Social Marketing: Notion and Past
| Vol-4 | Issue-02 | February 2019 | Published Online: 10 February 2019 PDF ( 250 KB ) | ||
| Author(s) | ||
| Siddharth Kashyap 1 | ||
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1Assistant Professor, School of Management, Bahra University Shimla Hills, Himachal Pradesh (India) |
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| Abstract | ||
The origin of social marketing can be credited to Philip Kotler and Gerald Zaltman, whose article in 1971 is viewed as the building obstruct for social marketing. Inspite the way that Kotler and Zaltman began the adage social marketing they ascribed the utilization of business systems in social battles to G. D. Wiebe. Wiebe's question about selling brotherhood like soap was a help as it incorporated social crusade with business, subsequently making the previous more fruitful. The social marketing was isolated into three stages. The main stage was from late 1960 to 1970s and its focus was on early social marketing improvements. This phase did suffer lack of clarity along with identity crisis due to its evolution from commercial marketing and other ethical issues This stage concerned creating hypothesis and contemplating rehearse alongside handy utilization of social promoting in various territories however was somewhat confounding in regards to the conceptualization of marketing. The purposes of this research paper to exhibit the historical background and conceptual framework of social marketing, which has been evolving through many years since its inception. |
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| Keywords | ||
| Target Audience, Social Marketing, Commercial Marketing, Behaviour | ||
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