Robert Errey
Degree: PhD
Title: Marketing's Contribution to
Shareholder Value
Overview: In recent years the contribution of the marketing function has changed and interest now
centres on its contribution to a firm's financial performance. The Marketing Science Institute in the
USA has stated that it is the number one marketing issue facing corporate America. The Australian Marketing
Institute is promoting a set of marketing metrics that will help Australian firms measure the functions
contribution to shareholder value creation. Much of the literature relates notions such as customer
satisfaction and other marketing activities with a firm's profit. A missing link appears to be the
choice firms make in terms of which customer groups to target and the resultant impact on shareholder
value performance. The generic customer groups comprise: existing customers, former customers and prospects.
A review of the literature reveals that marketing costs and benefits vary across these groups. The challenge
for management is to determine which group represents the best target and to allocate scarce marketing resources
accordingly. The task is made even more challenging because the economic value of members within each group also
varies and some product lines may be unprofitable and therefore, may not be worth pursuing. To generate superior
shareholder value it may not simply be the case of acquiring the maximum number of new customers from any source
but to find the appropriate mix of the generic customer groups and manage the individual customer relationships
accordingly.
Principal Supervisor: Dr Peter Oppenheim
Associate Supervisor: Professor Brian West
Return to Student Listing
|