SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 28
REVIEW OF STRATEGIC MARKETING
SUSTAINABILITY: FROM A MARKETING MIX TO
A MARKETING MATRIX OF ALAN POMERING
BY MAXWELL RANASINGHE
• Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for
creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that
have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large. (
American Marketing Association 2017)
• This calls for a responsibility to society at large, not just individual consumers. The
term “society at large” include many stakeholders, importantly the environment. It
includes all what is spoken in Green marketing and Societal Marketing
• It proposes a fundamental shift in marketing philosophy, and it is in line with
Sustainability and Corporate Social Responsibility that advocates adding value not
only to shareholders but also for the employees, customers, collaborators and the
environment
• To achieve sustainability outcomes, new marketing models are needed, but the theoretical development
of marketing research on sustainability is considered to be in its infancy (Connelly, Ketchen & Slater
2011).
• In this pursuit, it is worth to make an attempt on reviewing what Alan Pomering ( 2014)
proposes
• Pomering’s Sustainability Marketing Model, is a simple yet systematic framework that
ensures sustainability cascades through the marketing planning process.
• In developing this model, the marketing mix is replaced with a matrix that adds four critical
decision fields to the traditional marketing mix
• He adds Participants, Physical Evidence, Process and Partnership - and draws on the
three pillars of sustainable development -Planet, People and Profit - to ensure managers
cross-check decision-making's sustainability impacts.
• The principle of sustainable development, that the future of the planet’s environment, communities
and their cultures not be compromised by actions in the present (World Commission on Environment
and Development 1987), has now served as a guide for business managers for more than two decades.
• Business managers currently have little guidance on how they might drive a sustainable
development agenda across their operational activities, they execute under the heading of the
Marketing Mix.
• Marketing should bear a societal obligation beyond the narrow consumer-orientation is
generally not reflected in its contemporary conceptual Frameworks
• Key concepts of value chain (Porter, 1985) was critiqued by Polonsky et al ( 2003) as “harm
chain” and Porter later in line with Polonsky’s critique, revised the his value chain concept to
reflect the simultaneous harm created along the value chain. ( Porter and Kramer 2006)
STRATEGIC ACTION AND SUSTAINABILITY
• It is clear from several recent managerial surveys that contemporary managers
are inadequately prepared to meet business’s challenge to adequately consider
the needs of society at large in their strategic and operational decisions.
• A McKinsey Global Survey (2010) of around 2000 executives
reports that despite its acknowledged importance, companies are not taking a
proactive approach to managing sustainability.
• The World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) has called for a more
sustainable level of consumption, but, apart from de-marketing and social marketing efforts to
highlight that marketing may yet have a broader role to play.
• Hult (2011) suggested marketing, ‘is in a unique position to elevate its focus from managing
relationships with customers to strategically managing a broader set of marketplace issues’.
• It demand managing relationship with not only customers but with other stakeholders in the
market place including the environment
• At present, marketing managers’ decision-making is typically framed around the traditional
concept of the marketing mix, which addresses the needs of individua consumers, but
provides little guidance on operating more sustainably, for the benefit of society at large.
• Philip Kotler (2011) argued, ‘marketing will have to reinvent its practices to be
environmentally responsible’ (p. 132).
• Pomering (2014) proposes the Sustainability Marketing Model, a simple yet systematic
framework that ensures sustainability cascades through the marketing planning process, to
address the call of Phillip Kotler
• Sustainability Marketing Model is a simple yet powerful model that provides the manager with a
comprehensive check-list for considering the sustainability implications of all supply- and demand-side
decision-making.
• It can ensure that sustainable development considerations are written into the strategic planning
process, ultimately cascading to operational decisions, such as pricing, product design, promotional
tools and messages, and distribution methods, and the various other mix elements for specific contexts,
such as services and experiences
• The Sustainability Marketing Model targets improving sustainability performance through reference to
Triple Bottom Line: Planet, People and Profit
