Economic ConditionsSince most marketers are engaged in activities designed to entice customers to spend their money, it makes sense that an important external force is economic conditions. Economic analysis looks at how a defined group produces, distributes and consumes goods and services. These groupings can range from those defined very broadly (e.g., country) to those defined narrowly (e.g., small town). Of course the production, distribution and consumption of products are also of high interest to marketers and, in fact, many leading scholars of marketing first studied economics before moving to marketing. In very simple terms (and with apologies to both marketers and economist) the major difference between the marketer and economist is that marketers are engaged in activity that make things happen to individual customers (e.g., create demand for products) while economists are engaged in activity showing the results marketers’ decisions have on a group (e.g., study how much is being spent by certain groups). Additionally, economists whose job it is to study a group may use hundreds of economic variables when assessing how a group is responding. Marketers tend to evaluate far fewer economic variables preferring to concentrate on those variables that affect spending behavior of consumers and businesses. The economic conditions of most interest to marketers include:
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Samples of Marketing TutorialsMarket Pricing: Psychological Method For many years researchers have investigated customers’ response to product pricing. Some of the results point to several interesting psychological effects price may have on customers’ buying behavior and on their perception of individual products. We stress that certain pricing tactics "may" have a psychological effect since the result |


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