Marketing Chapter 6-11

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legal and ethical constraints

price fixing, price discrimination, deceptive pricing, predatory pricing

exporting

producing goods in one country and selling them in another

product & promotional strategies

product extension; product adaptation; communication adaptation; dual adaptation; product invention

managing the product life cycle

product manager; product modification; market modification; product repositioning

business products

products organizations buy that assist in providing other products for resale

consumer products

products purchased by the ultimate consumer

tariff

putting taxes on goods (imports) outside of the country

queries

questions the database can answer

constraints

restrictions placed on potential solutions to a problem

setting a final price - steps

select an approx. price level; set list or quoted price; make special adjust. to list or quoted price

licensing

selling the right to use some process, trademark, patent, or other right for a fee or royalty

product extension

selling virtually the same product in other countries

intangibility

services cannot be seen, tasted, felt, heard, or smelled before purchase

inconsistency

services depend on the people who provide them, their quality varies with each person's capabilities and day-to-day job performance

brand personality

set of traits people attribute to a product as if it were a person

above at or below market

setting a above, at , or below the market

prestige

setting a high price so that quality or status conscious consumers will be attracted to it

penetration

setting a low initial price to appeal to the mass market

skimming

setting a price at the highest level the market will bear

target return on sales

setting a price to achieve a profit that is a specified percentage of the sales volume

target return on investment

setting a price to achieve an annual target return on investment

high learning

significant customer education is required and there is an extended introductory period

target market (segment) selection criteria

simplicity and cost effectiveness of assigning potential buyers to segments; potential for increased profit; similarity of needs of potential buyers within a segment; difference of needs of buyers among segments; potential of a marketing action to reach a segment

late majority

skeptics who adopt new products when they feel it is necessary

demand oriented

skimming; penetration; prestige; odd-even; bundle

idea generation

stage 2, developing a pool of concepts to serve as candidates for new products, building upon the previous stage's results

internal & external screening

stage 3: screening and evaluation

business analysis

stage 4; specifies the features of the product and the marketing strategy needed to bring it to market and make financial projections

development

stage 5; the stage in the product development process in which a prototype is developed and a marketing strategy is outlined

market testing

stage 6; the stage of the new-product process that involves exposing actual products to prospective consumers under realistic purchase conditions to see if they will buy

commercialization

stage 7; the stage of the new-product development process that positions and launches a new product in full-scale production and sales

cost oriented

standard mark up; cost plus

lost horse

starting with the last known value of the item being forecast; listing the factors that could affect the forecast; and assessing whether they have a positive or negative impact; making final forecast

psychographic segmentation

subjective mental or emotional attributes (personality), aspirations (lifestyle), or needs of prospective customers

total costs

sum of fixed and variable cost

cost plus

summing the total unit cost of providing a product or service and adding a specific amount to the cost to arrive at a price

segments of one or mass customization

tailoring products or services to the tastes of individual customers on a high-volume scale

good

tangible attributes that a consumer's five senses can perceive

profit oriented

target profit; target return on sales; target return; target return on investment

decline of protectionism

tariff; quota

brand equity

the added value a brand name gives to a product beyond the functional benefits provided

methods

the approaches that can be used to collect data to solve all or part of a problem

inseparability

the consumer cannot distinguish the service provider from the service itself

product class

the entire product category or industry

data mining

the extraction of hidden predictive information from large databases to find statistical links between consumer purchasing patterns and marketing actions

values

the ideas, beliefs, and attitudes about what is important that help guide the way you live

organizational synergy

the increased customer value achieved through performing organizational functions such as marketing or manufacturing more efficiently

laggards

the last adopters, who distrust new products

bundle

the marketing of two or more products in a single package price

product manager

the person within an organization who is responsible for a product, a product line, or several distinct products that make up a group

value pricing

the practice of simultaneously increasing product and service benefits while maintaining or decreasing price

brand extension

the practice of using a current brand name to enter a different product class

currency exchange rate

the price of one country's currency expressed in terms of another country's currency

back translation

the process of translating material to a foreign language and then back to the original language

inventory

the quantity of goods that a firm has on hand

customary

the regular price for a product

analytics

the scientific process of transforming data into insight for making better decisions

sales forecast

the total sales of a product that a firm expects to sell during a specified time period under specified environmental conditions and its own marketing efforts

cultural symbols

things that represent ideas or concepts in a specific culture

early adopters

those who adopt an innovation early in the diffusion process but after the innovators

