Question: QUESTION TWO [ 3 0 ] 2 . 1 . Marketing refers to the process of communicating, creating, and delivering the ( 1 5 )

QUESTION TWO [30]
2.1. Marketing refers to the process of communicating, creating, and delivering the (15) organisational function to their valuable clients. Discuss how a company such as Yuppiechef can make use of promotion or marketing communication. Use examples related to Yuppiechef to motivate your answer.
Include the following in your discussion:
- Advertising
- Personal Selling
- Sales Promotion
- Publicity
- Direct Marketing
2.2. According to Strutner (2020), at its core, financial management is the practice of (15) formulating a business plan and then ensuring all departments stay on track. Discuss the types of financial managers at a company such as Yuppiechef. Include the following types in your discussion:
- Controllers
- Treasurers and finance officers
- Credit managers
- Cash managers
- Risk managers
- Insurance managers
Read the following case study and answer the questions that follow:
Zero to R500m since 2006 the story of Yuppiechef
Savvy dressers know how to mix cheap brands with high-end items. So too do the yuppie chefs among us
Andrew Smith and Shane Dryden were web designers with backgrounds in technology, online marketing and brand-building, but they wanted to sell products and not just their time.
After an initial foray into bug zappers and flags (Smiths mom was their first customer), they realised the market was craving a specialist kitchenware retailer.
So, in 2006, they created Yuppiechef.
This past week, the partners sold it to the mighty Mr Price Group for nearly R500m.
You can see the appeal: Yuppiechef has a stellar reputation as an award-winning e-commerce retailer, and sells more than 10,000 products from nearly 700 brands.
It also shifted into bricks-and-mortar stores in 2017, recognising the potential power in omnichannel retail.
As it turns out, shoppers in this country like to see and touch what theyre buying a lot of the time.
While it took two years for Yuppiechef to generate its first R1m turnover as an online company, it took only a few days to reach that at its V&A Waterfront store in Cape Town. Smith says SA shoppers prefer to visit physical stores, which might explain why the country has one of the highest number of malls per capita in the world.
But it is also an unlikely marriage between the listed value-oriented clothing and homeware group, and an aspirational kitchen and homeware business.
Mr Price, after all, sells jeans for under R200, while at Yuppiechef, pots can go for more than R5,000 and a KitchenAid mixer will set you back about R12,000.
"Yuppiechef is a business that we believe will give us the right offering as an opportunity," says Mr Price CEO Mark Blair.
That means a higher-income customer base and a greater share of their better-padded wallets.
Mr Price didnt want to invest in a segment that competes with it but rather one that complements it.
So while other operators have been targeting the lower end (TFG recently bought Jet, and Mr Price itself bought Power Fashion), it seems the more aspirational side has appeal too.
This strategy started to emerge last November as Mr Price mapped out areas for growth in the SA market, which it has now largely confined itself to.
Daniel Masvosvere, equity analyst at Sanlam Investments, says the deal is "incrementally positive".
With a stroke, it will ratchet up Mr Prices online platform and extend the reach of its homeware offering into the premium end of local retail.
As for the cost of the deal, Masvosvere says: "I cant opine on whether they over-or underpaid, because we dont have a true sense of the extent of the profitability of [Yuppiechef]. We do know the deal is relatively small at about 1% of the market capitalisation of the Mr Price Group."
But for Smith and Dryden, its arguably every savvy start-up owners dream.
Their interest in kitchenware began when Dryden, whos something of a foodie, wanted to sell the types of tools that international cooking shows were popularising but which werent easily available in SA.
A chef friend recommended including Cuisipro tongs in their must-have list, and the first Yuppiechef sale was a pair to Drydens dad. It took months for them to sell to someone they didnt know.
In its first year, Yuppiechef sold only 200 items from its selection of 32 products.
There was little money coming in, but Dryden and Smith had jobs and they were working on Yuppiechef from a lounge in Plumstead, Cape Town. It took five years before they were able to draw a salary from the business.
International hedge fund Tiger Global, which has also invested in Takealot, Bidorbuy and Private Property, then bought in.
Its not as if its been a one-way track up, though. Yuppiechef used to deliver to customers in Namibia, Mauritius, Botswana and Zambia and briefly also op

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