PDB acquired Crescent Pure to expand its organic product line. Sarah Ryan must choose a positioning strategy for Crescent Pure's launch in 3 markets. The options are energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. Consumer research shows perceptions of energy drinks as unhealthy while sports drinks are seen as low-energy. An analysis of the markets finds opportunity in the growing energy drink and organic drink segments. Ryan recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink to leverage its reputation and avoid competition, which is supported by a break-even analysis showing profits will exceed PDB's $750,000 goal.
A presentation made on the analysis of a Havard Business School briefcase on- Crescent Pure, during a Marketing Management internship by Professor Sameer Mathur.
Crescent Pure is considering positioning strategies as either an energy drink or sports drink. As an energy drink, it could provide a healthier alternative in a growing $13.5 billion market, with pricing advantages over competitors. However, energy drinks face negative publicity over health risks. As a sports drink, it could attract a wider consumer base and combine hydration with mental focus and energy boosting. But the sports drink market is smaller and prices are typically lower. The document analyzes the pros and cons of each positioning option and provides market data to inform the strategy.
Crescent Pure is an organic beverage created in 2008 by Peter Hooper and later acquired by Portland Drake Beverages in 2013. It provides energy but contains less sugar than typical energy drinks. Retailers found high demand and sold out frequently. Market research identified three positioning options: energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. As an organic energy drink priced at $2.75 per can, Crescent Pure has the potential to appeal to consumers across demographics while having lower sugar and being healthier than typical energy drinks. The VP of Marketing at PDB, Sarah Ryan, recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink to capitalize on the growing organic and energy drink markets at an affordable price point.
This document discusses product positioning options for Crescent Pure, an organic juice and sparkling water company. It analyzes positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. While the energy drink market has high revenue, it also has negative health perceptions. The sports drink market has lower sugar but is also crowded. Positioning as an organic drink captures the growing consumer interest in natural products. The document recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink, emphasizing its health and taste advantages over traditional energy drinks.
Crescent Pure is launching an organic energy drink called Crescent Pure. It is positioned as a healthier alternative to sugary energy drinks, containing less sugar and chemicals. The target market is younger, active, health-conscious consumers on the West Coast who embrace organic and local foods. Crescent Pure will be priced lower than most energy drinks at $2.75 for an 8oz can. It will be distributed in health/organic stores, big box retailers, and cafes in California, Oregon and Washington. Marketing will include sponsoring events, billboards, music festivals and social media to build brand awareness among the target market.
The VP of marketing for PDB is deciding how to position Crescent Pure. There are two options - as an energy drink or sports drink. Market research shows the energy drink market is larger and growing faster. While sports drinks have less competition, their market is smaller. Perceptual maps also indicate Crescent could gain market share by positioning as a healthier energy drink. After analyzing customer segments, differentiation strategies, and perceptual maps, the document recommends positioning Crescent as an energy drink to target the larger, faster growing market.
PDB acquired Crescent Pure to expand its organic product line. Sarah Ryan must choose a positioning strategy for Crescent Pure's launch in 3 markets. The options are energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. Consumer research shows perceptions of energy drinks as unhealthy while sports drinks are seen as low-energy. An analysis of the markets finds opportunity in the growing energy drink and organic drink segments. Ryan recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink to leverage its reputation and avoid competition, which is supported by a break-even analysis showing profits will exceed PDB's $750,000 goal.
A presentation made on the analysis of a Havard Business School briefcase on- Crescent Pure, during a Marketing Management internship by Professor Sameer Mathur.
Crescent Pure is considering positioning strategies as either an energy drink or sports drink. As an energy drink, it could provide a healthier alternative in a growing $13.5 billion market, with pricing advantages over competitors. However, energy drinks face negative publicity over health risks. As a sports drink, it could attract a wider consumer base and combine hydration with mental focus and energy boosting. But the sports drink market is smaller and prices are typically lower. The document analyzes the pros and cons of each positioning option and provides market data to inform the strategy.
