How To Turn Wealthy Prospects Into High Paying Customers


Discover what a big ticket opportunity is and what is the benefit to selling a high ticket
item.
Read about the blue print to success:
1. Who are you marketing to
2. Creating a business image
3. Advertising
4. Online and offline networking
5. Funded proposals
6. 2.0 marketing
7. Get a mentor

How To Turn Wealthy Prospects Into High Paying Customers
Marketing is a "social and managerial process by which individuals and groups obtain what they need
and want through creating and exchanging products and values with others." It is an integrated process through
which companies create value for customers and build strong customer relationships in order to capture value from
customers in return.
Marketing is used to create the customer, to keep the customer and to satisfy the customer. With the customer as
the focus of its activities, it can be concluded that marketing management is one of the major
components of business management. The evolution of marketing was caused due to mature markets and overcapacities
in the last decades. Companies then shifted the focus from production more to the customer in order to stay
profitable.
The term marketing concept holds that achieving organisational goals depends on knowing the needs and
wants of target markets and delivering the desired satisfactions. It proposes that in order to satisfy its
organizational objectives, an organization should anticipate the needs and wants of consumers and satisfy these
more effectively than competitors.
Marketing is defined by the American Marketing Association as "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." The term developed from the original meaning which referred literally to going
to a market to buy or sell goods or services. Seen from a systems point of view, sales process engineering views
marketing as "a set of processes that are interconnected and interdependent with other functions, whose methods
can be improved using a variety of relatively new approaches."
The Chartered Institute of Marketing defines marketing as "the management process responsible for
identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer requirements profitably." A different concept is the
value-based marketing which states the role of marketing to contribute to increasing shareholder value. In
this context, marketing is defined as "the management process that seeks to maximise returns to shareholders by
developing relationships with valued customers and creating a competitive advantage."
Marketing practice tended to be seen as a creative industry in the past, which included advertising,
distribution and selling. However, because the academic study of marketing makes extensive use of social sciences,
psychology, sociology, mathematics, economics, anthropology and neuroscience, the profession is now widely
recognized as a science, allowing numerous universities to offer Master-of-Science (MSc) programmes. The overall
process starts with marketing research and goes through market segmentation, business planning and execution,
ending with pre and post-sales promotional activities. It is also related to many of the creative arts. The
marketing literature is also adept at re-inventing itself and its vocabulary according to the times and the
culture.
Also see: Magic Copywriting
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