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3.5.4
Marketing


3.5.4.1
Aspects of marketing relevant to the Church


         This is an area, clear ideas on which would be essential to

any orthodox managerial study, but which in the course of this study

engendered more ambivalence, and even downright abhorrence, than any

other - even the financial. The Church, it would seem, does not like

the idea of marketing; "it is in some way improper to transpose

commercial knowledge into the Christian field"
(B24)
, it is something

to be quietly relegated to the last item on the agenda, if indeed

it gets as far as that, or euphemistically rephrased so that it appears

to be something different; "we've no customers in that sense"
(C4)
.


         But there is more to marketing than looking at people as

customers. It is - or can be - a much broader science studying

relationships between the organisation and the public it serves. And

in this case 'public' can be taken as both actual and potential

churchgoers.

         Kotler
(B18)
divides marketing into certain broad divisions:

             (i)  Market appraisal. Whom are we serving, whom should we

                   be serving, and what do they think about us? This part

                   of marketing can be largely passive and it is hard to see

                   it offending any Church principles. Indeed one or two

                   such studies
(P4,T1)
have taken place, though not,

                   apparently, proceeded very far.

            (ii)  Product adaptation. When the market is known the product

                   can be adapted to suit it. Not necessarily by changing

                   its essential content but by acknowledging that certain

                   market segments have specialised needs which can best be

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