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What are the Basic Principles of Marketing?

So you want to do marketing. You’ve got to know the rules, but what are they? On our web site we try to give you the ideas you need to do marketing, but often the strategies and tactics and day to day operations make us forget some basic principles.

We wouldn’t waste your time talking about these rules, except we spend a lot of time in front of executives and we know that some of these ideas are easily forgotten and often controversial.

We are not the types to side-step controversy and we’re committed to underlining the enduring ideas of marketing - i.e., those that will be around long after the internet is firmly part of everyday life and off the headlines of trendy web sites and magazines. So, here are some of our basic rules of marketing.

REALITY AND PERCEIVED REALITY ARE DIFFERENT

Ok, you’ve heard it before - but don’t forget it. Not sure? Why do you think there are so many prices with 99 at the end, like the gas you buy almost always ends in a 9 (or 9/10s). We academics have studied this and recognized long ago that people see a significant difference between say $1.00 and 99 cents. The reality: 1 penny. In perceived reality, a lot.

The same goes for just about everything else in marketing. Look at the salt in your kitchen. It probably is Morten salt, but it’s just salt. Why would you buy something with a stupid brand name? Because you and everyone else decides and buys product based on perceptions, not reality.

And before you start thinking this is only relevant to consumers, think again. Companies, purchasing agents and everyone else in a company buys on based on perceived reality as well.

So, if you're not playing on the field of perceived reality, you're not doing marketing!

COMPANIES AND CONSUMERS REALLY BUY BENEFITS (EVEN THOUGH THEY PURCHASE FEATURES!)

That’s right. You might think that people buy features because you’ve seen them looking over the feature set for a Palm Pilot, a computer, and even a car. People do consider the features that any product has, but they buy based on the benefits these features provide. A good way to think about this is through a newspaper analogy. The benefits are the HEADLINES, the features is the story. People buy based on the headlines, even if the details lie in the accompanying story.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Allen Weiss

Allen Weiss is MarketingProfs founder and CEO, positioning consultant, and emeritus professor of marketing. Over the years he has worked with companies such as Texas Instruments, Informix, Vanafi, and EMI Music Distribution to help them position their products defensively in a competitive environment. He is also the founder of Insight4Peace and the former director of Mindful USC.