Lee / Kotler | Social Marketing | Buch | 978-1-4522-9214-4 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 584 Seiten, Format (B × H): 187 mm x 231 mm, Gewicht: 872 g

Lee / Kotler

Social Marketing

Buch, Englisch, 584 Seiten, Format (B × H): 187 mm x 231 mm, Gewicht: 872 g

ISBN: 978-1-4522-9214-4
Verlag: SAGE Publications, Inc


Nancy R Lee and Philip Kotler (who coined the term 'social marketing' in 1971 with Gerald Zaltman) demonstrate how traditional marketing principles are successfully applied to campaigns to improve health, decrease injuries, protect the environment, build communities and enhance financial well-being.

The Fifth Edition contains over 25 new cases highlighting the 10-step planning model, and a new chapter describing major theories, models and frameworks that inform social marketing strategies and inspire social marketers.
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Weitere Infos & Material


Part 1: Understanding Social Marketing
Chapter 1: Defining And Distinguishing Social Marketing
Marketing Highlight: Ending Polio in India
What is Social Marketing?
Where Did the Concept Originate?
How Does Social Marketing Differ From Commercial Marketing?
How Does Social Marketing Differ From Other Related Disciplines, Behavior Change Theories and Models, and Promotional Tactics?
What Is Social Marketing’s Unique Value Proposition?
Who Does Social Marketing?
What Social Issues Can Benefit From Social Marketing?
What Are Other Ways to Impact Social Issues?
What Is the Social Marketer’s Role in Influencing Upstream Factors and Midstream Audiences?
When Is Social Marketing “Social Marketing”? When Is It Something Else?
Chapter 2: 10 Steps In The Strategic Marketing Planning Process
Marketing Highlight: Water Sense
Marketing Planning: Process and Influences
10 Steps to Developing a Social Marketing Plan
Why Is a Systematic, Sequential Planning Process Important?
Where Does Marketing Research Fit in the Planning Process?
Marketing Dialogue
Part 2: Analyzing The Social Marketing Environment
Chapter 3: Determining Research Needs And Options
Marketing Highlight: Decreasing Use of Mobile Phones While Driving
Major Research Terminology
Steps In Developing a Research Plan
Research “That Won’t Break the Bank”
Chapter 4: Choosing A Social Issue, Purpose And Focus For Your Plan And Conducting A Situation Analysis
Marketing Highlight: Every Child By Two
Step 1: Describe the Social Issue, Background, Purpose, and Focus of Your Plan, and Step 2: Conduct a Situation Analysis (SWOT)
Ethical Considerations When Choosing a Focus for Your Plan
Part 3: Selecting Target Audiences, Objectives, and Goal
Chapter 5: Segmenting, Evaluating, And Selecting Target Audiences
Marketing Highlight: Increasing Alternative Transportation by Targeting a Group Open to Change
Step 3: Select Target Audiences
Steps Involved in Selecting Target Audiences
Variables Used to Segment Markets
Criteria for Evaluating Segments
How Target Audiences Are Selected
What Approach Should Be Chosen?
Ethical Considerations When Selecting Target Audiences
Chapter 6: Setting Behavior Objectives And Target Goals
Marketing Highlight: Reducing Deaths at Railroad Crossings in India
Step 4: Set Behavior Objectives and Target Goals
Behavior Objectives
Knowledge and Belief Objectives
Target Goals
Objectives and Target Goals Are Only a Draft at This Step
Objectives and Target Goals Will Be Used for Campaign Evaluation
Ethical Considerations When Setting Objectives and Target Goals
Chapter 7: Identifying Barriers, Benefits, Motivators, The Competition, And Influential Others
Marketing Highlight: Reducing Litter in Texas: Don’t mess with Texas®’s New “CANpaign”
Step 5: Identify Target Audience Barriers, Benefits, Motivators, the Competition, and Influential Others
What More Do You Need to Know About the Target Audience?
How Do You Learn More From and About the Target Audience?
How Will This Help Develop Your Strategy?
Potential Revision of Target Audiences, Objectives, and Goals
Ethical Considerations When Researching Your Target Audience
Chapter 8: Tapping Behavior Change Theories, Models, And Frameworks
Marketing Highlight: Preventing Domestic Violence Among Women in West Africa A Social Norms Approach
Informing Audience Segmentation and Selection
Informing Behavior Selection and Goals
Deepening Understanding of Audience Barriers, Benefits, Motivators, The Competition and Influential Others
Inspiring Development of Social Marketing Mix Strategies
Part 4: Developing Social Marketing Strategies
Chapter 9: Crafting A Desired Positioning
Marketing Highlight: truth
Positioning Defined
Behavior-Focused Positioning
Barriers-Focused Positioning
Benefits-Focused Positioning
Competition-Focused Positioning
Repositioning
How Positioning Relates To Branding
Ethical Considerations When Developing a Positioning Statement
Chapter 10: Product: Creating A Product Platform
Marketing Highlight: Increasing Pet Adoption with Meet Your Match
Product: The First “P”
Step 7: Develop the Social Marketing Product Platform
Design Thinking
Branding
Ethical Considerations Related to Creating a Product Platform
Chapter 11: Price: Determining Monetary And Nonmonetary Incentives And Disincentives
Marketing Highlight: Reducing Tobacco Use through Commitment Contracts
Step 7: Determine Monetary and Nonmonetary Incentives and Disincentives
More On Commitments and Pledges
Setting Prices for Tangible Goods and Services
Ethical Considerations Related to Pricing Strategies
Chapter 12: Place: Making Access Convenient And Pleasant
Marketing Highlight: Books: The Ultimate Toy for Toddlers & Lucie and André Chagnon Foundation
Place: The Third “P”
Step 7: Develop the Place Strategy
Social Franchising
Ethical Considerations When Selecting Distribution Channels
Chapter 13: Promotion: Deciding On Messages, Messengers, And Creative Strategies
Marketing Highlight: Seafood Watch®: Influencing Sustainable Seafood Choices
Promotion: The Fourth “P”
A Word About the Creative Brief
Message Strategy
Messenger Strategy
Creative Strategy
Pretesting
Ethical Considerations When Deciding on Messages, Messengers, and Creative Strategies
Chapter 14: Promotion: Selecting Communication Channels
Marketing Highlight: Increasing Blood Donations in Australia Using Social Media and More
Promotion: Selecting Communication Channels
Traditional Media Channels
Nontraditional and New Media Channels
Factors Guiding Communication Channel Decisions
Ethical Considerations When Selecting Communication Channels
Part 5: Managing Social Marketing Programs
Chapter 15: Developing A Plan For Monitoring And Evaluation
Marketing Highlight: ParticipACTION
Step 8: Develop a Plan for Monitoring and Evaluation
Why Are You Conducting This Measurement?
What Will You Measure?
How Will You Measure?
When Will You Measure?
How Much Will It Cost?
Ethical Considerations in Evaluation Planning
Chapter 16: Establishing Budgets And Finding Funding
Marketing Highlight: Increasing Funding through Corporate Social Marketing
Step 9: Establish Budgets and Finding Funding Sources
Determining Budgets
Justifying The Budget
Finding Sources for Additional Funding
Appealing to Funders
Revising Your Plan
Ethical Considerations When Establishing Funding
Chapter 17: Creating An Implementation Plan And Sustaining Behavior
Marketing Highlight: Improving Water Quality and Protecting Fish and Wildlife Habitats In Puget Sound and Chesapeake Bay
Step 10: Complete an Implementation Plan
Phasing
Sustainability
Anticipating Forces Against Change
Sharing and Selling Your Plan
Ethical Considerations When Implementing Plans


