Explain various levels of Product with examples? (10 Marks) For many a product is simply the tangible‚ phsysical entity that they may be buying or selling. You buy a new car and that’s the product - simple! Or maybe not. When you buy a car‚ is the product more complex than you first thought? In order to actively explore the nature of a product further‚ lets consider it as three different products - the COREproduct‚ the ACTUAL product‚ and finally the AUGMENTED product. These are known as the ’Three
Premium Management Project management Marketing
Levels of Product and Service Product Name: Itel Mobile Phone (Model: IT 6700). Introduction: Product planners need to think about products and services on three levels. Each level adds more customer value. The most basic level is core benefit. At the second level‚ product planners must turn the core benefit into actual product. Finally‚ product planners must build an augmented product around the core benefit and actual product by offering additional consumer services and benefits. Now I discuss
Premium Marketing Mobile phone Pixel
Marketing The Core CHAPTER 1 CREATING CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS AND VALUE THROUGH MARKETING 3 Creating Customer Relationships and Value through Marketing HOW DO COLLEGE STUDENTS STUDY? 3M’S RESPONSE TO A NEW-PRODUCT CHALLENGE! 3M inventor David Windorski faced a curious challenge—understanding how college students study! Specifically‚ how do they read their textbooks‚ take class notes‚ and prepare for exams? First‚ Windorski needed to obtain information on students’ study habits. Next
Premium Marketing
Identify L’Occitane’s core competence. With reference to resource based view‚ explain how the competence was created. 1. Respect for the Environment L’Occitane invested heavily in developing products that contain rich natural ingredients with traceable origins. The company follows the principles of phytotherapy and aromatherapy‚ without using animal products. All product tests are under medical supervision rather than tests on animals. L’Occitane also limits the use of silicones‚ chemical
Premium Marketing Brand Branding
Marketing mix - Product Agenda ✦ Product ✦ Service ✦ Product life cycle ✦ Experience Aim: transform strategic decisions already take into a sustainable and attracted commercial offer. From a managerial point the key question is: how can we transform our decision‚ our value proposition into something that can be bought by the market? We have to consider that there are several models that have been suggested over time to depict from a managerial view point what marketing mix meansthey clarify the
Premium Marketing Product management
Doctrine Report of Actual Sin My childhood took place in a small community‚ about 30 years ago. The town was home for Northwestern Prep College for WELS coed high school and pre-seminary for males‚ Bethesda Lutheran Hospital for mental illness‚ and Maranatha Baptist College. We had a whole lot of religion going on. I am taking this back about 30 years ago. I was in WELS grade school‚ about 5th grade and I was aware my mom was having an affair. I lived in fear of losing friends and going
Premium Tort Law Tort law
A Book Report On Tourism Business In Nepal Chapter-1 Introduction to Tourism Tourism nowadays has been an essential activity all over the world. The form of tourism can be of various types. Most of the people are quite familiar with the tourism as it has become the modern needs and demands of all people. Everyone loves travelling and exploring new things. People love visiting new places‚ so that they have the best moment
Premium Tourism
A real-time tracker for markerless augmented reality Andrew I. Comport‚ Éric Marchand‚ François Chaumette IRISA - INRIA Rennes Campus de Beaulieu‚ 35042 Rennes‚ France E-Mail : Firstname.Lastname@irisa.fr Abstract Augmented Reality has now progressed to the point where real-time applications are being considered and needed. At the same time it is important that synthetic elements are rendered and aligned in the scene in an accurate and visually acceptable way. In order to address these issues
Premium Computer vision
Core principles of marketing Core principles of marketing: There are seven core principles of marketing. They are as follows: 1. The marketing concepts 2. Marketing orientation 3. Satisfying customers needs and wants‚ 4. Market segmentation 5. Value and the exchange process 6. Product life cycle 7. Marketing mix 1. The marketing concept It is core principle of marketing‚ when hospitality and travel manager adopt marketing con-cept‚ they must belief on costumer need
Premium Marketing
Organizations develop strategies to gain a competitive advantage. One way an organization establishes competitive advantage is through the use and development of core competencies. Core competencies are the value created activities that allows a company to achieve efficiency‚ quality‚ innovation‚ or customer responsiveness (Jones‚ 2010). Two specific core competencies that give an organization a competitive advantage are functional and organizational resources. Functional resources are simply the skills
Premium Organization Management Organizational studies