About
Publication Information
Subscriptions
Permissions
Advertising
Journal Rankings
Best Article Award
Press Releases
Resources
Access Options
Submission Guidelines
Reviewer Guidelines
Sample Articles
Paper Calls
Contact Us
Submit & Review
Browse
Current Issue
All Issues
Featured
Latest
Topics
Videos
Cases
Subscribe
California Management Review
California Management Review is a premier academic management journal published at UC Berkeley
Search
Article Information
Framework for Marketing Strategy
Allison, Harry
4
/
1
(
Fall
1961
):
74
-
95
It's up to the marketing staff to maximize a firm's total revenue net of selling costs, and this often calls for statistical as well as sales know-how, for many factors must be equated and others, such as fixed and variable costs, juggled to produce the most advantageous net possible. The purpose of this paper is to accent both the need for a systematic approach to marketing management decision-making and the need-in each decision-making situation-for a complete consideration of the many variables involved. The emphasis is on how marketing decisions should be made rather than on how they are, in fact, made; yet, it is hoped that the former is kept parallel enough with the latter so that the marketing practitioner does not feel uncomfortable. Briefly, the framework views the job of the marketing staff as that of identifying all relevant marketing alternatives confronting the firm, of choosing from among these alternatives the particular alternative at each output level which best satisfies the goals of the firm and of carrying out the marketing side of the firm's final plan of action as efficiently and effectively as possible.