Marketing Management Philip Kotler Keller Koshy Jha

Philip Kotler is a professor of international marketing at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, in Evanston, Illinois. He is widely recognized as the dean of America’s marketing ...

Philip Kotler, the S.C. Johnson & Son Distinguished Professor of International Marketing at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, is widely regarded as the Father of Modern Marketing ...

Marketing Management Philip Kotler Keller Koshy Jha 2

Philip Kotler is Professor Emeritus of Marketing at the Kellogg School of Management, where he held the S.C. Johnson & Son Professorship of International Marketing. Kellogg was voted the "Best ...

As a youngster, Philip Kotler loved books. But not the kind of books most kids read. "When I was 12, I got into Plato and Aristotle," said Kotler, 94, who's considered the father of modern marketing.

Philip Kotler's four P's of marketing—Product, Price, Place, and Promotion—have long been foundational, but he recently introduced a fifth P: Purpose. Purpose-driven branding can backfire if not ...

Marketing Management Philip Kotler Keller Koshy Jha 5

Los Angeles Times: Marketing expert Philip Kotler turns gaze to capitalism’s flaws

Philip Kotler ("the father of modern marketing") and co-author Waldemar Pfoertsch argue that "performance branding" is reshaping B2B marketing by ...

The following article deals with the relative merits of advertising and public relations in the marketing mix—with some conclusions that are sure to rattle your cage. Philip Kotler is Distinguished ...

Marketing Management Philip Kotler Keller Koshy Jha 8

Forbes India: The Thinker Interview with Philip Kotler, the Father of Marketing

Marketing Management Philip Kotler Keller Koshy Jha 9

International marketing expert Philip Kotler is in Melbourne this week telling Australian companies how best to position their brands in the face of new global challenges. These challenges include the ...

Marketing Week: ‘Father of modern marketing’ Philip Kotler on avoiding brand decay and preparing for disruption