• Bridges and Wilhelm (2008, p. 34) argued, ‘marketing education for sustainability requires a
consideration of environmental and social issues in all elements of marketing strategy planning, from
objective setting to target market selection to strategic and tactical decisions regarding each of the
marketing mix variables
• Pomerings(2014) proposed model addresses this requirement, expanding the notion of the marketing
mix, in terms of its relevance for sustainability, but also transforming the notion of a mere mix into a
matrix of decision-making.
• Strategic planning assists organisations by making them understand how they will compete in
the future.
• Through the strategic planning process, value is to be created: value for consumers, value for
the organisation, and, importantly, value for society at large (AMA 2007).
• The planning process occurs at a number of levels, starting with the vision and/or mission,
which articulates how the organisation sees its place in the future, its purpose and ‘what it
wants to accomplish in the larger environment’ (Kotler et al. 2007, p. 80)
• It is critical that sustainability is addressed at this primary level, as the mission, ‘acts as an “invisible
hand” that guides people in the organisation so they can work independently and yet collectively toward
overall organisational goals’ (Kotler et al. 2007, p. 80).
• Marketing strategy requires the, ‘planning and coordination of marketing resources and the integration
of the marketing mix to achieve a desired result’ (Kotler et al. 2007, p. 79).
• It is ultimately the marketing mix that produces value for individual consumers and society at large,
or alternatively, harm.
THE SUSTAINABILITY MARKETING MATRIX
• The marketing mix, a simple mnemonic device of four Ps (McCarthy 1960) broadly details the activities
the marketing manager needs to consider to achieve the organisation’s desired market offering: product,
price, promotion and place.
• They do not permit a company to adequately address sustainability’s challenge
• These challenges include:
• Altering the way things are done, that is, the way value (harm) is created;
• Clearly demonstrating to stakeholders the firm’s sustainability stance and values;
• Collaborating with other individuals and organisations to achieve sustainability-related synergies;
• Ensuring employees and customers are included and supportive of the drive toward greater sustainability.
FOUR MORE PS TO TRADITIONAL MIX
• Four more Ps are added to the traditional mix to address the
sustainability challenges processes, physical evidence, partnerships
and participants.
• These eight elements are cross referenced against the TBL’s planet, people
and profitability measurements to form the Sustainability Marketing
Matrix.
• Each of these additional ingredients needs to be effectively managed by the
marketing manager in the pursuit of sustainability outcomes
SUSTAINABILITY MARKETING MATRIX
THE PURPOSE OF THIS MATRIX IS TO
RAISE THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS:
Planet: How does our (marketing mix element) make optimal
use of environmental resources, maintain essential ecological
processes and help to conserve natural heritage and biodiversity?;
People: How does our (marketing mix element) demonstrate
respect for individuals and the socio-cultural authenticity of
communities?;
Profitability: How does our (marketing mix element)
ensure our viable, long-term economic operations, and
provide long-term socioeconomic benefits to all
stakeholders that are fairly distributed, including stable
employment and income-earning opportunities to
communities?
ADDING FOUR MORE P’S
• The inclusion of participants, physical evidence, process and partnership is recognition that
the traditional sense of the marketing mix, that is, that which is controllable by the
organisation, must be seen more comprehensively or on broader viewpoint to address the
sutainability
ELEMENTS OF SUSTAINABILITY MATRIX AND ITS
EFFECT ON SUSTAINABILITY
Product
• Sustainable products are those products that provide environmental, social
and economic benefits while protecting public health and environment over
their whole life cycle, from the extraction of raw materials until the final disposal
Price
• A sustainable pricing strategy involves setting prices that cover a company's
social and environmental costs for each sale. It aims to contribute to the drive
for a sustainable economy, to reduce the impact on the planet and its people, thus
meeting the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
• Place ( distribution)
• Sustainable distribution refers to any means of transportation / hauling of goods
between vendor and purchaser with lowest possible impact on the ecological and
social environment, and includes the whole distribution process from storage,
order processing and picking, packaging, improved vehicle loadings, delivery to
the customer or purchaser and taking back packaging
• Promotion
• Sustainable Promotion addresses the carbon footprint and other negative environmental and
