1 / 42

Setting Product Strategy

Setting Product Strategy. At the heart of a great brand is a great product. Product. Anything that can be offered to a market to satisfy a want or need. Five Hotel (Product) Levels . Core benefits—rest and sleep Basic product—bed, bathroom, towels, desk, dresser, and closet

talon
Download Presentation

Setting Product Strategy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Setting Product Strategy

  2. At the heart of a great brand is a great product

  3. Product Anything that can be offered to a market to satisfy a want or need.

  4. Five Hotel (Product) Levels • Core benefits—rest and sleep • Basic product—bed, bathroom, towels, desk, dresser, and closet • Expected product—clean bed, fresh towels, working lamps, relative degree of quiet • Augmented product—cable TV • Potential product—high speed internet connection

  5. Consumer Goods Classification Convenience Shopping Specialty Unsought Emergency

  6. Industrial Goods Classification Materials and parts Capital items Supplies/ business services

  7. Product form Features Performance Conformance Durability Reliability Reparability Style Design Ordering ease Delivery Installation Customer training Customer consulting Maintenance Product Differentiation

  8. Product Line Analysis Core product Basic computers Staples Faster CPUs Specialties Digital moviemaking Convenience Items Monitors, Printers

  9. Line Stretching Down-Market Stretch Up-Market Stretch Two-Way Stretch

  10. Line Filling

  11. Product-Mix Pricing • Product-line pricing (pricing points) • Optional-feature pricing (electric window controls) • Captive-product pricing (razor and the razor blades) • Two-part pricing (fixed free plus a variable cost—telephone minimum plus long distance) • By-product pricing (after mass of product produced) • Product-bundling pricing (group of products at a reduced price of products sold separately)

  12. Product Line Pricing

  13. Two-Part Pricing

  14. Co-branding

  15. Ingredient Branding

  16. Packaging: The 5th P All the activities of designing and producing the container for a product.

  17. Packaging has been influenced by… Self-service (supermarkets) Consumer affluence (willing to pay for convenience) Company/brand image (recognition of company or brand) Innovation opportunity

  18. Innovations in Packaging

  19. Functions of Labels Identifies Grades Describes Promotes

  20. Warranties and Guarantees

  21. Designing and Managing Services

  22. IBM has moved from a goods business to a service business

  23. Service Any act of performance that one party can offer another that is essentially intangible and does not result in the ownership of anything; its production may or may not be tied to a physical product.

  24. Service Sectors Government (courts, hospitals, etc.) Private Nonprofit (museums, churches, etc.) Business (airlines, banks, etc.) Retail (cashiers, clerks, etc) Manufacturing (accountants, legal staff, etc.)

  25. General Motors’ OnStar Service

  26. Categories of Service Mix Pure tangible good—soap, salt Good w/ accompanying services—cars and computers Hybrid--restaurants Service w/ accompanying goods—airlines serve food and drinks Pure service—baby sitting

  27. Service Distinctions • Equipment-based (vending machines) or people-based (window washing) • Service processes (fast-food, buffet) • Client’s presence required (Brain surgery) or not (car repair) • Personal needs (personal needs) or business needs (business service) • Objectives (profit or non-profit) and ownership (private or public)

  28. Continuum of Evaluation for Different Types of Products

  29. Distinctive Characteristics of Services Intangibility Inseparability Variability Perishability

  30. Mayo Clinic’s Tangible Cues

  31. Blue Man Group includes 33 different performers

  32. How to Increase Quality Control Invest in good hiring and training procedures Standardize the service-performance process Monitor customer satisfaction

  33. Demand side Differential pricing Shift demand from peak to off-peak Nonpeak demand cultivate Complementary services Cocktail lounges Reservation systems Manage demand levels Supply side Part-time employees Hired to serve peak demand Peak-time efficiency Perform only essential tasks during peak periods Increased consumer participation Consumer fill out their own medical records Shared services Several hospitals can share medical-equipment purchases Facilities for future expansion Buy surrounding land for later development Matching Demand and Supply

  34. Consumer-Friendly Services

  35. Factors Leading to Customer Switching Behavior • Pricing—high, increases, unfair, deceptive • Inconvenience—locations/hours • Core Service Failure—billing errors • Service Encounter Failures--unresponsive • Response to Service Failure—negative • Competition—found better service • Ethical Problems—cheat, unsafe • Involuntary Switching—provider closed

  36. Gaps that Cause Unsuccessful Service Delivery • Gap between consumer expectation and management perception • Gap between management perception and service-quality specifications • Gap between service-quality specifications and service delivery • Gap between service delivery and external communications • Gap between perceived service and expected service

  37. Determinants of Service Quality Reliability-dependably and accurately Responsiveness-prompt service Assurance-trust and confidence Empathy-caring Tangibles-appearance

  38. Best Practices • Strategic Concept—customer obsessed • Top-Management Commitment—service quality • High Standards-reliable • Self-Service Technologies • Monitoring Systems • Satisfying Customer Complaints • Satisfying Employees

  39. Customer Importance and Performance Ratings for an Auto Dealership

  40. Developing Brand Strategies for Services Choosing Brand Elements—logos, symbols Establishing Image Dimensions--associations Devising Branding Strategy—price and quality

  41. Customer Worries Failure frequency (reliability) Downtime (dependability) Out-of-pocket costs (maintenance and repair)

  42. Marketing Discussion • Colleges and universities can be classified as service organizations. How can you apply the marketing principles developed in this chapter to your school? Do you have any advice as to how it could become a better service marketer?

More Related