This document discusses key concepts related to defining and categorizing marketing offerings. It explains that an offering consists of a product, price, and service. Products can be tangible goods or intangible services. The traditional view considers these as separate components, while the service-dominant view integrates them. An offering is based on an underlying technology platform that can be used to create a product line of similar offerings. Product lines can vary in depth and breadth. Developing new offerings involves understanding customer needs and repackaging technology platforms in innovative ways.
Chapter 7 - Products, Services, and Brands Building Customer JinElias52
Chapter 7 - Products, Services, and Brands: Building Customer value
Strategic Marketing, MASY1-GC 1230
Nike: More Than Just Innovative Sports Gear—a Total Brand Experience
Nike House of Innovation, Paris: The 3rd installation of HOI, and Nike’s largest, most digitally connected and immersive retail concept in the world
Provides consumers access to Nike’s best innovations, athlete storytelling and experiences.
Creates an immersive and digitally-powered end-to-end consumer journey.
To customers, the Nike brand means much more than just innovative running shoes and apparel. Deep down, Nike means sports inspiration, a just-do-it attitude, and a total brand experience. Nike draws on a wide range of
experiences to connect with consumers.
Nike’s innovative use of digital marketing recently earned the brand the title of “top genius” in “digital IQ” among 70 activewear companies in one digital consultancy’s rankings. Another firm ranked Nike the number one apparel brand in social media.
2
What Is a Product?
A product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might satisfy a want or need.
A service is an activity, benefit, or satisfaction offered for sale; it is intangible and does not result in ownership of anything.
A product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might satisfy a want or need. Broadly defined, products include services, events, persons, places, organizations, and ideas, or a mixture of these.
Services are a form of product that consists of activities, benefits, or satisfactions offered for sale that are essentially intangible and do not result in the ownership of anything.
3
Products, Services, and Experiences
Market offerings include both tangible goods and services.
Companies create and manage customer experiences with their brands or companies.
To differentiate their offers from that of the competitors
A company’s market offering often includes both tangible goods and services. At one extreme, the market offering may consist of a pure tangible good and at the other extreme a pure service. Between these two extremes, however, many goods-and-services combinations are possible. Today, as products and services become more commoditized, many companies are moving to a new level in creating value for their customers. To differentiate their offers, beyond simply making products and delivering services, firms are creating and managing customer experiences with their brands or companies.
4
Products, Services, and Experiences (CONT’D)
More than just selling products, Apple’s highly successful retail stores create engaging life-feels-good brand experiences.
Apple’s retail stores are very seductive places, where “life-feels-good” experiences abound. The store design is clean, simple, and just oozing with style—much like an Apple iPad or a featherweight MacBook Air.
The stores encourage a lot of purchasing, ...
Content marketing is all the rage. In a distracted world, where consumers are bombarded with advertising and overwhelmed by media and device choices, brands are searching for a new ways to connect—ideally over the long...
Chapter 7 - Products, Services, and Brands Building Customer JinElias52
Chapter 7 - Products, Services, and Brands: Building Customer value
Strategic Marketing, MASY1-GC 1230
Nike: More Than Just Innovative Sports Gear—a Total Brand Experience
Nike House of Innovation, Paris: The 3rd installation of HOI, and Nike’s largest, most digitally connected and immersive retail concept in the world
Provides consumers access to Nike’s best innovations, athlete storytelling and experiences.
Creates an immersive and digitally-powered end-to-end consumer journey.
To customers, the Nike brand means much more than just innovative running shoes and apparel. Deep down, Nike means sports inspiration, a just-do-it attitude, and a total brand experience. Nike draws on a wide range of
experiences to connect with consumers.
Nike’s innovative use of digital marketing recently earned the brand the title of “top genius” in “digital IQ” among 70 activewear companies in one digital consultancy’s rankings. Another firm ranked Nike the number one apparel brand in social media.
2
What Is a Product?
A product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might satisfy a want or need.
A service is an activity, benefit, or satisfaction offered for sale; it is intangible and does not result in ownership of anything.
A product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might satisfy a want or need. Broadly defined, products include services, events, persons, places, organizations, and ideas, or a mixture of these.
Services are a form of product that consists of activities, benefits, or satisfactions offered for sale that are essentially intangible and do not result in the ownership of anything.
3
Products, Services, and Experiences
Market offerings include both tangible goods and services.
Companies create and manage customer experiences with their brands or companies.
To differentiate their offers from that of the competitors
A company’s market offering often includes both tangible goods and services. At one extreme, the market offering may consist of a pure tangible good and at the other extreme a pure service. Between these two extremes, however, many goods-and-services combinations are possible. Today, as products and services become more commoditized, many companies are moving to a new level in creating value for their customers. To differentiate their offers, beyond simply making products and delivering services, firms are creating and managing customer experiences with their brands or companies.
4
Products, Services, and Experiences (CONT’D)
More than just selling products, Apple’s highly successful retail stores create engaging life-feels-good brand experiences.