social impacts associated with the production and distribution of advertising materials.
• A growing number of companies are making a commitment to the reduction of their
environmental impact associated with advertising production and distribution.
• Print advertising impacts the environment due to the carbon dioxide emitted into the
atmosphere as a result of the production and distribution of print media. Factors include the
sourcing and production of paper, petroleum-based ink, solvents, plastics and adhesives used
and the fossil fuels burned in the manufacturing and distribution of newspapers and magazines.
• Digital media has impacts due to the greenhouse gas emissions associated with the
manufacturing and operation of servers and datacenter devices, networking devices and client
computers as well as the e-waste impacts of these devices at the end of their useful lives.
Process
• Process describes how the service is assembled, the ‘actual procedures,
mechanisms, and flow of activities by which the service is delivered – the
service delivery and operating systems’.
• How efficiently the processors are made to minimise the use of resources
and improve efficiency? E.g. Innovative process may use less electricity, may
provide better safety for works, better product for customers, emit less GHG
gases to the environment, pay more for suppliers, reduce waste or increase
the recyclability, improve profitability to shareholders
Physical evidence
• Physical evidence refers to the tangible clues that assist consumers’ evaluations of products.
• In service contexts, such evidence might include elements of the servicescape, including design and
furnishing, employee appearance and communications.
• Manufactured products might make use of evidence as product packaging and labelling information (
traditionally discussed under product)
• Green building may help to achieve sustainability matrix in different ways as to Planet, People and Profit
Partnership
• Partnership refers to the cooperative efforts of sustainability outcome-enabling individuals and
organisations in the realisation that one organisation cannot stand alone in the struggle to achieve
sustainable development
• Productive partnerships include employees and the organisation’s customers, captured under
participants, and other stakeholders and even competitor organisations.
• Partnerships with universities and research organisations
Participants
• Participants include ‘all human actors who play a part in service delivery and thus influence
the buyer’s perceptions: namely the firm’s personnel, the customer, and other customers in
the service environment’ (Zeithaml, et al. 2006, p. 26).
• Participants is preferred to People, the term commonly referred to in services marketing, as
it was the term originally used by Booms and Bitner (1981) and to avoid confusion with the
People of the triple bottom line, against which it must be cross-referenced.
RESPONSIBILITY OF EMPLOYEES AND CUSTOMERS
IN SUSTAINABILITY
• For sustainability marketing, employees and customers are equally important.
• Employees should be committed to the sustainability initiatives, and be committed to continuous
sustainability performance improvement.
• Customers too can be included in continuous-improvement efforts and suggestion systems.
• Customers are not merely targeted to consume the outputs of the organisation in the general marketing
sense, but are also to be included in the co-production of sustainability achievements as much as
possible through, for example, product use, servicing and disposal, recycling and future product
purchase( intelligent consumption)
DISCUSSION
• The proposed Sustainability Marketing Model contributes to the ongoing marketing sustainability
conversation.
• The approach model is designed to deliver transparency, along with a comprehensive audit of
operational issues that might impact all sustainability outcomes, and reduce negative responses from
the critiques such as “ Green wash’
• Consumers and other stakeholders are now looking to organisations to pursue pro-social and pro-
environmental achievement.
• Sustainability offers organisations the opportunity for differentiation from competitors and
increase profits (Porter & Kramer (2002) (but it needs to be systematic, evidence-based and
transparent)
• Pomering has filled a gap by creating a model that is worth adopting
• Once it is used, one could evaluate how it works practically at the implementation level
• Future research should explore how simple but practical models could be developed to
assists organisations to embed sustainability in their strategic thinking and planning.
REFERENCE
• Pomering, A. (2014). Strategic marketing sustainability: from a marketing mix to a
marketing matrix. In H.
Hasan (Eds.), Being Practical with Theory: A Window into Business Research (pp. 80-86).
Wollongong,
Australia: THEORI. http://eurekaconnection.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/p-80-86-strategic-
marketingsustainability-theori-ebook_finaljan2014-v3.pdf

