2012/2013 KAN-CB16 Marketing and Creative Processes
English Title | |
Marketing and Creative Processes |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Exam ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Course period | Autumn |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc of Social Science
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Course coordinator | |
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Main Category of the Course | |
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Last updated on 17-07-2012 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||
This course aims at giving students
an understanding of creative processes within a marketing context.
The specific learning objectives of the course are the following
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Examination | |||||||||||||||
Oral exam based on a mini-project | |||||||||||||||
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Examination | |||||||||||||||
The exam is an oral exam based on a
mini-project. The mini-project must be written in groups of max.5
students (max. 15 pages) or individually (max. 10 pages). If the
mini-project is written in groups the oral exam will be an oral
group exam with individual assessment.The oral exam will be 20
minutes pr. student, however, no longer than 90 minutes max. The
mini-project will be integrated in the assessment.
If a student is ill during the regular oral exam, he/she will be able to re-use the mini-project at the make-up exam. If a student is ill during the writing of the mini-project and did not contribute to the mini-project, the make-up exam can be written individually or in groups (provided that other students are taking the make-up/re-exam). If the student did not pass the regular exam, he/she must make a new revised mini-project (confer advice from the examiner) and hand it in on a new deadline specified by the secretariat. |
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Course content | |||||||||||||||
Marketing comprises a set of
activities that work in concert with other business functions such
as logistics, technology, production, customer services, and the
secondary value functions of finance, legal services, and
accounting. However, marketing is much more than a set of
functions, managerial strategies, models and techniques which treat
the market merely as the end of business strategy and marketing
campaigns as instrumental means. In an environment characterised by
high levels of media fragmentation, consumer activity, and
consumers’ expanding marketing literacy, it is important to
understand how creative processes work within a marketing context.
In this course, students will therefore be introduced to key
creative processes within a contemporary marketing context that
treats consumers as an active part in the value creation process.
This course thus acts as an introductory course into creative business processes in relation to marketing, and will provide students with an understanding of marketing as a philosophy rather than merely as a business function. In particular, the role of consumers and their expactations and interactions with firms, brands and products will be discussed. The course will take students from the various stages of a marketing campaign, from preliminary research and market analysis, to segmentation, targeting and positioning, and finally to issues of (service) product development, integrated communications, pricing, retail/distribution decisions, and finally relationship management. Throughout the course, organizational and personal contexts for creative processes as well as work in creative industries will be addressed. |
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Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||
Class and lecturers will meet once a
week for four hours in total. The course consists of two forms of
teaching (two sessions): during the first session of two hours,
Stefan Schwarzkopf will present the relevant theoretical topics of
the week (models, theories, and research methods) in form of an
interactive lecture. After a short break, Anthony Aconis and Stefan
Schwarzkopf will meet the class in a second session. This will take
place as an intensive and discussion-based seminar in which
specific “real-life” cases from the world of campaign planning,
product marketing, and creative execution are analysed in class.
During some of the weeks, the order of session 1 (lecture) and
session 2 (seminar) will be reversed in order to bring out
theoretical issues after a specific case has been discussed in the
seminar.
The course will start with an introductory session at which the course co-ordinators will explain the rationale and structure of the course, the course aims, the literature base, the case studies, and the structure of the mini-project. |
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Expected literature | |||||||||||||||
Please note that literature is only
guidning.
P. Kotler, G. Armstrong, V. Wong, J. Saunders, Principles of Marketing. 5th European Edition, 2008. Chapter 1, 3, and 4. P. A. Titus, ‘Applied creativity: the creative marketing breakthrough model’, Journal of Marketing Education, Vol. 29 No. 3 (2007), pp. 262-272. N. Bendapudi, R. P. Leone,‘Psychological implications of customer participation in co-production’, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 67, No. 1 (2003), pp. 14-28. |
Last updated on
17-07-2012