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Products, Services and Brands: Building Customer Value

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Presentation on theme: "Products, Services and Brands: Building Customer Value"— Presentation transcript:

1 Products, Services and Brands: Building Customer Value
A Presentation On Products, Services and Brands: Building Customer Value

2 Products, Services, and Experiences
What Is a Product? Products, Services, and Experiences Product is anything that can be offered in a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might satisfy a need or want Soap Toothpaste

3 Products, Services, and Experiences
What Is a Product? Products, Services, and Experiences Service is a form of product that consists of activities, benefits, or satisfactions offered for sale that are essentially intangible and do not result in ownership Doctor’s exam Financial services

4 Products, Services, and Experiences
What Is a Product? Products, Services, and Experiences Experiences represent what buying the product or service will do for the customer Disney Airlines

5 Levels of Product & Services
What Is a Product? Levels of Product & Services basic level is the core customer value. It represents what the buyer is really buying Second level is turning the core benefits into an actual product. It represents the design, brand name, and packaging that delivers the core benefit to the customer In the third stage building an augmented product by offering additional consumer services and benefits

6 Levels of Product Augmented Product Product Levels Installation
This CTR corresponds to Figure 8-1 on p. 239 and relates to the material on pp Levels of Product Installation Packaging Brand Name Features Delivery & Credit After- Sale Service Core Benefit or Service Product A product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption and that might satisfy a want or need. Products can be physical objects, services, persons, places, organizations, and ideas. Product Levels Core Product. This concept refers to the use-benefit, problem-solving service that the consumer is really buying when purchasing a product. Actual Product. The actual product is the tangible product or intangible service that serves as the medium for receiving core product benefits. Five characteristics: Quality Level refers to product performance. Features include combinations of product attributes. Design consists of aesthetic or ergonomic aspects of the product. Brand Name may help consumers position and identify the product. Packaging serves to both protect the product and to promote it to consumers. Augmented Product. The augmented consists of the measures taken to help the consumer put the actual product to sustained use. Measures can include installation, delivery & credit, warranties, and after sale service. Quality Level Design Warranty Actual Product Core Product

7 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications There are two types of products: Consumer Products Industrial Products

8 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Consumer products are products and services for personal consumption It is classified by how consumers buy them Consumer Products Convenience Products Shopping Products Specialty Products Unsought Products

9 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Convenience products Consumer products and services that the customer usually buys frequently, immediately, and with a minimum comparison and buying effort. Newspapers Candy Fast food Soft drinks Cigarettes.

10 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Shopping products Consumer products and services that the customer compares carefully on suitability, quality, price, and style Furniture Cars Appliances Jewelry Hotel

11 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Specialty products Consumer products and services with unique characteristics or brand identification for which a significant group of buyers is willing to make a special purchase effort. Medical services Designer clothes High-end electronics

12 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Unsought products Consumer products that the consumer does not know about or knows about but does not normally think of buying Life insurance Funeral services Blood donations

13 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Industrial products are products purchased for further processing or for use in conducting a business Industrial Products Materials And Parts Capital Items Supplies and Services

14 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Materials and parts include raw materials and manufactured materials and parts usually sold directly to industrial users. Wheat Iron Cement Cotton

15 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Capital items are industrial products that aid in the buyer’s production or operations. Buildings Elevators Computers

16 Product and Service Classifications
What Is a Product? Product and Service Classifications Supplies and services include operating supplies, repair and maintenance items, and business services.

17 Organizations, Persons, Places, and Ideas
What Is a Product? Organizations, Persons, Places, and Ideas Organizations-Profit (businesses) and Nonprofit (colleges, churches and museums) Persons –Entertainers, doctors, lawyers and architects Places-Tourist attracting sites, new residents, company offices and factories Social –Reduce smoking, drug abuse, family planning and human rights

18 INDIVIDUAL PRODUCT AND SERVICE DECISION
Product and Service Decisions INDIVIDUAL PRODUCT AND SERVICE DECISION LINE DECISION PRODUCT MIX DECISION

19 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Product attributes Branding Packaging Labeling Product Support services

20 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Product attributes are the benefits of the product or service Quality Features Styles & Design

21 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Product quality includes level and consistency Quality level is the level of quality that supports the product’s positioning. Conformance quality is the product’s freedom from defects and consistency in delivering a targeted level of performance.

22 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Product features are a competitive tool for differentiating a product from competitors’ products Product features are assessed based on the value to the customer versus the cost to the company

23 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Style describes the appearance of the product Design contributes to a product’s usefulness as well as to its looks. It goes to the very heart of a product

24 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Brand is the name, term, sign, or design—or a combination of these—that identifies the maker or seller of a product or service Brand equity is the differential effect that the brand name has on customer response to the product and its marketing

25 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Packaging involves designing and producing the container or wrapper for a product The primary function of the package was to hold and protect the product

26 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Labeling identifies the product or brand, describes attributes, and provides promotion

27 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions The label might also describe several things about the product- who made it where it was made when it was made its contents how it is to be used and how to use it safely

28 Product and Service Decisions
Individual Product and Service Decisions Product support services augment actual products Companies must continually: Assess the value of current services to obtain ideas for new ones Assess the costs of providing these services Develop a package of services to satisfy customers and provide profit to the company

29 Product and Service Decisions
Product Line Decisions Product line is a group of products that are closely related because they function in a similar manner, are sold to the same customer groups, are marketed through the same types of outlets, or fall within given price ranges.