Más contenido relacionado

Similar a Pomerings Sustainability and Startegy.pptx

7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docxsodhi3
 
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docxpriestmanmable
 
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docxsleeperharwell
 
Marketing strategy of airtel
Marketing strategy of airtelMarketing strategy of airtel
Marketing strategy of airtelJerry Mia
 
Module 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmm
Module 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmmModule 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmm
Module 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmmthanuja
 
The role of marketing in sustainability-led innovation
The role of marketing in sustainability-led innovationThe role of marketing in sustainability-led innovation
The role of marketing in sustainability-led innovationCranfield University
 
SOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptx
SOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptxSOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptx
SOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptxBinaLove
 
4_5918215915979149596.pptx
4_5918215915979149596.pptx4_5918215915979149596.pptx
4_5918215915979149596.pptxBinaLove
 
Shared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sector
Shared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sectorShared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sector
Shared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sectorjournal ijrtem
 
Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...
Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...
Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...Université Internationale de Rabat
 
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16 CH.docx
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16    CH.docxCUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16    CH.docx
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16 CH.docxfaithxdunce63732
 
Managerial perspective on marketing
Managerial perspective on marketingManagerial perspective on marketing
Managerial perspective on marketingAlexander Decker
 
2 module Marketing Management
2 module Marketing Management2 module Marketing Management
2 module Marketing ManagementDr UMA K
 
Key Concepts In Marketing
Key Concepts In MarketingKey Concepts In Marketing
Key Concepts In Marketinglamanansala
 
Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1
Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1
Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1thanuja
 
Ss marketing environment
Ss marketing environmentSs marketing environment
Ss marketing environmentCMPCERT
 
How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...
How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...
How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...Nicha Tatsaneeyapan
 

Similar a Pomerings Sustainability and Startegy.pptx (20)

7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
 
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
 
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
7 Managing Marketing ActivitiesThomas NorthcutDigital Vis.docx
 
Marketing strategy of airtel
Marketing strategy of airtelMarketing strategy of airtel
Marketing strategy of airtel
 
Module 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmm
Module 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmmModule 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmm
Module 1 course 1 mysore university pgdmm
 
The role of marketing in sustainability-led innovation
The role of marketing in sustainability-led innovationThe role of marketing in sustainability-led innovation
The role of marketing in sustainability-led innovation
 
SOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptx
SOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptxSOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptx
SOCIAL M Chapter one PPT 1-4.pptx
 
4_5918215915979149596.pptx
4_5918215915979149596.pptx4_5918215915979149596.pptx
4_5918215915979149596.pptx
 
Shared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sector
Shared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sectorShared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sector
Shared Value Creation: Value chain redesign in companies of the sugar sector
 
unit 1.pptx
unit 1.pptxunit 1.pptx
unit 1.pptx
 
Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...
Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...
Industrial Marketing Management : Marketing capabilities and innovation-based...
 
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16 CH.docx
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16    CH.docxCUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16    CH.docx
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 69 (16 CH.docx
 
Strategic Marekting - Maleeha Fakhar
Strategic Marekting - Maleeha FakharStrategic Marekting - Maleeha Fakhar
Strategic Marekting - Maleeha Fakhar
 
Managerial perspective on marketing
Managerial perspective on marketingManagerial perspective on marketing
Managerial perspective on marketing
 
2 module Marketing Management
2 module Marketing Management2 module Marketing Management
2 module Marketing Management
 
Key Concepts In Marketing
Key Concepts In MarketingKey Concepts In Marketing
Key Concepts In Marketing
 
Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1
Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1
Key concepts-in-marketing m1c1
 
Ss marketing environment
Ss marketing environmentSs marketing environment
Ss marketing environment
 
Marketing
MarketingMarketing
Marketing
 
How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...
How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...
How To Shift Consumer Behaviors to be more sustainable; a literature review a...
 

