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Marketing Book

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CHAPTER 1<br />

One more time – what is<br />

marketing?<br />

MICHAEL J. BAKER<br />

The enigma of marketing is that it is one of<br />

man’s oldest activities and yet it is regarded as<br />

the most recent of the business disciplines.<br />

Michael J. Baker, <strong>Marketing</strong>: Theory and Practice,<br />

1st Edn, Macmillan, 1976<br />

Introduction<br />

As a discipline, marketing is in the process of<br />

transition from an art which is practised to a<br />

profession with strong theoretical foundations.<br />

In doing so it is following closely the precedents<br />

set by professions such as medicine, architecture<br />

and engineering, all of which have also been<br />

practised for thousands of years and have built<br />

up a wealth of descriptive information concerning<br />

the art which has both chronicled and<br />

advanced its evolution. At some juncture, however,<br />

continued progress demands a transition<br />

from description to analysis, such as that<br />

initiated by Harvey’s discovery of the circulation<br />

of the blood. If marketing is to develop it,<br />

too, must make the transition from art to applied<br />

science and develop sound theoretical foundations,<br />

mastery of which should become an<br />

essential qualification for practice.<br />

Adoption of this proposition is as threatening<br />

to many of today’s marketers as the<br />

establishment of the British Medical Association<br />

was to the surgeon-barber. But, today, you<br />

would not dream of going to a barber for medical<br />

advice.<br />

Of course, first aid will still be practised,<br />

books on healthy living will feature on the bestsellers<br />

list and harmless potions will be bought<br />

over the counter in drug stores and pharmacies.<br />

This is an amateur activity akin to much of what<br />

passes for marketing in British industry. While<br />

there was no threat of the cancer of competition<br />

it might have sufficed, but once the Japanese,<br />

Germans and others invade your markets you<br />

are going to need much stronger medicine if you<br />

are to survive. To do so you must have the<br />

courage to face up to the reality that aggressive<br />

competition can prove fatal, quickly; have the<br />

necessary determination to resist rather than<br />

succumb, and seek the best possible professional<br />

advice and treatment to assist you.<br />

Unfortunately, many people are unwilling to<br />

face up to reality. Even more unfortunate, many<br />

of the best minds and abilities are concentrated<br />

on activities which support the essential functions<br />

of an economy, by which we all survive,<br />

but have come to believe that these can exist by<br />

themselves independent of the manufacturing<br />

heart. Bankers, financiers, politicians and civil<br />

servants all fall into this category. As John<br />

Harvey-Jones pointed out so eloquently in the<br />

1986 David Dimbleby lecture, much of our<br />

wealth is created by manufacturing industry

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