Crescent Pure is an organic beverage created in 2008 by Peter Hooper and later acquired by Portland Drake Beverages in 2013. It provides energy but contains less sugar than typical energy drinks. Retailers found high demand and sold out frequently. Market research identified three positioning options: energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. As an organic energy drink priced at $2.75 per can, Crescent Pure has the potential to appeal to consumers across demographics while having lower sugar and being healthier than typical energy drinks. The VP of Marketing at PDB, Sarah Ryan, recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink to capitalize on the growing organic and energy drink markets at an affordable price point.
This document discusses product positioning options for Crescent Pure, an organic juice and sparkling water company. It analyzes positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. While the energy drink market has high revenue, it also has negative health perceptions. The sports drink market has lower sugar but is also crowded. Positioning as an organic drink captures the growing consumer interest in natural products. The document recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink, emphasizing its health and taste advantages over traditional energy drinks.
Crescent Pure is launching an organic energy drink called Crescent Pure. It is positioned as a healthier alternative to sugary energy drinks, containing less sugar and chemicals. The target market is younger, active, health-conscious consumers on the West Coast who embrace organic and local foods. Crescent Pure will be priced lower than most energy drinks at $2.75 for an 8oz can. It will be distributed in health/organic stores, big box retailers, and cafes in California, Oregon and Washington. Marketing will include sponsoring events, billboards, music festivals and social media to build brand awareness among the target market.
The VP of marketing for PDB is deciding how to position Crescent Pure. There are two options - as an energy drink or sports drink. Market research shows the energy drink market is larger and growing faster. While sports drinks have less competition, their market is smaller. Perceptual maps also indicate Crescent could gain market share by positioning as a healthier energy drink. After analyzing customer segments, differentiation strategies, and perceptual maps, the document recommends positioning Crescent as an energy drink to target the larger, faster growing market.
Crescent Pure is a new beverage developed by PDB and they must choose a brand positioning. The options are an energy drink, sports drink, or healthy organic beverage. Market research found consumers associate Crescent Pure most with a healthy organic drink. The healthy organic market has less competition and growing demand for healthier options. While it requires a large advertising budget, break-even analysis shows PDB can stay within budget at $2.75 per drink. Therefore, the recommendation is to position Crescent Pure as a healthy organic beverage.
PDB owns Crescent Pure, an organic functional beverage. It is considering positioning strategies such as sports drink, energy drink, or healthy organic beverage. Positioning as a sports drink could fail since Crescent's price is higher than sports drinks and a past sports drink strategy failed. Positioning as a healthy organic beverage matches Crescent's consumers, ingredients, and prices better than other options. A $750,000 ad campaign and 12,000 case monthly production would allow PDB to break even within a year.
Portland Drake Beverages (PDP) acquired Crescent Pure in 2014. PDP must decide how to position Crescent Pure and is considering positioning it as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. Positioning it as an organic drink allows Crescent Pure to dominate an upcoming market and appeal to health-conscious customers willing to pay premium prices, though it risks losing other customer segments. After analyzing customer demographics, perceptions of each option, and projected profits, PDP ultimately recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink to leverage the brand's reputation for natural ingredients while tapping into the large and lucrative energy drink market.
1) The document analyzes potential positioning strategies for Crescent Pure, an organic beverage bought by PDB, as an energy drink, sports drink, or healthy organic drink.
2) Market research was conducted including consumer surveys and data analysis to understand perceptions of Crescent's functionality.
3) Based on the analysis, positioning Crescent as a broad functional organic beverage that highlights its natural and affordable qualities is recommended, allowing it to compete in growing healthy and organic beverage markets while leveraging its existing attributes evaluated positively by consumers.
The document analyzes positioning Crescent Pure, a functional beverage company acquired by Portland Drake Beverages, in the market. It discusses the companies' profiles, timeline of events, factors for Crescent Pure's acquisition, and product positioning options. Based on market size, growth, pricing, and consumer perception analysis, the document recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink to leverage the larger and faster growing energy drink market.
PDB recently acquired Crescent Pure, an organic beverage. Sarah Ryan must decide how to position and market Crescent Pure in the next 6 weeks. The document analyzes positioning it as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic energy drink. It recommends positioning it as an organic energy drink to target the growing natural products market and differentiate from competitors. Crescent Pure already uses organic ingredients and consumer research showed people described it as natural and functional rather than as an energy or sports drink. Positioning it organically would allow them to hit a new market segment with their existing product.
