Professional Documents
Culture Documents
A PROJECT REPORT
(2019-2022)
Submitted By:
Tushar Sharma
The Project is designed to present a real life study on the real life situation are
different from theoretical aspect.
The project presented here is a result of my hard work. This project helps me to
learn about Marketing Strategies of AMUL.
Tushar Sharma
This is to certify that Tushar Sharma a student of B.B.A. 6th Semester of D.A.V.
College, Abohar has undertaken the Project under my guidance for the project
titled “Marketing Strategy of AMUL.” This project report is prepared in partial
fulfilment for the award of the degree of Bachelor of Business Administration. The
work included in the project is all original and done by him.
Date:
Place:
(Assistant Professor
Commerce Department
TUSHAR SHARMA
❖ Chapter 1: Introduction…………………………………………………8-22
• Market …………………………………………………………9-10
• Marketing ………..…………………………………………….12-14
• Marketing Strategies …………………………………………..
• Role Of Marketing Strategies
• Advantages and Disadvantages of Marketing Strategies
• Types of Marketing Strategies
•
Chapter: 1
Introduction To Marketing Strategy
Market
What Is a Market?
A market is a place where parties can gather to facilitate the exchange of goods and services.
The parties involved are usually buyers and sellers. The market may be physical like a retail
outlet, where people meet face-to-face, or virtual like an online market, where there is no direct
physical contact between buyers and sellers.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• A market is a place where buyers and sellers can meet to facilitate the exchange or
transaction of goods and services.
• Markets can be physical like a retail outlet, or virtual like an e-retailer.
• Other examples include the illegal markets, auction markets, and financial markets.
• Markets establish the prices of goods and services that are determined by supply and
demand
Types of Markets
1. Physical Markets - Physical market is a set up where buyers can physically meet the sellers and
purchase the desired merchandise from them in exchange of money. Shopping malls, department
stores, retail stores are examples of physical markets.
2. Non Physical Markets/Virtual markets - In such markets, buyers purchase goods and services
through internet. In such a market the buyers and sellers do not meet or interact physically,
instead the transaction is done through internet. Examples - Rediff shopping, eBay etc.
3. Auction Market - In an auction market the seller sells his goods to one who is the highest bidder.
4. Market for Intermediate Goods - Such markets sell raw materials (goods) required for the final
production of other goods.
5. Black Market - A black market is a setup where illegal goods like drugs and weapons are sold.
6. Knowledge Market - Knowledge market is a set up which deals in the exchange of information
and knowledge based products.
7. Financial Market - Market dealing with the exchange of liquid assets (money) is called a financial
market.
Marketing
What Is Marketing?
Professionals who work in a corporation's marketing and promotion departments seek to get the
attention of key potential audiences through advertising. Promotions are targeted to certain
audiences and may involve celebrity endorsements, catchy phrases or slogans, memorable
packaging or graphic designs and overall media exposure.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• Marketing refers to all activities a company does to promote and sell products or
services to consumers.
• Marketing makes use of the "marketing mix," also known as the four Ps—product, price,
place, and promotion.
• At its core, marketing seeks to take a product or service, identify its ideal customers, and
draw the customers' attention to the product or service available.
Understanding
Product, price, place, and promotion are the Four Ps of marketing. The Four Ps collectively
make up the essential mix a company needs to market a product or service. Neil Borden
popularized the idea of the marketing mix and the concept of the Four Ps in the 1950s.
Product refers to an item or items the business plans to offer to customers. The product
should seek to fulfill an absence in the market, or fulfill consumer demand for a greater
amount of a product already available. Before they can prepare an appropriate campaign,
marketers need to understand what product is being sold, how it stands out from its
competitors, whether the product can also be paired with a secondary product or product
line, and whether there are substitute products in the market.
Price
Price refers to how much the company will sell the product for. When establishing a price,
companies must consider the unit cost price, marketing costs, and distribution expenses.
Companies must also consider the price of competing products in the marketplace and
whether their proposed price point is sufficient to represent a reasonable alternative for
consumers.
Place
Place refers to the distribution of the product. Key considerations include whether the
company will sell the product through a physical storefront, online, or through both
distribution channels. When it's sold in a storefront, what kind of physical product
placement does it get? When it's sold online, what kind of digital product placement does it
get?
Promotion
Promotions vary depending on what stage of the product life cycle the product is in.
Marketers understand that consumers associate a product’s price and distribution with its
quality, and they take this into account when devising the overall marketing strategy.
An important goal of marketing is propelling a company’s growth. This can be seen through
attracting and retaining new customers.
Companies may apply a number of different marketing strategies to achieve these goals. For
instance, matching products with customers' needs could involve personalization, prediction,
and essentially knowing the right problem to solve.
Another strategy is creating value through the customer experience. This is demonstrated
through efforts to elevate customer satisfaction and remove any difficulties with the product or
service.
Marketing Strategies
What Is a Marketing Strategy?
A marketing strategy refers to a business's overall game plan for reaching prospective
consumers and turning them into customers of their products or services. A marketing strategy
contains the company’s value proposition, key brand messaging, data on target
customer demographics, and other high-level elements. A thorough marketing strategy covers
"the four Ps" of marketing—product, price, place, and promotion.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
• A marketing strategy is a business's game plan for reaching prospective consumers and
turning them into customers of their products or services.