Último

一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理
一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理
一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理exehay
 
LANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptx
LANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptxLANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptx
LANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptxKrish DS
 
Shaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptx
Shaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptxShaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptx
Shaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptxAgrodome projects LLP
 
ecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory project
ecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory projectecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory project
ecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory projectMayank524181
 
Laplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Laplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhLaplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Laplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhjoshuaclack73
 
Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...
Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...
Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...Open Access Research Paper
 
Lecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.ppt
Lecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.pptLecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.ppt
Lecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.pptDiptiPriya6
 
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3susannedejong
 
poplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptx
poplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptxpoplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptx
poplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptxjihad19
 
SUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptx
SUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptxSUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptx
SUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptxKrish DS
 
TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...
TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...
TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...marcuskenyatta275
 
LaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjx
LaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjxLaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjx
LaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjxjoshuaclack73
 
一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单tyvaq
 
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单qogbuux
 
LaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptx
LaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptxLaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptx
LaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptxjoshuaclack73
 
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)susannedejong
 
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单pcoow
 
一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单qogbuux
 
Impacts of agriculture on the environment.
Impacts of agriculture on the environment.Impacts of agriculture on the environment.
Impacts of agriculture on the environment.AyushKumar76331
 
Climate change Presentation for students who need it
Climate change Presentation for students who need itClimate change Presentation for students who need it
Climate change Presentation for students who need itmaythadar1312
 

Último (20)

一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理
一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理
一比一原版EUR毕业证鹿特丹伊拉斯姆斯大学毕业证成绩单如何办理
 
LANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptx
LANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptxLANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptx
LANDFILL AND ITS EFFECT(Managing waste).pptx
 
Shaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptx
Shaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptxShaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptx
Shaded Net house agricultural greenhouse.pptx
 
ecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory project
ecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory projectecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory project
ecosystem class 12 ppt investigatory project
 
Laplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Laplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhLaplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Laplace Transforms.pptxhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
 
Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...
Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...
Use of Raffias’ species (Raphia spp.) and its impact on socioeconomic charact...
 
Lecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.ppt
Lecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.pptLecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.ppt
Lecture 6- Bacteria- Pathathogenesis.ppt
 
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3
 
poplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptx
poplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptxpoplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptx
poplar trees field in kurdistan region of iraq.pptx
 
SUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptx
SUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptxSUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptx
SUNDERBANS-a case study(E.V.S. PROJECT).pptx
 
TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...
TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...
TEST BANK For Geosystems An Introduction to Physical Geography, 5th Canadian ...
 
LaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjx
LaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjxLaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjx
LaPlace Transform Questions.pptjjjjjjjjjx
 
一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Lincoln毕业证)新西兰林肯大学毕业证成绩单
 
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
 
LaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptx
LaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptxLaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptx
LaPlace Transforms 2 with use of Matlab.pptx
 
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)
New Metrics for Sustainable Prosperity: Options for GDP+3 (preliminary study)
 
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Monash毕业证)莫纳什大学毕业证成绩单
 
一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单
一比一原版(Adelaide毕业证)阿德莱德大学毕业证成绩单
 
Impacts of agriculture on the environment.
Impacts of agriculture on the environment.Impacts of agriculture on the environment.
Impacts of agriculture on the environment.
 
