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THE MARKETING MIX The 4ps • • • • PRICE PLACE PRODUCT PROMOTION Why are the 4Ps so important? • To ensure a successful product an organisation must get the 4 elements of the marketing mix just right. For example if they don’t get the price right eg too expensive then people may not buy the product. PRICE • For most people price is a deciding factor in whether they will buy a product or not – so the price set has to be just right – also depending upon where a product is in its life cycle might help a business decide the price. Demand and supply of the product can also determine price Pricing Strategies – what to consider • What are competitors charging for their product • How can you use price to promote your product and so increase sales • What the price needs to cover eg what are the costs of production • Where is the product on its product life cycle Competitors’ prices • Orgs can undercut competitors – but have to be careful – as too cheap might make your product seem poorer quality • Or you can set your price at the same as your competitors and so you are matching them – if you do this you have to give your product more promotion or a USP (Unique Selling Point) Destroyer Pricing • Large orgs who are pretty stable and have good finance may sometimes use this strategy of undercutting competitors to try and remove them from the market – they may sustain a short term loss – once the competitor is removed then the price will be put up to a realistic level Penetration Pricing • Mainly used on new products entering a highly competitive market – to attract customers to your new product – once you have captured a market share and people have become brand loyal – then the price is put up to a realistic price eg remember Golden Grahams Skimming • This involves setting a high price for a new product as it is launched onto the market – used a lot with new technology products – once the people who want to have new techno products have got one (saturated the market) – the price is lowered – then others can afford it – saturate that market – then price lowered again (and competitors may now be in the market) – high prices helps orgs to recover some of the research and development costs Cost Plus Pricing • You calculate how much it costs to produce the product – for each unit – then you say want to earn a 10% profit – you add on 10% to the unit cost and you then have your price. PRODUCT • Product most important part of marketing mix – no point in having other 3 elements correct if your product isn’t right. If your product is of poor quality it will not sell. Decisions to make about the Product • What product are they going to sell? • What are they going to call the product? – it has to be pronounceable and remembered easily • How is the product to be packaged – eg design, colour, distance it has to travel, information about contents • Should it be branded? • Should it be seen to be environmentally friendly? • What will its product life cycle be? Product Life Cycle • Go onto website • www.bized.co.uk • From the website we can see that organisations have to be aware that each product has a different life cycle. For example technology products tend to have quite a short life cycle, as do confectionary products • Find out about how organisations can extend the life cycle of their product – the strategies that they use. Opal Fruits, Coco Pops, Kit Kats, Dyson just some examples to look up.