When W. Edwards Deming proposed his method for statistical quality control, he emphasized theimportance of the production system beginning with the customer. Customer input provides the foundationfor creation of products that meet market needs. For decades prior to Deming, manufacturing industries inmost industrialized nations elected to manufacture goods based on their ability to be produced, what isreferred to as the "production orientation". The challenge became finding ways to promote the products topotential purchasers in such ways as to create a perceived need for the good in the minds of potentialbuyers. Today, the advertising industry still finds itself constantly battling social critics who suggest thatadvertising, especially as practiced in the U.S. and Europe, creates false needs resulting in society'sunnecessary expenditures for unneeded products or services.Marketing matured in the 1950s and 1960s. The "marketing concept," a concept that had been around forcenturies in practice if not in theory, re-emerged to suggest that the most effective and efficient marketingstrategy is to survey markets to identify unfilled needs and then to produce products that satisfy thoseunmet needs. The thought was that if a product or service sufficiently satisfies consumers, the product orservice will sell itself as people with the need seek to fill it. The marketing concept means that anorganization aims all its efforts at satisfying customers. This concept requires marketers to focus theirresearch on what potential consumers want, then to translate that to product traits, packagingcharacteristics, price levels, or availability of products to consumers.Compare some differences in outlook between the Marketing Concept and the Production Concept and seeif you can identify differences that might be reflected in a company's relationship with customers.
Analytics
Comparison Of Market & Production
Analytics Process
Collect
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Analyze
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Insight
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Action