This MCQ module is based on: Marketing Concept, Functions & Philosophies
Marketing Concept, Functions & Philosophies
This assessment will be based on: Marketing Concept, Functions & Philosophies
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Marketing — Concept, Scope & Management Philosophies
Marketing class 12 NCERT — meaning of marketing, the difference between marketing and selling, the five marketing-management philosophies and the twelve functions of marketing every CBSE Class 12 student must know.
2.1 Where Do Companies Do Their Business? — In the Markets or in the Society?
NCERT opens this chapter with a powerful question: a company's survival does not depend on its consumers alone. A diverse set of stakeholders — the government, religious leaders, social activists, NGOs, the media — also shape the brand. Earning their satisfaction is just as imperative, because they add to the power of the brand by word of mouth. Social concern strengthens the brand. Corporates that have embraced the deepest social values have built powerful brands and, eventually, robust customer relationships.
NCERT groups corporate social justice into two broad categories. The first covers issues that need instant humanitarian attention — child nutrition, child care, old-age homes, fighting hunger, aid to victims of natural calamities. The second covers issues that make society a pleasant place to live in the long run — health awareness and aid, education, environmental protection, women's employment and empowerment, preventing unjust discrimination (caste, community, religion, ethnicity, race, sex), eradication of poverty through employment, preservation of culture, values and ethics, and contribution to research.
2.2 What is Marketing?
The term marketing is described by different people in different ways. Some think it is the same as shopping; whenever they go out to buy something they call it 'marketing'. Others confuse it with selling and feel that marketing starts only after a product has been produced. Still others equate it with merchandising — designing the product. All these descriptions are partly correct, but marketing is a much broader concept.
Traditionally, marketing was described in terms of its activities — the performance of business activities that direct the flow of goods and services from producers to consumers. Most manufacturing firms do not produce for their own consumption but for use by others. To move goods and services from the producer to consumers, a number of activities are required — product designing or merchandising, packaging, warehousing, transportation, branding, selling, advertising and pricing. Together, these are called marketing activities. Thus merchandising, selling and distribution are all parts of a much larger set of activities that a firm performs collectively as marketing?.
Importantly, marketing is not merely a post-production activity. It also includes activities performed before goods are produced (identifying customer needs, gathering information, designing the product, packaging, branding) and continues even after the goods have been sold (after-sales follow-up to maintain customer relations and procure repeat sales).
"Marketing takes a day to learn. Unfortunately it takes time to master." — Philip Kotler
2.2.1 Understanding 'Market' — Old and New Meanings
In the traditional sense, the term market refers to the place where buyers and sellers gather to enter into transactions involving the exchange of goods and services. We still use the word this way every day — a cotton market, the gold market, the share market, a national or international market, a consumer or industrial market, a retail or wholesale market.
But in the modern marketing sense, market has a broader meaning. It refers to the set of actual and potential buyers of a product or service. When a fashion designer offers a new dress, all the people who are willing to buy it and offer some value in exchange make up the market for that dress. The market for fans, bicycles, electric bulbs or shampoos similarly means all the actual and potential buyers of those products.
2.2.2 Four Important Features of Marketing
2.3 What Can Be Marketed?
The list of what can be marketed today is far wider than physical goods. NCERT lists eight categories — and modern marketing literature now adds 'experiences', 'properties' and 'organisations' to this list.
| Category | NCERT Examples |
|---|---|
| Physical Products | Motorcycle, iPods, mobile phone, footwear, television, refrigerator |
| Services | Insurance, health care, BPO, security, financial services (investment), computer education, online trading |
| Ideas | Polio vaccination, HelpAge, family planning, blood donation (Red Cross), Flag Day donation (National Foundation for Communal Harmony) |
| Persons | Election candidates for various posts |
| Places | "Visit Agra — City of Love"; "Udaipur — City of Lakes"; "Mysore — City of Gardens"; "When Orissa celebrates, even the gods join in" |
| Events | Sports events (Olympics, cricket series), Diwali Mela, fashion show, music concert, film festival, elephant race (Kerala Tourism) |
| Information | Information produced and distributed by universities, research organisations, marketing-research agencies, technology providers |
| Experiences/Properties/Organisations | Theme-park experiences, real-estate properties, image-building of organisations themselves |
2.4 Who is a Marketer?
A marketer is the one who is more active in seeking the exchange. In a typical exchange, one party is more actively looking to make the deal happen — that party is the marketer; the other is the prospect. A seller searching for buyers is a marketer; a buyer searching out a scarce good is also playing a marketer's role at that moment.
A marketer's job in an organisation is to identify the needs of the target customers and to develop products and services that satisfy those needs at a price the customer is ready to pay, made available at a place the customer can access, and communicated through promotion that reaches the customer.
2.5 Marketing Management — Concept
According to the American Management Association, marketing management is "the process of planning and executing the conception, pricing, promotion and distribution of ideas, goods and services to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organisational goals." Philip Kotler similarly defines it as "the art and science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping and growing customers through creating, delivering and communicating superior customer values of management."
