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Marketing
Academic Program Description
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Marketing
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Marketing
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Marketing
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Marketing Academic Program |
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Description |
The discipline of marketing is eclectic
in nature. In developing and expanding its content, it draws from and
interchanges with the quantitative and social sciences. As such, the
areas of accounting, economics, law, mathematics, philosophy,
psychology, sociology, and other related disciplines are used as
resources for the conceptual, theoretical, and empirical underpinnings
of the marketing discipline.
What product or service, and how much of it, should a company provide
for its consumers? How should the product be distributed? How should the
company inform consumers of the product's existence and merits? What
price should consumers pay for it?
Every organization, profit or non-profit, must answer these questions in
one form or another. It is the purpose of the marketing program to
provide the student with the necessary concepts and background for
examining these questions. The program's objectives are to make the
student aware of the role of marketing in society and in the firm, where
it interrelates with almost all organizational functions and influences
virtually all plans and decisions.
The marketing program intends to introduce the student to the role of
marketing, both in the firm and in society. Case analyses, computer
simulation, discussion groups, experiential exercises, research reports,
seminars, field projects, lectures, outside speakers, the McIntire
Marketing Association (MMA), and American Advertising Federation (AAF),
together with national marketing/advertising competitions, are utilized
to accomplish this purpose. The marketing program is intended to meet
the basic educational needs of students planning graduate study or
entering profit or non-profit organizations in such areas as client
relations, sales, advertising and promotion, brand management,
distribution, international marketing, marketing research, marketing
consulting, logistics, purchasing, product management, retailing, and
positions in the service industries.
Required courses for the marketing concentration are COMM 353 and two
400-level marketing courses.
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