Products‚ Positioning‚ and Market Segmentation Thorson‚ Esther (Ed). 1989. Advertising Age: The Principles of Advertising at Word. Lincolnwood‚ IL: NTC Business Books. Advertising professionals realize that the heart of any campaign is the product and the position it holds in people’s minds. Products and their brand names are newsmakers themselves. Wendy’s hamburgers‚ Apple computers‚ and California raisins (particularly when they sing and dance) are objects of our attention and interest
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respondents in the 18-22 age group‚ who are mainly students‚ and even fewer respondents from the above 28 years age group who represent the working class. Importance of various parameters in fast food restaurants We asked respondents to judge McDonalds on the parameters taste of food‚ speed of service‚ cleanliness‚ ambiance and value for money‚ as to which is the most important one. The response received is represented in the pie chart below. [pic] From the survey conducted it was found
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a diagrammatic technique used by asset marketers that attempts to visually display the perceptions of customers or potential customers. Typically the position of aproduct‚ product line‚ brand‚ or company is displayed relative to their competition. Perceptual maps can have any number of dimensions but the most common is two dimensions. The first perceptual map below shows consumer perceptions of various automobiles on the two dimensions of sportiness/conservative and classy/affordable. This sample of consumers felt Porsche was
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Developing Products and Managing Product Portfolios Chapter 12 What We Already Know About Products • How to define a product • How to classify a product – Consumer v business products – Different types of consumer products • The product life cycle • There are different levels of product: – Core benefits – Branding‚ design‚ quality – Support aspects: guarantees‚ after-sales service What Is Managing Products About? • Ensuring we have the right product mix to maximise
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Table of Contents Market Segmentation and Product Positioning 2 1.1. Introduction 2 1.2. Product the company will offer 2 1.2.1. Motorcycle industry an overview 2 1.2.2.Motorcycle industry in US an overview 3 1.3.Marketing Objectives of the Motorcycle Company: 4 1.4.Primary Characteristics of the Motorcycle 4 1.5.Branding Strategy 5 1.6.Product Positioning: 6 1.6.1.Short-run Strategy: 6 1.6.2.Longer-Run Strategies 6
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Segmentation variables spar can consider when segmenting the market are: a) Geographic segmentation which assumes that customers within a particular geographic location‚ be it a country‚ region‚ city or even suburb may be targeted with the same product offering and market mix. This is the most common form of market segmentation; wherein companies segment the market by attacking a restricted geographic area. The following are examples of geographic variables often used in segmentation; (i) Religion
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UNIT 6: DEMONSTRATE AND UNDERSTANDING OF PRODUCT POSITIONING INTRODUCTION =product offering at heart of marketing effort =starting point of marketing mix = example =good product can result in good marketing mix 1. WHAT IS A PRODUCT =any favourable or unfavourable thing in exchange for money =can be tangible‚ a service‚ or an idea (examples ?) =marketing process for each is the same 2. PRODUCT LEVELS =5 levels = each level adds more customer value =constitutes the customer value
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next steps‚ marketers construct a marketing program that actually deliver superior value through building profitable customer relationships by capturing value from customers. Here we will focus on customer driven marketing strategy of launching a product or service. Customer – driven marketing strategy and marketing management orientations that guide marketing strategy: To design a winning marketing strategy ‚ the company must first decide who it will serve. It does this by dividing the market
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MAZDA: POSITIONING A PRODUCT LINE I TEGRATED MARKETI G COMMU ICATIO (MKTG 6140) Case Summary • Lack focus in marketing and advertising plan. • Weak positioning‚ focus on value for money only. • Introduced new marketing strategy. • New slogan – “Get In. Be Moved” for Protégé (1999). • New approach used to cater new target market. • Introduced new slogan – “Zoom-Zoom” (make fun to drive for adults). • New model - MAZDASPEED Protegé‚ Protegé5 and MAZDA6. 2 I TEGRATED MARKETI G COMMU ICATIO
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Product and Positioning The Nook E-Reader by Barnes and Noble is a 12.1 ounce portable e-reader with a 6 inch ink screen 3G wireless connection with the ability to hold over 1‚500 books on its memory card. The nook’s features also include computerized versions of popular games and allow the user to download magazines and newspapers to the device (Bubar). This device satisfies the esteem needs of achievement and status since owning a piece of new technology delivers the message of a higher status
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