The document discusses PDB Beverages' plans to launch and distribute the organic energy drink Crescent Pure. PDB planned a soft launch of Crescent in 3 western states in 2014, spending $750,000 on advertising with the goal of meeting or exceeding $750,000 in profits that year. If successful, they would fund a national expansion in 2015. PDB acquired Crescent in 2012 and decided to lower its retail price to $2.75 per 8oz can, reflecting PDB's strategy of affordable organic products. Variable costs were $1.02 per can and PDB's wholesale price to distributors was $1.24 per can. To ensure distributor profitability, PDB limited the initial launch to 3 distributors in the western
PDB acquired Crescent Pure, a non-alcoholic functional beverage, to expand its organic juice and sparkling water business. Crescent Pure contains organic ingredients like lime juice, lemon juice, guarana, and ginseng that provide 80 calories per can with 70% less sugar than energy drinks. PDB plans a soft launch of Crescent Pure in three Western states in early 2015 and has budgeted $75,000 for advertising, projecting the regions represent 15% of the functional beverage market. The document discusses positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink and analyzes whether PDB will break even in the first year with sales of 12,000 cases per month. It recommends positioning Crescent
Crescent Pure is an organic functional drink created by Peter Hooper and later acquired by Portland Drake Beverages. PDB is considering three positioning strategies for Crescent Pure as an energy drink, sports drink, or health drink. Market research shows the energy drink market is growing faster than sports drinks and Crescent Pure's ingredients are well-suited for an energy drink. The presentation recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink to take advantage of this growing market segment and differentiate from competitors in the sports drink category.
The document discusses positioning a new organic drink called Crescent Pure. It should not be positioned as a sports drink due to stiff competition and lower hydration. Positioning it as an energy drink may not appeal to teens due to lower caffeine. The best option is to position it as an "Organic+Energy" drink to target both adults and the fast growing energy drink market. The price should be increased to $2.99 to improve perceptions of quality. Break-even analysis shows the company will profit with sales of over 1,42,046 cases per year.
This document discusses positioning strategies for Crescent Pure, a new organic energy drink launched by Portland Drake Beverages (PDB). Crescent contains 80mg of caffeine from organic herbal stimulants and is priced at $2.75 per can. PDB is considering positioning Crescent as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic beverage. The energy drink market offers the most growth potential but comes with health concerns. The sports drink market has less growth and competition from dominant brands. An organic beverage positioning does not leverage Crescent's caffeine but commands a price premium. The recommendation is to position Crescent as a healthier energy drink alternative to appeal to health-conscious younger consumers and organic purchasers, with the goal of
Crescent Pure is an organic energy drink acquired by PDB in 2013. Sarah Ryans must finalize the product positioning strategy for Crescent Pure in a few weeks. There are two viable positioning options - as an energy drink or a sports drink. After analyzing customer segmentation data, market growth trends, pricing strategies, and product differentiation opportunities for both options, an energy drink positioning is recommended. It attracts a larger customer base and market, is better aligned with PDB's pricing approach, and allows Crescent to differentiate itself as a healthy organic alternative in a category with negative publicity around artificial ingredients.
Mountain Man Brewing Co. is a market leader in West Virginia that produces one beer called Mountain Man Lager. To remain profitable amid a 2% revenue decline, the company is considering launching a light beer called Mountain Man Light to tap into the growing light beer segment. This would involve new product development, marketing, and costs of $1.65 million. The strategy could increase revenue but faces risks of high costs, competition, and difficulty building a new brand.
Cresent pure(harvard business school case) pushkar sarafPushkar Saraf
PDB is launching Crescent Pure, an organic energy drink. It contains herbal stimulants with 80mg of caffeine and 70% less sugar than competitors. PDB sees opportunity in the growing organic and natural drinks market but cannot launch nationally until 2015 due to production constraints. Sarah must evaluate positioning strategies and her promotion depends on Crescent's success. Research shows the 18-34 age group prefers energy drinks while 12-24 favors sports drinks. Crescent is priced competitively and has advantages over competitors in being organic and healthier. With proper marketing, Crescent can break even in its first year.