30 Product and Service Decisions
Product Line Decisions Product line length is the number of items in the product line Product Line Length Line Filling Line Stretching Upward Downward Both Ways

31 Product and Service Decisions
Product Line Decisions Line filling: adding more items within the present range of the line More profits Satisfying dealers Line stretching: when a company lengthens its product line beyond its current range Downward: add low-end products Upward: add prestige to the current products Both ways: achieve both goals of line filling and line stretching

32 Product and Service Decisions
Product Mix Decisions Product mix consists of all the products and items that a particular seller offers for sale A company's product mix has four important dimensions

33 Product and Service Decisions
Product Mix Decisions Width: total number of different product lines the company carries Length: total number of items the company carries within its product lines Depth: number of versions offered of each product in the line Consistency: how closely related the various product lines are in end use, production requirements, distribution channels or some other way

34 Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Brand represents the consumer’s perceptions and feelings about a product and its performance. Brand Equity Brand equity is the positive differential effect that knowing the brand name has on customer response to the product or service.

35 Building Strong Brands
Brand positioning Attributes Benefits Beliefs and values Brand name selection Selection Protection Brand sponsorship Manufacturer’s brand Private brand Licensing Co-branding Brand development Line extensions Brand extensions Multibrands New brands

36 Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Brand Positioning Brand positioning includes: Product attributes Product benefits Product beliefs and values

37 Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Brand Name Selection Desirable qualities Suggest benefits and qualities Easy to pronounce, recognize, and remember Distinctive Extendable Translatable for the global economy Capable of registration and legal protection

38 Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Brand Sponsorship Manufacturer’s brand: A brand created and owned by a manufacturer of a product or service Private brand (store) A brand created and owned by a reseller of a product or service Licensed brand: license names or symbols previously created by other manufacturers, names of well-known celebrities, or characters from popular movies and books Co-brand: Co-branding occurs when two established brand names of different companies are used on the same product

39 Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Brand Development Strategies Product Category Existing New Line Extensions Brand Extension Existing Brand Name Multibrands New Brands New

40 Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Brand Development Strategies Line extensions occur when a company extends existing brand names to new forms, colors, sizes, ingredients, or flavors of an existing product category Brand extensions extend a brand name to a new or modified product in a new category Multibrands additional brands in the same category New brands are used when existing brands are inappropriate for new products in new product categories or markets

41 Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Requires: Continuous brand communication Customer-centered training Brand audits Managing Brands

42 Types of Service Industries
Services Marketing Types of Service Industries Government Private not-for-profit organizations Business services

43 Services Marketing Nature and Characteristics of a Service
Intangibility Services cannot be seen, tasted, felt, heard or smelled before purchase Inseparability Services cannot be separated from their providers Services Variability Quality of services depends on who provides them and when, where and how Perishability Services cannot be stored for later sale or use.

44 Marketing Strategies for Service Firms
Services Marketing Marketing Strategies for Service Firms In addition to traditional marketing strategies, service firms often require additional strategies Service-profit chain Internal marketing Interactive marketing

45 Marketing Strategies for Service Firms
Service-profit chain

46 Marketing Strategies for Service Firms
Services Marketing Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Service-profit chain links service firm profits with employee and customer satisfaction Internal service quality Satisfied and productive service employees Greater service value Satisfied and loyal customers Healthy service profits and growth

47 Three Types of Service Marketing
Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Three Types of Service Marketing Company Internal Marketing External Marketing Employee Customers Interactive Marketing

48 Marketing Strategies for Service Firms
Internal marketing Orienting and motivating customer-contact employees and supporting service people to work as a team to provide customer satisfaction

49 Interactive marketing
Marketing Strategies for Service Firms Interactive marketing Training service employees in the fine art of interacting with customers to satisfy their needs

50 Marketing Strategies for Service Firms
External Marketing Product Variety Quality Design Features Brand name service Packaging Price List Price Discounts Allowance Payment Period Credit terms 4 P’S Promotion Advertising Personal selling Sales Promotion Public Relations Place Channels Coverage Assortments Locations Inventory Transportations Logistics

51 Marketing Strategies for Service Firms
Major Marketing Tasks Managing Service Differentiation creates a competitive advantage from the offer, delivery, and image of the service Managing Service Quality Empower employees Responsibility Authority Incentive Managing Service Productivity Train current or new employees Increase quantity by decreasing qualities technology


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