Climate change Presentation for students who need it
Climate change Presentation for students who need itClimate change Presentation for students who need it
Climate change Presentation for students who need it
 

Pomerings Sustainability and Startegy.pptx

  • 1. REVIEW OF STRATEGIC MARKETING SUSTAINABILITY: FROM A MARKETING MIX TO A MARKETING MATRIX OF ALAN POMERING BY MAXWELL RANASINGHE
  • 2. • Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large. ( American Marketing Association 2017) • This calls for a responsibility to society at large, not just individual consumers. The term “society at large” include many stakeholders, importantly the environment. It includes all what is spoken in Green marketing and Societal Marketing • It proposes a fundamental shift in marketing philosophy, and it is in line with Sustainability and Corporate Social Responsibility that advocates adding value not only to shareholders but also for the employees, customers, collaborators and the environment
  • 3. • To achieve sustainability outcomes, new marketing models are needed, but the theoretical development of marketing research on sustainability is considered to be in its infancy (Connelly, Ketchen & Slater 2011). • In this pursuit, it is worth to make an attempt on reviewing what Alan Pomering ( 2014) proposes • Pomering’s Sustainability Marketing Model, is a simple yet systematic framework that ensures sustainability cascades through the marketing planning process. • In developing this model, the marketing mix is replaced with a matrix that adds four critical decision fields to the traditional marketing mix • He adds Participants, Physical Evidence, Process and Partnership - and draws on the three pillars of sustainable development -Planet, People and Profit - to ensure managers cross-check decision-making's sustainability impacts. • The principle of sustainable development, that the future of the planet’s environment, communities and their cultures not be compromised by actions in the present (World Commission on Environment and Development 1987), has now served as a guide for business managers for more than two decades.
  • 4. • Business managers currently have little guidance on how they might drive a sustainable development agenda across their operational activities, they execute under the heading of the Marketing Mix. • Marketing should bear a societal obligation beyond the narrow consumer-orientation is generally not reflected in its contemporary conceptual Frameworks • Key concepts of value chain (Porter, 1985) was critiqued by Polonsky et al ( 2003) as “harm chain” and Porter later in line with Polonsky’s critique, revised the his value chain concept to reflect the simultaneous harm created along the value chain. ( Porter and Kramer 2006)
  • 5. STRATEGIC ACTION AND SUSTAINABILITY • It is clear from several recent managerial surveys that contemporary managers are inadequately prepared to meet business’s challenge to adequately consider the needs of society at large in their strategic and operational decisions. • A McKinsey Global Survey (2010) of around 2000 executives reports that despite its acknowledged importance, companies are not taking a proactive approach to managing sustainability.
  • 6. • The World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) has called for a more sustainable level of consumption, but, apart from de-marketing and social marketing efforts to highlight that marketing may yet have a broader role to play. • Hult (2011) suggested marketing, ‘is in a unique position to elevate its focus from managing relationships with customers to strategically managing a broader set of marketplace issues’. • It demand managing relationship with not only customers but with other stakeholders in the market place including the environment
  • 7. • At present, marketing managers’ decision-making is typically framed around the traditional concept of the marketing mix, which addresses the needs of individua consumers, but provides little guidance on operating more sustainably, for the benefit of society at large. • Philip Kotler (2011) argued, ‘marketing will have to reinvent its practices to be environmentally responsible’ (p. 132). • Pomering (2014) proposes the Sustainability Marketing Model, a simple yet systematic framework that ensures sustainability cascades through the marketing planning process, to address the call of Phillip Kotler
  • 8. • Sustainability Marketing Model is a simple yet powerful model that provides the manager with a comprehensive check-list for considering the sustainability implications of all supply- and demand-side decision-making. • It can ensure that sustainable development considerations are written into the strategic planning process, ultimately cascading to operational decisions, such as pricing, product design, promotional tools and messages, and distribution methods, and the various other mix elements for specific contexts, such as services and experiences • The Sustainability Marketing Model targets improving sustainability performance through reference to Triple Bottom Line: Planet, People and Profit
