Introduction to Product Management

About This Presentation
Title:

Introduction to Product Management

Description:

Introduction to Product Management Professor Carl Mela BA 460 Product Management Fuqua School of Business Brand Management System On Building A Brand – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: dukeEdu76
Learn more at: https://people.duke.edu

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introduction to Product Management


1
Introduction to Product Management
  • Professor Carl Mela
  • BA 460 Product Management
  • Fuqua School of Business
  • Brand Management System
  • On Building A Brand
  • Managing Across Brands

2
Agenda
  • Course Overview
  • What is a Brand?
  • Brand Equity
  • Brand Management

3
Course Overview
  • Objective
  • Structure
  • Brand Management System
  • On Building A Brand
  • Managing Across Brands
  • Requirements
  • 2 case write-ups, class participation, marketing
    plan, and final exam.

4
Structure
  • Part I - The Brand Management System
  • Class 1 Class Overview, The Nature of a Brand,
    Brand/Product Management. An application to the
    Pepsi syringe scare.
  • Class 2 PG Case. Live commentary from PG.

5
Structure
  • Part II - Building Brands
  • Class 3 Branding and Price. The case is Kodak.
    Then, Red Hat discusses how its branding strategy
    leads to a price advantage.
  • Class 4 Distribution and forecasting. The
    Goodyear case. Video regarding the effect of
    channel on brand.

6
Structure
  • Part II - Building Brands (Cont.)
  • Class 5 Craig Stacey (VP from IRI) discusses the
    use of information to build brands.
  • Class 6 Promotions and Brands Marketing in the
    NHL with live commentary from the Hurricanes
    Director of Communications, Ken Lehrner

7
Structure
  • Part II - Building Brands (Cont.)
  • Class 7 Advertising and Brands with Intel Inside
    Interactive CDROM. Live Commentary and
    Discussion with Michael J. Ganey, Director,
    Howard, Merrell Partners,Inc.

8
Structure
  • Part III - Across Brands and Markets
  • Class 8 The Marketing Plan Pharmasim. Tom
    OGuinn, Visiting Professor discusses Brand
    Communities.
  • Class 9 Product Extensions The Black and Decker
    Case and Video
  • Class 10 Global Branding The Heineken Case,
    MTV Worldwide, and The Fuqua MBA with Jim Gray,
    Associate Dean, Fuqua.

9
Structure
  • Part III - Across Brands and Markets
  • Class 11 Branding on the Internet. Deborah
    Kania (Lens Express and author of branding.com)
    and Beth Yakel (Sciquest)
  • Class 12 Wrap-up and PharmaSim Summary.

10
Agenda
  • Course Overview
  • What is a Brand?
  • Brand Equity
  • Brand Management

11
What is a Brand?
  • Name, term, sign, symbol, or design, or a
    combination of them intended to identify the
    goods and services of one seller or groups of
    sellers and to differentiate them from those of
    competition. - AMA
  • Not all products are brands.
  • Focus of Court et al. reading

12
Why Brand?
  • Identify product
  • Reduce risk
  • Reduce consumer search cost
  • Signal quality
  • Legal protection
  • Create product associations
  • Differentiate product

13
Agenda
  • Course Overview
  • What is a Brand?
  • Brand Equity
  • Brand Management

14
Brand Equity
  • The marketing effects uniquely attributable to
    the brand - Keller
  • Positive brand equity leads to
  • Loyalty
  • Margins
  • Reduced vulnerability to competition
  • Enhanced marketing effectiveness
  • Brand extensions

15
Brand Equity
  • Sources of Brand Knowledge
  • Brand Awareness
  • Brand Image
  • Strength of Brand Associations
  • Favorability of Brand Associations
  • Uniqueness of Brand Associations

16
Brand Equity
  • Benefits
  • Loyalty
  • Larger Margins
  • Greater Trade Support
  • More Efficient Communications
  • Licensing Opportunities
  • Brand Extension Opportunities
  • Coke name worth 39BB, Kodak 11BB (Brand
    Valuation Reading)

17
Best Corporate Reputations in America
Source Wall Street Journal / Harris Poll
18
Brand Equity
  • But how does one develop brand equity?
  • The goal of this course is to learn how to manage
    brands (via marketing programs) in order to
    create brand equity - that is, create an enduring
    advantage for your brands.

