Marketing 300 Chapter 10
Steps of New-Product Process
1. New-Product Development 2. Ideas Generation 3. Screening and Evaluation 4. Business Analysis 5. Development 6.Market Testing 7. Commercialization
Step 5 of New-Product Process
Development: is the stage that turns the idea on paper into a prototype.
Step 2 of New-Product Process
Idea Generation: involves developing a pool of concepts to serve as candidates for new products, building upon the pervious stage's results.
Shopping Products
are items for which the consumer compare several alternatives on criteria such as price, quality, or style. Ex: Furniture, Cars, Appliances.
Unsought Products
are items that the consumer does not know about or knowns about but does not initially want. Ex: Life insurance, Funeral services, Blood donations.
Specialty Products
are items that the consumer makes a special effort to search out and buy. Ex: Medical services, Designer clothes, High-end electronics.
Convenience Products
are items that the consumer purchases frequently, conveniently, and with a minimum shopping effort. Ex: Newspapers, Candy, Fast food.
Consumer Products
are products purchased by the ultimate consumer
Organization Marketing
consists of activities undertaken to create, maintain, or change attitudes and behavior of target consumers toward an organization.
Person Marketing
consists of activities undertaken to create, maintain, or change attitudes and behavior of target consumers toward particular people.
Place Marketing
consists of activities undertaken to create, maintain, or change attitudes and behavior of target consumers toward particular places.
Product Mix
consists of all of the product lines offered by an organization.
Business Products (B2B)
products that organizations buy that assist in providing other products for resale. A major characteristic is that their sales are often the result of derived demand, that is, sales of business products frequently result from the sale of consumer products. Ex: Capital items, Raw Materials, Supplies and Service.
Acquisition
refers to the buying of a whole company, patent, or a license to produce someone else's product.
New Product Development
refers to the original products, product improvements, product modifications, and new brands developed from the firms own research development.
New-Product Process
the seven stages an organization goes through to identify opportunities and convert them into salable products or services.
Protocol
A statement that, before product development begins, identifies: a well-defined target market, specific customer needs, wants, and preferences, what the product will be and do to satisfy customers.
Step 7 of New-Product Process
Commercialization: the stage that positions and launches a new product in full-scale production and sales.
Step 6 of New-Product Process
Market Testing: stage that involves exposing actual products to prospective buyers under realistic purchase conditions to see if they will buy.
Step 1 of New-Product Process
New-Product Development: is the stage of the new product process that defines the role for a new product in terms of the firms overall objectives.
Step 3 of New-Product Process
Screening and Evaluation: is the stage that internally and externally evaluates new product ideas to eliminate those that warrant no further effort.
Product
a good or service or idea consisting of a bundle of tangible and intangible attributes that satisfies consumers' needs and is received in exchange for money or something else of value.
Marketing Reasons for Failure
insignificant point of difference no economic access to buyers incomplete market and product protocol before product development not satisfying needs on critical factors bad timing poor product quality too little market attractiveness poor execution of marketing mix
Business Analysis
involves a review of the sales, costs, and profit projections to find out whether they satisfy the company's objectives.
Product Line
is a group of product or service items that are closely related because they satisfy a class of needs are used together, and sold to the same customer group, are distributed through the same outlets, or fall within a given price range.
Product Item
is a specific product that has a unique brand, size, or price.
Customer Experience Management (CEM)
is the process of managing the entire customer experience whiten a company.
Idea Generation
is the systematic search of new product ideas including sourcing from: employees and co-workers customers (crowdsourcing) and suppliers research and development labs competitive product smaller firms, universities, inventors
Social Marketing
is the use of commercial marketing concepts and tools in programs designed to influence individuals' behavior to improve their well-being and that of society.