SWOT & environmental scanning

used for stage 1: new product strategy development to assess strengths and weakness relative to the opportunities and threats

product form

variations of a product within the product class

transnational companies

view world as one market; emphasize & similarise (Walmart, Apple, Nike)

customs

what is considered normal and expected about the way people do things in a specific country

joint venture

when a foreign company and a local firm invest together to create a local business

geographic segmentation

where prospective customers live or work

expectations derived from

words of mouth; personal needs; past experiences; promotional activities

unit variable cost

VC/Quantity

pricing approach

demand oriented; cost oriented; profit oriented; competition oriented

actual experiences

determined by the way an organization delivers its service

gap analysis

differences between the consumer's expectations and actual experience

perceptual map

displays, in two or more dimensions, the position of products or brands in the consumer's mind

5 trends that have influenced the landscape of global marketing

economic protectionism by countries; economic integration among countries; global competition among global companies; presence of networked global marketspace; growing prevelance of economic espionage

international companies

engages in trade as extension of what they're doing in home country (Makeup comapnies)

barter

exchange goods without involving money

global competition

exists when firms originate, produce, and market their products and services worldwide

global market entry strategies

exporting; licensing; joint venture; direct investment

demand factors

factors that determine consumers' willingness and ability to pay for products and services

pricing constraints

factors that limit the range of prices a firm may set

questionnaire data

facts and figures obtained by asking people about their attitudes, awareness, intentions, and behaviors

observational data

facts and figures obtained by watching, either mechanically or in person, how people actually behave

primary data

facts and figures that are newly collected for the project

secondary data

facts and figures that have already been recorded prior to the project at hand

target profit

firm sets an annual target of a specific dollar volume of profit

multinational companies

firms view countries as different & market them differently in other countries (Mr. Clean)

price

the money or other considerations (including other products and services) exchanged for the ownership or use of a product or service

price as an indicator of value

the more expensive it is, the better it is

differentiation positioning

involves seeking a less-competitive, smaller market niche in which to locate a brand

one product and multiple market segments

W]when an organization produces only a single product or service and attempts to sell it to two or more market segments

direct investment

a domestic firm actually investing in and owning a foreign subsidiary or division

shopping products

items for which the consumer compares several alternatives on criteria such as price, quality, or style

unsought products

items that the consumer does not know about or knows about but does not initially want

specialty products

items that the consumer makes a special effort to search out and buy

convenience products

items that the consumer purchases frequently, conveniently, and with a minimum of shopping effort

aspects of the product life cycle

length; shape; product class vs product form

deceptive pricing

price deals that mislead consumers

inelastic demand

1% decrease in price produces less than 1% increase in demand

elastic demand

1% decrease in price produces more than 1% increase in demand

mixed branding

a firm markets products under its own name and that of a reseller because the segment attracted to the reseller is different from its own market

pricing strategy (dumping)

a firm sells a product in a foreign country below its domestic price or below actual cost

decision

choice made from among available alternatives

surveys

collect data from subjects who respond to a series of questions about behaviors and opinions, often in the form of a questionnaire

break even analysis / break even point

FC/P-UVC

external data

Facts and figures available in locations outside a company

internal data

Facts and figures located inside the company

innovators

First adopters of new products

marketing reasons for new product failures

Insignificant point of difference; Incomplete market and product protocol before product development starts; Not satisfying customer needs on critical factors; Bad timing; No economical access to buyers; Poor product quality; Poor execution of the marketing mix: brand name, package, price, promotion, distribution; Too little market attractiveness

total revenue

P x Q

profit equation

Profit = Total revenue − Total cost; or Profit = (Unit price × Quantity sold) − (Fixed cost + Variable cost).

new product development process

SWOT & Environmental scanning; idea generation; internal & external screening; business analysis; development; market testing; commercialization

global brand

a brand marketed under the same name in multiple countries with similar and centrally coordinated marketing programs

market modification

a company tries to find new customers, increase a product's use among existing customers, or create new use situations

multiproduct branding

a company uses one name for all its products in a product class

80/20 rule

a concept that suggests 80% of a firm's sales are obtained from 20% of its customers

price fixing

a conspiracy among firms to set prices for a product

product differentiation

a firm using different marketing mix actions, such as product features and advertising, to help consumers perceive the product as being different and better than competing products

market product grid

a framework to relate the market segments of potential buyers to products offered or potential marketing actions

communication adaptation

a global communication strategy of fully adapting advertising messages to local markets

demand curve

a graph that relates the quantity sold and price, showing the maximum number of units that will be sold at a given price

product line

a group of product or service items that are closely related because they satisfy a class of needs, are used together, are sold to the same customer group, are distributed through the same outlets, or fall within a given price range

data warehouse

a place where databases are stored so that they are available when needed

loss leader

a product sold at a loss to attract customers

market segment

a relatively homogeneous group of customers who will respond to a marketing mix in a similar way

fashion fad

a short-lived fashion trend life

cannibalization

a situation that occurs when sales of a new product cut into sales of a firm's existing products

