Total market offering

(noun)

"total market offering" includes the reputation of the organization, staff representation, product benefits, and technological characteristics as compared to competitors' market offerings and prices.

Related Terms

  • supply chain

Examples of Total market offering in the following topics:

  • Competition Based on Value

    • Value-based marketing allows organizations to create and sustain differentiating values that enable them to compete within their markets.
    • For a firm to deliver value to its customers, it must consider what is known as the "total market offering. " This comprises the organization's reputation, staff representation, product benefits, and technological characteristics as compared to competitors' market offerings and prices.
    • Value can thus be defined as the relationship of a firm's market offerings to those of its competitors.
    • The migration from product-oriented to customer-oriented strategies is called Total Customer Value Management (TCVM).
    • State what is important when shifting to a competition based on value marketing perspective
  • Calculating Market Share

    • This fierce competition has also led to increases in the quality and features of the products offered, as each company attempts to offer a better product to the consumer.
    • Unit market share (%) = 100 * Unit sales(#) / Total Market Unit Sales(#)
    • Unit sales (#) = Unit market share (%) * Total Market Unit Sales (#) / 100
    • Total Market Unit Sales (#) = 100 * Unit sales (#) / Unit market share (%)
    • Revenue market share (%) = 100 * Sales Revenue ($) / Total Market Sales Revenue ($)
  • Market Share

    • Market share is key metric that helps firms evaluate demand in their market and can be influenced by PR and marketing campaigns.
    • This safety net allowed Hyundai to gain a larger market share than they would have if they had not offered this deal.
    • It enables a company to judge not only total market growth or decline, but also trends in customers' selections among competitors.
    • Generally, sales growth resulting from primary demand (total market growth) is less costly and more profitable than that achieved by capturing share from competitors.
    • For example, offering products online with easy payment options can increase sales.
  • Local, regional, national, international, and global marketers

    • Local marketers are concerned with customers that tend to be clustered tightly around the marketer.
    • Naturally, the total potential market is limited.
    • This type of marketing offers tremendous profit potential, but also exposes the marketer to new, aggressive competitors.
    • As the US market becomes more and more saturated with US-made products, the continued expansion into foreign markets appears inevitable.
    • Global marketing differs from international marketing in some very definite ways.
  • Seasoned Equity Offering

    • The best known way of selling equity is through an initial public offering (IPO) where a company sells shares on the market for the first time.
    • When more shares are put into the market, the percent of total ownership that share represents drops.
    • It is important not to confuse a SEO with a secondary market offering.
    • A secondary market offering broadly means that shares are sold, but not by the company through the registration of new shares.
    • Contrast a seasoned equity offering with an initial public offering and a secondary market offering
  • What Are Markets

    • The total number of people or organizations meeting the previous criteria must be large enough to be profitable for the marketer.
    • International markets, American markets, a shopping center, and even the site of a single retail store can be called a market.
    • The primary types of markets are consumer markets, industrial markets, institutional markets, and reseller markets.
    • Defining the market as a place can help marketers use geographic factors to decide which products to offer, how to promote product features, and even set price.
    • A mall in Korea Town would have different offerings and promotions than a mall in Little Mexico.
  • Direct Marketing

    • Direct marketing allows businesses and nonprofit organizations to advertise and market directly to customers via a variety of print and electronic mediums.
    • Direct marketing campaigns focus on the consumer, statistical data generated via outreach and the accountability of the marketer.
    • In 2010, direct marketing accounted for 8.3% of the total U.S. gross domestic product.
    • Direct marketing targets individual members of defined consumer groups.
    • Direct marketing has cleared the way for a number of competitors to enter markets on a global level and has increased product offerings to fill niche markets.
  • Test Marketing

    • Test marketing is the final stage before commercialization, and is where all the elements of the marketing plan are tested.
    • This stage represents the launching of the total marketing program, albeit on a limited basis.
    • Product testing is totally initiated by the producer: he or she selects the sample of people, provides the consumer with the test product, and offers the consumer some sort of incentive to participate.
    • Test marketing, on the other hand, is distinguished by the fact that the test cities represent the national market.
    • Sample size determination: the number of stores used should be adequate to represent the total market.
  • Price Transparency

    • Bond markets, unlike stock or share markets, sometimes do not have a centralized exchange or trading system.
    • In such a market, market liquidity is provided by dealers and other market participants committing risk capital to trading activity.
    • Bond markets can also differ from stock markets in that, in some markets, investors sometimes do not pay brokerage commissions to dealers with whom they buy or sell bonds.
    • Rather, the dealers earn revenue by means of the spread, or difference, between the price at which the dealer buys a bond from one investor–the "bid" price–and the price at which he or she sells the same bond to another investor—the "ask" or "offer" price.
    • The bid/offer spread represents the total transaction cost associated with transferring a bond from one investor to another.
  • Market Share/Sales

    • Increasing market share is one of the most important objectives of business and pricing may offer a mechanism to increase share.
    • Netflix recently announced that they were going to offer, for the first time, their streaming video subscription service separately from their DVD-by-mail subscription service.
    • Market share is a key indicator of market competitiveness—that is, how well a firm is doing compared to its competitors.
    • It enables them to judge not only total market growth or decline but also trends in customers' selections among competitors.
    • Generally, sales growth resulting from primary demand (total market growth) is less costly and more profitable than that achieved by capturing share from competitors.
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