a human being. The last section looks at the Buying Man.

Part 3, called “Workshop,” is essentially a guidance on how to employ marketing thinking in the everyday work of a marketing practitioner. The section “Marketing: wings and fuselage” stresses the importance of a synergy between marketing thinking and adequate organizational structure. A section on market research looks carefully into the many prejudices associated with surveys. A large section discusses the many aspects of products. One of the most contentious sections in the book is that called “A well-selling product or a well-known ‘brand’?” It looks at the now fashionable topic of “branding” from the Client’s perspective. The winding sections are concerned with the applications of marketing thinking in marketing communications, especially in advertising.

The ideas of this book have been tested extensively in practice and class.

Alexander Repiev

Moscow, Russia, 2007

Table of Contents

1

“Marketing Thinking” by AlexanderRepiev

Preface

PartI

Marketing:knowledge, thinking, decisions

Marketing and pseudomarketing

Ismarketing obsolete?

Marketing “soul” or a marketing “department”?

Definitions of marketing

The “Client” in marketing

Science, art, or craft?

Pseudo-marketing: irresponsibility to practice

Pseudo-marketing: scholasticism

Pseudo-marketing: faulty reasoning

Pseudo-marketing:wrong education

Pseudo-marketing:bureaucracy

Marketing: performance skills

Marketing: it is getting harder!

Marketing: universal thinking, unique decisions

Marketing: disciplined creativity

What and how to teach marketers

Decisions in marketing

Negative sides of decisions

Education

“Correct” experience

Information

Marketing thinking

Brain hemispheres

Definition of “marketing thinking”

Marketing thinking non-stop

Some history

The core of the profession

Switching to marketing thinking

Corporate marketing thinking

Internalmarketing

Ergonomics and marketing

Marketing thinking for NON-marketers

What helps marketing thinking

Qualities of the creative marketer

Personal opinion

No dogmatism!

Common sense and intellect

“Imagination tempered by marketing acumen”

Creative intuition

Inventiveness that sells

Marketing thinking “techniques”

Client-questions non-stop

Marketing audit

From a hypothesis to a decision

Selling points

The language of selling points

Can characteristics sell?

Identification of selling points

False selling points

“Secret” selling points

Corporate selling points

Creationofnovel selling points

Advantage or disadvantage

Cross-cultural marketingand selling points

Selling points of imported goods

Client objections

PartII

Your Client

The Living Man

Human values

Man and information

Herd behavior

How we all hate changes!

Who is an authority to us?

Lay notions of quality

Resources of a human being

The conscious and subconscious minds

Time

Interestedness

Eye sight

Other sensory organs

Attention

Desire to strain oneself

Intellect and education

Memory

Humor

Sexuality

Ambitions and vanity

Fear

Trust

Money

Privacy

Needs

Levels of needs

How needs occur

Do we know the needs of the Client?

Does the Client know his needs?

Kinds of needs

Creation of new needs

Cultural needs

Ways of meeting needs

The Buying Man

Do people like to buy?

Overwhelming choice

Customer behavior

Purchases

Classification of Clients

How do people buy a product?

Segmentation

The unhappy Client

PartIII

Workshop

Marketing: wings and fuselage

Attitude to marketing in the company

Attitude to marketing in the marketing department

Work with selling points

Internal marketing

Marketing communications

New products

Pricing

Distribution

Other elements

Market research

To research or not to research?

Marketing thinking and research

The respondent: ideal and real

Surveys

Interpretation of data

Answers and real actions

Research for new products

Competition research

Ethics, time, finances

Observations of Clients

Products

Product: a good + services

Product: a good + services + atmosphere

Products and needs

WHAT does the Client buy?

Product categories

HOW does the Client buy?

The Client at the point of purchase

After a sale

Consumption

Prejudices in the market

Country as a selling point

Latent needs

Newness

Trademark awareness

Availability at retail outlets

A well-selling product or a well-known “brand”?

“Brand-ologists”

“Brand-masters”

Everything in the garden is just lovely

“Brand” – an utterly obscure notion

A stop-over

Historical roots of the chaos

“Brands” and business

“Economic” definition of “brand”

Awareness

Associations

Loyalty

Superbenefits

Identifiers

Company names

What is a good “brand”?

“Branding” and human resources

“Emotional ties”

“Brandability” of product categories

Conclusions

Creation of new products

Product idea

Preparation

R&D

Manufactured article

Product

List of selling points

Name of a product

Marketingof packaging

Manuals

Sales guides

“How-to-choose” guides

Marketing communications

Testing everything!

Marketing communications

Everything communicates!

Definition of marketing communications

Nature and volume of communications

Start with internal marketing!

Investments rather than costs

“Two-way street”

Priority of selling points

Advertising

What is advertising?

Purpose of advertising

Different advertising for different products

Do you need advertising?

Efficiencies of advertising

Problems of advertising

Advertising thinking

The Living Man and advertising

Environment of advertising

Simplicity

Consumption of advertising

AIDA

Attention of a target audience

Visual perception of advertising

To read or not to read?

Readability

Testing of advertisements

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