Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Markering :: GCSE Business Marketing BTEC Coursework

MarkeringIntroductionSteve Case founded America Online (AOL) in pre-Internet days when the networking of various computer systems was instead sluttish and difficult for all but the highly computer-literate to accomplish. His goal was to make accessing these networks easy enough for anyone to manage. Though AOL has changed dramatically since those days, ease of use has remained a primary retainer in all changes visible to the user.Much maligned by the more serious services (and their subscribers) in the past, AOL has risen to be the industry leader despite challenges and the take to of being the J.R. Ewing of the Internet, the provider everyone loves to hate. Advertisers complain of AOLs dictatorial policies, yet with more than 21 million subscribers (Anonymous, 2000), AOL is an advertising venue that they dare not ignore.Current Situation and priming coatAll large organizations today subscribe vision and missionary station statements, but only the most successful actually ad here to them. Many organizations sport rather cryptic mission statements, or they put great effort into devising one and then never consult it again. AOL appears to be cognizant of both its mission and vision statements in every addition it makes to its service. America Onlines VisionTo build an interactive mass medium that improves the lives of people and benefits society as no other medium before it. America Onlines MissionTo build a global medium as central to peoples lives as the telephone or television... and even more blue-chip (America Online, 1999 p. 34). Corporate strategy is clear. Mission and vision statements reveal gross strategy investment reports indicate that more narrow strategy also is effective. Several advertisers have complained about AOLs policies in the past, but the factors of which they complain are those that keep AOLs management rather than the phenomenal growth of the Internet in control of the companys destiny and its improvement of its goals. Senior management misjudged the response to its offer of flat-rate charges for unlimited use, and the company even suffered class-action lawsuits after their access systems were overwhelmed in many areas. Seeking the greatest number of subscribers and pass to highlight advertisers willing to pay for AOLs assistance is a strategy that ensures AOLs continued financial good health. AOLs functional strategy of being indispensable to subscribers is one that plenty work to ensure the companys continued growth. Already, AOL has more content than does any other ISP (Anonymous, 2000), and it seeks only to grow in scope.

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