This book covers in vivid, clear prose the basic accounting tools that marketers need to develop profitable marketing programs: costs, marketing arithmetic, marginal analysis, and contribution accounting. It is thorough and up-to-date, and has a hard-as-nails practicality to it. The book is packed with examples that are both fascinating and illustrative of the author's points. After a short treatment of the uses and limitations of microeconomics to the practicing marketer, the book develops in detail two key ideas from microeconomics--costs and marginal analysis. Each is explained fully with…mehr
This book covers in vivid, clear prose the basic accounting tools that marketers need to develop profitable marketing programs: costs, marketing arithmetic, marginal analysis, and contribution accounting. It is thorough and up-to-date, and has a hard-as-nails practicality to it. The book is packed with examples that are both fascinating and illustrative of the author's points. After a short treatment of the uses and limitations of microeconomics to the practicing marketer, the book develops in detail two key ideas from microeconomics--costs and marginal analysis. Each is explained fully with illustrations and advice on how to use the idea. For readers who want to increase their mastery of the material, there are some seventy problems with complete answers at the end of the volume. This is a solid book for marketers and would-be marketers who want to increase their competence on the job.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
DAVID L. RADOS is Professor of Marketing at the Owen Graduate School of Management, Vanderbilt University. He has taught graduate students at Harvard, Columbia, and Vanderbilt and at universities in Australia, Tanzania, and England. He is a popular speaker and has run successful executive seminars for clients and universities on three continents for over twenty years. He has written three books, including a best-selling book on nonprofit marketing (Auburn House, 1980), and many articles on marketing. He has consulted for such companies as Scott Paper, AT&T, the Girl Scouts of America, and the New York Port Authority. He has served as a director of a machine equipment company and an expert witness in patent litigation.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface First Words Why You Should Learn Some Economic Theory . . . But Only a Little What Every Marketer Needs to Know About Costs Elements of Marketing Arithmetic Averages and Marginals What Marginal Analysis Says The Marketing Control Statement Break even Points and Just Cover Points Contribution Analysis Why Didn't We Make A Plan? Last Words Problems Answers to the Problems
Preface First Words Why You Should Learn Some Economic Theory . . . But Only a Little What Every Marketer Needs to Know About Costs Elements of Marketing Arithmetic Averages and Marginals What Marginal Analysis Says The Marketing Control Statement Break even Points and Just Cover Points Contribution Analysis Why Didn't We Make A Plan? Last Words Problems Answers to the Problems
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