10 Product Concept

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10 Product Concept Professor Close

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10 Product Concept. Professor Close. Product Planning. Product: - Anything a customer gets in an exchange (good, bad) Need satisfying offerings (Hallmark) Can be a good or a service Services are “products” too. Product Planning. Quality (What does it mean?) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of 10 Product Concept

Page 1: 10 Product Concept

10Product Concept

Professor Close

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Product Planning • Product: - Anything a customer gets in an exchange (good, bad)

– Need satisfying offerings (Hallmark)– Can be a good or a service– Services are “products” too

Good

Tangible

In advance

Possible

Possible

Consistent

Some Characteristics

Nature

Production simultaneity

Storage/ Perishability

Transport

Quality/ Heterogeneity

Service (def) deed for another

Intangible

“Close” to the customer

Impossible

Impossible

Inconsistent

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Product Planning • Quality (What does it mean?)

– Product’s ability to satisfy customer’s needs/requirements.

– Consistency (McDonalds and what other companies?)

– Relative quality – similar products against each other

What do you think are some What do you think are some quality products? Why?quality products? Why?

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Consumer Products

• General classification: what types of customers will use them?

• Businesses B2B or consumers B2C• Consumer products:

• For “final” users• Classifying consumer products

• How consumers shop• How consumers think about them

– Perception usage varies (among food items and what other product categories?)

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4 Types of Consumer Products

1. Convenience– Little time/effort; frequent purchase– Intense distribution– Substitutes acceptable– Low price (grocery products)

2. Shopping: time comparing alternatives; less frequent purchase, low loyalty– Homogeneous: seen as same; want bargain – Heterogeneous: seen as different; want quality;

salespeople help desired – Marketing: fewer outlets, higher markups

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4 Types of B2C Products, cont.

3. Specialty: is shopping an end, pleasurable; willingness makes it specialty

• Planned purchase: strong desire and effort (collectors); alternatives unacceptable

• Amount of search (Beanie Babies; xmas toys)

• Limited availability is OK; high markups

4. Unsought (tombstones; towing; dentists)

• Only want “in a pinch;” infrequent and no effort; lack knowledge or desire

• Promotion; sales (Dentists for phobic patients)

• What are your unsought products? What are your unsought products?

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What type of product?

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What type of product?

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B2B Products

• Businesses (B2B):– Use to make other products– Bought and resold– Used for corporate or organization’s use– Less shopping is involved (vs. B2C)– Classify via:

• How buyers think about the product• What type of customer will use the product• How the product is used

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Product Items, Lines, and Mixes

• Item: version of a product (Diet Coke)• Line: group of closely related products (Coca-

Colas soft drinks)• Mix: all the products a company offers (water,

energy drinks, soda)• Modify and reposition (Old Navy)

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Should Old Navy Reposition???

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Branding – Identify product via letters, terms, designs– Branding strategies:

– Brand name – letters associated with product– Trademark/servicemark – words, symbols for

one firm (legally protected)– Co-brand (apple ipod and coach)– Family – one brand, many products

(Hershey’s, Campbell’s)– Generics – no brand (signal of savings)– Dealer/private label: by store– National/manufacturer: by vendor

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Hot or not…What are the most equitable brands?

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Equitable Brands

1. Apple

2. Blackberry

3. Google

4. Amazon

5. Yahoo

6. eBay

7. Red Bull

8. Starbucks

9. Pixar

10. Coach

11. Whole Foods

12. EA Sports/Games

13. MTV

14. Samsung

15. Victoria’s Secret

16. Nike

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Branding

• Brand equity: financial value of the brand name

– Value (are we just paying for the name?)• Consumer – familiarity • Seller- be authentic, true to your people

– Less promotion (Reese’s)– Legal protection (Coke; Olympic rings)

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Better Branding; Less Promotion

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Packaging

• Defined as:– Container or wrapping

• Elements:

1. Function (fridgepack; pill bottles)

2. Promotion (L’eggs pantyhose; square Chanel)• Issues:

- UPC codes needed– Information: government guidelines (good or bad??)– Waste (kids lunches)– Size (changing??)

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Labeling

• Ethics (size of drink and sodium, calories)• Warrantees• Persuasive labeling (little information; focus on

logo)• Informational labeling (helps your buying

decision; lessens cognitive dissonance)• Your examples of each type of labeling?Your examples of each type of labeling?

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Summary

• Global branding issues

• Cobranding

• Trademarks/service marks

• Brand equity

• Branding strategies

• Product packaging/labeling