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marketing 300

marketing 300. discussion section. Announcements?. agenda. Evaluations Exam Quiz Promotions Skimming and Penetration Pricing. Evaluations. About the exam…. Some, um, minor changes. More questions What’s on the exam Most of exam is not cumulative

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marketing 300

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  1. marketing 300 discussion section

  2. Announcements?

  3. agenda • Evaluations • Exam • Quiz • Promotions • Skimming and Penetration Pricing

  4. Evaluations

  5. About the exam… • Some, um, minor changes. • More questions • What’s on the exam • Most of exam is not cumulative • Questions on targeting, segmenting, positions, life cycles are fair game • Attend lecture!

  6. Quiz Trade shows are a sales promotion device usually aimed at promoting products or services to: a) Final consumers. b) Business/industrial customers. c) A firm's own employees. d) All of the above. e) None of the above.

  7. Quiz In total, advertising costs less than sales promotion. • True • False

  8. What would you do? If you were presented with the following situations, how would you, as a manager, respond?

  9. Razor Blades Improved razor blade that customers aren’t motivated to buy • Who is your target, and what is your goal?

  10. Razor Blades • Why might people be uninterested? • People don’t know that it’s improved • Improvement isn’t really an improvement that anyone cares about (improvement does not offer a benefit) • Improved product is still inferior to another product • What might make someone interested?

  11. Razor Blades • Coupons • Sampling • Aisle displays explaining benefits • More market research?

  12. Shaving Cream Snack Food A grocery chain doesn’t think there’s demand for your new edible shaving cream and so won’t stock it

  13. Shaving Cream Snack Food • What is the problem, and what is your goal? • Who do you direct your efforts towards?

  14. Shaving Cream Snack Food Store (push strategy): • Free product for each case sold (effectively a discount that might get passed on to end user) • Pay stocking allowance (slotting fee) • Help set up sampling area in stores

  15. Shaving Cream Snack Food End User (pull strategy): • Advertising in various media • Couponing • Samples in mail (if possible) YUM.

  16. Shaving Cream A competitor (not you!) wants to test market a new type of shaving cream, and wants to track sales to fine-tune its marketing mix. • In this situation, what are your firm’s goals, and who is your target? • How might you achieve those goals through promotion?

  17. Shaving Cream • Special deals that cause consumers to stockpile your stuff (ex. buy 1 get 2 free) • Big display to draw attention towards your product (need retailer’s assistance for this!) • Others?

  18. Thinking harder… • When competitor tries to enter the market, is your goal • …to maintain your market share by offering clear benefits • …or to disrupt competitor’s entry through “dirty tricks?” • …or “anything it takes?” • What are ethical dimensions of this? • What about the ethics from a consumer’s perspective?`

  19. Some Might Say…

  20. What happens when you run out of ideas 1901 1998 1971

  21. What happens when you run out of ideas 2003 2008 2006

  22. the bleeding edge

  23. Pricing Strategies

  24. January 2007: $599 • March 2007: $399

  25. Oops “I have received hundreds of emails from iPhone customers who are upset about Apple dropping the price of iPhone by $200 two months after it went on sale… We have decided to offer every iPhone customer a $100 store credit…” – Steve Jobs EPIC FAIL …OR IS IT?

  26. Skimming • What is “skimming”? • Selling high to first adopters • “Skimming the cream” • What kind of situation might this be good for? • Small number of people willing to pay a lot • Few substitutes • If you don’t know shape of demand curve • What is the objective of skimming? • Profit-maximization

  27. Skimming

  28. Skimming

  29. Skimming

  30. Skimming

  31. Skimming

  32. Skimming

  33. Skimming

  34. Skimming • Other examples?

  35. Penetration Pricing • What is “penetration pricing”? • Selling cheap to whole market • What kind of situation might this be good for? • Large potential market / high potential sales volume • Large potential competitor base • Need economies of scale • What is the objective? • Expansion of market share • Possibly profit-maximization

  36. Penetration Pricing Apple Newton March 1993: $1000 “discontinued” PalmPilot March 1996: $250 1,000,000+ sold

  37. Penetration Pricing • Other examples?

  38. Discussion Question What technique would you use for each of the following, and why?

  39. Skimming or Penetration? A new-fangled jet-powered unicycle? • Skimming is ideal • A new technology that no one else offers • Small group of people will likely want to be first ones to get it (first adopters) • Price competition likely to follow

  40. Skimming or Penetration? Mysterious soft drink that causes all skin problems to vanish • Skimming • A few people will really want this • Cost-benefit will make it worth it to buy even if expensive • Penetration • Large potential market • More people will buy if perceived as good value

  41. Skimming or Penetration? DVD of very popular, critically acclaimed movie • Skimming • A few fans will want it more than general public • Penetration • Skimming approach might be risky • High level of competition already

  42. Skimming or Penetration? A new piece of musical gear • Skimming • If device does something completely new or unusual • If there’s a market of “gearheads” who always rush out and get the latest gizmos • Penetration • If there are many competitors whose products do similar things • If you can use as a tool to build dependence on other product

  43. Skimming or Penetration? A new children’s toy • Skimming • If toy is very unique • If having “popular brand” is important for kids • Penetration • If many competitors • If toy is not unique or brand is not important

  44. have a good weekend

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