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CHAPTER 11: Marketing Creating and Pricing Products Identifying Target Market Creating New Products Product Differentiation Pricing Strategy
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Page 1: Marketing

CHAPTER 11: Marketing

• Creating and Pricing Products• Identifying Target Market• Creating New Products• Product Differentiation• Pricing Strategy

Page 2: Marketing

Good Marketing is No Accident

1-2

Starbucks plans to ensure its marketing successes in countries around the world.

Page 3: Marketing

What is Marketing?

1-3

Marketing is an organizational function and a set of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value

to customers and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the

organization and its stakeholders.

Page 4: Marketing

What is Marketing Management?

1-4

Marketing management is theart and science

of choosing target markets and getting, keeping, and growing

customers throughcreating, delivering, and communicating

superior customer value.

Page 5: Marketing

What is Marketed?

1-5

GoodsGoods

ServicesServices

Events & ExperiencesEvents & Experiences

PersonsPersons

Places & PropertiesPlaces & Properties

OrganizationsOrganizations

InformationInformation

IdeasIdeas

Page 6: Marketing

Key Customer Markets

1-6

Consumer Markets

Business Markets

Global Markets

Nonprofit/ Government Markets

Page 7: Marketing

Definitions

Consumer Buying BehaviorBuying behavior of individuals and households that buy products for personal consumption.

Consumer MarketAll individuals/households who buy products for personal consumption.

Page 8: Marketing

6 - 8

Factors Influencing Consumer Behavior

Page 9: Marketing

Target MarketFocuses all marketing decisions on the

specific group of people you want to reach.

Undifferentiated Targeting

Concentrated Targeting

Multi-Segment Targeting

 Market is as one group with no individual segments.Eg: Newspaper

Select a particular market niche/small on which marketing effort is targeted.Eg: AirAsia focuses on low fare.

Need to focus on two or more well defined market segments and want to develop different strategies.Eg:

Differentiated Targeting

Market coverage strategy to several market segments & divide into different groups. Eg: Shoes(Size,Colors, Design)

Page 10: Marketing

Segmentation Variables

Dividing the total market into smaller parts.

Market is heterogeneous/dissimilar.

By segmentation, heterogeneous market is converted into homogeneous components.

Basis for segmentation

Geographic Basis.

Demographic Basis.

Psychographic Basis.

Page 11: Marketing

DEMOGRAPHIC

GEOGRAPHIC

PSYCHOGRAPHIC

• Age and life cycle• Gender• Income and occupation• Generation (Baby boomer, • Gen X, Gen Y)• Education

• Activities• Interest• Opinions• Attitudes• Values

• Region : continent, country, state, or neighborhood• Size of metropolitan area• Population Density• Climate

Page 12: Marketing

• Product/Service • Price • Promotion • Place • People • Politics • Public Relations 

• Probe • Partition • Prioritize • Position • Profit • Plan • Performance • Positive

Implementation

15 P’s of Marketing Mix

Page 13: Marketing
Page 14: Marketing

Product

Product: “what to make, how to package it, what brand name to use, and what image to project”

EXAMPLE: Pink Gildan t-shirt, Made in China, tie-dye swirl print

Page 15: Marketing

Price

Price: “reflects what customers are willing & able to pay”

EXAMPLE: UnderArmor hoods are $50 – customers are willing to pay more for this high quality product

Page 16: Marketing

Place

Place: “how/where a product will be distributed”

EXAMPLE: Florida Oranges arrive via delivery truck and are displayed at Harris Teeter for sale.

Page 17: Marketing

Promotion

Promotion: “deals with how potential customers will be told about the new product”

EXAMPLE: Keebler cookies are on sale with coupon “buy TWO packages & save $1.00”

Page 18: Marketing

People

The right people to support the company’s products and/or service.

EXAMPLE: Excellent customer service personnel who can provide support with clearly known expectations, such as hours of operation and average response time, is key to maintaining a high level of customer satisfaction. 

Page 19: Marketing

Process

Solid procedures and policies that are in place.

EXAMPLE:

Customers want to understand more than just your product; they also want to focus on the shape and form your business will take.

Page 20: Marketing

Physical Evidence

The way your product, service, and everything about your company, appears from the outside.

EXAMPLE:  size, shape, color, material, UPC bar code, and label of the packaging.  This should be customer tested and updated when needed.

Page 21: Marketing

Classification of Consumer Products

Consumer Products

Convenience Products

Shopping Products

SpecialtyProducts

UnsoughtProducts

Page 22: Marketing

Convenience:

Inexpensive, little shopping effort, regularly buy products, no prior planning. Eg: coke, mineral water, chicken

Shopping:

Homogeneous prod is familiar where customers look for lower price brand.

Heterogeneous prod different where customers have trouble comparing the products

Specialty:

Status-conscious advertising, expensive products.

Unsought:

Customers not having intention of buying unless marketer do aggressive marketing. Eg: Insurance

Page 23: Marketing

Market Targeting

Product Differentiation

To differentiate the product from other products on the basis of features.

Product differentiation is used to avoid competition.The objective of differentiation is to develop a position that potential customers see as unique The objective of differentiation is to develop a position that potential customers see as unique

Page 24: Marketing

Marketing Concept

The marketing concept:“states that to make a profit a business must focus all efforts on satisfying the needs & wants

of the customer”

Page 25: Marketing

Cost-Based PricingProductProduct

CostCost

PricePrice

ValueValue

CustomersCustomers

Page 26: Marketing

Break-Even Analysis and Target Profit

Pricing• BE= Fixed Costs/Contribution (SP-VC)• Example - Meal - SP = $20, VC = $8• Fixed costs are $2400 a day• BE=$2400/$12 = 200• Need to sell 200 meals @ $20 to break-even• VC = 40%, contribution = 60%• BE = $2400/.6 = $4000

Page 27: Marketing

Value-Based PricingCustomerCustomer

ValueValue

PricePrice

CostCost

ProductProduct

Page 28: Marketing

New Product Pricing

1. Market-skimming pricing

Setting a high price for a new product to skim maximum

revenues layer by layer from the segments willing to pay the high price: the company makes fewer but more profitable sales

Page 29: Marketing

The conditions:

1. A sufficient number of buyers have a high current demand;

2. The unit costs of producing a small volume are not so high that they cancel

the advantage of charging what the traffic will bear;

3. The high initial price does not attract more competitors to market;

4. The high price communicates the image of a superior product.

Page 30: Marketing

2. Market-penetration pricing

New Product Pricing

Setting a low price for a new product in order to attract a large number of buyers and a large market share.

Page 31: Marketing

The conditions:

1. The market is highly price sensitive and a low price stimulates market growth;

2. Production and distribution costs fall with accumulated

production experience;

3. A low price discourages actual and potential competition.