Marketing Exam 2

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Market Targeting

Evaluate segments and select segments to enter

break-even analysis

a cost based technique used to examine the relationship between cost and price and to determine best sales volume

positioning strategies

a firm may focus its positioning strategy on certain product attributes, features, or value perceptions

services

a form of product that consists of activities benefits, or satisfactions and that is essentially intangible and does not result in the ownership of anything

Disney Mickey check

a nutritional seal of approval program to combat childhood obesity after survey feedback revealed parents concern about childhood health

performance levels

ability to perform its function

cost-plus pricing

adds a standard mark-up to the cost of the product

total quality management

approach that involves constantly improving the quality of products/services

Brand association

are consumer thoughts connected to the consumer's memory about the brand

product mix

assortment of product lines and individual product offerings

private brand

brand created/owned by seller

measurement role

brand price compared to unbranded price

marketing strategies

develop marketing strategies consistent with offering's competitive advantages

Market differentiation

differentiate offering to create superior value

Psychographic segmentation

divides a market into different segments based on social class, lifestyle, or personality characteristics

behavioral segmentation

divides a market into segments based on consumer knowledge, attitudes, uses of a product, or response to a product.

Geographic segmentation

divides groups based on physical location

Demographic segmentation

divides markets into segments based on variables such as age, generation, etc.

laggards

don't like change, may remain loyal to a product until it is no longer available, may not use the internet

value proposition

how company will create differential value for targeted segments, and the position it will occupy based on the full mix of benefits upon which a brand is positioned

differentiation

how offering are differentiated based on the value proposition - benefits it promises to target market compared to competitors

changing society

how societies operate is constantly changing

Positioning

how the product is defined by consumers on important attributes - the place it occupies in the consumer's mind relative to competitors

Geo Demographic

hybrid form of segmentation that considers geographic and demographic factors

labeling and logos

identifies the product or brand, describes attributes, and provides promotional value

competitive advantage

identify competitive advantages and select the ones consistent with consumer beliefs

competitive advantage

if consumers believe it has more value than other products in its category

undifferentiated

ignore segments and sell one offer to entire market

four characteristic that affect services

intangible, inseparable, perishable, variability

every-day-low pricing

involves charging a constant everyday low price with few or no temporary price discounts

packaging

involves designing and producing the container or wrapper for a product

Brand loyalty

is a consumer steadfast allegiance to a brand by repeatedly purchasing it

brand loyalty

is a consumer steadfast allegiance to a brand by repeatedly purchasing it

perceived quality

is a consumer's perception of the overall quality of the brand

Good-value pricing

is offering just the right combination of quality and good service at a fair price

quality levels

level of quality that will support positioning

manufacturer brand

manufacturer sells under their own brand name

positioning

marketers need to position brands clearly in the target market's mind

Strategic fit

marketers should work to ensure that the selected target markets fit with what the organization is and wants to be

Requirements for effective segmentation

measurable, accessible, substantial, differentiable, actionable

new-to-market

new been seen before

new product

new to the company

new category

new to the company, not market

length

number of different products a firm sells

co branding

occurs when two or more companies issue a single product in an effort to capitalize on the equity of each company's brand

attributes

often a product will have multiple attributes that create a unique position in the market

Price/quality relationship

optionally priced according to quality

revamped products

packaging, features, design

observability

people can see others using a product and perceive value in its use

market positioning

position offering in the minds of the target consumers vs competition

Market Segmentation

Divide total market into smaller, similar segments with distinct needs, characteristics or behaviors

The Cohort Effect

Tendency of members of a generation to be influenced and bound together by significant events in their formative years

Price

The amount of money charged for a product or service, or the sum of all the values that customers exchange for the benefits of having or using the product or service

Product

This includes a specific combination of goods, services, or ideas that a firm offers to its target market

Positioning

a company's market position is the customers perception of a company's efforts, including its products, services, and even ideas

early majority

careful in their approach, more competitors have entered the market by this time so they have some choice as to which product to buy

product features

characteristics that describe a product

communications

communicate important attributes and deliver on promise

licensed brand

companies extend their brand by licensing

types of consumer products

convenience products, shopping products, specialty products, unsought products

product line extentions

extend product line

competitive analysis

firms must understand the position other competitors have taken in the marketplace

innovators

first to try new products, unafraid to take risks

concentrated

focus effort on a large share of one/few segments

competition

forced to update/add products because competitors

conformance quality

freedom from defects and consistency in delivering a targeted level of performance

technology

has always driven/most responsible for product innovation

High-low pricing

pricing involves charging higher prices on an everyday basis but running frequent promotions to lower prices temporarily on selected items

Family life cycle

process of age-related family formation and dissolution

complexity

product is easier it is to understand and use a product

application

product/brand positioned in term of how it is used

consumer products

products and services bought by final consumers for personal consumption

trialability

products that consumers can try without significant expense

early adopters

purchase product soon after it is introduced, wait for product reviews and info before purchasing

return on equity

quality is an investment, holding quality efforts accountable for bottom line results

customer expectations

related to changes in what consumers need or want

product lines

series of related products

Cost based pricing

sets prices based on the cost for producing distributing, and selling the product plus a fair rate of return for effort and risk

competition

setting prices based on competitors strategies costs, prices, and market offerings. consumers base their decisions base on price for value

product item

single, specific product

target costing

starts with an ideal selling price based on consumer value considerations and then targets costs that will ensure that price is met

style and design

style - describes the appearance of the product but does not necessarily make the product better design - broader measure, contributes to the products usefulness and looks

differentiated

targets several market segments and design separate offers for different segment

micro marketing

taylors offers to needs of individuals and local customer segments

late majority

tend to be cautious about new things and ideas, often older

Product Quality

the characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied customer needs.

Brand recognition

the degree to which customers identify the brand under the variety of circumstances

Brand equity

the differential effect that knowing the brand name has on customer responses

Growth potential

the higher the future growth rate, the more attractive is the segment

level of competition

the more intense the competition within a segment, the less attractive the segment is to marketers

branding

the name, term, sign, or design or a combination of these, that identifies the maker or seller of a product or service

diffusion

the process through which a product is adopted and spreads across various types of adopters

compatibility

the product fits a potential customer's needs, values, product knowledge, and past behaviors

Product life cycle

the progression of a product category rather than a product item through the four stages of its time on the market

globalization

their product is sold in an expanded global marketplace

Perceptual maps

tool used to show the customer's perception of a brand relative to competing brands on important attributes

width

total number of product lines a firm offer

co-branded

use brand name of two different companies

Value-based pricing

users the buyers perceptions of value rather than the seller's cost

depth

variation in each product the firm offers


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