Kotler, Philip
Philip Kotler, is the S. C. Johnson & Son Distin­guished Professor of International Marketing emeritus at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. Kellogg was twice voted Best Business School in Business Week’s survey of U.S. business schools. It is also rated Best Business School for the Teaching of Marketing. Professor Kotler has significantly contributed to Kellogg’s success through his many years of research and teaching there.
He received his master’s degree at the University of Chicago and his Ph.D. degree at MIT, both in economics. He did postdoctoral work in mathematics at Harvard University and in behavioral science at the University of Chicago.
Professor Kotler is the author or co-author of 90 books including Marketing Management, the most widely used marketing book in graduate business schools worldwide; Principles of Marketing; Marketing Models; Strategic Marketing for Non-Profit Organizations; The New Competition; High Visibility; Social Marketing; Marketing Places; Marketing for Congregations; Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism; The Marketing of Nations; Marketing 3.0; Good Works; Market Your Way to Growth; Winning Global Markets; Kotler on Marketing; Confronting Capitalism; Democracy in Decline: and Advancing the Common Good. He has published over 170 articles in leading journals, several of which have received best-article awards.
Professor Kotler was the first recipient of the Distinguished Marketing Educator Award (1985) given by the American Marketing Association (AMA). The European Association of Marketing Consultants and Sales Trainers awarded him their prize for Marketing Excellence. He was chosen as the Leader in Marketing Thought by the Academic Members of the AMA in a 1975 survey. He also received the 1978 Paul Converse Award of the AMA, honoring his original contribution to marketing. In 1995, Sales and Marketing Executives International (SMEI) named him Marketer of the Year. In 2012 he received the William L. Wilkie “Marketing for a Better World: Award of the American Marketing Association Foundation (AMAF).” In 2014, he was inducted into the AMA Marketing Hall of Fame. He was the first chosen Legend in Marketing and his work was published and reviewed in nine volumes.
Professor Kotler has consulted for such companies as IBM, General Electric, AT&T, Honeywell, Bank of America, Merck, and others in the areas of marketing strategy and planning, marketing organization, and international marketing.
He has been chairman of the College of Marketing of the Institute of Management Sciences, director of the American Marketing Association, trustee of the Marketing Science Institute, director of the MAC Group, former member of the Yankelovich Advisory Board, and a member of the Copernicus Advisory Board. He was a member of the Board of Governors of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a member of the advisory board of the Drucker Foundation. He has received 22 honorary doctoral degrees from Stockholm University, University of Zurich, Athens University of Economics and Business, DePaul University, the Cracow School of Business and Economics, Groupe H.E.C. in Paris, the University of Economics and Business Administration in Vienna, the Catholic University of Santo Domingo, the Budapest School of Economic Science and Public Administration, and several other universities.
He has traveled extensively throughout Europe, Asia, and South America, advising and lecturing to many companies and organizations. This experience expands the scope and depth of his programs, enhancing them with an accurate global perspective.