The document summarizes a case study about Crescent Pure, an organic juice company that was acquired by PDB. It provides background on Crescent Pure's founding, products, and revenues. It then discusses PDB's options to position Crescent Pure in the functional beverage market, analyzing the energy drink, sports drink, and organic drink industries. It outlines strategies considered to promote Crescent Pure as a healthier energy drink and evaluates the financial feasibility and key metrics for success.
Crescent Pure is a new beverage developed by PDB and they must choose a brand positioning. The options are an energy drink, sports drink, or healthy organic beverage. Market research found consumers associate Crescent Pure most with a healthy organic drink. The healthy organic market has less competition and growing demand for healthier options. While it requires a large advertising budget, break-even analysis shows PDB can stay within budget at $2.75 per drink. Therefore, the recommendation is to position Crescent Pure as a healthy organic beverage.
PDB owns Crescent Pure, an organic functional beverage. It is considering positioning strategies such as sports drink, energy drink, or healthy organic beverage. Positioning as a sports drink could fail since Crescent's price is higher than sports drinks and a past sports drink strategy failed. Positioning as a healthy organic beverage matches Crescent's consumers, ingredients, and prices better than other options. A $750,000 ad campaign and 12,000 case monthly production would allow PDB to break even within a year.
Portland Drake Beverages (PDP) acquired Crescent Pure in 2014. PDP must decide how to position Crescent Pure and is considering positioning it as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. Positioning it as an organic drink allows Crescent Pure to dominate an upcoming market and appeal to health-conscious customers willing to pay premium prices, though it risks losing other customer segments. After analyzing customer demographics, perceptions of each option, and projected profits, PDP ultimately recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink to leverage the brand's reputation for natural ingredients while tapping into the large and lucrative energy drink market.
1) The document analyzes potential positioning strategies for Crescent Pure, an organic beverage bought by PDB, as an energy drink, sports drink, or healthy organic drink.
2) Market research was conducted including consumer surveys and data analysis to understand perceptions of Crescent's functionality.
3) Based on the analysis, positioning Crescent as a broad functional organic beverage that highlights its natural and affordable qualities is recommended, allowing it to compete in growing healthy and organic beverage markets while leveraging its existing attributes evaluated positively by consumers.
The document analyzes positioning Crescent Pure, a functional beverage company acquired by Portland Drake Beverages, in the market. It discusses the companies' profiles, timeline of events, factors for Crescent Pure's acquisition, and product positioning options. Based on market size, growth, pricing, and consumer perception analysis, the document recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink to leverage the larger and faster growing energy drink market.
PDB recently acquired Crescent Pure, an organic beverage. Sarah Ryan must decide how to position and market Crescent Pure in the next 6 weeks. The document analyzes positioning it as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic energy drink. It recommends positioning it as an organic energy drink to target the growing natural products market and differentiate from competitors. Crescent Pure already uses organic ingredients and consumer research showed people described it as natural and functional rather than as an energy or sports drink. Positioning it organically would allow them to hit a new market segment with their existing product.
The document discusses PDB Beverages' plans to launch and distribute the organic energy drink Crescent Pure. PDB planned a soft launch of Crescent in 3 western states in 2014, spending $750,000 on advertising with the goal of meeting or exceeding $750,000 in profits that year. If successful, they would fund a national expansion in 2015. PDB acquired Crescent in 2012 and decided to lower its retail price to $2.75 per 8oz can, reflecting PDB's strategy of affordable organic products. Variable costs were $1.02 per can and PDB's wholesale price to distributors was $1.24 per can. To ensure distributor profitability, PDB limited the initial launch to 3 distributors in the western
PDB acquired Crescent Pure, a non-alcoholic functional beverage, to expand its organic juice and sparkling water business. Crescent Pure contains organic ingredients like lime juice, lemon juice, guarana, and ginseng that provide 80 calories per can with 70% less sugar than energy drinks. PDB plans a soft launch of Crescent Pure in three Western states in early 2015 and has budgeted $75,000 for advertising, projecting the regions represent 15% of the functional beverage market. The document discusses positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink and analyzes whether PDB will break even in the first year with sales of 12,000 cases per month. It recommends positioning Crescent
Crescent Pure is an organic functional drink created by Peter Hooper and later acquired by Portland Drake Beverages. PDB is considering three positioning strategies for Crescent Pure as an energy drink, sports drink, or health drink. Market research shows the energy drink market is growing faster than sports drinks and Crescent Pure's ingredients are well-suited for an energy drink. The presentation recommends positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink to take advantage of this growing market segment and differentiate from competitors in the sports drink category.