A careful reading reveals three pillars:
2.6 Marketing versus Selling
Many people confuse selling with marketing. Marketing is a much larger set of activities of which selling is just one part. Before a TV is even sold, a TV marketer plans the type and model to be produced, the price at which it will be sold and the distribution outlets through which it will be available. In short, marketing covers a whole range of activities relating to planning, pricing, promoting and distributing products that satisfy customer needs.
Selling, by contrast, is restricted to promoting goods and services through salesmanship, advertising, publicity and short-term incentives — so that the title of the product is transferred from seller to buyer. In other words, selling is about converting the product into cash; marketing is about creating customer value.
2.6.1 Seven Key Differences — Marketing vs Selling
| Basis | Marketing | Selling |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Scope | Wide range — planning, pricing, promoting, distributing | Narrow — only the act of transferring title |
| 2. Focus | Customer needs & satisfaction | Product & sales volume |
| 3. Starting point | The market — what customers want | The factory — what is already produced |
| 4. Means | Integrated marketing — product, price, place, promotion | Selling and promoting |
| 5. End | Profit through customer satisfaction | Profit through sales volume |
| 6. Time horizon | Long-term — customer for life | Short-term — close this sale |
| 7. Activities | Begins before production, continues after sale | Begins after production, ends at title transfer |
2.7 Marketing Management Philosophies — Five-Stage Evolution
What philosophy or thinking should guide an organisation's marketing efforts? The choice determines the weight given to factors such as product features, selling techniques, customer needs or social concerns. The marketing concept has evolved through five stages.
① Production Concept
Demand exceeded supply; selling was no problem. Focus: maximise production at large scale to cut average cost. Assumption: customers favour products that are widely available and affordable.
② Product Concept
Mere availability and low price could no longer ensure sale. Customers wanted superior quality, performance and features. Focus shifted from quantity to quality; product improvement became the key to profit.
③ Selling Concept
With many sellers selling quality products, attracting and persuading customers became critical. Aggressive selling and promotion — advertising, personal selling, sales promotion — was needed to push the product. Assumption: buyers won't buy enough unless coaxed. Risk: ignored long-run customer satisfaction.
④ Marketing Concept
Customer satisfaction is the key to organisational success. The basic role of the firm is to "identify a need and fill it." All decisions — product features, price, place, promotion — are taken from the customer's point of view. Profit follows automatically.
⑤ Societal Marketing Concept
Pure customer focus is inadequate when society faces pollution, deforestation, resource shortage, population explosion and inflation. The firm must identify customer needs and ensure long-term well-being of the consumer and society. Ethics, ecology and equity are added to the marketing concept.
2.7.1 NCERT Comparison — Five Philosophies Side by Side
| Basis | Production | Product | Selling | Marketing | Societal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting point | Factory | Factory | Factory | Market | Market & Society |
| Main focus | Quantity of product | Quality, performance, features | Existing product | Customer needs | Customer needs & society's well-being |
| Means | Availability & affordability | Product improvements | Selling & promoting | Integrated marketing | Integrated marketing |
| Ends | Profit through volume | Profit through quality | Profit through sales volume | Profit through customer satisfaction | Profit through customer satisfaction and social welfare |
2.7.2 The Marketing Concept Rests on Five Pillars
Match each company stance below with one of the five marketing philosophies (Production / Product / Selling / Marketing / Societal):
- "We just need to make more units cheaper — customers buy whatever is on the shelf at a low price."
- "We pay our salesmen the highest commissions in the industry — we'll sell what we have made."
- "Tell me what features the customer wants in our next refrigerator and we'll build it."
- "Our shampoo bottle uses 25% recycled plastic and our profit funds rural sanitation."
- "Our LED TV has the brightest panel in its class — that's why people will choose us."
- (1) Production concept — focus on availability and affordability.
- (2) Selling concept — push the product through aggressive selling.
- (3) Marketing concept — start from the customer's expressed needs.
- (4) Societal marketing — customer + ecological + social welfare.
- (5) Product concept — superior performance and features.
2.8 Functions of Marketing — Twelve Activities of a Marketer
Marketing covers all activities required to move goods and services from producers to consumers in a way that maximises customer satisfaction. From the management point of view, twelve functions are typically performed.
