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• Product
• Price
• Place
• Promotion
• Refers to the goods and services offered by
the organization.
• Consumers purchased products because it
satisfies one or more of their needs.
• When consumers are paying, they are not
paying for the tangible products, but for the
benefit it will provide.
• Thus, product can be described as a bundle
of benefits which marketers offered to the
consumer for price.
It is anything that can be offered to a
mark for attention, acquisition, use, or
consumptions and that might satisfy a
want or need.
Ipod Shuffle Iphone & Ipad
Form of product that consist of activities,
benefits, or satisfaction offered for sale that
are essentially intangible and do not result
in ownership of anything.
Hotel Service Dermatologist
Foot Spa
Banking Service
• Pure tangible goods – Physical items
that can be touched and seen.
• Tangible goods with accompanying
services - It consists of a tangible good accompanied
by one or more services. These types of offering are more
dependent on quality and available services such as
delivery time, after-sale services, warrantees and
guarantees, etc.
Refrigerator
Car Aircon
• Hybrid offers – consist of equal parts of
goods and services.
• Services with accompanying minor
goods – It consists of major service along with
additional services or supportive goods.
• Pure Services- represent the highest
level of customer contact.
• Total Customer Experience-
“Experiences are memorable while some
products and services are not.”
– problem-solving service,
or core benefit that consumers are really
buying when they obtain a product or
service.
a. Quality Level
b. Features
c. Design
d. Brand Name
e. Packaging
– includes any
additional consumer services and benefits
built around for the core and actual products.
When developing products, marketers must:
1. Identify the core consumer needs that the
product will satisfy.
2. Design the actual product.
3. Find ways to augment the product.
• Consumer Products
• Industrial Products
• Marketable Entities
 bought by final consumers for personal
consumption.
• Convenience Products
• Shopping Products
• Specialty Products
• Unsought Products
Consumer products and services that the
consumer usually buys frequently,
immediately, and with a minimum of
comparison and buying effort. They are
usually low priced, and marketers place
them in many outlets to make them readily
available when customers need them.
Consumer products that the consumer,
in the process of selection and
purchase, characteristically compares
on such bases as suitability, quality,
price, and style. These products are
usually distributed through fewer
outlets but have deeper sales support.
Unique characteristics or brand
identification. Buyers do not normally
compare specialty products; instead,
they only invest the time to reach the
outlet that carries the goods.
Consumer either does not know about or
knows about but does not normally think of
buying. These products require a lot of
promotional support to be successful.
 Bought by individuals and organization for
further processing or for use of conducting
a business. Purpose of purchase is the chief
distinction between industrial products and
consumer products.
• Material and parts
• Capital items
• Supplies and services
• Most are sold directly to the industrial users
• These products aid in the buyer’s
production or operations, including
installations and accessory equipment.
• These could be operational or repair
and maintenance. Many of these
services are supplied under contract.
 Are entities other than products and
services that marketing covers.
• Organization marketing
• Person Marketing
• Place Marketing
• Idea Marketing
• Activities undertaken to create, maintain,
or change attitudes and behavior of target
audiences towards an organization.
• A major tool to market organization is
corporate image advertising.
• Activities undertaken to create,
maintain or change attitudes or
behavior toward particular person.
• Activities undertaken to create, maintain, or
change attitudes towards a particular place.
 Business Site Marketing
Tourism Marketing
• It is the marketing of social ideas.
• It includes the design, implementation, and
control of programs seeking to increase the
acceptability of social idea, cause, or
practice within targeted groups.
Product
Attributes
Branding Packaging Labeling
Product
Support
Services
Developing a product or service
involves defining the benefits that it
will offer.
1. Product Quality
2. Product Features
3. Product Style and Design
 Ability of the product to perform its
functions. It has two dimensions: level and
consistency.
• Quality level
• Performance Quality
• Product Consistency or Conformance
• Return on Quality
• Improve customer satisfaction and value
It helps to differentiate the product
from those of the competition.