The document discusses positioning a new organic drink called Crescent Pure. It should not be positioned as a sports drink due to stiff competition and lower hydration. Positioning it as an energy drink may not appeal to teens due to lower caffeine. The best option is to position it as an "Organic+Energy" drink to target both adults and the fast growing energy drink market. The price should be increased to $2.99 to improve perceptions of quality. Break-even analysis shows the company will profit with sales of over 1,42,046 cases per year.
This document discusses positioning strategies for Crescent Pure, a new organic energy drink launched by Portland Drake Beverages (PDB). Crescent contains 80mg of caffeine from organic herbal stimulants and is priced at $2.75 per can. PDB is considering positioning Crescent as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic beverage. The energy drink market offers the most growth potential but comes with health concerns. The sports drink market has less growth and competition from dominant brands. An organic beverage positioning does not leverage Crescent's caffeine but commands a price premium. The recommendation is to position Crescent as a healthier energy drink alternative to appeal to health-conscious younger consumers and organic purchasers, with the goal of
Crescent Pure is an organic energy drink acquired by PDB in 2013. Sarah Ryans must finalize the product positioning strategy for Crescent Pure in a few weeks. There are two viable positioning options - as an energy drink or a sports drink. After analyzing customer segmentation data, market growth trends, pricing strategies, and product differentiation opportunities for both options, an energy drink positioning is recommended. It attracts a larger customer base and market, is better aligned with PDB's pricing approach, and allows Crescent to differentiate itself as a healthy organic alternative in a category with negative publicity around artificial ingredients.
Mountain Man Brewing Co. is a market leader in West Virginia that produces one beer called Mountain Man Lager. To remain profitable amid a 2% revenue decline, the company is considering launching a light beer called Mountain Man Light to tap into the growing light beer segment. This would involve new product development, marketing, and costs of $1.65 million. The strategy could increase revenue but faces risks of high costs, competition, and difficulty building a new brand.
Cresent pure(harvard business school case) pushkar sarafPushkar Saraf
PDB is launching Crescent Pure, an organic energy drink. It contains herbal stimulants with 80mg of caffeine and 70% less sugar than competitors. PDB sees opportunity in the growing organic and natural drinks market but cannot launch nationally until 2015 due to production constraints. Sarah must evaluate positioning strategies and her promotion depends on Crescent's success. Research shows the 18-34 age group prefers energy drinks while 12-24 favors sports drinks. Crescent is priced competitively and has advantages over competitors in being organic and healthier. With proper marketing, Crescent can break even in its first year.
The document summarizes a case study about Crescent Pure, an organic juice company that was acquired by PDB. It provides background on Crescent Pure's founding, products, and revenues. It then discusses PDB's options to position Crescent Pure in the functional beverage market, analyzing the energy drink, sports drink, and organic drink industries. It outlines strategies considered to promote Crescent Pure as a healthier energy drink and evaluates the financial feasibility and key metrics for success.
Michael Booth, CEO of PDB, assigned Sarah Ryan the task of recommending how to position Crescent Pure over the next 6 weeks. Ryan was to analyze positioning Crescent Pure as either an energy drink or sports drink. As an energy drink, Crescent Pure faces significant competition but could leverage its organic certification and lower caffeine/sugar. However, energy drinks are facing health scrutiny. As a sports drink, Crescent Pure could target the growing low-sugar market but would have difficulty competing against established brands. Ryan was to advise on the benefits and drawbacks of each option and provide a final recommendation to Booth.
Crescent Pure is an organic beverage company founded in 2008 that sells 1000 cases per month. It was acquired by Portland Drake Beverages who wanted to expand into the premium organic market. To capture more of the growing organic market, Crescent Pure needs to decide on a positioning strategy. It considers positioning as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic energy drink. After analyzing characteristics and opportunities of each, it is recommended to position as an organic energy drink to leverage the growing organic industry and target health-conscious consumers. The budget is $750,000 and pricing should be $2.75 per can wholesale to reach 12,000 cases sold per month and achieve desired profits.