standard mark up

adding a fixed percentage to the cost of all items in a specific product class

expanding the 4Ps to 7Ps for Services

adding in people, physical environment, and process

market segmentation

aggregating prospective buyers into groups that have common needs and will respond similarly to a marketing action

degree of consumer learning

amount of learning effort consumers must exert to use the product

political-regulatory climate

analysis of countries political stability and trade regulations

brand name

any word, device (design, shape, sound, or color), or combination of these used to distinguish a seller's goods or services

branding

brand name; brand personality; brand equity

price plays 2 essential roles

capacity management, & affect perceptions

product adaption

changing a product in some way to make it more appropriate for a country's climate or consumer preferences

affect perceptions

changing the perception

Product repositioning

changing the place a product occupies in a consumer's mind relative to competitive products

product repositioning

changing the place a product occupies in a consumer's mind relative to competitive products

predatory pricing

charging a very low price for a product with the intent of driving competitors out of business or out of a market

price discrimination

charging different prices to different buyers for goods (Clayton Act amended by Robinson-Patman Act)

multiple products and multiple market segments

common in the automobile industry where auto makers produce different lines of cars, trucks, and SUV's...each targeted to a different market

packaging and labeling - benefits

communication, functional, perceptual

product invention

companies can invent totally new products designed to satisfy common needs across countries

Head-to-head positioning

competing directly with competitors on similar product attributes in the same target market

global consumers

consumer groups living in many countries or regions of the world who have similar needs or seek similar features and benefits from products or services

classifying services

consumer products; business products; convenience products; shopping products; specialty products; unsought products

3 other key factors that influence demand

consumer taste; price and availability of similar products; consumer income

continuous innovation

consumers don't need to learn new behaviors

advantages of different types of surveys

cost minimal; turnover time for results are quicker than normal ones

global environmental scan

currency exchange rate; cultural symbols; customs; back translation; values; political-regulatory climate

competition oriented

customary; above at or below market; loss leader

cloud environment

data storage; cloud computing capabilities

marketing research approach

define the problem; develop the research plan; collect relevant information; develop findings; take marketing actions

demographic segmentation

gender, race; age, income; birth era, occupation

general bases of segmentation

geographic; demographic; psychographic; behavioral

pricing objectives

goals that describe what a firm wants to achieve through pricing

shape

high learning; low learning; fashion, fad

challenges to market research

how can MR determine if consumers will buy a product they've never seen before; how can MR get consumers to answer questions they don't want to reveal; how can MR help people remember purchases

concepts

ideas that represent a class or category of objects, events, or activities

disadvantages of different types of surveys

in spam/junk; pop up blockers; complete multiple times

information technology

includes all of the computing resources that collect, store, and analyze data

idea generation vs idea evolution

individual interview, focus groups, fuzzy front end vs surveys

early majority

individuals who adopt a new product just prior to the average person

categories of product adopters

innovators; early adopters; early majority; late majority; laggards

4 I's

intangibility; inconsistency; inseparability; inventory

services

intangible activities or benefits that an organization provides to satisfy consumers' needs in exchange for money or something else of value

capacity management

integrating the service component of the marketing mix with efforts to influence consumer demand

types of companies in the global market

international; multinational; transnational

product life cycle

introduction; growth; maturity; decline

product modification

involves altering one or more of a product's characteristics, such as its quality, performance, or appearance, to increase the product's value to customers and increase sales

trend extrapolation

involves extending a pattern observed in past data into the future

multibranding

involves giving each product a distinct name

discontinuous innovation

involves making the consumer learn entirely new consumption patterns to use the product

low learning

little learning is required by the consumer and the benefits of purchase are readily understood

sales forecast techniques

lost horse; survey (buyers, sales force); trend extrapolation

odd - even

making prices .99

private branding

manufactures products but sells them under the brand name of a wholesaler or retailer

build to order

manufacturing a product only when there is an order from a customer

quotta

maximum amount of goods that are allowed to be imported/exported

dual adpatation

modifying both their products and promotion message

branding strategies

multiproduct branding; brand extension; multibranding; private branding; mixed branding

rise of economic integration

number of countries with economical goods forming translational trade groups or signed trade agreements European Union; NAFTA

behavioral segmentation

observable actions or attitudes by prospective customers

segmentation strategies

one product and multiple market segments; multiple products and multiple market segments; segments of one or mass customization

dynamically continuous innovation

only minor changes in behavior are required

deletion, harvesting

part of decline; dropping a product from company's line or retain the product but reduce marketing costs

trial

part of introduction; the initial purchase of a product by a consumer

value

perceived benefits/price

price elasticity of demand

percentage change in quantity demanded/ percentage change in price

product positioning

place a product occupies in consumers mind based on important attributes (head to head and differentiation)

price equation

price = list price - incentives and allowances + extra fees


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