Commercial Applications
Explain 'Sales-Oriented Stage' and 'Marketing-Oriented Stage' of Marketing.
Answer
Sales-Oriented Stage (1930–1950):
- The Great Depression caused drastic changes in buying habits and questioned existing business strategies.
- The focus shifted from production to selling.
- The new motto was 'get rid of what you have.'
- Producers realised that consumers will not buy enough unless they are approached with substantial selling and promotional efforts.
- The focus was on increasing sales rather than on consumer satisfaction.
- Demand outstripped supply earlier; now supply exceeded demand and it became a buyer's market.
- This stage was characterised by hard selling, sometimes leading to unscrupulous practices.
- Salesmanship was the focus of marketing activities.
- The selling philosophy is still used today in insurance, charity fund raising and other unsought products.
Marketing-Oriented Stage (1960–1980):
- Keen competition and growing consumer awareness forced producers to rethink the philosophy of marketing.
- Producers realised that business policies and programmes should be built around the goal of customer satisfaction.
- Management began to think of itself not as producing products but as providing value satisfaction to customers.
- The aim of marketing became to know and understand the customer so well that the product or service fits him and sells itself.
- Marketing became the heartbeat of business and the key to business planning and decision-making.
- Customer satisfaction became the principal reason for corporate existence.
- The consumer was considered the 'king' in this stage.
Related Questions
What is the role of marketing in a commercial organisation? Explain with reference to Indian economy.
'Marketing has gone through three distinct stages.' Explain them in brief.
Discuss the Sales Oriented and Product Oriented stage of marketing.
Why is service becoming more important than a product? Give five reasons.