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
Premium Brand management Product management Marketing
Product Differentiation Definition: Development or incorporation of attributes (such as benefits‚ price‚ quality‚ styling‚ service‚ etc.) that a product’s intended customers perceive to be different and desirable. Advertising and promotion of a product is based on its differentiating characteristics. Source: http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/product-differentiation.html Today‚ the market is crowded with similar brands‚ clamoring for the attention of customers. In order for their
Premium Brand Brand management Advertising
Depth of the Product Lines | Width of the Product Mix | | Carbonated Soft Drink | Isotonic drink | Juice | Tea | Mineral Water | | Pepsi | 7up Revive Isotonic Original | Tropicana Twister Orange | Lipton Ice Lemon Tea | Bleu | | Pepsi Light | 7up Revive Isotonic Lime Burst | Tropicana Twister Blackcurrant | Lipton Green Tea Lemon | | | Pepsi Twist | Excel8 Isotonic | Tropicana Twister Lychee | Lipton Tea 9 | | | 7up | Gatorade Grapefruit Drink | Tropicana Twister Apple | Lipton Red
Premium Soft drink United States Tea
rules covering how a good or service is promoted 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
Premium Marketing
NEW PRODUCT LINE DEVELOPMENT Dark Chocolate with Omega 3 Masterand: Onaca Andra Maria Anul I FQM -2009- TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Introduction……………………………………………………..………………………3 1.1. Basic Product Development Process Flow………………………….………………………..3 1.2. Challenges in Today’s Environment…………………………...…………………………….4 1.3. About Company…………………………………….…………………………………………6 2. New Product Development Process……………………………………………………9
Premium Chocolate
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION AND MARKET SEGMENTATION AS ALTERNATIVE MARKETING STRATEGIES WENDELL R. SMITH Alderson & Sessions decade the 1930’s‚ the work of D URING theRobinsonofand ofChamberlin resulted in a revitalization economic theory. While classical and neoclassical theory provided a useful framework for economic analysis‚ the theories of perfect competition and pure monopoly had become inadequate as explanations of the contemporary business scene. The theory of perfect competition assumes homogeneity
Premium Marketing
Products Liability 1. Construct a fact pattern [an example] to clearly delineate: a. A Manufacturing Defect: A car’s braking system that does not work properly and causes the driver to get into an accident. b. A Design Defect: A type of sunglasses that fail to protect the eyes from ultraviolet rays. c. A Marketing Defect: Prescription drugs advertised as “virtually non-toxic‚” “safe‚” and “free of significant side effects” when they are not. They failed to state
Free Product liability Tort Strict liability
Success factors in Product Innovation Success Factors in Product Innovation: The Case Study of Savola by: Salma Nader Abbass Hussein Bachelor Thesis Submitted to the Innovation management department at the Faculty of Management and Technology German University in Cairo Student registration number: 7-4445 Date: 8-6-2009 Supervisor: Dr. Hadya Hamdy i Success factors in Product Innovation Abstract We are living in a world that customers are becoming increasingly sophisticated and
Premium Innovation
Product * A good‚ idea‚ method‚ information‚ object or service created as a result of a process and serves a need or satisfies a want. It has a combination of tangible and intangible attributes (benefits‚ features‚ functions‚ uses) that a seller offers a buyer for purchase. The Product Concept * This orientation holds that consumers will favor those products that offer the most quality‚ performance‚ or innovative features. * A philosophy that a good product creates its own market‚
Premium Marketing Product management
1. Introduction A significant part of economic theory focuses on the assumption of a representative consumer buying a homogeneous good. For example‚ think of the standard Bertrand and Cournot models of oligopoly. Consumers only care about the prices in the market and decide how much of a good to buy and from which firm in order to maximize their utility (given a budget constraint). We know that price competition is fiercer than quantity competition and this result is described by the so called
Premium Economics Marketing Competition