(Cheryl) Li | 387283 | 4. | Putri Yusman | | Consumer Behaviour- Case Analysis Snapple Snapple is an American-based beverage brand that focuses distinctively in producing juices and tea. During the late 1980s‚ Snapple gained prominent share in a highly competitive market and became the leading brand in the alternative beverage industry. However following the attempts of several acquisitions‚ the volatile brand reacts as there are a series of sales declinations. These declining sales can be analysed
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Caso Snapple ¿Recuerdas los años 80‚ Philip? - Obvio. Dios odiaba los 80. - ¿No le gustaba nada de los 80? Le gustaba el jugo Snapple. - ¿A Dios le gustaba el jugo Snapple? Si‚ pero no todos los sabores. Episodio de Chicago Hope‚ serie de televisión. Arnie Greeberg‚ Leonard Marsh y Hyman Goleen eran amigos desde el colegio. En 1972 formaron una empresa y vendían jugos naturales de manzana a tiendas de alimentos naturales en Greenwich Village bajo la marca de Snapple y a fines de los
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# 3: Snapple I. Diagnostic symptoms The most critical and diagnostic facts in this case primarily revolve around Snapple’s overall image as perceived by consumers. The image is what built this brand into a success and later pushed it into decline. Five most diagnostic/alarming symptoms: 1. Mismanagement of established image. (Deighton‚ 2003:5). • Quaker intended on making the Snapple brand into big business in a short amount of time much like it did with the Gatorade brand.
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Product: The Snapple product line is vast and spans many different flavors‚ many of which were unpopular. Only a handful of flavors held the product afloat‚ this in effect was due to the premium pricing of the product. The product in itself was marketed with the accompanying mantra of “100% Natural” and proved to be quite popular among a very difficult to define market segment. Snapple was neither defined as a “lifestyle” brand or a “fashion” brand‚ it was somewhere in the middle‚ generally grouped
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Case Analysis: Snapple Steals Share I. Point of View This case study examines the critical decisions to be made by Arnold Greenberg‚ Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Snapple. The point of view of the latter was chosen since his role is increasingly important to the company’s ability to execute its strategy. The chief operating officer’s main concern is to come up with strategies that will drive operational excellence and high performance in the operation of the business. His
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BUSI 410 Business Analytics Module 22: Revitalizing Dell 1 Last lecture • Home Depot revenue (forecasting) • Using correlation to choose lag • Using Durbin-Watson statistic to test missing drivers • Out-of-sample model validation 2 Dell’s success strategies • Direct model (marketing) – “Cut out the middlemen.” – NC born Harlem drug lord Frank Lucas • Mass customization (design) – Modularity – Component commonality – Postponement • Lean manufacturing (operations) – Just-in-time
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Snapple case 1. severity The severity of this of this problem is showing in exhibit 1. Where total case sales of the first 5 months of 1992 were 6‚8 million the sales of the first 5 months of 1993 were 15‚3 million cases. So that’s an increase of 225% in sales. And when you look at figure 1 you can really see the severity of the problem. Because normally the first five months are only 27‚91% of the total sales in a year. So normal sales volume would be 24‚3 million cases. But if the increase
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Dr Pepper Snapple External Analysis * Bargaining Power of suppliers – Medium The switching cost to find other suppliers of commodities to produce beverage is not high‚ and those suppliers are not concentrated or differentiated. However‚ the recession significantly increased commodity prices‚ and DPS has very little power in affecting the prices they pay for these commodities. * Bargaining Power of buyers - Medium Individual buyers do not put high pressure on DPS‚ but large buyers like
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How would you characterize Snapple’s brand image? What are the sources of its Brand equity? Snapple’s brand is a customer-based brand. Snapple is the first company to produce a complete line of all-natural beverages and they were “made from the best stuff on earth.” In 1980‚ Snapple created the non-carbonated ready-to-drink beverages with fruit juices and iced teas. Snapple brand equity: Customers love Snapple The name of “Snapple” is attractive Quirky Logo and packaging Word-of mouth advertising
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Snapple Case Study Despite the fact that many small startup premium fruit drink companies stayed small or even disappeared during the period from 1972 to 1993‚ Snapple was able to flourish. A large part of Snapple avoiding the fate of these other companies can be attributed to how successful it was in utilizing the four Ps of marketing‚ especially product and promotion. Of the four Ps‚ the marketing mix typically starts with the product‚ which is one area where Snapple separated itself from
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