Another way to add distinctiveness. It
is the process of designing a product’s
style and function.
a. Style – appearance of a product.
b. Design – heart of the product. It
contributes to the product’s usefulness
as well as its looks.
• Brand – is a name, sign, symbol, or design
that identifies the maker or seller of the
product or service.
Buyer
• It helps buyers to identify the
product that might benefit them.
• It tells the buyer something about
quality and value.
Seller
• Make it easier for the sellers to process
order and track down problems.
• It provide legal protection for unique
product features.
• It promotes loyalty and helps in
segmenting markets.
• Higher brand loyalty
• Name awareness
• Perceived quality
• Strong brand associations
• Patents, trademarks, channel
relationships
Powerful brand names command
strong consumer preference.
It is a very valuable asset.
1. High consumer awareness and loyalty
2. Greater ease in launching brand extensions
because of high brand credibility
3. A good defense against fierce price
competition
4. Belief in being the company’s most enduring
asset
Brand
Name
Selection
Brand
Sponsor
Brand
Strategy
It should suggest something about the
product’s benefits and qualities.
It should be easy to pronounce, recognize,
and remember.
It should be distinctive.
It should be extendible.
It should translate easily into foreign
languages.
It should be capable of registration and
legal protection.
• Manufacturer's Brand or National
Brand- brand created and owned by
the producer of a product or service.
• Private Brand or distributor or store
brand- brand created and owned by a
reseller of a product or service.
• Licensed Brand- company sells it output
under another brand name.
• Co-branding- occurs when two companies
go together and manufacture one product.
It is the practice of using the established
brand names of two different companies on
the same product.
Advantages
• Create broader customer appeal and
greater brand equity.
• Allow a company to expand its existing
brand into a category it might
otherwise have difficulty entering
alone.
Disadvantages
• Complex legal contracts and licenses
are involve.
• Coordination efforts are often difficult.
• Trust is essential between partners.
• The Battle of the Brands – the competition
between manufacturer's and private
brand. It causes resellers to have
advantages, they charge manufacturer's
slotting fees.
• Slotting fees- payments demanded by
retailers from producer before they will
accept new products and find slots for
them on the shelves.
1. Introduce Line-extensions – Existing
brand names are extended to new forms,
sizes, and flavors of an existing product
category.
a. Meet consumer desires for variety
b. Meet excess manufacturing capacity
c. Simply command more shelf space
2. Introduce Brand Extension – Existing
brand names are extended to new or
modified product categories.
a. They help a company enter new
product categories more easily.
b. They aid in new product recognition.
c. They save on advertising cost.
3. Introduce Multi-brands – new brand names
are introduce in the same product categories.
a. They gave more shelf space.
b. They offer several brands to capture “brand
switchers”.
c. It helps to develop healthy competition
within the organization.
d. Each brand can have a separate following.
4. Introduce New Brands - new brand names in
new categories are introduced.
a. They help move away from a brand that
is failing.
b. They can get new brands in new
categories by corporate acquisitions.
c. Weaker brand weeded out and resources
are focused achieving number one or two
market share position.
Is the activity of designing and
producing the container or wrapper for
a product.
Traditionally, packaging decisions are
based on cost and production factors.
Now, it has promotional value.
a. Establish packaging concept
b. Decide on specific elements of the
package
c. Tie together elements to support the
positioning and marketing strategy.
 Part of Packaging and consists of printed
information appearing on or with the
package.
Functions
1. It identifies the product or brand.
2. It describes several things about the product.
3. It promote the product through attractive
graphics.
• There are numerous laws enacted to
regulate labeling and protect the
public.
• The aspects of nit pricing, open dating
and nutritional labeling have effects on
labeling practices.
Services that augment actual products.
• Good customer service is good for
business.
• Monitor customer complaints.
• Work at designing products that need-
less service.
