ANALYSIS By Saqib Rizvi PGDM(Communications) Roll No.- 27 SIMSR Table of Contents… TOPIC | PAGE NUMBER | The beginning | 3 | Coca-Cola history | 3 | Coca-Cola worldwide and in India | 5 | Logo design | 6 | Slogans | 7 | Pricing | 7 | Targeting and segmentation | 8 | Positioning | 9 | An example of segmentation and positioning | 9 | Distribution System in India | 11 | Market share | 12 | Promotions | 13 | Swot analysis | 17 | Pestle analysis | 18 | BCG analysis
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2) How should Printup think about the segmentation of potential Metabical consumers? Who is the optimal target consumer? The book of Marketing Management defines “Market Segmentation” as the process of dividing the market into group(s) of similar consumers and selecting the most appropriate to serve. Eventually‚ the selected group will be called the target market. According to this definition and the case on hand‚ Printup must decide on the parameters according to which she should start the segmentation
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Coca-Cola was originally formulated in 1886 by John Pemberton in Atlanta‚ Georgia and then later acquired by Asa Candler. One of the most influential people in Coca-Cola ’s history was Robert Woodruff‚ who became CEO of the company in 1923‚ and later developed Coca-Cola ’s international business and was instrumental in cooperation with U.S. Armed Forces during WWII. Caleb Bradham‚ a North Carolina pharmacist‚ invented Pepsi in 1893. Like Coca-Cola‚ Pepsi developed a franchised bottling system in
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Experiment TITRATION OF A COLA PRODUCT The CCLI Initiative Computers in Chemistry Laboratory Instruction LEARNING OBJECTIVES The objective of this laboratory experiment is to determine the molar concentration of phosphoric acid in a cola product. BACKGROUND Titration is an analytical technique used to find the concentration of a known volume of unknown substance by adding a known concentration of a known substance. As the unknown and known substance react‚ we look for a "telltale" indication
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The public issue facing The Coca-Cola Company was its impact on availability and accessibility on water sources. A Public issue is mostly the one that affects a person’s day to day life. The traditional use of land by communities and farmers on a diverse scale of production becomes much more difficult when water sources are at risk. (Hwang & Steward‚ 2008). Water conservation had become a huge issue in India and all over the world. A decade ago Coca-Cola faced a major crisis in south India. The
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foreign colas boycott and pesticide allengations). Though most of the factors in the political environment are unpredictable and existed within the macroenvironment‚ steps could have been taken to anticipate and minimize the impact of the political risks. Coca-Cola could have worked with local partners and the host government. As “political sensitivity to foreign influences can be catastrophic – often driven by perception and not reality” (William Nobrega 2008) in India‚ PepsiCo and Coca-Cola could
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1. In the new Coke fiasco‚ how could Coca-Cola’s marketing research have been improved? Be specific. Coca-Cola’s marketing research could have been improved in many ways to help it reach success over Pepsi in the long run. Pepsi started off in the 70’s and 80’s with marketing campaigns like the “Pepsi Generation” and the “Pepsi Challenge” which really made Pepsi gain momentum on Coke. Coke could have done some research on this to determine some similar types of campaigns to compete with Pepsi. Coke
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Coca Cola SWOT analysis 2013 | Strengths | Weaknesses | 1. The best global brand in the world in terms of value ($77‚839 billion) 2. World’s largest market share in beverage 3. Strong marketing and advertising 4. Most extensive beverage distribution channel 5. Customer loyalty 6. Bargaining power over suppliers 7. Corporate social responsibility | 1. Significant focus on carbonated drinks 2. Undiversified product portfolio 3. High debt level due to acquisitions 4. Negative
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MKTS 7303 - PRINCIPLE OF STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT Cola Wars (Coke and Pepsi 2010) Case Study - Week 4 (S42166755) 1. Compare the competitive dynamics of the concentrate business to that of the bottling business? Why is the profitability so different? By using Five Forces Model by Michael Porter‚ it will shows competitive dynamics in the industry. Therefore‚ to define everything further this model will be used to do the comparison between concentrate business (CB) and bottling business (BB).
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IISc- Funded by MHRD -1- NPTEL Vinod Gupta School of Management Consumer Behavior MODULE 3 MARKET SEGMENTATION AND POSITIONING MODULE 3: MARKET SEGMENTATION AND POSITIONING ( 2 hours) 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 Aggregate Marketing and Market Segmentation Target Marketing Market Segmentation Alternatives available for Segmentation Basis for Segmentation Targeting Positioning Introduction: The traditional way of doing business was Mass Marketing which meant offering a standardized product to
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