* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download What is a Product?
Multicultural marketing wikipedia , lookup
Integrated marketing communications wikipedia , lookup
Youth marketing wikipedia , lookup
Market penetration wikipedia , lookup
Food marketing wikipedia , lookup
Marketing mix modeling wikipedia , lookup
Advertising campaign wikipedia , lookup
Perfect competition wikipedia , lookup
Green marketing wikipedia , lookup
First-mover advantage wikipedia , lookup
Global marketing wikipedia , lookup
Planned obsolescence wikipedia , lookup
Supermarket wikipedia , lookup
Pricing strategies wikipedia , lookup
Marketing strategy wikipedia , lookup
Product placement wikipedia , lookup
Product lifecycle wikipedia , lookup
Marketing channel wikipedia , lookup
Product, PLC and Services Chapters 9-11(sections) What is a Product? • Everything, both favorable and unfavorable, that a person receives in an exchange. – Primary characteristics – Auxiliary characteristics Augmented Product Installation Packaging Brand Name Delivery & Credit Quality Level Core Benefit or Service Warranty Features AfterSale Service Design Product Classifications PRODUCTS Consumer Products Convenience Products Shopping Products Business Products Specialty Products Unsought Products Some Product Definitions • Product item – a specific version of a product that can be designated as a distinct offering among a firm’s products. • Product line – a group of closely related product items. • Product mix – all products that a firm sells. Depth of the product lines Gillette’s Product Lines & Mix Width of the product mix Blades and razors Toiletries Mach 3 Sensor Trac II Atra Swivel Double-Edge Lady Gillette Super Speed Twin Injector Techmatic Series Adorn Toni Right Guard Silkience Soft and Dri Foamy Dry Look Dry Idea Brush Plus Writing instruments Lighters Paper Mate Flair Cricket S.T. Dupont Why Product Lines? • • • • • Advertising Economies Package Uniformity Standardized Components Efficient Sales and Distribution Equivalent Quality Product Line Strategies • Extensions: Adding additional products to an existing product line in order to compete more broadly in the industry. • Contractions: deleting products from product lines if there are low sales, cannibalization, obsolesce or few resources. What is the Product Life Cycle (PLC)? • A concept that provides a way to trace the stages of a product’s acceptance, from its introduction (birth) to its decline (death). • It is based on the product category. The Product Life Cycle Introductory Growth Stage Stage Maturity Stage Decline Stage Product Dollars Category Sales Product Category Profits 0 Time Introduction Stage • • • • • • • High failure rates Little competition Frequent product modification Limited distribution High marketing and production costs Negative profits Promotion focuses on awareness and information • Intensive personal selling to channels Growth Stage • • • • • • • • Increasing rate of sales Entrance of competitors Market consolidation Initial healthy profits Promotion emphasizes brand ads Goal is wider distribution Prices normally fall Development costs are recovered Maturity Stage • • • • • • • • Declining sales growth Saturated markets Extending product line Stylistic product changes Heavy promotions to dealers and consumers Marginal competitors drop out Prices and profits fall Niche marketers emerge Decline Stage • Long-run drop in sales • Large inventories of unsold items • Elimination of all nonessential marketing expenses • Options for Deleting Products: • • • • Maintaining Deletion Harvesting Contracting Marketing Strategies for PLC INTRODUCTION Product Strategy Distribution Strategy Promotion Strategy Pricing Strategy Limited models Frequent changes GROWTH More models Frequent changes. Limited Expanded Wholesale/ dealers. Longretail distributors term relations MATURITY DECLINE Large number Eliminate of models. unprofitable models Extensive. Margins drop. Shelf space Awareness. Aggressive ads. Advertise. Stimulate Stimulate Promote heavily demand.Sampling demand Higher/recoup Fall as result of Prices fall competition & development (usually). efficient produccosts tion. Phase out unprofitable outlets Phase out promotion Prices stabilize at low level. Consider TiVo Where is it in the PLC? • 90% TiVo subscribers channel surf less than before • 95% say it is easier to work than VCR • 40% would rather give up their mobile phones than TiVo • 80% shift prime time programming • 50% watch up to 2 or more hours of TV daily Percentage of Adopters Categories of Product Adopters Early Innovators Adopters 2.5% 13.5% Early Majority 34% Time Late Majority 34% Laggards 16% Diffusion Process and PLC Curve Introduction Growth Decline Maturity Sales Product life cycle curve Early majority Late majority Early adopters Innovators Laggards Diffusion curve What is a Service? • The result of applying human or mechanical efforts to people or objects. • Medical, utilities, entertainment, professional (law, medical), transportation, financial Characteristics of Services • Intangibility – cannot be touched, seen, tasted, heard or felt in the same manner as goods. • Inseparability –services are produced and consumed simultaneously • Heterogeneity – services are less standardized and uniform than goods. • Perishability – services cannot be stored, warehoused or inventoried. Marketing Mixes for Services • Product – People processing – Possession processing – Information processing • Mass Customization • Core and Supplementary Services • Distribution – Convenience – Number of outlets – Direct v indirect distribution – Location – Scheduling Marketing Mix for Services • Promotion – Stress tangible cues – Use personal informational sources – Create a strong firm image – Engage in postpurchase communication • Price – Define unit of service consumption – Determine if multiple elements are bundled – Trends have made pricing an active component