• Determine the best way to deliver
product support services.
• Set up strong customer service
departments.
• One of the keys to successful internet
marketing is to have excellent support
services.
1. Survey customers
2. Assess cost of providing desired
services.
3. Develop a package of services to
delight customers and yield profit to
the company.
Areas of Concern
• Acquiring or dropping products
• Patents protection
• Product quality and safety
• Product warranties
• A group of products that are closely related
because they function in similar manner.
• They are sold to the same group.
• Marketed through the same type of outlet.
• Fall within given price ranges.
• Tend to lengthen over time.
Product line length- number of items in
the product line. As new products are
added to the line, costs begin to rise.
Product line stretching- increasing the
product line by lengthening it beyond its
current range.
a. Downward Stretch- Occurs when the company
moves from the high end of the market to lower
end.
1. Faster growth is occurring at the lower end.
2. The quality image established at the upper
end can be moved downward.
3. They need a low product to fill a hole.
4. A retaliation against attack on their upper
end product.
b. Upward Stretch- This is done when companies
at the lower end of the market want to enter the
higher end.
1. They are attracted by faster growth rates
or higher margins at the upper end.
2. They may want to position themselves
as a full-line company.
c. Two-way Stretch- Occurs when
companies in the middle range of the
market may decide to stretch their lines in
both direction.
 Increasing the product line by adding more items
within the present range of the line.
Reasons:
a. Extra profit
b. Attempting to satisfy dealers
c. Trying to use excess capacity
d. Trying to be the leading full-line company
e. Trying to plug holes to keep out competition.
An organization with several product lines
has a product mix.
• Width – number of different product lines
the company carries.
• Length – total number of items the company
carries within its product lines.
• Depth – the number of versions offered of
each product line.
• Consistency of the Product Mix – how
closely related the various product lines.
1. It can add new product lines thus widening
its product mix.
2. The company can lengthen its existing
product lines to become a more full-line
company.
3. It can add more versions of each product
and thus deepen its product mix.
4. The company can pursue more product
line consistency, or less depending whether
it wants a strong reputation in a single or
in several fields.
Because of the demand generated by the
time-pressed consumer, service industry
immensely grow.
• Service Intangibility - Services cannot be
seen, tasted, felt, heard, or smelled before
they are bought.
• Service Inseparability - Services are
produced and consumed at the same time
and cannot be separated from their
providers.
Provider-customer – interaction is a
special feature of services marketing.
• Service Variability- quality may vary
greatly depending on who provides
them and when, where and how.
• Service Perishability- Service cannot
be stored for later sale or use.
Interaction must be controlled and
constantly improved.
Service-profit Chain- Chain that links
service firm profits with employees and
customer satisfaction.
1. Internal service quality
2. Satisfied and productive service employees
3. Greater service value
4. Satisfied and loyal customers
5. Healthy service profits and growth
Internal service quality
Satisfied and productive
service employees
Greater service value
Company
Internal
Marketing
External
Marketing
Employees
Internal
Marketing Customers
 Train and effectively motivate its customer-
contact employees and all the supporting
service people to work as a team to provide
customer satisfaction.
a. Everyone in the organization must practice
customer orientation.
b. Internal marketing must precede external
marketing.
 Recognizes that perceived service
quality depends heavily on the quality
of buyer- seller interaction.
 The marketer cannot assume that
they will satisfy the customer simply
by providing good technical service.
• Competitive Differentiation – Occur by
differentiating the offer, the delivery and
their images.
• Service Productivity- Increase productivity
by training employees better. Work on
quality and quantity of service. Utilize
technology.
• Service Quality- Delivering higher quality
than the competition.
 Empower front-line employees
 Customer obsessed
 Set high quality standards
 Watch service performance
closely.
