LONDON SCHOOL OF COMMERCE COLOMBO CAMPUS SRI LANKA MBA FOR EXECUTIVES MODULE ASSIGNMENT : MARKETING MANAGEMENT Student Name: MAHESH UDUGAM KORALALAGE Student Registration No.: 0030nlnl0912 Module Lecturer: Khaldoun Dia-Eddine Module Tutor: Wimarshana Wijesuriya Date Submitted: 25.10.2012 Total Word Count: 2‚121 (Excluding references – Annex 1) “Gillette Fusion ProGlide Power” Razor in Sri Lanka 1. Executive Summary Gillete is the dominant market
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The question in the case is whether Kim should spend the fresh (2nd round) VC financing in Marketing and scale up the business or should focus the resources on fine tuning the existing product. Our recommendation is that the company should allocate around 70% of $4mn in marketing spend and 30% in product development and fine tuning the existing one. This recommendation is primarily based on the fact that the company should maximize the first mover advantage and develop barriers to entry by reducing
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1) How has marketing management change in recent years? We can say with some confidence that the marketplace isn’t what it used to be. It is dramatically different from what it was even 10 years ago. Today‚ major and sometimes interlinking‚ societal forces have created new marketing behaviors‚ opportunities‚ and challenges. Here are 12 key ones.• Network information technology• Globalization • Deregulation • Privatization • Heightened competition • Industry convergence • Retail transformation•
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of products and services from business to business and from business to consumers through the Internet. The biggest lures of e-commerce of consumers are the convenience of having round-the-clock access to the virtual store and the ability to engage in comparative shopping at minimal cost and effort. Through e0commerce‚ sellers can sharply reduce their cost of executing sales and procuring inputs‚ reformulate supply chains and logistics and redefine customer relationship management. 2.) Why are
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strong need that cannot be satisfied by an existing product 4. Declining demand 5. Irregular demand 6. Full demand 7. Overfull demand – more would like to buy than can be satisfied 8. Unwholesome demand – attraction to products with undesirable social consequences Key Customer Markets - Consumer‚ Business‚ Global‚ and Nonprofit and Governmental Types of Needs – Stated‚ Real‚ Unstated‚ Delight‚ Secret Types of Marketing Environments Task - includes the actors engaged in
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The five PMLC models according to Wysocki are as follows: 1. Linear PMLC model 2. Incremental PMLC model 3. Iterative PMLC model 4. Adaptive PMLC model 5. Extreme PMLC model Linear PMLC Model: This is one of the Traditional Project Management (TPM) method‚ it consist of the five process group‚ each performed once in the sequence: Scoping> Planning > Launching > Monitoring and Controlling> Closing. The final deliverable is not released until the closing process group is executed. (Wysocki‚ 2009:345)
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behavior. Segmentation aims to match groups of purchasers with the same set of needs and buyer behavior. The family life cycle is a model that was originality identified by Wells and Gubar (1966)They identified nine life‐cycle stages-which try to depict the consumption behavior of consumers ‚ from bachelor to retired solitary survivor. The basic assumption underlying the family life-cycle approach is that most households pass through an orderly progression of stages‚ each with its own characteristic
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Marketing ManageMent hamed imad Salah Kevin PhiliP Kotler Keller hassan Baalbaki Shamma Pearson Arab World Editions — Business & Economics The Arab world’s location between three continents ensures its place at the centre of an increasingly integrated global economy‚ as distinctive as any business culture. We think learning should be as dynamic‚ relevant‚ and engaging as the business environment. Our new Arab World Editions for Business & Economics provide this uniquely
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CTR CONTEMPORARY TOURISM REVIEWS Tourism Area Life Cycle R.W. Butler Emeritus Professor Strathclyde Business School‚ University of Strathclyde Contemporary Tourism Reviews Series Editor: Chris Cooper (G) http://www.goodfellowpublishers.com Published by Goodfellow Publishers Limited‚ Woodeaton‚ Oxford‚ OX3 9TJ Copyright © Goodfellow Publishers Ltd 2011 All rights reserved by Goodfellow Publishers Limited. The text of this publication‚ or any part thereof‚ may not be reproduced
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Brand Positioning Submitted by: Rishi Dewan PGDM-Marketing (DCP) IMT Ghaziabad Contents Introduction 2 Process of Positioning 3 Strategies of Positioning 5 Positioning by Product attributes 5 Positioning by Quality 5 Positioning by Price 6 Positioning by User Category 7 Positioning by Use 8 Positioning by Competitor 9 Positioning by Celebration 10 Positioning Errors: 11 1. Under-positioning 11 2. Over Positioning 11 3. Confused positioning 12 4
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