Introducing EMAM!

May 9th, 2009 by Kelly Page Leave a reply »

EMAM! So what is it and why write about it?

EMAM or ‘Electronic Marketing Activity Management’ is a framework for looking at how electronic resources are being used in marketing activities to help us manage them.

This framework was developed with a differing mindset of marketing than is traditionally held by many. Here we see marketing as a dialogue with many participants and communities in order to create and deliver value.

In order to maintain this dialogue we have to participate in, coordinate and implement many activities and resources. So not so much as a mixer of ingredients, but as a node in a network of resources – be it people, technology, knowledge or time – and a network of activities.

In essence, marketing is rising in complexity as the many and differing electronic resources and activities we conduct and manage evolve.

Marketing is all about resources – people, technology, knowledge and time!

A really interesting article written by Grönroos, in (1996) noted that we are increasingly seeing a move towards a more resource-oriented approach to marketing.

This resource approach focuses on the management and planning of core competencies and resources, not just seeing the product as the core resource we are managing. He noted that this is what forms the basis and foundation for successful market relationships, and not just the facilitation of an exchange – a sale.

A resource-based view further places increased emphasis on marketing as a series of activities for fulfilling promises and delivering value, moving away from focusing on the product. Grönroos discussed four types of resources as key to marketing effectiveness and efficiency – personnel, technology, knowledge and time. With EMAM we focus on the use of technology resources in marketing.

Introducing EMAM!

So EMAM is a framework for looking at how electronic resources are being used and managed in marketing activities. This framework was introduced in a paper published in the Marketing Review in 2005. You can read our summary of the key article insights here.

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EMAM moves away from traditional frameworks of marketing (e.g., 4P’s and 7Ps) to focus on the resources and activities we as marketers manage and conduct in order to participate in an ongoing dialogue with the many participants and communities we coexist with, in order to create and deliver value.

One important thing to note though is that this framework is not structured around the specific technologies – the electronic resources themselves, but the activities that we use them for.

Given the rapid development of electronic resources marketers increasingly focus on specific technologies as and when they are popular and define their marketing activities by these (e.g., we need a web marketing strategy, an SMS marketing campaign, a social media marketing strategy).

This is a very myopic view and can become quickly outdated as the technology evolves. But this is not new behaviour in how we treat new innovations and their impact on our profession, it also occurred with newspapers, radio, TV in defining marketing by the innovation, not by what it can help us do better.

Sources

  • Grönroos, C. (1994). Relationship marketing: Strategic and tactical implications. Management Decision, 34/3, 5-14.
  • Page-Thomas, K. L. (2005). Electronic Marketing: The Bigger Picture. Marketing Review, 5(3 (Autumn)), 243-262.

« CASE Insights: Exploring Marketing’s Evolution Through Technology »

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1 comment

  1. JamesAven says:

    I just got a copy of http://ePostMailer.com and I would recommend to anyone who needs to send out an opt-in email mailshot. Its the best free desktop based email marketing software I have used so far.

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