AI Summary
[DOCUMENT_TYPE: study_guide]
**What This Document Is**
This document is a review sheet prepared by Dr. Luke Hopkins for the first exam in MMC 2000, Introduction to Mass Media, at Florida State University. It’s designed to help students organize their study efforts by highlighting key concepts and providing a sample multiple-choice question. The review emphasizes that it is *not* a substitute for attending class or thorough note-taking.
**Why This Document Matters**
This review is essential for students enrolled in MMC 2000 preparing for their first exam. It clarifies the exam format – 40 multiple-choice questions drawn from a larger question pool – and points students toward the core areas of focus. It’s most useful when used *in conjunction with* class notes and readings, serving as a checklist to ensure comprehensive preparation.
**Common Limitations or Challenges**
This review sheet is explicitly *not* a comprehensive summary of all course material. It’s a guide to organization, not a replacement for active learning. Students should not rely on this document as their sole study resource. It also doesn’t provide answers or detailed explanations, only topic areas.
**What This Document Provides**
The full review sheet includes:
* An overview of the exam process and format.
* A sample multiple-choice question with commentary on the question type.
* Key topics covered on the exam, including the definition of marketing, the 4 Ps of marketing, marketing’s core strategies (creation, relationship, segmenting), the history of marketing eras (Simple Trade, Production, Sales, Marketing, Societal), stakeholder identification, and the marketing mix.
* Details on game changers in marketing (product, pricing, distribution), common misconceptions about marketing, the impact of time on marketing, and macro-marketing strategies.
* Information on SWOT analysis, strategic business units, internal and external marketing, and key figures like Warren Buffet.
* Coverage of the internal and external marketing environments, including competitive and sociocultural factors, and changes in U.S. demographics.
This preview does *not* include the detailed explanations, examples, or the full list of people and firms students are expected to know. It also does not contain the complete list of sociocultural factors or the full discussion of U.S. demographic changes.