Intermediate

The Marketing Mix

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·GCSE Business·Pearson Edexcel 1BS0·10 min
1.4.3 The marketing mix

What the Marketing Mix Is

The marketing mix is the set of decisions a business makes about how to market its product or service. The classic framework is the 4Ps: Price, Product, Promotion, and Place.

Each element is a lever a business can adjust. No single lever works in isolation — the four must work together coherently. A premium product priced cheaply and sold in a discount outlet sends a confused message to consumers. A low-cost product with expensive advertising in luxury magazines mismatches message and medium.

Key term — marketing mix: the combination of price, product, promotion, and place that a business uses to meet the needs of its target market.

The marketing mix is not set once and left unchanged. As the competitive environment shifts, as consumer tastes evolve, and as new technology emerges, businesses adjust the mix. Understanding why a business might change one or more of the 4Ps — and what the knock-on effects are — is the analytical skill Edexcel tests.

Note: this lesson covers the introductory 4P overview. Detailed pricing strategies, the product life cycle, and specific promotional methods are covered in Theme 2 (2.2.x).

The 4Ps: Price, Product, Promotion, Place

P elementWhat it includesStart-up example
PriceThe amount charged to customers; pricing strategy (e.g. competitive, penetration, skimming)A new app charges £0 initially to attract users, then introduces a subscription
ProductWhat is being sold; its features, quality, design, and USPA new protein bar made without artificial sweeteners, aimed at health-conscious gym-goers
PromotionHow the business communicates with customers; advertising, social media, sales promotionsA new clothing brand runs Instagram ads targeting 18–24-year-olds
PlaceHow and where the product reaches customers; distribution channelsA craft beer brand sells direct via its own website rather than through supermarkets

Price is what a customer pays and what the business receives as revenue. Price must be set in relation to costs (to ensure profit), competitor prices (to remain competitive), and customer perceptions of value (a price too low can signal low quality).

Product encompasses everything about what is sold — not just the physical item but its packaging, warranty, after-sales service, and brand identity. The product must meet the needs of the target market.

Promotion covers all activities that communicate the product's existence and benefits to potential customers: advertising (TV, online, print), public relations, social media, influencer partnerships, and in-store promotions.

Place describes how the product gets to the customer: through retailers, wholesalers, the business's own website, or direct sales. Choosing the wrong channel can make a great product invisible.

How the 4Ps Work Together

The 4Ps are interdependent. Changing one element typically requires adjusting others. A business that raises its price without improving the product or increasing its promotion risks losing customers to cheaper rivals. One that improves its product significantly may need to communicate that change through promotion and may be justified in raising the price.

Balancing the mix in a competitive environment:

In a highly competitive market — many similar products, price-sensitive customers — businesses often compete on price and place (wide availability). A business with a differentiated product can charge more and focus promotion on communicating that difference.

Worked example — budget gym chain launch:

A new chain of budget gyms enters a city where established gyms charge £50–£70 per month.

  • Price: £19.99 per month — penetration pricing to undercut rivals and attract price-sensitive customers
  • Product: basic facilities (cardio machines, weights, changing rooms) with no pool, spa, or classes included — keeps costs low to sustain low price
  • Promotion: social media advertising on Instagram and TikTok targeting 18–30-year-olds; referral discounts for members who bring a friend
  • Place: high street locations close to transport hubs to maximise accessibility

Each P reinforces the others. The low price attracts a high volume of members; the basic product keeps costs down to make that price viable; social media promotion reaches the target demographic cheaply; high-street locations maximise accessibility. If the gym had tried to compete with premium facilities while keeping the £19.99 price, the financial model would collapse.

Exam tip: on a 4-mark question asking how a business might use the marketing mix, pick two Ps and explain how each is suited to the business context. On a 6-mark question, discuss how the Ps work together or evaluate a proposed change.

Changing Consumer Needs and the Marketing Mix

Consumer tastes and needs evolve — and businesses that do not respond lose customers. The Edexcel spec requires you to understand how changing consumer needs can force a business to adjust its marketing mix.

Changes in consumer preferences may require a product redesign (new formulations, features, packaging) or a change in promotion (new messages, new channels) to remain relevant.

Worked example — changing health trends: In the 1990s, many soft drink brands promoted high-sugar products as energising and fun. As consumer concerns about sugar and obesity grew, several brands reformulated products (product P: lower sugar), relaunched with health-oriented messaging (promotion P: "no added sugar"), and moved into health food aisles (place P: different shelf position in supermarkets). The price often rose slightly because reformulation cost more — all four Ps shifted in response to changing consumer needs.

