Title: Chapter 8: Product and Services Strategies
1Chapter 8Product and Services Strategies
2The Marketing Mix
- Once a firm has decided on an appropriate
strategy, has done research on consumer
behaviour, and has segmented the market, it is
time to target selected segments and position
products and brands. - This is done by manipulating the marking mix (the
4 Ps) Beginning with the Product(s)
3What is a product?
- Product
- A cluster of benefits that can be offered to a
market for attention, acquisition, use or
consumption that might satisfy a want or need
4Hierarchy of Terms
Company
Brand
Product Lines
Products
5Levels of Product
Installation
Augmented product
Packaging
Actual product
Brand name
Core benefit or service
Features
Delivery and credit
Core product
After- Sale service
Quality level
Design
Warranty
6Classes of Products
- Consumer Products
- Convenience Products, Shopping Products,
Specialty Products, Unsought Products - Industrial Products
- Materials and Parts, Capital items, Supplies and
Business services - Marketable Entities
- Organizations, People, Places and Ideas
7Types of Consumer Products (see. Table 8-1)
- Convenience products
- Regular purchases, immediate with little
comparison, low-priced and readily available - Staples, impulse buys, emergency items
- Shopping products
- Less frequent purchases, info. Seeking brand
comparison shopping, less available, mid-priced - E.g. small appliances, furniture, clothing
- Specialty products
- Brand loyalty, specific locations only, high
priced, luxury goods (e.g. Rolex Watches) - Unsought products
- Customer doesnt know or think about product
8Industrial Products
- Capital items
- installations - fixed capital (e.g. buildings,
fixed equipment) - Accessory equipment - retail purchased (e.g.
tools, desks, phones) - Materials and parts
- raw materials (e.g. lumber. cotton)
- manufactured parts (e.g. tires)
- Supplies and Business Services
- minor commodities (e.g. paper clips)
- contracted services (e.g consultants)
9Marketable Entities
Marketing to promote or change attitudes/behaviour
toward
- Organizations (e.g. Firestone)
- Persons (e.g. SHAQ!)
- Places (e.g. Ontario)
- Ideas (e.g. Anti-Smoking)
- Social Marketing
10Product Marketing Decisions
3. Packaging
4. Labeling
1. Product attributes
5. Product Support services
2. Branding
111. Product Attributes
- Quality - The ability of a product to perform its
functions at high levels and consistently - Features as a tool for differentiation
- Value of features versus cost to company
- Design as a competitive weapon
- Form and function integrated via design vs.
style, which is based solely on visual impact
122. Branding
- A name, term, sign, symbol or design or a
combination of these, intended to identify goods
or services of a seller or group to differentiate
them from those of competitors - A unique identifier of a family of products
13Branding
Buyers viewpoint
Sellers viewpoint
- Basis of product story
- Gives legal protection
- Helps in segmenting markets
- Symbol of ongoing promise
- Gives personality
- Helps find products with desired benefits
- Aids repeat purchase
- Suggests quality of product
14Brand Equity
- The value of a brand to the firm
- based on
- Consumer brand awareness
- Brand loyalty
- Leverage bargaining with resellers
- Aids launch of line and brand extensions
- Defense against price competition
15Brand Name Selectiondesirable qualities
- Suggest benefits and qualities of products
- Easy to pronounce recognize remember
- Distinctive
- Translates easily
- Capable of registration legal protection
16Brand Sponsorship
- Manufacturers (National) brand
- brand created owned by manufacturer
- Private (Store) brand
- brand owned by reseller, not manufacturer
- Licensed brand
- purchased rights to use a brand name for a period
of time - Co-branding
- Agreement between firms to use two brands
together on a new product
17Major Branding Decisions
To brand or not to brand
Brand name selection
Brand sponsor
- Manufacturers brand
- Private brand
- Licensed brand
- Co-branding
Brand strategy
- New brands
- Line extensions
- Brand extensions
- Multibrands
Brand repositioning
- Brand repositioning
- No brand repositioning
18Four Brand Strategies
Product Line
Existing
New
Line extension
Brand extension
Existing
Brand Name
New brands
Multi-brands
New
193. Packaging developing a good package
- Needs to attract attention and stimulate senses
- Important for commodities - shelf space
- Elements to support position strategy
- Environmental issues
204. Labeling
- Key functions
- Identify product or brand
- Describe product characteristics
- Provide promotional and design elements
- Legal and ethical issues
- Avoid misleading or dangerous practices
- Consumer packaging and labeling act
- Weights and measures act
215. Product Support Services
- Major source of competitive advantage
- Design for target customer needs and profit
- Survey needs wants to Delight customers
22Product Line Decisionsstretching downward
Present products
High
Price
New products
Quality
Low
High
Low
23Product Line Decisionsstretching upward
New products
High
Price
Present products
Quality
Low
High
Low
24Product Line Decisionsstretching both ways
New Products
High
Present products
Price
New products
Quality
Low
High
Low
25Product Line Decisions
Selected Proctor Gamble Products
Product Mix Width
Detergents Toothpaste Bar Soap Deodorants Ivory
Snow Gleem Ivory Secret Dreft Crest Camay Sur
e Tide Complete Lava Joy Denquel Kirks Cheer
Zest Oxydol Safeguard Dash Coast
Product Line Length
26What is a Service?
- Service
- Any activity or benefit one party can offer
another - Specific type of product that is essentially
intangible and does not result in ownership of a
tangible item - Often accompanies a tangible product (e.g.
customer support, repair, warranty, sales
service)
27Four Service Characteristics
Intangibility
Inseparability
From the provider
Cannot be seen tasted, felt or smelled
before purchasing
Services
Perishability
Variability
Depends on who provides and under what conditions
Cannot be stored for resale or later use
28What is a Product?The product-service continuum
Service Dominated offerings
Pure tangible good
29Services Marketingservice sector organizations
- Governments
- Private non-profits
- Service businesses
30The Service Profit Chain
- Internal service quality (selection training)
leads to... - Satisfied and productive service employees, which
leads to... - Greater service value, which leads to ...
- Focus on both customers and employees
- Satisfied and loyal customers, which leads to ...
- Healthy service profits and growth
31Three Types of Marketingin Service Businesses
Company
Internal marketing
External marketing
Interactive marketing
Employees
Customers
32Service Marketing Tasks
- Service Differentiation
- what is offered, how it is offered, when it is
offered and by whom - Service Quality
- Exceeding customer expectations, especially when
they need it the most - service recovery (e.g.
ECM corp.) - Balancing Quality and Efficiency
- Empowering employees vs. standardized service
delivery
33International Product and Services Marketing
- Which countries to enter?
- Which products to introduce?
- How much to standardize or adapt?
- Suitable packaging approach?
- Follow clients overseas?
- Non-tariff barriers to services?