Product, services and branding strategies

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Product, services and branding strategies

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. • Product • Price • Place • Promotion
  • 4. • Refers to the goods and services offered by the organization. • Consumers purchased products because it satisfies one or more of their needs. • When consumers are paying, they are not paying for the tangible products, but for the benefit it will provide. • Thus, product can be described as a bundle of benefits which marketers offered to the consumer for price.
  • 5. It is anything that can be offered to a mark for attention, acquisition, use, or consumptions and that might satisfy a want or need.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12. Form of product that consist of activities, benefits, or satisfaction offered for sale that are essentially intangible and do not result in ownership of anything.
  • 13. Hotel Service Dermatologist Foot Spa Banking Service
  • 14. • Pure tangible goods – Physical items that can be touched and seen.
  • 15. • Tangible goods with accompanying services - It consists of a tangible good accompanied by one or more services. These types of offering are more dependent on quality and available services such as delivery time, after-sale services, warrantees and guarantees, etc. Refrigerator Car Aircon
  • 16. • Hybrid offers – consist of equal parts of goods and services.
  • 17. • Services with accompanying minor goods – It consists of major service along with additional services or supportive goods.
  • 18. • Pure Services- represent the highest level of customer contact.
  • 19. • Total Customer Experience- “Experiences are memorable while some products and services are not.”
  • 20. – problem-solving service, or core benefit that consumers are really buying when they obtain a product or service.
  • 21. a. Quality Level b. Features c. Design d. Brand Name e. Packaging
  • 22. – includes any additional consumer services and benefits built around for the core and actual products.
  • 23. When developing products, marketers must: 1. Identify the core consumer needs that the product will satisfy. 2. Design the actual product. 3. Find ways to augment the product.
  • 24. • Consumer Products • Industrial Products • Marketable Entities
  • 25.  bought by final consumers for personal consumption. • Convenience Products • Shopping Products • Specialty Products • Unsought Products
  • 26. Consumer products and services that the consumer usually buys frequently, immediately, and with a minimum of comparison and buying effort. They are usually low priced, and marketers place them in many outlets to make them readily available when customers need them.
  • 27.
  • 28. Consumer products that the consumer, in the process of selection and purchase, characteristically compares on such bases as suitability, quality, price, and style. These products are usually distributed through fewer outlets but have deeper sales support.
  • 29.
  • 30. Unique characteristics or brand identification. Buyers do not normally compare specialty products; instead, they only invest the time to reach the outlet that carries the goods.
  • 31.
  • 32. Consumer either does not know about or knows about but does not normally think of buying. These products require a lot of promotional support to be successful.
  • 33.
  • 34.  Bought by individuals and organization for further processing or for use of conducting a business. Purpose of purchase is the chief distinction between industrial products and consumer products. • Material and parts • Capital items • Supplies and services
  • 35. • Most are sold directly to the industrial users
  • 36. • These products aid in the buyer’s production or operations, including installations and accessory equipment.
  • 37. • These could be operational or repair and maintenance. Many of these services are supplied under contract.
  • 38.  Are entities other than products and services that marketing covers. • Organization marketing • Person Marketing • Place Marketing • Idea Marketing
  • 39. • Activities undertaken to create, maintain, or change attitudes and behavior of target audiences towards an organization. • A major tool to market organization is corporate image advertising.
  • 40. • Activities undertaken to create, maintain or change attitudes or behavior toward particular person.
  • 41. • Activities undertaken to create, maintain, or change attitudes towards a particular place.  Business Site Marketing Tourism Marketing
  • 42. • It is the marketing of social ideas. • It includes the design, implementation, and control of programs seeking to increase the acceptability of social idea, cause, or practice within targeted groups.
  • 44. Developing a product or service involves defining the benefits that it will offer. 1. Product Quality 2. Product Features 3. Product Style and Design
  • 45.  Ability of the product to perform its functions. It has two dimensions: level and consistency. • Quality level • Performance Quality • Product Consistency or Conformance • Return on Quality • Improve customer satisfaction and value
  • 46. It helps to differentiate the product from those of the competition.