  • 9. • Bridges and Wilhelm (2008, p. 34) argued, ‘marketing education for sustainability requires a consideration of environmental and social issues in all elements of marketing strategy planning, from objective setting to target market selection to strategic and tactical decisions regarding each of the marketing mix variables • Pomerings(2014) proposed model addresses this requirement, expanding the notion of the marketing mix, in terms of its relevance for sustainability, but also transforming the notion of a mere mix into a matrix of decision-making.
  • 10. • Strategic planning assists organisations by making them understand how they will compete in the future. • Through the strategic planning process, value is to be created: value for consumers, value for the organisation, and, importantly, value for society at large (AMA 2007). • The planning process occurs at a number of levels, starting with the vision and/or mission, which articulates how the organisation sees its place in the future, its purpose and ‘what it wants to accomplish in the larger environment’ (Kotler et al. 2007, p. 80)
  • 11. • It is critical that sustainability is addressed at this primary level, as the mission, ‘acts as an “invisible hand” that guides people in the organisation so they can work independently and yet collectively toward overall organisational goals’ (Kotler et al. 2007, p. 80). • Marketing strategy requires the, ‘planning and coordination of marketing resources and the integration of the marketing mix to achieve a desired result’ (Kotler et al. 2007, p. 79). • It is ultimately the marketing mix that produces value for individual consumers and society at large, or alternatively, harm.
  • 12. THE SUSTAINABILITY MARKETING MATRIX • The marketing mix, a simple mnemonic device of four Ps (McCarthy 1960) broadly details the activities the marketing manager needs to consider to achieve the organisation’s desired market offering: product, price, promotion and place. • They do not permit a company to adequately address sustainability’s challenge • These challenges include: • Altering the way things are done, that is, the way value (harm) is created; • Clearly demonstrating to stakeholders the firm’s sustainability stance and values; • Collaborating with other individuals and organisations to achieve sustainability-related synergies; • Ensuring employees and customers are included and supportive of the drive toward greater sustainability.
  • 13. FOUR MORE PS TO TRADITIONAL MIX • Four more Ps are added to the traditional mix to address the sustainability challenges processes, physical evidence, partnerships and participants. • These eight elements are cross referenced against the TBL’s planet, people and profitability measurements to form the Sustainability Marketing Matrix. • Each of these additional ingredients needs to be effectively managed by the marketing manager in the pursuit of sustainability outcomes
  • 15. THE PURPOSE OF THIS MATRIX IS TO RAISE THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS: Planet: How does our (marketing mix element) make optimal use of environmental resources, maintain essential ecological processes and help to conserve natural heritage and biodiversity?; People: How does our (marketing mix element) demonstrate respect for individuals and the socio-cultural authenticity of communities?;
  • 16. Profitability: How does our (marketing mix element) ensure our viable, long-term economic operations, and provide long-term socioeconomic benefits to all stakeholders that are fairly distributed, including stable employment and income-earning opportunities to communities?
  • 17. ADDING FOUR MORE P’S • The inclusion of participants, physical evidence, process and partnership is recognition that the traditional sense of the marketing mix, that is, that which is controllable by the organisation, must be seen more comprehensively or on broader viewpoint to address the sutainability
  • 18. ELEMENTS OF SUSTAINABILITY MATRIX AND ITS EFFECT ON SUSTAINABILITY Product • Sustainable products are those products that provide environmental, social and economic benefits while protecting public health and environment over their whole life cycle, from the extraction of raw materials until the final disposal Price • A sustainable pricing strategy involves setting prices that cover a company's social and environmental costs for each sale. It aims to contribute to the drive for a sustainable economy, to reduce the impact on the planet and its people, thus meeting the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
  • 19. • Place ( distribution) • Sustainable distribution refers to any means of transportation / hauling of goods between vendor and purchaser with lowest possible impact on the ecological and social environment, and includes the whole distribution process from storage, order processing and picking, packaging, improved vehicle loadings, delivery to the customer or purchaser and taking back packaging
