mngt 310 exam 3
captive pricing
setting the price for an item relatively low and then charging much higher prices for the expendables it uses
secondary research
an approach to research based on the use of existing information often from government, commercial, or academic databases and research efforts
chances are close
the customer asks to think about it and you say, "what are the chances you will buy later?'
Succinct Message
the key point in as few and as memorable words as possible
price lining
the practice of setting (usually) three price points: good quality, better quality, best quality
market segmentation
the process of dividing a market into meaningful, relatively similar, and identifiable segments or groups
personal selling
the process of selling your products and services; includes prospect and evaluate, prepare, present, close and follow up
multi-channel marketer
the use of several different channels to reach your customers, for example a website, direct mail, and traditional retailing
primary research
an approach to researching based on the gathering of new information, using techniques such as interviewing, surveying, and observation
e-tailer
an electronic retailer; a store that exists only on the internet.
external reference price
an estimation of what a price should be based on information external to a consumer, such as advice, advertisements, or comparison shopping
wholesaler
an intermediary who sells to other intermediaries, usually to retailers; term usually applies to consumer markets
psychographic
another category for segmenting has to do with an individual's personality, attitudes, concerns, choices, and behaviors
service locations
at the client's location, mutually accessible location, remote location
core product
basic description of what a product is
trendiness
what is new and great
what will it take to close
what will it take to close this deal
trial close
which credit card would you like to use to pay for that
cognitive dissonance
doubt that occurs after a purchase has been made. an inconsistency between experience and belief
Good-Dominated Products
example car purchases
freight forward
firms specializing in arranging international shipments, packaging, transportation, and paperwork
Advantages of Personal Selling
flexible in your current schedule, find out the buyers main concerns and address them
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
focuses on the longer-term monitoring and promotion of customer interest and loyalty
elasticity
from economics, the idea that the market's demand for a product or service is sensitive to changes in its price
product life cycle stages
introduction, growth, maturity, decline
Key performance indicators (KPIs)
measures or metrics that identify the outcomes that are most important to the success of a business.
services
nonphysical products
try before you buy
offer a trial period if your business can handle that
make a suggestion close
offer a waffling customer suggestions on why it is a good idea to buy
goods
physical products
three factors of newsworthiness
public regonition, public importance, and public interest
follow up
refers to the contacts you periodically make with customers in order to remind them of your business and your interest in their business
service-dominated
rental cars
periodic discounting
sales conducted at predictable intervals, such as before major holidays
value
second in order of importance to the pricing decisions
demographic segmentation
segmenting markets by age, gender, income, ethnic background, and family life cycle
influencer
a customer role describing a person or group who can make credible or recognized suggestions or recommendations to others regarding purchase choices
referral discount
a discount given to a customer who refers a friend to the business
customer retention
a general approach to keeping customers
hetergeneity
a quality of a service in which each time it is provided it will be slightly different from the previous time
random discounting
a sale run on a schedule that is unpredictable to the customer
Perishability
a service exhibits perishability in that if it is not used when offered, it cannot be saved for later use.
diversification
a strategy whose goal is growth based on adding new products or services to the firm's existing collection of offering
customer vector report
a type of CRM report that segments customers (or customer groups) on purchases or dates of purchase
geographic segmentation
segmenting markets by region of a country or the world, market size, market density, or climate
tangibility
an item's capability of being touched, seen, tasted, or felt
bundling
combining two or more products in one unit and pricing it less than if the units were sold separately
marketing process
connecting your customer and product 1. connecting through value position 2. applies the valur proposition to the mechanics of making the connection through the 4 p's
augmented product
core product plus features that tend to differentiate it from the competition
benefit
customers can be divided into groups based on what benefits they seek when making product or service decisions
ethnographic
data gathered by simple observation-seeing what consumers do, rather than asking them
decision maker
A customer role that describes a person in an organization who is responsible for choosing which product or service will be obtained.
purchaser
A customer role that describes an individual or institution that pays for or obtains a product or service.
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.
born international
A new firm that opens a website immediately, thus being exposed to customers from around the world
New Product Development Process
A seven-phase process for introducing products: idea generation, screening, concept testing, business analysis, product development, test-marketing, and commercialization
market expansion
A strategy whose goal is growth, based on selling in areas or to groups previously not served by the business.
retailer
An intermediary who sells to consumers
agent
an intermediary who negotiates transactions between two or more parties but does not take title to the goods being purchased or sold
indirect exporting
Exporting using intermediaries such as agents, export management companies, or export trading companies.
direct exporting
Exporting using no intermediaries
assumptive close
I'll just need your credit card for payment
direct sales
Methods of going directly to your customer in order to sell your product. Vending machines, door-to-door salespeople, leasing space at a craft fair, farmers markets, party sales, and most industrial sales are methods of direct selling
4 P's of Marketing
Product, Price, Place, Promotion
value proposition
Small business owners' unique selling points that will be used to differentiate their products and/or services from those of the competition.
prototypes
The name given to the first model of a product or service. Some prototypes 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.
internal reference price
a consumer's mental image of what a product's price should be
urgency close
this rate will end at the end of today
partitioned pricing
setting the price for a base item and then charging extra for each additional component
alternate choice close
would you prefer that standard or deluxe model