Marketing Mix OUTLINE o INTRODUCTION o UNILEVER AT A GLANCE o STP STRATEGY Segmentation Targeting Positioning • 4 Ps o CONCLUSION UNILEVER AT A GLANCE Unilever is one of the world’s leading suppliers of fast-moving consumer goods. UNILEVER was founded in 1930 190 countries in which their products are sold 171‚000 employees at the end of the year 2011 €1 billion invested in R&D worldwide in 2011 CUSTOMER PARTNERSHIPS o Unilever has products for three markets: • FOOD • PERSONAL CARE
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Department ♦Planning department ♦Costing department ♦Finance department ♦Payment department ♦Cash office ♦Wages & salaries department ♦Business Support Department ♦Administration department Unilever Pakistan Ltd is a wholly owned subsidiary of Unilever Overseas Holding‚ UK‚ Unilever PLC (a company incorporated in the United Kingdom) Fundamentals of Organization We often begin to describe a firms Structure by looking at its Organization Chart. Organizational Chart:- The reporting
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Decade of Organizational Change at Unilever What did Unilever’s decentralized organizational structure make sense from the 1950s through the 1970s? Why did this structure start to create problems for the company in the 1980s. Discussion Question # 1 What was Unilever trying to do when it introduced a new structure based on business groups in the mid-1990s? Why do you think that this structure failed to cure Unilever’s ills? Discussion Question #2 In the 2000s Unilever has switched to a structure based
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Interactive Session 7 UNILEVER SEGURES ITS MOBILE DEVICES Unilever is a $54 billion global manufacturer and supplier of fast-moving consumer goods‚ including brands such as Q-Tips‚ Lipton tea‚ and Dove personal care products. It operates in 57 countries‚ with regional teams for Europe‚ the Americas‚ and Asia/Africa (including Australia.) Unilever also has teams for its Foods and Home and Personal Care products. This global giant is known for its ability to leverage products and brands throughout
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DATE: Karl Schmidt Jared Sessum Sustainable Tea at Unilever‚ Harvard Business School January 29‚ 2013 This memorandum addresses the following questions based on information found in the Harvard Business School case study on Unilever: Why did Unilever commit to sustainably source 100% of its tea? Has Rainforest Alliance certification been success for Unilever –why or why not? What should Unilever do with its tea business in India? Why has Unilever committed to sustainably source 100% of its agricultural
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TOWS Matrix Weaknesses 1. 1. Less Funding 2. 2. Higher Tuition 3. 3. Class Size 4. 4. Non-specialized 5. Curriculum 5. Foreign TA’s SO Strategies WO Strategies 1. Develop a hotel lab 1. Use funding to hire more experience (O2‚ O3‚ O4‚ S4‚ professors ()‚ )4‚ W3‚ W5) S1) Strengths Reputation PSHRS Multiple Campuses Experienced Faculty Café Laura Lab 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Opportunities Hospitality is Worldwide Field State Funding Location Opportunity for Expansion Demand for Hospitality
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Myriam Riedel‚ brand leader Out Of Home Company Context • On any given day‚ two billion people use Unilever products to look good‚ feel good and get more out of life. Our portfolio ranges from nutritionally balanced foods to indulgent ice creams‚ affordable soaps‚ luxurious shampoos and everyday household care products. We produce world-leading brands including Lipton‚ Dove‚ Carte d’Or‚ Skip • Unilever is the leader in the ice cream category on the In Home and Out Of Home business with brands like
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UNILEVER Everyday 150 million people buy a unilever product to feed themselves or clean themselves or their homes. Employing over 206‚000 people in over 100 countries and 2000 alone in uk achieving an annual sales of about 900 million pounds in UK‚ unilever today is one of the largest international company today. Like many companies even unilever has faced its ups and downs. it was established in the 1885 and faced many difficulties until the end of second world war‚ even though in spread in fragments
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------------------------------------------------- MARKETING: Group 1 ------------------------------------------------- Case: Chandon‚ Pierre (2004). Unilever in Brazil: Marketing Strategies for Low-income Consumers (Question 1 a & b) a) Discuss whether marketing and branding can create value for poor consumers. Marketing is the performance of activities that seek to accomplish organisations objectives by anticipating customer or client needs and directing a flow of need satisfying
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SIA SWOT TOWS SFA STUDIES Strength Young Fleet Geographical diversification Strong Brand reputation Self-sustainable business model Bold and prudent management Highly competitive human resource Effective distribution channel – CRS - ABACUS Weakness No government subsidies Short of route network Too much service classification and pricey Opportunity Open Skies – government agreement between countries‚ bilateral or multilateral Strategic alliance Growth of air passenger service
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