Ten Deadly Marketing Sins: Signs and Solutions

By: Philip Kotler

Quick read for people who want to analyze and test their marketing strategies against benchmarks.

Quick read for people who want to analyze and test their marketing strategies against benchmarks.

Flow: 5/5, short and easy read.

Actionability: 4/5, there are lots of specific recommendations on steps that can be taken to implement the knowledge shared in the book.

Mindset: 3/5, there are other marketing books that I would recommend before reading this one.

Some of My Highlights:

  • “Most of marketing is reduced to a one-P function – Promotion – not a four-P job.”

  • “My basic belief is that marketing’s work should not be so much about selling but about creating products that don’t need selling.”

  • “Ford found this out when it launched its new Mustang automobile to appeal to young sports-minded drivers, only to find that many young people were not so interested and many older people rushed to buy the car.”

  • “Spotlight specific cases of how customers have been either won or lost by departmental behavior.”

  • “The aim is to define the company’s brand and values and to get the employees to ‘live the brand’.”

  • “If the answer is clear, I ask for a copy of the latest marketing research study describing how the company’s target customers think, act, and feel.”

  • “The challenge is even more daunting: How can your company listen continuously to the ‘voice of the customer’?”

  • “The company should place a high value on new ideas and facilitate their collection and evaluation.”

  • “The Idea Committee should meet every few weeks to review and evaluate the ideas, putting them into three piles, from poor, to good, to great-sounding ideas.”

  • “Does your plan visualize some alternative scenarios and state what your response would be?”

  • “Ask marketers what changes they would make if they were given 20 percent more budget or 20 percent less budget.”

  • “Services that are given away free create two problems. First, customers tend to evaluate them even if they take these services. Second, some services could have supplied a separate revenue stream that is lost when they are given away free.”