Marketing for Engineers

When asking people to mention a word that they associate with marketing, they will most certainly mention advertising or selling. The scope of the marketing team in an engineering project is often limited to promoting and selling the product or service that the engineers create. The reach of marketing is, however, broader than communicating with potential and existing customers.

Engineering and marketing are not as far apart as might seem. In 1969, marketing guru Philip Kotler and his colleague Levy wrote a seminal article about the essence of marketing. Marketing, they wrote, is “customer satisfaction engineering”. Both marketing and engineering are processes to achieve an objective. Marketing and engineering can work together to not only provide technical excellence but also to meet the needs of customers.

This series of articles explores various topic about using marketing theory in engineering, with specific reference to managing water utilities.

Communicating Water's Value by Melanie Goetz: Book Review
Review of Communicating Water's Value by Melanie Goetz. This book describes using marketing techniques to increase the value of water.
Dissolve the Three Tap Water Paradoxes or Manage Ambiguity?
Through my review of using marketing theory in the provision of tap water services I have found three tap water paradoxes. Can these paradoxes be dissolved?
The Engineering-Marketing Interface in Water Utilities
The Engineering-Marketing Interface is about the relationship between engineers and customer-facing employees in water utilities.
The Psychology of the Recycled Water Yuck Factor
Many people are repelled by the idea of drinking recycled water in the form of treated sewage because of the so called recycled water yuck factor.
The Water Quality Paradox and Perceptions of Service Quality
The water quality paradox: even when providing a technically perfect service, customers are not necessarily happy with the level of service.
The Value of Water — A Marketing Perspective on Tap Water
Describing the value of water from a marketing perspective helps water utilities to understand the value proposition of tap water.
Do water utilities need to have customer focus?
Tap water supply is provided through complex engineering. Utilities are staffed by engineers who believe that customer focus is not needed. Are they right?
Bottled Water Marketing: The Importance of the Place of Origin
Bottled water marketing is one of the greatest business successes in history. Why do people buy bottled water when tap water is 1000 times cheaper?