“Why do people buy products?” asked Theodore Levitt, the celebrated Harvard Business School professor, at the start of his 1969 book The Marketing Mode. He suggestedan answer:
Leo McGivena once said, “Last yearone million quarter-inch drill bits were sold — not because people wantedquarter-inch drill bits but because they wanted quarter-inch holes.”People don’t buy products, they buy the expectation of benefits.People spend their money not for goods and services, but to get thevalue satisfac...
Published on September 16, 2015 10:50