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Marketing managers are often responsible for influencing the level, timing, and composition of customer demand in a manner that will achieve the
company's objectives.
There is no universally accepted definition of the term. In part, this is due to the fact that the role of a marketing manager can vary significantly based on a
business' size, corporate culture, and industry context. For example, in a large consumer products company, the marketing manager may act as the
overall general manager of his or her assigned product category or brand with full profit & loss responsibility. In contrast, a small law firm may have no
marketing personnel at all, requiring the firm's partners to make marketing management decisions on a largely ad-hoc basis.
In the widely used text Marketing Management and leadership training, Philip Kotler and Kevin Lane Keller define marketing management as "the art and
science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping and growing customers through creating, delivering, and communicating superior customer
value."
From this perspective, the scope of marketing management is quite broad. The implication of such a definition is that any activity or resource the firm
uses to acquire customers and manage the company's relationships with them is within the purview of marketing management. Additionally, the Kotler
and Keller definition encompasses both the development of new products and services and their delivery to customers.
Noted marketing expert Regis McKenna expressed a similar viewpoint in his influential 1991 Harvard Business Review article "Marketing is Everything."
McKenna argued that because marketing management encompasses all factors that influence a sales training company's ability to deliver value to
customers, it must be "all-pervasive, part of everyone's job description, from the receptionists to the Board of Directors."
This view is also consistent with the perspective of management training guru Peter Drucker, who wrote: "Because the purpose of business is to create a
customer, the business enterprise has two--and only these two--basic functions: marketing and innovation. Marketing and innovation produce results; all
the rest are costs. Marketing is the distinguishing, unique function of the business."
The broader, more sophisticated definitions of marketing management from Drucker, Kotler and other scholars are therefore juxtaposed against the
narrower operating reality of many businesses. The source of confusion here is often that inside any given firm, the term marketing management may be
interpreted to mean whatever the marketing department happens to do, rather than a term that encompasses all marketing activities -- even those
marketing activities that are actually performed by other departments, such as the sales, finance, or operations departments. If, for example, the finance
department of a given company makes pricing decisions (for deals, proposals, contracts, etc.), that finance department has responsibility for an important
component of marketing management -- pricing.
But because many businesses operate with a much more limited definition of marketing, such statements can appear controversial, or even ludicrous to
some business executives. This is especially true in those companies where the marketing department is responsible for little more than developing sales
brochures and executing advertising campaigns.