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Agenda

7:00 - 8:00 AM Continental breakfast
8:00 - 8:15 AM Welcome - President Joseph Morone, Bentley College
Symposium Overview - Raj Sisodia, Bentley College

8:15 to 10:00 AM SESSION 1: DOES MARKETING HAVE A PROBLEM?
Chair: Susan Dobscha, Bentley College
  J. Walker Smith, president, Yankelovich Partners
Consumer Resistance to Marketing
  Johny K. Johansson, Georgetown University
In Your Face - The Backlash Against Marketing Excess
  Rajiv Grover, University of Georgia
Marketing or Marketers: What or Who Needs Reforming?
  Raj Sisodia, Bentley College
Marketing's Reputation With Consumers and Business Professionals - Findings From a Survey
  Q&A / Discussion
10:00 - 10:15 AM Coffee break

10:15 - 12:15 PM SESSION 2: THE FUNDAMENTAL ISSUES
Chair: Lan Xia, Bentley College
  Jerry Wind, The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
Challenging the Mental Models of Marketing
  Frederick E. Webster, Jr., Dartmouth College
Marketing: A Work in Progress
 
The idea that you design a business to create shareholder wealth is wrong in both theory and practice. The proper design point of any business is customer value creation, the REWARD for which is shareholder wealth creation. A failure to recognize this distinction puts brakes on growth, fosters a dysfunctional fixation on near term financial performance, and explains why deal-making, arcane financial structures tailored to the idiosyncrasies of the tax code and creative accounting have become core competences in the minds of too many business leaders. Business designs with firm success as their organizing principle are called "firm-forward." Business designs with customer-value production as their organizing principle are called "customer-back." The function of marketing in firm-forward companies is making and selling the products and services that customers are forecasted to want in the future. In sharp contrast, the essential feature of a customer-back firm is to sense earlier and respond better to what its customers actually want now. "Sense and Respond" organizations are structural implementations of the marketing concept. Marketing should become the center of competence for designing and managing customer-back organizations. But this would entail a true transformation - reformation won't get us there.
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  Rajendra Srivastava, Emory University
Can Marketing Bridge Corporate Fault Zones?
  Jag Sheth, Emory University
How to Reform Marketing
  Q&A / Discussion
12:15 - 1:45 PM LUNCHEON & KEYNOTE
Philip Kotler, Northwestern University
Observations on Marketing Reform

1:45 - 3:45 PM SESSION 3: NEW PERSPECTIVES
Chair: Nada Nasr, Bentley College
  Glen Urban, MIT
Customer Advocacy - The Start of a New Paradigm in Marketing
  Mohan Sawhney, Northwestern University
Marketing in a Connected World
  Stephen Haeckel, Adaptive Business Designs
Designing a Business From the Customer Back
  David B. Wolfe, Wolfe Resources, Inc.
Marketing to the New Customer Majority
  Q&A / Discussion
3:45 - 4:00 PM Coffee break

4:00 - 6:00 PM SESSION 4: WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
Chair: Pierre Berthon, Bentley College
  William L. Wilkie, University of Notre Dame
Scholarship in Marketing: Lessons From the '4 Eras' of Thought Development
  Robert F. Lusch, University of Arizona
A Service-Dominant Logic for Marketing
  Rajan Varadarajan, Texas A&M University
Marketing Strategy's Identity Crisis: Musings on the Need for Reform and the Mechanics of Reform
  Kay Lemon, Boston College
Marketing's Power in the Marketplace: For Good or For Ill?
6:00 - 7:00 PM Reception


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