19
Figure 2-9 Building Customer-Based Brand Equity
TOOLS AND OBJECTIVES
KNOWLEDGE EFFECTS
BENEFITS
Choosing Brand Elements (4)
Brand Awareness (3)
Possible Outcome
Depth Recall
Recognition Breadth Purchase Consumption
Brand name Logo
Memorability Symbol
Meaningfulness Character
Transferability Packaging
Adaptability Slogan Protectability

Greater loyalty Less vulnerability to
competitive marketing actions and
crises Larger margins More elastic response to
price increases More inelastic response to
price increases Increased marketing communica-
tion efficiency and effectiveness Possible
licensing opportunities More favorable brand
extension evaluations
Developing Marketing Programs (5 6)
Product Functional symbolic benefits Price Val
ue perceptions Distribution channels Integrate
Push Pull Communications Mix and match
options
Brand Associations (3)
Strong Relevance Consistency Favorable Desirable
Deliverable Unique Point of parity Point of
difference
Leverage of Secondary Associations (7)

Company Country of origin Channel of
distribution Awareness Other brands Meaningfulnes
s Endorsor Transferability Event
20
Agenda
  • Course Overview
  • What is a Brand?
  • Brand Equity
  • Brand Management

21
Brand Management
  • Brand management is the act of designing and
    implementing marketing programs to build and
    maintain brand equity.
  • Product
  • Price
  • Distribution
  • Communications

22
The Role of a Brand or Product Manager
  • Prepare Marketing Plan
  • Develop Copy, Programs, and Campaigns
  • Stimulate Sales and Distribution
  • Market Intelligence
  • Product Improvements

23
The Role of a Brand or Product Manager
  • Pluses
  • - Cost effective mix, quick market reaction,
    attention for small brands, good training for
    executives
  • Minuses
  • - Conflict and frustration (responsibility and
    no authority), administrative work with executive
    expectations, learns products not functions,
    short horizon, costs of associates and assistants

24
A Product Manager - Computer Software Firm
  • Background
  • Undergrad in architecture, became director of
    marketing for architecture firm
  • Received MBA
  • International marketing manager for sporting
    goods company
  • Founded a toy company

25
A Product Manager -Computer Software Firm
  • Typical day
  • Meetings - new product line, marketing mix,
    marketing staff, organizational design and
    integration
  • E-mail/Phone - 3rd party developers, sales force,
    product support
  • Marketing planning - drafting the marketing plan

26
A Product ManagerComputer Software Firm
  • Marketing mix - recommends price to corporate
    committee, manages advertising, conducts focus
    groups for product positioning and development,
    decides on channels

27
A Product Manager - Consumer Packaged Goods Firm
  • Background
  • Medical equipment sales after undergraduate
  • Received MBA
  • Assistant Brand Manager at large CPG Company
  • Switched firms, promoted several times to product
    manager.
  • Switched firms again to as senior product manager

28
A Product Manager -Consumer Packaged Goods Firm
  • Typical day
  • 75 fighting fires, 25 planning
  • Marketing planning - key is volume forecasting
    since unsold inventory is perishable
  • Mix - 1/3 on pricing issues (list trade), 20
    on consumer promotions, president handles ads,
    15 on distribution, little on sales and service

29
A Product ManagerComputer Software Firm
  • Marketing mix - recommends price to corporate
    committee, manages advertising, conducts focus
    groups for product positioning and development,
    decides on channels.

30
The Marketing Department
VP Marketing
Marketing Administration
New Products
Advertising Promotion
Existing Products
Sales
Market Research
Design the Department!!! Matrix or Tree?
31
Brand Management Issues
Media
Purchasing
Packaging
Promotion Services
Salesforce
Product Manager
Distribution
RD
Fiscal
Manufacturing
Legal
Publicity
Market Research
Advertising Agency
32
The Nature of the Job
Department Their Emphasis Marketings
Emphasis RD Basic Research, Intrinsic
Quality, Applied Research, Perceived Functional
Features Quality, Sales Features Engineering Long
Design Lead Times, Few Short Lead Times, Many
Models, Models, Standard Components Custom
Components Purchasing Narrow Lines, Standard
Parts, Price Broad Lines, Nonstandard Parts, of
Material, Large Infrequent Lots Quality of
Material, Small Lots Manufacturing Long Lead
Times, Long Runs, Few Short Lead Times, Short
Runs, Models Revisions, Standard Orders, Many
Models, Custom Orders, Ease of Fabrication,
Average Quality Fine Appearance, Tight
Quality Finance Strict Rationale for Spending,
Hard Intuitive Arguments for Spending, and Fast
Budgets, Pricing Covers Flexible Budgets, Pricing
to Costs Market Developments Accounting Standard
Transactions, Few Reports Special
Terms/Discounts Credit Full Disclosures, No
Risk, Tough Minimum Disclosure, Some Risk,
Terms, Tough Collection Easy Credit, Easy
Collection
33
A Key Trend in Product/Brand Management
  • Salaries and bonus for product marketers are up
    65 in the last two years (Marketing News, Nov.
    99)

34
Brand Management Prognostications
  • Future of brand management
  • Customer management vs. product management
  • Cuts across brands and products
  • Managers organized by portfolios of customers

35
Summary
  • Brand Equity
  • Awareness
  • Associations
  • Created by the mix
  • It is the role of a product manager to manage the
    mix to create equity
  • The brand management system
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)