  • 47. Another way to add distinctiveness. It is the process of designing a product’s style and function. a. Style – appearance of a product. b. Design – heart of the product. It contributes to the product’s usefulness as well as its looks.
  • 48.
  • 49.
  • 50. • Brand – is a name, sign, symbol, or design that identifies the maker or seller of the product or service.
  • 51.
  • 52. Buyer • It helps buyers to identify the product that might benefit them. • It tells the buyer something about quality and value.
  • 53. Seller • Make it easier for the sellers to process order and track down problems. • It provide legal protection for unique product features. • It promotes loyalty and helps in segmenting markets.
  • 54. • Higher brand loyalty • Name awareness • Perceived quality • Strong brand associations • Patents, trademarks, channel relationships
  • 55. Powerful brand names command strong consumer preference. It is a very valuable asset.
  • 56. 1. High consumer awareness and loyalty 2. Greater ease in launching brand extensions because of high brand credibility 3. A good defense against fierce price competition 4. Belief in being the company’s most enduring asset
  • 58. It should suggest something about the product’s benefits and qualities. It should be easy to pronounce, recognize, and remember. It should be distinctive.
  • 59. It should be extendible. It should translate easily into foreign languages. It should be capable of registration and legal protection.
  • 60. • Manufacturer's Brand or National Brand- brand created and owned by the producer of a product or service. • Private Brand or distributor or store brand- brand created and owned by a reseller of a product or service.
  • 61. • Licensed Brand- company sells it output under another brand name. • Co-branding- occurs when two companies go together and manufacture one product. It is the practice of using the established brand names of two different companies on the same product.
  • 62. Advantages • Create broader customer appeal and greater brand equity. • Allow a company to expand its existing brand into a category it might otherwise have difficulty entering alone.
  • 63. Disadvantages • Complex legal contracts and licenses are involve. • Coordination efforts are often difficult. • Trust is essential between partners.
  • 64. • The Battle of the Brands – the competition between manufacturer's and private brand. It causes resellers to have advantages, they charge manufacturer's slotting fees. • Slotting fees- payments demanded by retailers from producer before they will accept new products and find slots for them on the shelves.
  • 65. 1. Introduce Line-extensions – Existing brand names are extended to new forms, sizes, and flavors of an existing product category. a. Meet consumer desires for variety b. Meet excess manufacturing capacity c. Simply command more shelf space
  • 66. 2. Introduce Brand Extension – Existing brand names are extended to new or modified product categories. a. They help a company enter new product categories more easily. b. They aid in new product recognition. c. They save on advertising cost.
  • 67. 3. Introduce Multi-brands – new brand names are introduce in the same product categories. a. They gave more shelf space. b. They offer several brands to capture “brand switchers”. c. It helps to develop healthy competition within the organization. d. Each brand can have a separate following.
  • 68. 4. Introduce New Brands - new brand names in new categories are introduced. a. They help move away from a brand that is failing. b. They can get new brands in new categories by corporate acquisitions. c. Weaker brand weeded out and resources are focused achieving number one or two market share position.
  • 69.
  • 70. Is the activity of designing and producing the container or wrapper for a product. Traditionally, packaging decisions are based on cost and production factors. Now, it has promotional value.
  • 71.
  • 72.
  • 73.
  • 74. a. Establish packaging concept b. Decide on specific elements of the package c. Tie together elements to support the positioning and marketing strategy.
  • 75.  Part of Packaging and consists of printed information appearing on or with the package. Functions 1. It identifies the product or brand. 2. It describes several things about the product. 3. It promote the product through attractive graphics.
  • 76.
  • 77. • There are numerous laws enacted to regulate labeling and protect the public. • The aspects of nit pricing, open dating and nutritional labeling have effects on labeling practices.
  • 78.
