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(2014) Humanistic marketing, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Well-being marketing as humanistic marketing

Grace B. Yu, Dong-Jin Lee

pp. 164-175

Well-being marketing refers to the business mechanism that plans, prices, promotes, and distributes consumer goods for the purpose of enhancing customer well-being (i.e., marketing beneficence) while preserving the well-being of all other stakeholders (i.e., marketing non-maleficence). As such, well-being marketing has two dimensions: marketing beneficence and marketing non-maleficence. Marketing beneficence refers to marketing decisions (e.g. market selection, product strategy, price strategy, distribu. tion strategy, and promotion strategy) designed to enhance customer well-being. Conversely, marketing non-maleficence alludes to marketing decisions designed to preserve the well-being of other stakeholders . other than customers (e.g., employees, stockholders, distributors, suppliers, local community, and the environment).

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137353290_13

Full citation:

Yu, G. B. , Lee, D. (2014)., Well-being marketing as humanistic marketing, in R. Varey & M. Pirson (eds.), Humanistic marketing, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 164-175.

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