View information for the Department of Management, Operations, and Marketing .
Professors: Chronis, Gnepa, Petrosky, Strong
Associate Professor: Saejoon Kim
Assistant Professors: Junhee Kim
Office: Demergasso-Bava Hall 223
Phone: (209) 667-3907
View the degree program Roadmap, which provide recommended advising maps to complete the degree program. Please consult your academic advisor as you develop your academic plan.
The concentration in Marketing is available to students earning the Bachelor of Science in Business Administration .
Marketing focuses on creating value in the exchange relationship between the firm and the markets it serves. As such, marketing plays a pivotal role in connecting customers and stakeholders to a business and in building long-term relationships with these individuals or groups. Accordingly, marketers plan, implement, and control specific strategies and tactics that will meet their customers’ ongoing needs and wants. That is, marketing matches the chosen customer or group with the right product, at the right price, at the right time and place, and with the right communications.
Fundamentally, marketers must be able to see and understand the world from their customers’ perspective. This requires specific marketing activities including the measurement and interpretation of market forces, cultivation of market opportunities, development of products and/or services to match those opportunities, marketing communications, advertising, sales promotion, public relations, personal selling, sales management, direct marketing, and digital and social media marketing. Marketing also requires conscious choice regarding social responsibility and corporate ethics.
Marketing provides exciting career opportunities for personal growth, creativity, variety, and income in the dynamic and ever-changing business environment. The “American Almanac of Jobs and Salaries” ranks the median income of marketers among the top 10 in a list of 125 professions. Professional careers in the various disciplines within marketing listed above are to be found in the marketing and sales departments of every type of private sector firm.
In addition, there is demand for marketing professionals in specialized organizations such as advertising agencies, marketing research agencies, service firms, transportation and distribution companies, global companies, Internet companies, not-for-profit organizations, and government organizations. As an academic and scientific field, marketing also provides the opportunity for advanced degrees such as master’s and Ph.D.
Click here to view Learning Objectives for the Business Administration B.S. and its concentrations.