Apple’s retail stores are very seductive places, where “life-feels-good” experiences abound. The store design is clean, simple, and just oozing with style—much like an Apple iPad or a featherweight MacBook Air.
The stores encourage a lot of purchasing, ...
Content marketing is all the rage. In a distracted world, where consumers are bombarded with advertising and overwhelmed by media and device choices, brands are searching for a new ways to connect—ideally over the long...
How to create a video Be paid for commenting on YouTube videos to sell for cl...Tarri1
Wanna make 840 bucks per week just by commenting on YouTube videos?
Yes? : )
Then, apply for today's job of the day.
We're currently working with an educational startup that has a youtube channel.
And those people need some helping hands to handle it as they get numerous comments daily, from their students, asking doubts and questions. And they can't handle it by themselves.
And that's why they're hiring 3 ordinary people from [COUNTRY] to answer those comments on behalf of them.
Don't worry, they'll provide you with a complete solution script containing all the answers to those questions.
You just have to copy and paste those answers while replying to their comments.
That's it.
And the best thing is that you don't need anything more than a reliable internet connection and a smartphone.
Hit this blue line to apply. https://2698agopz6cx7ocpx9s7vmk9kj.hop.clickbank.net/
16Retailing and WholesalingLEARNING OBJECTIVESAfter .docxLyndonPelletier761
16
Retailing and Wholesaling
L
EARNING
O
BJECTIVES
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
LO 16-1
Identify retailers in terms of the utilities they provide.
LO 16-2
Explain the alternative ways to classify retail outlets.
LO 16-3
Describe the many methods of nonstore retailing.
LO 16-4
Classify retailers in terms of the retail positioning matrix, and specify retailing mix actions.
LO 16-5
Explain changes in retailing with the wheel of retailing and the retail life cycle concepts.
LO 16-6
Describe the types of firms that perform wholesaling activities and their functions.
I
F
Y
OU
L
IKE TO
S
HOP
, Y
OU
W
ILL
L
OVE
G
OOGLE
G
LASS(ES)!
You’ve shopped in a store. You’ve also shopped online. Now you can enjoy the benefits of both thanks to new technologies such as Google Glass!
Google Glass products resemble a pair of eyeglasses with a small display screen visible to the wearer. Image and voice recognition capabilities identify relevant information to display on the screen. The sound, video, and graphics accessed through the glasses create an
augmented reality
that overlays the physical, real-world environment being viewed at the same time. When used by shoppers, this technology adds rich content to the shopping experience, improving the purchase decision process. It’s a perfect way to combine the fast, personalized, and customized information consumers enjoy when they shop online with the traditional brick-and-mortar in-store shopping experience!
In addition to the head-worn displays being developed by Google, other companies are developing augmented reality software and apps for smartphones, tablet devices, and 3D projectors. IBM, for example, is developing a mobile app that uses the camera in a smartphone to identify a product and then display information about the product (e.g., price, nutritional value, etc.) based on preferences specified by the consumer. Similarly, a company called Aurasma is developing image and pattern recognition technology to identify real-world objects and then activate interactive animations for consumers to view. Augmented reality technology platforms such as these are being used by Kellogg’s, to provide additional information on 80 million cereal boxes; by Taylor Swift, to support her Wonderstruck fragrance; and by the Rolling Stones, to augment an advertising campaign in 50 cities around the world.
Retailers are excited about the opportunity to enhance the customer experience. IKEA’s new catalog allows consumers to access information, videos, and 3D models through a tablet image recognition app. A Japanese furniture manufacturer is developing an app that allows customers to take a picture of a room in their house and then overlay digital images of furniture items in the photo to simulate the appearance of furniture arrangements before making a purchase. Toshiba offers a similar app that allows customers to see what a television will look like in their home. In addition, clothing retailers are d.
Abstract:
In
this
whitepaper
we
present
an
efficient
way
to
research
what
consumers
really
want
for
their
money.
We
have
learnt
from
consumers
that
“The
Number"
is
the
most
engaging
way
to
talk
about
financial
services.
“The
Number”
is
the
amount
of
resources
(financial
and
other)
that
people
think
they
need
to
feel
safe
for
the
rest
of
their
life.
Understanding
how
people
see
"their
Number"
brings
a
fresh
and
actionable
way
to
design
and
communicate
financial
services.
We
developed
our
own
proprietary
connector
research
tool,
eConceptLab.com,
making
use
of
simple
Google
and
Facebook
ads.
Connectors
are
small
sentences/visuals
like
the
ones
used
in
Google
or
Facebook
ads
that
generate
interest
and
create
a
mental
frame
of
expectations
about
a
product
or
service.
They
are,
in
this
sense,
a
great
door-‐opener
to
help
sell
in
a
relevant
way.
