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Published byLucy Harvey Modified over 9 years ago
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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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FIGURE 11-1 FIGURE 11-1 How stages of the product life cycle relate to a firm’s marketing objectives and marketing mix actions 11-2
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THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE INTRODUCTION STAGE LO1 Product Life Cycle Product Life Cycle Primary Demand Selective Demand Skimming Strategy Penetration Pricing 11-3
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THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE GROWTH STAGE LO1 Rapid Sales Increases Repeat Purchasers New Features Broader Distribution 11-4
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THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE MATURITY STAGE LO1 Product Differentiation Fewer Competitors Industry/Product Sales Slow 11-5
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THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE DECLINE STAGE LO1 Deletion Industry/Product Sales Drop Harvesting 11-6
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FIGURE 11-3 FIGURE 11-3 Alternative product life cycle curves based on product type 11-7
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THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE DIMENSIONS LO1 The Product Level: Class and Form Product Class Product Form 11-8
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FIGURE 11-4 FIGURE 11-4 Prerecorded music product life cycles by product form 11-9
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THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE DIMENSIONS LO1 The Life Cycle and Consumers Diffusion of Innovation Innovators Early Adopters Early Majority Late Majority Laggards 11-10
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FIGURE 11-5 FIGURE 11-5 Five categories and profiles of product adopters (diffusion of innovation) 11-11
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THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE DIMENSIONS LO1 The Life Cycle and Consumers Barriers to Adoption Usage Value Risk Psychological 11-12
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MANAGING THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE ROLE OF A PRODUCT MANAGER LO2 Product/Brand Manager Responsibilities Product Life Cycle Marketing Program Implementation New Product Development Data Analysis CDI BDI 11-13
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MANAGING THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE MODIFYING THE PRODUCT OR MARKET LO2 Product Modification Product Modification Product Bundling New Characteristics Market Modification Market Modification Finding New Customers Increasing a Product’s Use Creating a New Use Situation 11-14
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Harley-Davidson, Nokia N93, and Milk Processors Education Program What modification strategy does each use? LO2 11-15
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MANAGING THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE REPOSITIONING THE PRODUCT LO2 Product Repositioning Reaching a New Market Reacting to a Competitor’s Position 11-16
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Catching a Rising Trend Changing the Value Offered Trading Up Trading Down MANAGING THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE REPOSITIONING THE PRODUCT LO2 11-17
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Branding Branding Brand Name Brand Name Logotype (Logo) Product Counterfeiting BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT LO3 Trade Name Trade Name Trademark Trademark ® ™ 11-18
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Brand Personality Brand Personality Brand Equity Brand Equity BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT BRAND PERSONALITY AND BRAND EQUITY LO3 Provides a Competitive Advantage Consumers Willing to Pay a Premium 11-19
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FIGURE 11-6 FIGURE 11-6 The customer-based brand equity pyramid 11-20
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BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT BRAND PERSONALITY AND BRAND EQUITY LO3 Creating Brand Equity Develop Positive Brand Awareness Establish a Brand’s Meaning Elicit the Proper Response Create Intense Brand Loyalty 11-21
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BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT BRAND PERSONALITY AND BRAND EQUITY LO3 Valuing Brand Equity Provides a Financial Advantage Brand Licensing 11-22
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Hummer Footwear by Roper How does brand licensing create brand equity? LO3 11-23
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BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT PICKING A GOOD BRAND NAME LO3 Should Suggest Product Benefits Should Fit the Company or Product Image Should Be Memorable Should Have No Legal or Regulatory Restrictions Should Be Simple and Emotional 11-24
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FIGURE 11-7 FIGURE 11-7 Alternative branding strategies 11-25
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BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT BRANDING STRATEGIES LO3 Multiproduct Branding (Family or Corporate Branding) Multiproduct Branding (Family or Corporate Branding) Subbranding Brand Extension Co-branding Line Extension 11-26
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Kimberly-Clark’s Huggies What branding strategy is used? LO3 11-27
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BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT BRANDING STRATEGIES LO3 Multibranding Multibranding Private Branding (Private Labeling or Reseller Branding) Private Branding (Private Labeling or Reseller Branding) Mixed Branding Mixed Branding Fighting Brands 11-28
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PACKAGING AND LABELING PRODUCTS CREATING CUSTOMER VALUE AND COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE LO4 Packaging Packaging Label Label Communication Benefits Functional Benefits Perceptual Benefits 11-29
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PACKAGING AND LABELING PRODUCTS CONTEMPORARY PACKAGING AND LABELING CHALLENGES LO4 Environmental Concerns Health, Safety, and Security Issues Cost Reduction Connecting with Customers Shelf Life 11-30
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BRANDING AND BRAND MANAGEMENT LO4 Warranty Warranty Express Warranties Limited Coverage Warranties Full Warranties Implied Warranties 11-31
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FIGURE 11-A FIGURE 11-A Extent of coverage and formality of warranties 11-32
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