THE 8 PARTS OF SPEECH 1. Noun- something you can see‚ touch‚ taste‚ hears‚ smell‚ or have. Perform actions‚ complete actions or be the objects of actions. A noun that performs an action is called a subject. EX.) John ran. Nouns that complete actions or have actions done to them are called objects. EX.) John visited Grandma. John gave Grandma a pie. Objects or prepositions are nouns that follow prepositions. EX.) John dropped the pie on the floor. On is the preposition and floor is the object
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value. It does this in 2 ways‚ within the firm and outside the firm. Creating value within the firm At the Corporate/business unit level At this level‚ marketing creates value through corporate culture of customer first. This is then reinforced and measured so that it can transform from only values to action. It is measured by tools such as consumer research‚ customer visits and market orientation assessments. At the product level This is done by analyzing how a product/service should
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Levels of product Core product The core product is not the tangible physical product. We can’t touch it. That’s because the core product is the benefit of the product that makes it valuable to us. So with the car example‚ the benefit is convenience the ease at which we can go where we like‚ when we want to. Another core benefit is speed since we can travel around relatively quickly. Actual product The actual product is the tangible‚ physical product. We can get some use out of it. Again with the
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deficiencies Micronutrient malnutrition is recognised as one of the most serious obstacles to human development and survival. Nowhere is this more evident than in sub-Saharan Africa. The good news‚ however‚ is that many countries have made significant progress in ensuring that women and children have access to essential vitamins and minerals to combat this “hidden hunger”. Malnutrition is still a major underlying cause of child mortality in Africa‚ where one in five children will never live to
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Case Study: Electra Products Summary: The Company faces the distrust between the departments‚ the staff enthusiasm reduce the decline in market share‚ the low product innovation‚ reduced efficiency and other issues. Then Martin Griffin proposed a suggestion—the new empowerment campaign. But after Martin proclaimed a new era of trust and cooperation at Elecatra Products‚ Barbara’s friend Harry expressed doubts. He said: Garbage like empowerment isn’t a substitute for hard work and a little faith
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The current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/0309-0566.htm EJM 44‚7/8 Consumer responses to brand extensions: a comprehensive model ´ ´ Eva Martınez and Jose M. Pina ´ Facultad de Ciencias Economicas y Empresariales‚ The University of Zaragoza‚ Zaragoza‚ Spain Abstract Purpose – This paper aims to understand the reciprocal spill-over effects of brand extensions by testing a comprehensive model that gathers both the brand extension evaluation
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fairness cream for men among male grooming products. As it turned out‚ men contributed significantly to consumption of HUL’s fairness product Fair & Lovely and even other fairness products. That shouldn’t be surprising as we live in a society which is obsessed with fair skin‚ just as the West is preoccupied with getting the perfect tan. This phenomenon was not restricted to women and‚ unknown to marketers‚ had influenced Indian man as well. However in this case‚ HUL failed to hunt the treasure first
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to potential consumers. A typical product policy created by a business for a manufactured product might attempt to manage how the item will be perceived by its target market and could also contain information about how durable the product is. Product policy covers product planning and development‚ product line‚ product-mix‚ product branding or identification‚ product style‚ product positioning and production packaging. It includes product diversification. PRODUCT POLICY
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and techniques of getting people to exchange their cash for your product. It is not concerned with the values that the exchange is all about. And it does not‚ as marketing invariable does‚ view the entire business process as consisting of a tightly integrated effort to discover‚ create‚ arouse and satisfy customer needs." In other words‚ marketing has less to do with getting customers to pay for your product as it does developing a demand for that product and fulfilling the customer’s needs Market consists
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------------------------------------------------- Product management From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Marketing | Key concepts | Product • Pricing Distribution • Service • Retail Brand management Account-based marketing Marketing ethics Marketing effectiveness Market research Market segmentation Marketing strategy Marketing management Market dominance | Promotional content | Advertising • Branding • Underwriting Direct marketing • Personal Sales Product placement • Publicity Sales promotion • Sex
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