• Marketing strategies should revolve around a company's value proposition.
• The ultimate goal of a marketing strategy is to achieve and communicate a sustainable
competitive advantage over rival companies.
A clear marketing strategy should revolve around the company's value proposition, which
communicates to consumers what the company stands for, how it operates, and why it deserves
their business.
This provides marketing teams with a template that should inform their initiatives across all of
the company's products and services. For example, Walmart (WMT) is widely known as a
discount retailer with “everyday low prices,” whose business operations and marketing efforts
are rooted in that idea.1
ROLE OF MARKETING STRATEGIES
The broad purpose of a marketing plan is to advance the exposure of your product or company,
depending on the specific goal of that plan. When you develop your marketing strategy, it is
important to understand the various roles a marketing plan fills when it is in effect. By
understanding the roles of a marketing plan, you are better equipped to create an effective
strategy.
Product
Your marketing strategy identifies the strengths of your product, according to the business
experts at the Microsoft website. Part of your marketing plan's purpose is to explain, in detail,
the many benefits of your product and how your customers can realize some sort of return by
using your product. For the customer, that return could be in the form of saving money, or it
could be a competitive advantage that grabs more market share. The marketing strategy also
identifies the ways in which your product is superior to the competition, and the reasons why
your customers should consider your product over the competition.
Audience
Competition
In order to develop an effective marketing campaign, your marketing strategy needs to offer a
detailed description of the competition, according to the small business experts at the Center
for Business Planning website. The role of the marketing strategy is to give historical
information on how the competition has advertised products in the past, the target market the
competition goes after and the product features that the competition offers. Other factors such
as competition pricing, the competition's distribution network and the sales methods of the
competition are also part of a comprehensive marketing strategy.
Revenue
A marketing strategy is used to determine the revenue that the campaign will deliver. All of the
parts that go into determining revenue, including the budget allotted to the campaign, product
cost, selling price and the life span of the product, should all be part of the marketing strategy.
The revenue goal can be measured against the actual revenue, and that information can be used
to create future marketing strategies that are more successful.
Advantages & Disadvantages of Marketing Strategies
You can’t sell your products or services without appealing to the people most likely to buy
those products and services. That group is known as your target audience, and a marketing
strategy is the most effective way to reach that all-important group. If you have targeted this
group correctly, you know their habits, behaviors, wants, and needs, and you also know where
they like to hang out on social media. This information shapes the methods you will use to
promote your business. For example, if you own a comic book store, online marketing can be
more beneficial than traditional advertising to help you reach your audience on social media
platforms.
You have to do market research before you develop a marketing strategy, and that research can
provide you with reams of data that you can use over and over to help refine your product
development and to keep up with trends and shifts in your target audience’s behavior. With the
evolution of digital information, even small businesses have access to hyper-detailed
information about prospective customers. This is known in the digital world as “big data,”
large data sets that give you a deep analysis into customer behavior based on factors such as
online activity, buying activity, mobile activity, and interactions at stores and shops.
Although the digital revolution has somewhat evened the playing field, the truth is that small
business is still at a disadvantage, when it comes to grabbing their share of eyeballs through
their marketing efforts. Big data has great value, but accessing that data is expensive, and you
have to keep analyzing that data to stay abreast of buyer trends. Launching a marketing
campaign on your website can also be expensive, especially if you’re using a pay-per-click
strategy to attract more prospects. Television and radio advertising spots are also costly, and
even local advertising space is at a premium, because there is so much competition for the
local audience.
Big brands can afford to spend time and effort working on a marketing campaign that fails,
because they have the resources to regroup and move on. As a small business owner, however,
the return on investment on a marketing campaign may be low, and that means you have spent
months crafting a strategy that did nothing to help your bottom line. Even the most well-
planned marketing campaigns fail, and at the small business level, that can set you back for
months.
Types of Marketing Strategies
There are different types of marketing strategies available. Picking up a marketing strategy
includes analyzing the needs of your business, your target audience and specifications of your
products.
The most common form of marketing is business to consumer (B2C) marketing. Let’s explore a
bit more.
1. Paid advertising
This includes multiple approaches for marketing. It includes traditional approaches like TVCs
and print media advertising. Also, one of the most well-known marketing approach is internet
marketing. It includes various methods like PPC (Pay per click) and paid advertising.
2. Cause marketing
Cause marketing links the services and products of a company to a social cause or issue. It is also
3. Relationship marketing
This type of marketing strategy focuses on marketing the product while customers remain
5. Word of mouth
It totally relies on what impression you leave on people. It is traditionally the most important
type of marketing strategy. Being heard is important in business world. When you give quality
6. Internet marketing
It is also known as cloud marketing. It usually happens over the internet. All the marketing items
are shared on the internet and promoted on various platforms via multiple approaches.
7. Transactional marketing
Sales is particularly the most challenging work. Even for the largest retailers, selling is always
tough especially when there are high volume targets. However with the new marketing
strategies, selling isn’t as difficult as it was. In transactional marketing the retailers encourage
customers to buy with shopping coupons, discounts and huge events. It enhances the chances of
sales and motivates the target audience to buy the promoted products.
8. Diversity marketing
It caters diverse audience by customizing and integrating different marketing strategies. It covers
different aspects like cultural, beliefs, attitudes, views and other specific needs.
Introduction to Dairy Industry