Samsung Electronics is the largest affiliate of Samsung Group- a Korean brand. According to Forbes (2013)‚ it is the 20th biggest company in the world in term of market value. There are a wide range of electronic devices which are provided by Samsung such as refrigerators‚ air conditioners‚ cameras‚ tablets‚ phones‚ especially TVs and smart phones. It has several subsidiaries in over 50 different countries and employs almost 370‚000 people in FY2011 (Samsung‚ 2012). The main market of this company
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A Project on “PRODUCT PORTFOLIO & DEMAND ANALYSIS” Submittedinthe partial fulfilment forthe requirementof Theawardof degree of Mastersof ManagementStudies (MMS –II) Of MumbaiUniversity Submittedby Ms. Pooja Singh RollNo: 19 MMS–II Year:2013-14 Underthe guidanceof Prof. D.C. Kute ChanguKana ThakurInstituteof ManagementStudiesandResearch Plot–1&4‚Sector–11‚ Khanda Colony‚ NewPanvel(w) –410206 DECLARATION
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share. Samsung is one of the mobile brands that success in these years. Compare with 2010‚ Samsung mobile sales quantity is triple in this year and achieves HK market share number 1 in the 3rd quarter‚ defeated the tradition brand Nokia and the new mobile brand Apple. Facing on the large increment of demand in the market‚ the stock supply and the logistic system of Samsung Mobile must be under a high challenging situation; especially mobile is one of the fast moving products with a short product life
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SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY Under the guidance of Prof. B S Prakash PGPBA 2014-16 - By Team RANKS Radhika Odugoudar Anish Rawat Niharika Joshi Kiran Karpur Shreekarthik Shesha 1 B1412 B1401 B1411 B1405 B1415 Marketing Management Overview Product Definition Market Offering Elements 5 Product Levels Product Classification Product Differentiation DESIGN of Product Product & Brand Relationships Product Systems & Mixes Product Mix Length & Product Line
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Chapter 2: Analysis of marketing strategy (4 P’s) 2.1 Product Strategy 2.1.1 Product Classification Crocs Grace Heel is classified as consumer product. It bought by final consumers for personal consumption. Crocs Grace Heel is categorized as shopping product on consumer product. This product will be bought by consumers rarely‚ which consumers buy it for personal consumption as needed. Consumers are willing to buy it less frequently at a higher price. Grace Heel is only available at fewer purchase
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Activity 4: Colgate-Palmolive Case Study – Product and Pricing Strategy Gina L Lawrence MBAO209-MGT-541-A: Applied Marketing Management Indiana Wesleyan Instructor: Janis McFaul June 27‚ 2011 I have read and understand the plagiarism policy as outlined in the syllabus and the sections in the Student Bulletin relating to the IWU Honesty/Cheating Policy. By affixing this statement to the title page of my paper‚ I certify that I have not cheated or plagiarized in the process of completing
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PRODUCT STRATEGIES {draw:frame} When an organization introduces a product into a market they must ask themselves a number of questions. We must remember that marketing is fundamentally about providing the correct bundle of benefits to the end user‚ hence the saying “Marketing is not about providing products or services it is essentially about providing changing benefits to the changing needs and demands of the customer” For a more detailed analysis please refer to principles of marketing
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2.2Pricing Strategy Factors affecting pricing decision Kia Optima is one type of the oligopolistic competition market. It dominated by a small number of sellers‚ each seller is likely to be aware of the actions of the others. The prices might be uniform or not uniform to buyers. The price can be different at different places due to the reason of labor‚ resources‚ and taxes. Besides‚ there are few competitors include Toyota‚ Honda‚ and Hyundai. New Product Pricing Strategies Normally when
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innovative products are introduced or consumer tastes have changed. There is intense price cutting‚ and many more products are withdrawn from the market. Profits can be improved by reducing marketing spending and cost cutting. As sales decline‚ the firm has several options: * Maintain the product‚ possibly rejuvenating it by adding new features and finding new uses. * Harvest the product–reduce costs and continue to offer it‚ possibly to a loyal niche segment. * Discontinue the product‚ liquidating
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Customer-Segment Pricing Product-Form Pricing Image Pricing Channel Pricing Location Pricing Time Pricing Price Discrimination Differentiated Pricing Promotional Pricing Geographical Pricing (Cash‚ Countertrade‚ Barter) Changing Pricing Environment How Companies Price Understanding Pricing Consumer Psychology and Pricing Reference Prices Price-Quality Inferences Price Cues Survival Maximum Current Profit Maximum Market Share Selecting the Pricing Objective Maximum Market Skimming Product-Quality Leadership
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