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MARKETING Real People, Real Choices CHAPTER 8 Creating the Product Chapter Objectives • • • • Explain the layers of a product Describe the classifications of products Explain the importance of new products Describe how firms develop new products • Explain the process of product adoption and the diffusion of innovations 8-2 The Core Product • Consists of all the benefits the product will provide for consumers or business customers • A customer purchases a 1/2” drill bit. What does he want? – A 1/2” hole! • Marketing is about supplying benefits, not products 8-3 The Actual Product • Consists of the physical good or delivered service that supplies the desired benefit • Example: – A washing machine’s core product is the ability to get clothes clean, but the actual product is a large, square, metal apparatus • Actual product also includes appearance, styling, packaging, & the brand 8-4 The Augmented Product • Consists of the actual product plus other supporting features such as warranty, credit, delivery, installation, & service • Have you heard: “sell the sizzle not the steak?” 8-5 Classifying Consumer Products • By how long they last – Durable – Nondurable • By how consumers buy them – Convenience – Shopping – Specialty – Unsought 8-6 Classifying Business Products • By how products are used – Equipment – Maintenance, repair, operating – Raw materials – Processed materials – Specialized services – Component parts 8-7 Convenience Products • Good or service that consumers purchase frequently with a minimum of comparison and effort • Types of convenience products – staples – impulse products – emergency products 8-8 Shopping Products • Good or service for which consumers will spend time & effort gathering information on price, product attributes, & product quality • Consumers compare alternatives before purchase • Types of shopping products – attribute-based shopping products – price-based shopping products 8-9 Specialty Products • Goods or services bought with much consumer effort in an extended problem-solving situation • Consumers insist upon a particular item and will not accept substitutes – Rolex Watch: real or fake? 8-10 Unsought Products • Goods or services for which a consumer has little awareness or interest until a need arises • Require a good deal of advertising or personal selling to interest people 1-800-Metlife 8-11 It’s New and Improved • What is a new product? – According to the FTC, a new product is one that is entirely new or changed significantly and that product may be called new for only six months – From a marketing perspective, new is anything a customer perceives as new & different 8-12 New Product Development • Idea Generation • Product Concept Development & Screening • Marketing Strategy Development • Business Analysis • Technical Development • Market Testing • Commercialization 8-13 Step 1: Idea Generation • Sources of new ideas – customers – salespeople – service providers – anyone with direct customer contact 8-14 Step 2: Product Concept Development • Expand ideas into more complete product concepts • Describe what features the product should have and benefits those features will provide for consumers • Evaluate the chance for technical and commercial success 8-15 Step 3: Marketing Strategy Development • Develop a marketing strategy that can be used to introduce the product to the marketplace – Identify the target market – Estimate its size – Determine how the product can be positioned – Plan pricing, distribution, and promotion expenditures necessary for roll-out 8-16 Step 4: Business Analysis • Assess how the new product will fit into the firm’s total product mix • Evaluate whether the product can be a profitable contribution for the organization’s product mix 8-17 Step 5: Technical Development • Work with engineers to refine the design and production process • Develop one or more prototypes • Evaluate prototypes with prospective customers • If applicable, apply for a patent 8-18 Market Testing • Try out the complete marketing plan (product, price, place, and promotion) in a small geographic area that is similar to larger target market – Traditional test marketing is expensive and gives competition a chance to evaluate the new product – Simulated test markets eliminate competitive viewing and cost less 8-19 Commercialization • Launch the product! – Full scale production – Distribution – Advertising – Sales promotion – and more 8-20 Issues for Discussion • Should knockoffs be illegal? Who is hurt by knockoffs? Is the marketing of knockoffs good or bad for consumers? • What are some new products that have made our lives better? That have been harmful to consumers or to society? Should there be a way to monitor new products that are introduced? 8-21