  • 20. • Promotion • Sustainable Promotion addresses the carbon footprint and other negative environmental and social impacts associated with the production and distribution of advertising materials. • A growing number of companies are making a commitment to the reduction of their environmental impact associated with advertising production and distribution. • Print advertising impacts the environment due to the carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere as a result of the production and distribution of print media. Factors include the sourcing and production of paper, petroleum-based ink, solvents, plastics and adhesives used and the fossil fuels burned in the manufacturing and distribution of newspapers and magazines. • Digital media has impacts due to the greenhouse gas emissions associated with the manufacturing and operation of servers and datacenter devices, networking devices and client computers as well as the e-waste impacts of these devices at the end of their useful lives.
  • 21. Process • Process describes how the service is assembled, the ‘actual procedures, mechanisms, and flow of activities by which the service is delivered – the service delivery and operating systems’. • How efficiently the processors are made to minimise the use of resources and improve efficiency? E.g. Innovative process may use less electricity, may provide better safety for works, better product for customers, emit less GHG gases to the environment, pay more for suppliers, reduce waste or increase the recyclability, improve profitability to shareholders
  • 22. Physical evidence • Physical evidence refers to the tangible clues that assist consumers’ evaluations of products. • In service contexts, such evidence might include elements of the servicescape, including design and furnishing, employee appearance and communications. • Manufactured products might make use of evidence as product packaging and labelling information ( traditionally discussed under product) • Green building may help to achieve sustainability matrix in different ways as to Planet, People and Profit
  • 23. Partnership • Partnership refers to the cooperative efforts of sustainability outcome-enabling individuals and organisations in the realisation that one organisation cannot stand alone in the struggle to achieve sustainable development • Productive partnerships include employees and the organisation’s customers, captured under participants, and other stakeholders and even competitor organisations. • Partnerships with universities and research organisations
  • 24. Participants • Participants include ‘all human actors who play a part in service delivery and thus influence the buyer’s perceptions: namely the firm’s personnel, the customer, and other customers in the service environment’ (Zeithaml, et al. 2006, p. 26). • Participants is preferred to People, the term commonly referred to in services marketing, as it was the term originally used by Booms and Bitner (1981) and to avoid confusion with the People of the triple bottom line, against which it must be cross-referenced.
  • 25. RESPONSIBILITY OF EMPLOYEES AND CUSTOMERS IN SUSTAINABILITY • For sustainability marketing, employees and customers are equally important. • Employees should be committed to the sustainability initiatives, and be committed to continuous sustainability performance improvement. • Customers too can be included in continuous-improvement efforts and suggestion systems. • Customers are not merely targeted to consume the outputs of the organisation in the general marketing sense, but are also to be included in the co-production of sustainability achievements as much as possible through, for example, product use, servicing and disposal, recycling and future product purchase( intelligent consumption)
  • 26. DISCUSSION • The proposed Sustainability Marketing Model contributes to the ongoing marketing sustainability conversation. • The approach model is designed to deliver transparency, along with a comprehensive audit of operational issues that might impact all sustainability outcomes, and reduce negative responses from the critiques such as “ Green wash’ • Consumers and other stakeholders are now looking to organisations to pursue pro-social and pro- environmental achievement.
  • 27. • Sustainability offers organisations the opportunity for differentiation from competitors and increase profits (Porter & Kramer (2002) (but it needs to be systematic, evidence-based and transparent) • Pomering has filled a gap by creating a model that is worth adopting • Once it is used, one could evaluate how it works practically at the implementation level • Future research should explore how simple but practical models could be developed to assists organisations to embed sustainability in their strategic thinking and planning.
  • 28. REFERENCE • Pomering, A. (2014). Strategic marketing sustainability: from a marketing mix to a marketing matrix. In H. Hasan (Eds.), Being Practical with Theory: A Window into Business Research (pp. 80-86). Wollongong, Australia: THEORI. http://eurekaconnection.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/p-80-86-strategic- marketingsustainability-theori-ebook_finaljan2014-v3.pdf