SB&F Ch. 9
Serviceable obtainable market (SOM)
A marketing term (also called the target market) that represents the customers that a firm expects to be interested in its particular product or service, and able to be serviced by the firm.
Focus group
A form of data gathering from a small group led by a moderator.
Product
anything that is offered to the market to satisfy consumer wants, needs, and demands goods, services, people, ideas
Perishability
service exhibits perishability in that if it is not used when offered, it cannot be saved for later use.
End user
A customer role that describes the person who eventually makes actual use of a product or service in his or her personal or work life.
Survey
A data-collection method using a questionnaire—in person, on phone, on paper, or on the Internet.
Customer profile
A detailed description of an archetypical or hypothetical potential customer for a product or service, also called a customer persona.
Feasibility Analysis
basic evaluation tool for idea evaluation
Target Customer
benefit matching, long-term value, influencer impact
Product development process
The procedure to organize and pursue the creation of new goods or services.
Purchaser
A customer role that describes an individual or institution that pays for or obtains a product or service
Influencer
A customer role describing a person or group who can make credible or recognized suggestions or recommendations to others regarding purchase choices.
Decision maker
A customer role that describes a person in an organization who is responsible for choosing which product or service will be obtained.
Primary research
An approach to researching based on the gathering of new information, using techniques such as interviewing, surveying, and observation
Secondary research
An approach to researching based on the use of existing information, often from government, commercial, or academic databases and research efforts.
Tangibility
An item's capability of being touched, seen, tasted, or felt
Ethnographic research
Data gathered by simple observation—seeing what consumers do, rather than asking them
Value proposition
Small business owners' unique selling points (also known as benefits) that customers can expect from your goods or services, including benefits that differentiate your offering from those of the competition.
Marketing research
Systematic collection and interpretation of data to support future marketing decisions
Total product
The entire bundle of products, services, and meanings of your offering; includes extras like service, warranty, or delivery, as well as what the product means to the customer.
Outstanding customer service
The idea of "going all out" for the customer or providing over-the-top service, not just the basic help, professionalism, and friendliness we all expect in any business transaction; an employee or manager who is trying to make sure the customer walks away with an exceptional experience
Prototype
The name given to the first model of a product or service Some may be functioning, but built in a way that no consumer would buy it (e.g., with exposed wires and sharp edges) but shows the product can do what is promised
Customer development process
The procedure to organize and pursue the finding, obtaining and keeping of new customers.
Commercialization
The process of making the new products ready for use by consumers by achieving standards of durability and performance suitable for the market and comparable to (if not better than) the competition.
Purchasing process
The sequence of steps an individual or organization goes through in making a decision to buy a product or service.
Customer job
The term given to what a potential customer is trying to do—perform or complete some sort of task, solve some problem, or try to achieve some outcome
Pivot
Typically, a term describing a change of direction in the thinking of an entrepreneur or a firm, often based on new data or other findings.
Penetrated market (PM)
A marketing term that describes the actual number of customers of an operating firm, divided by the size of the target market, which gives a percentage of the market the firm (or product/service) has attained so far.
Total available market (TAM)
A marketing term that refers to all of the people or organizations (in one nation, region, or the world) who might consider a product or service being offered.
Serviceable available market (SAM)
A marketing term that refers to the customers within the geographic reach of a firm.
Heterogeneity
A quality of a service in which each time it is provided it will be slightly different from the previous time.
Inseparability
A quality of a service in which the service being done cannot be disconnected from the provider of the service.
Budget cycle
A term applied to the schedule and the process for setting the schedule for making purchases by an individual or an organization
4 Ps in Marketing
Product, price, promotion, and placement (marketing mix)
Core product
basic description of what a product is
Augmented product
core product plus features that tend to differentiate it from the competition brand names, quality levels, packaging
Idea evaluation
exhaustive process of specifying the details of each idea's technological feasibility, its cost, how it can be marketed, and its market potentia
Secondary research
refers to using existing data or databases to gather information on the topic of interest to you. data may not be timely and you don't always know why the data were gathered and whether they were gathered correctly
Me-too products
Products essentially similar to something already on the mark
Open-ended question
Question that allows respondents to express themselves as they choose; for example, "What do you like about this book?"
Dichotomous question
Question that has only two possible choices; for example, "Have you shopped here before?"
Categorical question
Question that is answered by selecting the proper category; for example, "What is your ethnicity? White, African American, Hispanic, Asian, American Indian, Other."
Scalar question
Question that is answered by some sort of scale; for example, "On a scale of 1 to 5, how do you like this book?"