Lee, Nancy R.
Nancy R. Lee, is president of Social Marketing Services, Inc., in Seattle, Washington, a strategic advisor for social marketing campaigns at C+C in Seattle, an affiliate instructor at the University of Washington, where she teaches social marketing. With more than 35 years of practical marketing experience in the public and private sectors, Ms. Lee has held numerous corporate marketing positions, including vice president and director of marketing for Washington State’s second-largest bank and director of marketing for the region’s Children’s Hospital and Medical Center.
Ms. Lee has participated in the development of more than 250 social marketing campaign strategies for public sector agencies, and consulted with more than 100 nonprofit organizations. Clients in the public sector include the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Washington State Department of Health, Office of Crime Victims Advocacy, County Health and Transportation Departments, Department of Ecology, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Washington Traffic Safety Commission, City of Seattle, and Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction. Campaigns developed for these clients targeted issues listed below:

· Health: COVID-19, opioid overdose, teen pregnancy prevention, HIV/AIDS prevention, nutrition education, sexual assault, diabetes prevention, adult physical activity, tobacco control, arthritis diagnosis and treatment, immunizations, dental hygiene, senior wellness, and eating disorder awareness
· Safety: texting and driving, drowning prevention, senior fall prevention, underage drinking and driving, youth suicide prevention, binge drinking, pedestrian safety, and safe gun storage
· Environment: natural gardening, preservation of fish and wildlife habitats, grass fires, recycling, trip reduction, water quality, and water and power conservation
She has conducted social marketing workshops around the world (Uganda, Jordan, South Africa, Ghana, Ireland, Scotland, Australia, Singapore, Canada, Indonesia, India, Bangladesh, Venezuela, Japan, Haiti) for more than 4,000 public sector employees involved in developing behavior change campaigns in the areas of health, safety, the environment, and financial well-being. She has been a keynote speaker on social marketing at conferences for public health, improved water quality, energy conservation, family planning, nutrition, recycling, teen pregnancy prevention, influencing financial behaviors, wildfire prevention, litter control, and foodwaste reduction.
Ms. Lee has coauthored eleven other books with Philip Kotler: Social Marketing: Improving the Quality of Life (2002); Corporate Social Responsibility: Doing the Most Good for Your Company and Your Cause (2005); Marketing in the Public Sector: A Roadmap for Improved Performance (2006); Social Marketing: Influencing Behaviors for Good (2008 and 2011); Social Marketing: Changing Behaviors for Good (2016); GOOD WORKS! Marketing and Corporate Initiatives That Build a Better World. And the Bottom Line (2012); Up and Out of Poverty: The Social Marketing Solution (2009); Social Marketing in Public Health (2010); Social Marketing to Protect the Environment (2011); Success in Social Marketing: 100 Case Studies From Around the Globe (2022). She also authored a book Policymaking for Citizen Behavior Change: A Social Marketing Approach (2017) andhas contributed articles to the Stanford Social Innovation Review, Social Marketing Quarterly, Journal of Social Marketing, and The Public Manager. (See more on Nancy Lee at www.socialmarketingservice.com.)


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