Michael Booth, CEO of Portland Drake Beverages, acquired Crescent Pure in 2013. He is considering strategies to maximize Crescent's revenue. Market research shows increasing demand for healthier drinks. While energy drinks have high growth, concerns exist about health impacts. Sports drinks have a large market but also health concerns. The document analyzes positioning Crescent as an energy drink, sports drink, or healthy organic beverage. It provides pros and cons of each option, consumer perceptions of different drinks, Crescent consumer demographics, and a recommendation to position Crescent as a healthy organic drink due to growing demand and avoiding health concerns of other options.
Michael Booth, CEO of Portland Drake Beverages, has tasked Vice President of Marketing Sarah Ryan with evaluating positioning opportunities for Crescent, a drink company they acquired. Ryan is to recommend a strategy to the executive team. Market research director Matt Levor conducted research on positioning Crescent as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic beverage. His findings showed demand for a healthier alternative is growing and Crescent's customer base is not restricted to those seeking energy. He recommends the organic beverage positioning due to the emerging market and lack of competition.
- Peter Hooper founded Crescent Pure in 2008 as a non-alcoholic, organic juice beverage infused with herbal stimulants and 80mg of caffeine. It sold out quickly and demand remained high.
- Portland Drake Beverages acquired Crescent Pure in 2013 to expand into the functional beverage market. However, Crescent Pure faces competition from large energy drink brands and constraints in production capacity.
- A SWOT analysis found Crescent Pure's strengths were its lower sugar content and natural ingredients appealing to health-conscious consumers. However, it lacked brand awareness and some may not view its caffeine content as enough. The recommendation was to position Crescent Pure as an organic energy drink to target the
An analysis of the Harvard Case Study- Crescent Pure. This case study was prepared during a marketing Internship under the guidance of Professor Sameer Mathur, IIM Lucknow
PDB acquired Crescent Pure, an organic beverage company, in 2013. As VP of Marketing, Sarah Ryan must recommend a positioning strategy for Crescent Pure's entry into three new states. The options are energy drinks, sports drinks, or organic drinks. Energy drinks have strong growth but health concerns. Sports drinks have less growth and face government guidelines. Consumer data finds Crescent Pure is seen as refreshing, healthy, and natural. Ryan will recommend the optimal positioning strategy within 6 weeks.
Portland Drake Beverages recently acquired Crescent Pure, a non-alcoholic beverage company. They are evaluating positioning strategies for Crescent Pure as they plan to expand distribution into three Western states. Key players will evaluate positioning Crescent Pure as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic drink. While the energy drink market has major competitors, Crescent Pure's nutritional value and lower caffeine position it well. The recommendation is to position Crescent Pure as an energy drink to leverage higher consumption and meet the $750,000 advertising budget's break even point in the first year, earning a small profit.
PDB acquired Crescent Pure, an organic juice drink containing caffeine, in July 2013. Crescent Pure aimed to position itself in the growing energy drink market by October 2013 through a soft launch in 3 states with $750,000 in advertising. Market research showed Crescent Pure was perceived as refreshing, healthy, and functional by consumers aged 18-24. Positioning it as an organic energy drink could reinforce these perceptions and help it break even with monthly sales of 12,000 cases by generating $760,320 in annual profit.
PDB acquired Crescent Pure, an organic beverage company founded in 2008. Crescent contains herbal stimulants and low sugar. Michael Booth, CEO of PDB, asked Sarah Ryan to finalize a positioning strategy for Crescent to maximize revenue. The options are to position it as an energy drink, sports drink, or organic beverage. As an energy drink it could be a healthier alternative but has negatives from media attention. As a sports drink it could attract a wider audience but Crescent's price is higher. Positioning it as an organic beverage targets young, health conscious consumers but the market is growing and opportunities exist in lower caffeine and purer products.
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Participants will learn about the advantages and hurdles of integrating AI in marketing initiatives, along with actionable advice on starting this transformation. They will understand how AI can automate mundane tasks, refine customer data analysis, and offer personalized experiences on a large scale.