  • 79. Services that augment actual products. • Good customer service is good for business. • Monitor customer complaints. • Work at designing products that need- less service.
  • 80.
  • 81. • Determine the best way to deliver product support services. • Set up strong customer service departments. • One of the keys to successful internet marketing is to have excellent support services.
  • 82.
  • 83. 1. Survey customers 2. Assess cost of providing desired services. 3. Develop a package of services to delight customers and yield profit to the company.
  • 84.
  • 85. Areas of Concern • Acquiring or dropping products • Patents protection • Product quality and safety • Product warranties
  • 86. • A group of products that are closely related because they function in similar manner. • They are sold to the same group. • Marketed through the same type of outlet. • Fall within given price ranges. • Tend to lengthen over time.
  • 87. Product line length- number of items in the product line. As new products are added to the line, costs begin to rise. Product line stretching- increasing the product line by lengthening it beyond its current range.
  • 88. a. Downward Stretch- Occurs when the company moves from the high end of the market to lower end. 1. Faster growth is occurring at the lower end. 2. The quality image established at the upper end can be moved downward. 3. They need a low product to fill a hole. 4. A retaliation against attack on their upper end product.
  • 89. b. Upward Stretch- This is done when companies at the lower end of the market want to enter the higher end. 1. They are attracted by faster growth rates or higher margins at the upper end. 2. They may want to position themselves as a full-line company.
  • 90. c. Two-way Stretch- Occurs when companies in the middle range of the market may decide to stretch their lines in both direction.
  • 91.  Increasing the product line by adding more items within the present range of the line. Reasons: a. Extra profit b. Attempting to satisfy dealers c. Trying to use excess capacity d. Trying to be the leading full-line company e. Trying to plug holes to keep out competition.
  • 92. An organization with several product lines has a product mix. • Width – number of different product lines the company carries. • Length – total number of items the company carries within its product lines. • Depth – the number of versions offered of each product line. • Consistency of the Product Mix – how closely related the various product lines.
  • 93. 1. It can add new product lines thus widening its product mix. 2. The company can lengthen its existing product lines to become a more full-line company.
  • 94. 3. It can add more versions of each product and thus deepen its product mix. 4. The company can pursue more product line consistency, or less depending whether it wants a strong reputation in a single or in several fields.
  • 95. Because of the demand generated by the time-pressed consumer, service industry immensely grow.
  • 96.
  • 97. • Service Intangibility - Services cannot be seen, tasted, felt, heard, or smelled before they are bought. • Service Inseparability - Services are produced and consumed at the same time and cannot be separated from their providers. Provider-customer – interaction is a special feature of services marketing.
  • 98. • Service Variability- quality may vary greatly depending on who provides them and when, where and how. • Service Perishability- Service cannot be stored for later sale or use.
  • 99.
  • 100. Interaction must be controlled and constantly improved. Service-profit Chain- Chain that links service firm profits with employees and customer satisfaction.
  • 101. 1. Internal service quality 2. Satisfied and productive service employees 3. Greater service value 4. Satisfied and loyal customers 5. Healthy service profits and growth
  • 103.
  • 105.
  • 107.
  • 108.
  • 109.
  • 111.  Train and effectively motivate its customer- contact employees and all the supporting service people to work as a team to provide customer satisfaction. a. Everyone in the organization must practice customer orientation. b. Internal marketing must precede external marketing.
  • 112.
  • 113.  Recognizes that perceived service quality depends heavily on the quality of buyer- seller interaction.  The marketer cannot assume that they will satisfy the customer simply by providing good technical service.
  • 114.
  • 115. • Competitive Differentiation – Occur by differentiating the offer, the delivery and their images. • Service Productivity- Increase productivity by training employees better. Work on quality and quantity of service. Utilize technology. • Service Quality- Delivering higher quality than the competition.
  • 116.
  • 117.  Empower front-line employees  Customer obsessed  Set high quality standards  Watch service performance closely.