Marketing is the business science of understanding, creating, and delivering value to customers. It studies how markets function, how consumer needs are identified, and how products and services are positioned, promoted, and sustained. At its core, marketing connects organizations with their environments by translating human desires into exchange relationships.


Core Functions

  1. Market Research
    • Gathering and analyzing data on consumers, competitors, and trends.
    • Methods: surveys, focus groups, ethnography, analytics.
  2. Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning (STP)
    • Dividing markets into segments.
    • Selecting target audiences.
    • Positioning offerings for competitive advantage.
  3. Product (Offering) Strategy
    • Development of goods, services, and experiences.
    • Branding and differentiation.
  4. Pricing Strategy
    • Setting value-based, cost-based, or competitive prices.
    • Dynamic pricing, bundling, discounting.
  5. Promotion and Communication
    • Advertising, public relations, digital content, social media.
    • Managing brand perception and awareness.
  6. Distribution (Place)
    • Channels: retail, e-commerce, wholesale, direct-to-consumer.
    • Logistics and delivery systems.

Major Branches


Methods


Theoretical Foundations


Role in Knowledge

As a business science, marketing provides:


Distinction


In the Logos Framework

Marketing spans Perspective, Purpose, and Value:

It is the science of recognition: dividing populations into segments, crafting messages, and structuring exchanges that link human wants with organizational goals.