Worked example — growing demand for sustainable products: A fashion brand finds that its core 18–30 customer base increasingly cares about ethical sourcing and sustainability. The brand adjusts:

  • Product: switches to certified organic cotton; highlights this in packaging
  • Promotion: shifts messaging from "affordable fashion" to "ethical fashion at accessible prices"
  • Price: raises prices modestly to cover higher material costs, positioning this as a quality signal
  • Place: begins selling through ethical fashion platforms alongside its own website

The competitive environment changed (more consumers demanding ethical goods) so the mix changed with it.

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The Impact of Technology on the Marketing Mix

Technology — particularly e-commerce and digital communication — has transformed how all four Ps operate.

Place — e-commerce has made global distribution possible for businesses of any size. A sole trader can sell products worldwide via Etsy, Amazon, or their own Shopify store without any physical retail space. Previously, "place" was constrained by geography and the need for distributors or retailers. Now a business can reach customers directly, anywhere.

Promotion — digital communication has created entirely new promotional channels: social media advertising (Facebook, Instagram, TikTok), search engine marketing (Google Ads), influencer marketing, email campaigns, and content marketing. These channels are often cheaper than traditional advertising (TV, print) and can be targeted precisely at specific demographics. A small business with a £500 monthly ad budget can now reach tens of thousands of relevant consumers.

Price — online comparison tools make it easier for consumers to compare prices instantly. This increases competitive pressure on pricing. At the same time, subscription models and dynamic pricing (prices changing in real time based on demand) have become common because digital systems make them easy to implement.

Product — technology enables digital products (apps, software, streaming services) that can be sold at scale with near-zero marginal cost. Physical products can now be customised online (e.g. personalised gifts, made-to-order clothing) in ways previously impractical.

Key term — e-commerce: the buying and selling of goods and services over the internet, enabling businesses to reach customers without physical retail premises.

Key term — digital communication: using internet-based channels (social media, email, websites) to promote and communicate with customers.

Worked Example: Launching a New Product

Scenario: A small company develops a new reusable water bottle made from sustainable materials, targeting environmentally conscious consumers aged 20–35.

Setting the marketing mix:

  • Product: 750ml stainless steel bottle, keeps drinks cold 24 hours, made from recycled steel; comes with a lifetime guarantee. The USP is sustainability credentials plus the guarantee — both reduce perceived risk for the buyer.
  • Price: £28.99 — premium price reflecting material quality and the lifetime guarantee. This is above budget plastic alternatives (£5–£10) but below top-end brands (£45+). Positioning: accessible premium.
  • Promotion: Instagram and TikTok content featuring outdoor activities and environmental messaging; partnerships with eco-lifestyle influencers; a launch campaign donating £1 per bottle sold to ocean clean-up charity — generates PR coverage.
  • Place: own website (direct-to-consumer for maximum margin); sustainable lifestyle retailers (e.g. ethical gift shops); Amazon for volume.

How the Ps reinforce each other: the premium price is consistent with the premium product and the ethical promotion — all three signal "this is a quality, values-driven purchase." Selling through sustainable lifestyle retailers reinforces the ethical brand image; selling on Amazon provides volume access without diluting the brand severely.

If the company cut the price to £12.99 to compete with cheap plastic alternatives, it would need to change its promotion (emphasising value, not quality), potentially change its product (reduce the guarantee), and might move into mass-market supermarket distribution (place). The entire mix would shift.

Exam Technique: The Marketing Mix

1. Name both the P and the action — do not leave it vague

"The business should use promotion" scores 0 on its own. "The business should use social media promotion to target 18–24-year-olds, because this demographic spends significantly more time on Instagram than watching television, reducing wasted ad spend" scores the analysis mark.

2. Show how the Ps connect

Higher-mark questions often reward explanations of how two Ps work together. "Setting a high price signals quality (price P), so the business should promote this quality through its branding and advertising (promotion P) to justify the premium to consumers" scores better than treating each P in isolation.

3. Changing consumer needs = change in at least one P

If the question says consumers now prefer X, identify which P most directly responds — usually product (reformulation) or promotion (new message) — and explain why.

4. Technology changes are usually about place and promotion first

E-commerce primarily affects place (online sales channel). Digital advertising primarily affects promotion. Do not say "technology affects price" without explaining the mechanism (e.g. online comparison tools increase competitive pressure on pricing).

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