"Marketing: Real People, Real Choices is the only text to introduce marketing from the perspective of real people, who make real marketing decisions, at leading companies every day. Timely and relevant, this reader-friendly text shows students how marketing concepts are implemented, and the impacts they can have on a company. Featuring new information, examples, and assessment, the 11th Edition continues its focus on the core issues every marketer needs to know, including value, analytics and metrics, and ethical and sustainable marketing. It also emphasizes the importance of branding oneself and shows students how the concepts they learn in class apply directly to their own personal marketing plan"--
I'll be honest: I didn't read all of this. I probably won't until I have an extensive break. Regardless, what I did read helped to emphasize what I did- and still am- learning in class. A lot of the time the chapters were too long. It's my only real complaint.
Conclusion
Definitely a must-read for those taking beginner marketing classes. It gives you a good foundation in what is to come later on or so I'm told.
They have done a good amount of editing to make the book easy to review and reference, but the ethics subsections and case scenarios lack much of a point. It seemed like the authors were trying to make this an all-in-one course, but they would have done better to simply write a textbook and allow an instructor to create lessons from the material. Also, the digital labs (separate purchase) use some of the same language, but do not relate well to the material, and they praise correct answers but fail to explain student mistakes.
Blah. Marketing: the pseudo-scientific part of business education that tries to prove that people really are no more than a pig, in a cage, on antibiotics.