contemporary marketing wired, 9th edition© 1998 the dryden press chapter 11 product strategy

15
Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Upload: sybil-tyler

Post on 18-Dec-2015

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Chapter 11

Product Strategy

Page 2: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

A bundle of physical, service, and symbolic attributes designed to enhance buyers want satisfaction.

Product

Page 3: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Figure 11.2 Classification of Consumer Products

UnsoughtProductsLife Insurance, Self-Improvement Courses Cemetery Plots

Shopping ProductsHomogeneous: WashingMachine, Portable FanHeterogeneous:Physical FitnessTraining

Specialty ProductsLuxury Cars,Designer Clothing,Health Foods

ConvenienceProductsImpulse Items: Magazines Staples: Gas, Bread Emergency Items: Bandages, Candles

Consumer

Products

Page 4: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Comparison of price and quality Very little Considerable Very little

Importance of convenient location

Purchase frequency

Planning time involved in purchase

Critical Important Unimportant

Frequent

Very little

Less frequent

Considerable

Infrequent

Extensive

CONSUMER FACTORS

FactorConvenience

ProductsShopping Products

Specialty Products

Table 11.1aMarketing Impact of the Consumer Products Classification System

Page 5: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Importance of store image Unimportant Very important Important

Number of retail outletsMany Few

Very few; often one per market

area

Distribution channel length

Promotion

Price

Long Relatively short Very short

Advertising and promotion by

producer

Low

Personal selling and advertising

by both producer and retailer

Relatively high

Personal selling and advertising by producer and

retailer

High

MARKETING MIX FACTORS

FactorConvenience

ProductsShopping Products

Specialty Products

Table 11.1bMarketing Impact of the Consumer Products Classification System

Page 6: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Figure 11.5 Classification of Business Products

InstallationsPlant: Factories

Major Equipment:Mining

Equipment BusinessServicesAdvertising,GroundsMaintenance,Workshops

Raw MaterialsEggs, Cotton,

Leather, Bauxite,Wheat

MRO SuppliesFloor CleaningCompounds, Pens,Staples

ComponentsComputer Chips,Lawn Mower Motors,Auto Stereos

AccessoryEquipmentAdvertising,Drill Presses,Desks, DeliveryTrucks

Business

Products

Page 7: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Comparison of price and quality

Purchase frequency

Planning time involved in purchase

Quality very important

Infrequent

Extensive

Quality and price

important

More frequent

Less extensive

Quality important

Frequent

Less extensive

Quality important

Infrequent

Varies

Price importan

t

Frequent

Very little

Varies

Varies

Varies

ORGANIZATIONAL FACTORS

Factor InstallationsAccessory Equipment

Component Parts &

Materials

Raw Materials

Supplies

Table 11.2a Marketing Impact of the Business Products Classification System

Business Services

Page 8: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Distribution channel length

Promotion method

Price

Very short

Personal selling by producer

High

Relatively short

Advertising

Relatively high

Short

Personal selling

Low to high

Short

Personal selling

Low to high

Long

Advertis-ing by

producer

Low

Varies

Varies

Varies

MARKETING MIX FACTORS

Factor InstallationsAccessory Equipment

Component Parts &

Materials

Raw Materials

Supplies

Table 11.2b Marketing Impact of the Business Products Classification System

Business Services

Page 9: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

A series of related products.

Product Line

Page 10: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

The four basic stages through which a successful product progresses-introduction, growth, maturity, and decline.

Product Life Cycle

Page 11: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Figure 11.8 Stages in the Product Life Cycle

Introduction Growth Maturity Decline

Time

Sal

es a

nd P

rofit

s

IndustrySales

IndustryProfits

NetworkComputers

CellularPhones

FoodProcessors

CassetteTapes

Hint: This WILL be on the test

Page 12: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Figure 11.10 Overlapping Life Cycles for Two Products

Introduction Growth Maturity Decline

Time

Indu

stry

Sal

es

Product A

Product B

Page 13: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

• Increasing Frequency of Use

• Increasing the Number of Users

• Finding New Uses

• Changing Package Sizes, Labels, or Product Quality

Extending the Product Life Cycle

Page 14: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

A company’s assortment of product lines and individual offerings.

*width, length, and depth

Product Mix

Page 15: Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition© 1998 The Dryden Press Chapter 11 Product Strategy

Contemporary Marketing Wired, 9th Edition © 1998 The Dryden Press

Introduction of a new product that is closely related to other products in the firm’s existing line.

Line Extension