Demarketing

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advanced demarketing applications
Ale Trail
Atm Machine
Brand Management
Brand Managment
Car Insurance
Category=KJS
Category=KJSA
consumer behaviour analysis
Counter-marketing
Crack Cocaine
demand management strategies
Demarketing
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethical marketing practices
Irregular Demand
Marketing
Marketing Communications
Negative Place Image
Operand Resources
Paddy Power
Psychological Reactance Theory
Real Ale Pub
Regional Adaptations
SD Logic
Selective Demarketing
Service Dominant Logic Literature
service marketing research
St Kilda
strategic marketing theory
Synchromarketing
Team GB
Twitter Account Holder
UK Airline
UK Athletic
UK Drug Policy
UK Drug Policy Commission
UK Recession
UK's Charter Institute
UK’s Charter Institute
value co-creation models
WHS Designation
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415816489
  • Weight: 190g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Oct 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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We all understand the basic principles underpinning marketing activity: to identify unfulfilled needs and desires and boost demand for the solutions a product is offering. The mantra is always "sell more". De-marketing tries for the very opposite. Why would a company actively try to decrease demand?

There are many good reasons to do so: a firm cannot supply large enough quantities, or wants to limit supply to a region of narrow profit margin. Or, crucially, to discourage undesirable customers: those that could be bad for brand reputation, or in the case of the finance sector, high risk. De-marketing can yield effective solutions to these issues, effectively curtailing demand yet (crucially) not destroying it. Nevertheless, the fundamental negativity of de-marketing strategies often causes organisations to hide them from view and, as a result, they are rarely studied.

This then is the first book to cast light on the secretive, counterintuitive world of de-marketing, deconstructing its mysteries and demonstrating how to incorporate them into a profit-driven marketing plan. A selection of thought leaders in strategic marketing mix theory with illustrative global cases, providing insight into how these strategies have been employed in practice and measuring their successes and failures. It’s a must-read for any student or researcher that wants to think differently about marketing.

Nigel Bradley was Senior Lecturer in Marketing at the University of Westminster, UK

Jim Blythe is Professor of Marketing at Westminster University and Visiting Professor at Plymouth Business School, UK