| # | Function | What It Involves |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gathering & Analysing Market Information | Identify customer needs; analyse opportunities, threats, strengths and weaknesses; today, many firms use interactive websites and SMS polls on TV news channels to capture viewer choice. |
| 2 | Marketing Planning | Develop a plan to achieve marketing objectives. Example: a colour-TV maker with 10% share aims at 20% in three years — needs an integrated plan covering production, promotion and action programmes. |
| 3 | Product Designing & Development | Make the product attractive — cost, mileage, shape, style. A motorbike buyer looks not only at performance but also at design. |
| 4 | Standardisation & Grading | Standardisation = producing to predetermined specifications (uniformity, less inspection). Grading = classifying products by quality/size — vital for agricultural produce like wheat or oranges; helps realise higher prices for high-quality output. |
| 5 | Packaging & Labelling | "Pillars of modern marketing." Packaging protects and promotes. Lay's, Uncle Chips, Clinic Plus and Colgate owe much of their success to packaging. |
| 6 | Branding | Decide whether to sell under a generic name (Fan, Pen) or a brand name (Polar Fan, Rotomac Pen). Brand name aids product differentiation, customer loyalty and repeat sales. |
| 7 | Customer Support Services | After-sales service, complaint handling, credit, maintenance, technical help, consumer information — key drivers of repeat sales and brand loyalty. |
| 8 | Pricing of Products | Set price objectives, strategy and the actual price. Lower price → higher demand (and vice-versa). Decide pricing changes too. |
| 9 | Promotion | Inform and persuade customers using advertising, personal selling, sales promotion and publicity. Decide promotion mix and budget. |
| 10 | Physical Distribution | Two big decisions: (a) channels — wholesalers, retailers; (b) physical movement — inventory, storage, transportation. |
| 11 | Transportation | Move goods physically. Tea produced in Assam must be transported to Tamil Nadu, Punjab, Jammu & Kashmir, Haryana and Rajasthan where it is consumed. |
| 12 | Storage / Warehousing | Bridge the time gap between production and sale — irregular demand (woollens, raincoats) or seasonal supply (sugarcane, rice, wheat, cotton). Manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers all play a role. |
NCERT notes a Hindi TV news channel that asks viewers (via SMS) which of four or five news stories should be aired as the prime-time detailed report. Which marketing function does this illustrate? Why has the internet made it cheaper than ever?
- Function illustrated: Gathering and analysing market information — direct customer feedback to shape the product (story).
- Why cheaper now: Interactive websites, social media polls, SMS short codes — all collect lakhs of data points instantly at near-zero marginal cost.
- Marketing benefit: Reduces the risk of producing what nobody wants, increases viewer satisfaction and lifts ratings.
- Caveat: Self-selecting samples are biased — only engaged viewers respond, so insights must be triangulated.
📝 Competency-Based Questions — Concept & Philosophies
Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.
Frequently Asked Questions — Marketing Concept & Functions
What is marketing in Class 12 Business Studies?
Marketing is the social and managerial process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need and want through creating, offering and exchanging products of value with others. NCERT defines it as a customer-focused activity that begins long before a product is made — with research into customer needs — and continues long after the sale through after-sales service. It covers all activities required to facilitate exchange, including product development, pricing, distribution, promotion, branding, packaging and labelling. The aim is to satisfy customer needs profitably and build long-term customer relationships.
What is the difference between marketing and selling?
Marketing and selling differ on several dimensions. Marketing starts with the customer's needs and seeks to satisfy them profitably; selling starts with the producer's product and pushes it to the customer. Marketing is a wider concept that includes product planning, pricing, distribution, promotion and after-sales service; selling is only a small part of marketing concerned with persuading buyers. Marketing earns profit through customer satisfaction, while selling earns profit through volume of sales. NCERT therefore says marketing is need-driven and long-term, while selling is product-driven and short-term.
What are the five marketing management philosophies?
NCERT lists five marketing-management philosophies that have evolved over time. The production concept assumes consumers favour cheap, widely available products. The product concept assumes consumers favour high-quality, feature-rich products. The selling concept assumes consumers must be persuaded to buy through aggressive selling and promotion. The marketing concept holds that the firm must identify and satisfy customer needs better than competitors. The societal-marketing concept adds that the firm must also preserve and enhance the well-being of society. Each stage shifts the focus closer to the customer and society.
What are the functions of marketing in Class 12 NCERT?
NCERT identifies twelve functions of marketing: gathering and analysing market information, marketing planning, product designing and development, standardisation and grading, packaging and labelling, branding, customer support services, pricing of products, promotion, physical distribution (place), transportation, and storage and warehousing. These functions cover everything a marketer does from research to after-sales service. Together they create utility — form, place, time, possession and information utility — that converts a basic product into something a customer wants to buy.
What can be marketed according to NCERT?
NCERT explains that anything of value can be marketed. This includes physical goods (cars, soaps), services (banking, telecom, healthcare), ideas (family planning, road safety), experiences (theme parks, concerts), events (cricket matches), persons (politicians, celebrities), places (tourism), properties (real estate, financial securities), organisations (NGOs, hospitals) and information (books, online courses). The marketing process applies to each — research the audience, design an offering, set a price or contribution, distribute it and promote it. Modern marketing is therefore far broader than only products.
Who is a marketer in Class 12 Business Studies?
A marketer is anyone who actively seeks a response — attention, purchase, vote, donation — from another party called the prospect. NCERT defines a marketer as a person who takes a more active part in the exchange process: a seller looking for a buyer, a politician seeking votes, an NGO seeking donations or a hospital seeking patients. Inside firms, the marketing manager and the entire marketing team — including market researchers, product managers, sales staff and advertising teams — perform marketer roles. The marketer's task is to create, communicate and deliver value to the prospect.