Attendees will come away with an understanding of AI's potential to redefine marketing, equipped with the knowledge and tactics to leverage AI in staying competitive. The talk aims to motivate professionals to adopt AI in enhancing their CX, driving greater customer engagement, loyalty, and business success.
Are you struggling to differentiate yourself in a saturated market? Do you find it challenging to attract and retain buyers? Learn how to effectively communicate your expertise using a Free Book Funnel designed to address these challenges and attract premium clients. This session will explore how a well-crafted book can be your most effective marketing tool, enhancing your credibility while significantly increasing your leads and sales while decreasing overall lead cost. Unpacking practical steps to create a magnetic book funnel that not only draws in your ideal customers, but also keeps them engaged. Break through the noise in the marketing world and leave with a blueprint that will transform your sales strategy.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era"" is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
We will explore the transformative journey of American Bath Group as they transitioned from a traditional monolithic CMS to a dynamic, composable martech framework using Kontent.ai. Discover the strategic decisions, challenges, and key benefits realized through adopting a headless CMS approach. Learn how composable business models empower marketers with flexibility, speed, and integration capabilities, ultimately enhancing digital experiences and operational efficiency. This session is essential for marketers looking to understand the practical impacts and advantages of composable technology in today's digital landscape. Join us to gain valuable insights and actionable takeaways from a real-world implementation that redefines the boundaries of marketing technology.
Customer Experience is not only for B2C and big box brands. Embark on a transformative journey into the realm of B2B customer experience with our masterclass. In this dynamic session, we'll delve into the intricacies of designing and implementing seamless customer journeys that leave a lasting impression. Explore proven strategies and best practices tailored specifically for the B2B landscape, learning how to navigate complex decision-making processes and cultivate meaningful relationships with clients. From initial engagement to post-sale support, discover how to optimize every touchpoint to deliver exceptional experiences that drive loyalty and revenue growth. Join us and unlock the keys to unparalleled success in the B2B arena.
Key Takeaways:
1. Identify your customer journey and growth areas
2. Build a three-step customer experience strategy
3. Put your CX data to use and drive action in your organization
Crafting Seamless B2B Customer Journeys - Strategies for Exceptional Experien...
Crescent pure - A Harvard Case Study
1.
2. • Sarah Ryan , VP Marketing of PDB
• Michael Booth , PDB’s CEO
• Peter Hooper , Founder of Crescent (2008)
• Matt Levor , Director of Market Research PDB
3. To Become America’s GREATEST natural beverage
All organic
Energy enhancing
Hydrating
Sports drink
9. • Industry Specifics of product positioning strategy
• Potential benefits and drawbacks
• Final recommendation
• Product pricing
• Scale of Advertising
10. “ Soft launch” in 3 western states(California, Oregon &
Washington) against “Fast launch” of beverage by
other companies
They hold 15% national beverage
demand
$75,000 on
advertising
(2014)
If achieved ,
(Jan,2014)
National
Expansion by
2015
BIG
PLAN
14. S
•Unique ,Refreshing , organic and healthier than average beverage
•Organic certification and lesser caffeine
•Environment friendly
•Pricing :$2.75 per can/8oz which is lesser than average energy drink approx $ 2.99 per can
W
•Short term productivity restraints i.e. 12,000 cans per month / 2014
•Competitors had 85% market share
•Limited Variety
O
•Projected market energy drinks ( 2013)$8.5Billion
•Expectation - $9.58Billion(2017) & $13.5Billion (2018)
•Consciousness of a healthier lifestyle made people to switch to healthier alternatives
T
•Alleged risk stories with health drinks lead to bad word of mouth i.e. Health & Safety
Concerns
•Due to Childhood obesity, School guidelines removed high cal drinks and snacks
19. Thank You
Efforts By – Chaitanya Vyas,
Amity Institute Of Biotechnology , Intern
under Professor Sameer Mathur, IIM-Lucknow
pursuing internship in “Marketing Management”
20. Credits
1. Harvard Business School Case Study :-
“Crescent Pure” , - John Quelch – Alisa Zalosh
2. Google images
3. Stockphoto.com
4. Colorlovers.com
5. Slideshare.net