OHT 7.1 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Product anatomy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Marketing Product. Overview l Definition of product vs. service l The importance of branding and packaging l Consumer and industrial products l Product.
Advertisements

Product and Brand Management. What is a product? A product is any offering by a company to a market that serves to satisfy customer needs and wants. It.
KEY TERMS UNIT 3 (PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT) Marketing.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 13 | 1 Product “…everything one receives in an exchange, including all tangible and intangible.
Product, Services, and Brands: Building Customer Value
Chapter Eight Product and Branding Strategy
Learning Goals Understand products and the major classifications of products and services Learn the decisions companies make regarding their products and.
Product and Services Strategy What is a product? One more time…
Kotler / Armstrong, Chapter 8 A _____ is anything that can be offered to a market that might satisfy a need or a want. 1.position 2.product 3.promotion.
Product, Service, and Branding Strategies
Objectives Be able to define product and know the major classifications of products and services. Understand the decisions companies make regarding their.
OHT 2.1 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition The European marketing environment.
Marketing Management (MKT 261)
7-1 Chapter Seven Product, Services, and Branding Strategy.
©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc.To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2 nd Edition Slide 0 in Chapter 11 Chapter 11 Setting Product and Brand Strategy.
Chapter 1 marketing dynamics.
Chapter 10 Product Concepts. What is a Product? A bundle of benefits What the buyer gets…not what the seller sells Tangible items, services, ideas.
Kotler / Armstrong 11e, Chapter 8 A _____ is anything that can be offered to a market that might satisfy a need or a want. 1.position 2.product 3.promotion.
Products, Services & Brands Chapter: 8 Lec: 7a. What is a product? Product Anything that could be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use,
Product, Services, and Branding Strategies Chapter 9.
Marketing. Marketing Activities Buying – Obtaining a product to be resold; involves finding suppliers that can provide the right products in the right.
Click to add text Principles of Marketing Fall 2013 Lecture Slides 4 Instructor : RAZA ILLAHE Lahore Leads University.
8-1 Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall i t ’s good and good for you Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands: Building.
Developing the Marketing Mix Product Pricing Placing Promoting.
1 11.Product & Service Strategies. 2 Products Product: tangible goods vs. services Levels of product –Class & form –Core, actual, augmented Product line.
Chapter 8 - slide 1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands Building Customer.
8-1 Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall i t ’s good and good for you Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands: Building.
What’s Happening? Term Projects! Term Projects!
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2005 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Understanding Marketing Processes and Consumer.
DEVELOP A NEW PRODUCT 10.1 What Is a Product?
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12 th edition 12 Setting Product Strategy KotlerKeller.
Blekinge Institute of Technology SE Karlskrona MARKETING MANAGEMENT Chaudhry Muhammad Nadeem Faisal Cell:
© 2006 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., McGraw-Hill/IrwinSlide 10-1.
Chapter 07 Customer-Driven Marketing Strategy: Creating Value for Target Customers.
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12th edition
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12 th edition 12 Setting Product Strategy KotlerKeller.
Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands: Building Customer Value Copyright ©2014 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
Product and Service Strategy Chapter 9. Product-Service Continuum Sugar Restaurant University Education Pure Tangible Good Pure Service.
Product: Concept, importance & Classification
Product and Services Strategy
Chapter 8 - slide 1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands: Building Customer.
Global Edition Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands: Building Customer Value Copyright ©2014 by Pearson Education.
Product, Services, and Branding Strategy Chapter 8.
Chapter 8 - slide 1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter Eight Products, Services, and Brands Building Customer.
New Products and Services
Chapter 8 Elements of Product Planning for Goods and Services
Product, Services, and Branding Strategy What is a Product? Anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption.
What We Will Discuss Today v What is a product? v Attributes v Brand v Packaging.
Marketing II Chapter 7: Products, Services, and Brands: Building Customer Value.
Principles of Marketing Global Edition
1 Chapter 7 Product, Services, and Branding Strategy.
FHF McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Products, Services, and Brands Building Customer Value.
Chapter 9 - slide 1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter Nine Product, Services, and Brands Building Customer Value.
Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands: Building Customer Value.
8-1 Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall i t ’s good and good for you Chapter Eight Product, Services, and Brands: Building.
Marketing Fundamentals
Product, Services, and Brands: Building Customer Value
MGT301 Principles of Marketing
Chapter 11 Setting Product Strategy
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12th edition
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12th edition
Setting Product Strategy
MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12th edition
Product, Services, and Branding Strategy
Product, Services, and Branding Strategy
Product and Brand Management
Product and Brand Management
Presentation transcript:

OHT 7.1 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Product anatomy

OHT 7.2 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Product definition A product is a physical good, service, idea, person or place that is capable of offering tangible and intangible attributes that individuals or organisations regard as so necessary, worthwhile, or satisfying that they are prepared to exchange money, patronage or some other unit of value in order to acquire it.

OHT 7.3 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition The anatomy of a product Figure 7.1

OHT 7.4 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Product layers All four layers of a product contribute to the buyer’s satisfaction. The outer two depend on the core product to determine how they are realised.

OHT 7.5 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Product based classifications Durable products - last for many uses and over a long period before having to be replaced. Non-durable products - can be used once or a few times before having to be replaced. Service products - intangible products comprising activities, benefits or satisfactions that are not embodied in physical products, e.g. financial services, holidays, etc.

OHT 7.6 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition User based classifications: consumer goods/services Convenience goods - relatively inexpensive, frequent purchases which respond to routine response buying situations. Shopping goods - represent more of a risk and an adventure to consumers. Speciality goods - high risk, expensive and infrequently purchased products. Unsought goods - e.g. sudden emergencies.

OHT 7.7 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition User based classifications: B2B goods/services Capital goods - buildings and fixed equipment that contribute to production. Accessory goods - items that give peripheral support to the production process. Raw materials. Semi-finished goods. Components and parts. Supplies and services.

OHT 7.8 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition The product mix The sum of all the products and variants offered by an organisation. The product mix can be split into the following: Product lines. Product items. Product line length. Product line depth. Product mix width.

OHT 7.9 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Importance of branding A brand is any name, design, style, words or symbols, singly or in combination that distinguish one product from another in the eyes of the customer. Brands are used by people to establish their status far more than religion or political party.

OHT 7.10 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Branding An important element of the tangible product. In consumer markets can link items within a product line. Can help in the development of a new product. Creates and communicates a three dimensional character of a product that is not easily duplicated by competitors.

OHT 7.11 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition The UK’s top ten brands 2001 Table 7.1 Source: adapted from data compiled by AC Nielsen, a VNU company, Hiscock (2001).

OHT 7.12 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Branding terms Brand name - word or illustration that distinguishes one seller’s goods from another. Trade name - the legal name of an organisation, which may or may not relate directly to the branding of its products. Trade mark - brand name, symbol, or logo which is registered and protected for the owner’s sole use. Brand mark - the element of the visual brand identity that does not consist of words but design and symbols.

OHT 7.13 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Benefits of branding Figure 7.4

OHT 7.14 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Types of brands Manufacturer brands. Retailer and wholesaler brands.

OHT 7.15 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition The rules for good brand naming Distinctive. Supportive. Acceptable. Available.

OHT 7.16 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Packaging Serves a functional purpose and a means of promotional communication about the product or brand. A container or wrapping in which a product is offered for sale. Effective and thoughtful packaging can increase sales.

OHT 7.17 © Pearson Education Limited 2003 Brassington and Pettitt: Principles of Marketing, 3rd Edition Product quality dimensions Figure 7.6