Syllabus

Title
4851 Marketing and Society Interface
Instructors
Renato de Sousa Castro Regis, MSc (WU), Mag.Dr. Barbara Hartl
Type
PI
Weekly hours
2
Language of instruction
Englisch
Registration
02/15/21 to 02/21/21
Registration via LPIS
Notes to the course
This class is only offered in summer semesters.
Subject(s) Master Programs
Dates
Day Date Time Room
Thursday 03/25/21 09:00 AM - 06:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 04/08/21 09:00 AM - 12:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 04/15/21 09:00 AM - 12:30 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 04/15/21 01:00 PM - 05:00 PM Online-Einheit
Thursday 05/06/21 09:00 AM - 06:00 PM Online-Einheit
Contents

This course provides students with a sound understanding of the interface between marketing and society. It will examine the various touch points a marketer has with society. Specifically this course highlights how “Marketing” is perceived by society, how consumers as well as producers can misbehave, the role marketing communication plays in society, and the prevalence of situations in which consumer and marketer interests align (Win-Win situations) and diverge, respectively.

The course enables students to broaden their perspective, to look upon marketing and its effects from different angles and to become equipped to develop into a rounded marketing practitioner themselves.

Learning outcomes

At the end of this course, students should:

1. have acquired an encompassing practical awareness of the interfaces between society and marketing;
2. know the primary theories situated at the intersection between marketing and society;
3. have a broadened perspective on marketing and be able to judge consequences of and influences on marketing activities in a wider societal context;
4. be sensitive to the ethical implications arising from the role of marketing in society;
5. be able to critically assess marketing efforts in order to maintain ethical principles;
6. be able to apply theoretical knowledge to new aspects and situations;
7. be able to clearly present an argument and insights with different perspectives and view points;
8. have gained heightened awareness of their own limitations in perspective taking;
9. be able to engage with different stakeholders.

Attendance requirements

The 80% requirement does not apply during this semester. But please keep in mind that changing to distance learning will require the students to attend online activities.

Teaching/learning method(s)

This course is organized as an intense course with a mix between expert discussions, lectures and students’ input. In total it stretches over 3 full days. Both lecturers are present at all time.

Session 1 (Full day): Theoretical background is provided by both lecturers to set the scene. The blog of MSI is presented, followed by a first-hand experience and field research on marketing-society touch points. Feedback is provided by both lecturers.

Session 2 (Coaching sessions – Half day) – Students will have the chance to explain their ideas and get feedback on how they can best depict them on a blog post, as well as critical input from the lecturers.

Session 3 (Expert discussion – Full day): Invited guests will elucidate and juxtapose the multiple perspectives of marketing and society interactions. Speakers include practitioners, academics working on relevant research topics, and special interest groups having first-hand experience with the phenomena under scrutiny. After the speakers’ presentations, they will discuss actual topics in a panel discussion. Students have the opportunity to ask questions after the presentations and engage in the panel discussion – every student should additionally submit questions via an online tool before the panel.

Session 4 (Half day) – Students’ final presentations of the group project (blog entry). Feedback from both lecturers and wrap up (students’ reflecting on the course and their learning outcomes).

Submission of the final blog entry two weeks after the last course day.

Assessment

Group 65%

  • Blog post 35%
  • Presentation 10%
  • Presentation of first/hand exercise 20%

Individual 35%

  • In-class participation 10%
  • Expert panel questions 10%
  • Kialo arguments 15%

 

Notenschlüssel: 90,00 - 100,00%: Sehr gut. 80,00 - 89,99%: Gut. 70,00 - 79,99%: Befriedigend. 60,00 - 69,99%: Genügend. 0 - 59,99%: Nicht genügend.

Prerequisites for participation and waiting lists

This course is meant to be done in the last semester of the marketing master program. It is designed to wrap up all the knowledge you gained throughout the entire marketing program and to review everything from different perspectives. The assignments require a profound knowledge about all marketing aspects covered in the different classes. Therefore we would strongly recommend to take this class in your 4th semester. This would make sure that you can draw from the full source of the class and benefit most from it.

Last edited: 2021-01-25



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