Due to its close relationship with the customer, Marketing has
been often criticized. From being misleading, to exaggerating, applying
the corporate view only while focusing on the organization's benefit
solely. This criticism may sound true to most, and is definitely worth
to be responded to by marketing professionals.
Before discussing
any type of criticism, let's start by the basics. What is marketing?
While reviewing the definition on the web, I found mainly those that
refer to marketing as the process by which companies determine what
products or services may be of interest to customers, and the strategy
to use in sales, communications and business development. The American
Marketing Association (AMA) defines marketing 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.
As the head the business department of my
company setting the marketing policy is one of my tasks. I surely do not
find anything offensive at the first glance by reading the first
definition. Some however may regard this as a proof that marketing
exists for the sole purpose of executing a company process that targets
customers. The answer to that however is found in the AMA definition,
the marketing activity can be initiated by a person and not solely by a
company. AMA sets the product as an offering that has value and not as a
product or service that may be of interest.
Someone
who has an offering (idea, product, belief...) and wants to put it out
for the grabs is getting involved in marketing. It is an open invitation
to be part of the offering. They can have a simple process or a series
of complicated ones, which include communicating, delivering and
exchange. The understanding of this simple definition does not mean
that some corporations do not indulge into unethical activities; it
simply reminds us that not all those who are involved in marketing are
aiming to deceive the public.
Let us take bread as an example. A
bakery providing us with fresh bread is likely able to sell more of its
fresh bread compared to two days old bread coming from a distant baker
if it offers it at the same price. Both are involved in marketing if
they want their product sold. They have the product, they defined its
price, their products are available at the local grocery stores, and
they both informed people of their presence (knowing that the local
bakery can focus on its products' freshness). How can either of those
entities be criticized for their involvement in basic marketing?
Let's
take the example a step further. The Distant bakery is really looking
into establishing a major market share in the market. Due to its
transportation costs it cannot compete on price. It advertises its
product as being a natural product that provides a certain amount of
energy. By the looks their bread may seem to have this golden color that
makes a bread lover drool. However, they decide to ignore mentioning
using chemicals to make the bread stay fresh for a longer period of
time, or using colorants to give that shiny golden look. All their
chemical components may be mentioned on the package but it will be in a
chemical terminology that we do not know as simple consumers. The
chances are that their sales will go higher by promoting the benefits of
their bread.
Are we to blame the marketing for such a
manipulative action? Some do, but is it really marketing that caused
this or is it the decision makers at that bakery? In this example we
could see the manipulative power of marketing when put in greedy hands.
The distant bakery did not lie about their products ability to stay
fresh; they just mentioned it can without stating how they do it.
From
a professional background, I have to state that there is a problem of
ethics when it comes to marketing. The origin of the problem is not
marketing; it is some individuals involved in the marketing field.
On
an individual level, let's take as an example email scams. How many of
you received an email claiming to represent the assistant of a
president, the siblings of a diamond dealer, and the son of an ousted
official who wants to send you millions of dollars to your account and
offering you a generous percentage. Sometimes all what they ask for is
your bank account number or a minor amount transfer (compared to the
huge amount you will receive) to their account.
Those people are
involved in illegal schemes yet they use marketing. Their product is
based on their understanding of human psychology and the greed and
ignorance of those who fall for it. It is their greed and their
manipulative message that is to be criticized, and not their usage of
emails as a means to market their product.
On a corporate level,
there are too many examples ranging from natural medication to
sophisticated electronics. Although some products may be harmful (Some
of the "natural weight loss" products for example) while others don't
deliver all what is promised. Marketers in those cases use deception and
manipulation. In the case of "natural" products they focus indirectly
on the safety of those products without clarifying that some people may
be allergic to one or the other, let alone those who use plants that can
have a poisonous effect. On another hand many had purchased one
electronic item or another promising to deliver so many solutions just
to find out that they had to purchase additional accessories before
being able to benefit fully from this product.
Neither provider
lied about their product, but neither told the full truth either. In
either case, I don't believe that marketing is to be blamed, it is
rather the people involved in it and how they are using it. Although
developing partial truth about their products they also exploited the
weaknesses of other human beings. It is their actions that should be
criticized and not the marketing process.
On the other hand, I
should point out that marketing is susceptible to such abuse due to its
core component: People. Beliefs such as "the end justifies the means"
can easily find their way in marketing and it is such beliefs that make
marketing vulnerable to criticism. By understanding the role of people
in marketing, many criticism issues can be understood and corrected to
aim at the individuals rather than the concept itself. Ethics are as
important in marketing as they are in our everyday life. Although we
could assume that people live by those ethics, we still have laws to
punish those who do not abide by them.
In Islam, trade has its
defined ethics. The prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) had said what
means that the truthful trader will appear in the Day of Judgment with
honest people, the messengers of God, and the martyrs. This shows that
being honest while exercising trade is not an easy task, yet it is
feasible and it is highly rewarding in the hereafter. In one of the
incidents, the Prophet was in the market and put his hand in a bag of
wheat to check its quality. He found out that the wheat that was
underneath the exposed part was humid due to its exposure to rain. He
addressed the trader by asking him why it is as such. The trader was
honest enough to answer that it rained on it. The meaning of the
prophet's comment to his answer was "Make it visible so people can see
it, the one who cheats us is not one of us" As simple as the statement
might be, it sets the ethics in trade making cheating unethical.
Trade
made Islam reach Indonesia by following this simple approach. When an
Indonesian king asked a Muslim trader why is he being honest in his
trade (compared to other traders) the Muslim trader's answer was that it
is due to his religion that forbids him from cheating. The king's
answer to that was that a religion as such deserves to be followed. Over
the years Islam got spread in Indonesia because of honest trading. In a
world where greed rules, it is hard to find honest marketers, yet
again, it is not the marketing process that is to blame; it is the human
behavior that takes it either way.
In future articles i will go through other types of criticism while discussing more advanced marketing applications.
Osman Habbal is a well traveled Business expert. With over 20
years experience in Business covering Marketing, Sales, Customer Care,
and Management, Osman has been exposed to many markets and cultures. His
skills in Arabic, French, Russian, and English, widened his
communication experience. Osman was born in Beirut, the capital city of
Lebanon, in a Muslim family. He is strongly opinionated when it comes to
Politics due to his early childhood exposure to war. Osman is Married
and a proud parent.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/5463427
No comments:
Post a Comment