Thomas Bieger

Marketing Concept - The St. Gallen Management Approach


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processes, companies and management1.3Embedding business processes into the St. Gallen Management Model1.3.1Stakeholders1.3.2Environmental spheres1.3.3Environments and sustainability1.3.4Horizons of meaning1.3.5Business processes within the St. Gallen Management Model1.4Objectives of business processes1.5Structure of business processes1.5.1Performance processes1.5.2Customer processes1.5.3Innovation processes1.6The marketing approach for the management of business processes1.6.1Development of marketing6.1.2Marketing concept2Market analysis as the basis for market-oriented business management2.1Case study MAMMUT2.2Customer behavior and markets2.2.1Definition and role of markets2.2.2Players and market types[8]2.2.3Motives, needs, benefit and demand2.3Market research objectives and data generation2.3.1Identifying market sizes, needs and decision-making2.3.2Supply-and-demand trends2.4SWOT analysis as a synthesis of market analysis3Marketing strategy — from market segmentation to a positioning strategy3.1Case study JURA3.2Marketing objectives3.2.1Corporate objectives and marketing objectives3.2.2Interaction of marketing objectives3.3From market segmentation to a positioning strategy3.3.1Segmentation criteria and segmentation level3.3.2Choice of target market3.3.3Positioning3.4From customer processes to tool strategy3.4.1Determinants of tool application3.4.2Focus on marketing tool application in the marketing mix4Product design and performance4.1Case study STADLER RAIL AG4.2Product design4.3Performance provision — physical product4.3.1Basic structure of the performance process4.3.2Strategic decisions4.3.3Operational decisions4.4Performance provision — services4.4.1Characteristic features of services4.4.2Performance design and control of the service process4.4.3From service chain to service blueprint5Marketing tool application5.1Case study JUNGFRAUBAHN5.2Pricing policy5.2.1Neoclassic pricing model5.2.2Behavioral-science pricing models5.2.3Functions of pricing[9]5.3Distribution policy5.3.1Functions of distribution5.3.2Distribution design5.4Communication5.4.1Role and function of communication5.4.2Organizational scopes of communication5.4.3Communication change5.5Marketing mix5.5.1Objectives of the marketing mix5.5.2Planning the marketing mix6Controlling and innovation6.1Case study SWISS web portal6.2Marketing controlling6.2.1Development of a controlling concept6.2.2Characteristics of marketing controlling6.2.3Contribution accounting6.3Innovation6.3.1Functions, roles and tools of innovation6.3.2Return on innovation6.3.3Innovation in models6.3.4Innovation’s directions of impact

       Bibliography

       Alphabetical index

      [10][11]Table of Figures

Fig. 1:Example of a value chain
Fig. 2:Value-creation network and meta-system
Fig. 3:Transaction interface and company
Fig. 4:Management cycle according to Fayol
Fig. 5:4th generation of the St. Gallen Management Model
Fig. 6:Stakeholders