Examples of Industrial Marketing in the following topics:
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- Industrial marketing (or business-to-business marketing) is the marketing of goods and services by one business to another.
- Industrial marketing (or business-to-business marketing) is the marketing of goods and services by one business to another.
- Industrial goods are those an industry uses to produce an end product from one or more raw materials.
- Industrial marketing can cross the border into consumer marketing.
- Industrial marketing often involves competitive tendering.
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- Any product, good, or service that is developed must have a target market in mind, in order to be effectively marketed and sold.
- In marketing, there are six types of target markets:
- International and Global Markets (several markets distinguished by different needs and different cultures)
- Markets segmented for strategic targets (markets segmented by strategy and product characteristics, and hence by characteristics of the buyer)
- Now, there is a trend in marketing to individualize the concept of "A Consumer. " Rather than generating broad demographic profiles and psycho-graphic profiles of market segments (which has been the norm), marketers are now starting to engage in personalized marketing, permission marketing, and mass customization.
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- Please explain the purpose of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and its usefulness.
- What are stock market crashes, and why are they bad for an economy?
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- On Monday, October 19, 1987, the value of stocks plummeted on markets around the world.
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 22 percent to close at 1738.42, the largest one-day decline since 1914, eclipsing even the famous October 1929 market crash.
- Partly as a result, the crash of 1987 was quickly erased as the market surged to new highs.
- In the early 1990s, the Dow Jones Industrial Average topped 3,000, and in 1999 it topped the 11,000 mark.
- But by then, the market had climbed so high that the declines amounted to only about 7 percent of the overall value of stocks, and investors stayed in the market, which quickly rebounded.
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- Kohli in the "Journal of Marketing", marketing orientation is the, "The organization-wide generation of market intelligence pertaining to current and future customer needs, dissemination of the intelligence across departments and organization wide responsiveness to it. "
- From the beginning of the Industrial Revolution until the 1950s, companies focused on maximizing economies of scale and minimizing production costs.
- Following the second world war, it soon became obvious that products were not selling as easily as during the Industrial era due to a saturated market.
- Marketing-oriented companies revolve around internal business processes that gather, synthesize, and package market intelligence into integrated marketing communications programs (i.e., advertising campaign, new product launch, promotional offer, etc.).
- Competitive analysis is also a significant component of market orientation.
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- A marketing channel is the network of organizations that work together to provide goods for consumption.
- This channel of distribution is commonly used to market accessory equipment, such as typewriters or operating supplies which include typewriting papers, pens, and office materials.
- This is preferably used when an industrial product is new in the market.
- Agents are middlemen who have market contacts and can provide sufficient information on possible markets.
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- Historical analysis of markets and of specific securities is a useful tool for investors, but it does not predict the future of the market.
- For example, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) has generally followed an upward trend from 1900-2009 .
- Macroeconomic forces, such as the Great Depression, affect the entire stock market and can't be predicted from past market performance.
- Animal spirits are the emotions felt by investors who affect markets.
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average has generally increased overall since 1900, but its past performance is not a guarantee of future performance.
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- The Industrial Revolution, which reached the United States by the 1800s, strongly influenced social and economic conditions.
- The Industrial Revolution was a global phenomenon marked by the transition to new manufacturing processes in the period from about 1760 to 1840.
- The Industrial Revolution began in the United Kingdom, and mechanized textile production spread from Great Britain to continental Europe and the United States in the early nineteenth century.
- Subsistence farming declined, and more consumer goods arrived on the market.
- The Industrial Revolution marked a major turning point in history.
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- Industrializing countries have low standards of living, undeveloped industry, and low Human Development Indices (HDIs).
- While Brazil has not fully developed its industrial base and its economy has much room for expansion, it is a more powerful player in the global market than less developed nations, such as Haiti.
- While Brazil has not fully developed its industrial base and its economy has much room for expansion, it is a more powerful player in the global market than nations that are less developed, such as Haiti.
- Industrializing countries have HDIs between the most and least industrialized countries in the world .
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