Keywords:
Concept
Lab,
online
advertising,
Google
and
Facebook,
Internet
consumer
research,
Address
stated
behaviour
Every CEO's Secret Weapon for Growth: Know Your Consumer
November 2013
You've heard the mandate "Know Your Consumer" but do you understand its true value to your company? Leaders who regularly tap consumer insight know that this is the key lever for sustained business growth. In this white paper, we examine methods of closing the company-consumer gap, and dig into examples of well-known companies that have done so successfully.
at least 2 references in each peer responses! I noticed .docxcockekeshia
at least 2 references in each peer responses!
I noticed that there are many proposed policies on the agenda that are related to healthcare. Some of them are specific to the nursing practice. This creates the opportunity for the nurse to advocate for policies that impact nursing and healthcare directly by providing first-hand accounts and professional opinions supported by research. Nurses have insight on issues, such as patient safety and satisfaction, health disparities, access to care, and promoting positive outcomes (Abood, 2016).
The problem is that some nurses are unable to navigate through the politics of regulation and policy (Abood, 2016). This can create a challenge and become discouraging for nurses looking to make an impact or promote an agenda (Abood, 2016). Nurses can overcome this difficulty by participating in internships and workshops that provide the opportunity for a nurse to learn about the legislative process and the current issues being discussed (Abood, 2016). Understanding the political process is an essential method for effectively advocate for an issue. Nurses have to learn to play the game to promote change or obtain the scarcely rationed funding available.
According to Milstead and Short (2019), key opportunities to advocate for policy lies in knowledge and perception. Being knowledgeable on an issue can increase your influence as an advocate. Perception is a significant key in politics. Being perceived as a valuable collaborator or obtaining the support of a mentor that is respected can help push your agenda (Milstead & Short, 2019). Networking plays a significant role in politics. being introduced respected mentor or partner can help a nurse gain influence with rallying for support of a proposed agenda (Milstead & Short, 2019).
Probably the most significant opportunity for a nurse to advocate for a policy comes with becoming a member of a nursing association. Nurses associations like the American Nurses Association (ANA) are set up with the mission of influencing policy and advocating for the nurses and patients (ANA, 2019). The strength lies in numbers with the nursing association. Many of these organizations have built relationships with politicians and political parties to gain influence to support their agendas. For example, the ANA tends to favor and support democratic candidates (Milstead & Short, 2019). Nurses associations have enough members to get the attention of lawmakers. However, the nurse still has to task of advocating within the association to gain support from its members.
.
At least 2 pages longMarilyn Lysohir, an internationally celebra.docxcockekeshia
At least 2 pages long
Marilyn Lysohir, an internationally celebrated ceramic artist, started Cowgirl Chocolates to provide some funding support for a yearly published arts magazine, High Ground, that she and her husband, Ross Coates, started in 1995. Her love of chocolates and hot and spicy foods spurred the idea of making hot and spicy chocolates to be sold in creative, artistic tins and packaging, which she labeled Cowgirl Chocolates. Her small business, begun in 1997, had won a number of awards in fiery food competitions. While Cowgirl Chocolates had grown steadily over its four years in business, it still had only generated $30,000 in sales revenue in 2000, which was not enough to cover expenses. Marilyn had drained much of her personal savings to keep Cowgirl Chocolates in business. Her cash accounting methods and record keeping were not very sophisticated although she seemed to have a good sense of her costs in production and raw materials and the packaging. However, Marilyn had taken a shotgun approach to most of her marketing efforts and had tried a number of activities to increase product demand. She allowed herself to make one risky financial move each year in her pursuit of profitability and increased sales. She had just made her one risky move for year 2001: She had taken out a full-page ad in Chile Pepper magazine for $3,000.
Questions
1. The suggested retail price and wholesale prices of Cowgirl Chocolates products are displayed in Exhibit 2 (p. 491) along with the product and packaging costs. Based on this information, discuss the relative merits of using a cost-based, demand-based, and competition-based pricing method. (50 points)
2. What are four (4) options that Cowgirl Chocolates may consider as far as pricing? What would you recommend? (50 points)
.
More Related Content
Similar to Week 5, Creating Offerings was derived from Principles of Ma.docx
How to create a video Be paid for commenting on YouTube videos to sell for cl...Tarri1
Wanna make 840 bucks per week just by commenting on YouTube videos?
Yes? : )
Then, apply for today's job of the day.
We're currently working with an educational startup that has a youtube channel.
And those people need some helping hands to handle it as they get numerous comments daily, from their students, asking doubts and questions. And they can't handle it by themselves.
And that's why they're hiring 3 ordinary people from [COUNTRY] to answer those comments on behalf of them.
Don't worry, they'll provide you with a complete solution script containing all the answers to those questions.
You just have to copy and paste those answers while replying to their comments.
That's it.
And the best thing is that you don't need anything more than a reliable internet connection and a smartphone.
Hit this blue line to apply. https://2698agopz6cx7ocpx9s7vmk9kj.hop.clickbank.net/
16Retailing and WholesalingLEARNING OBJECTIVESAfter .docxLyndonPelletier761
16
Retailing and Wholesaling
L
EARNING
O
BJECTIVES
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
LO 16-1
Identify retailers in terms of the utilities they provide.
LO 16-2
Explain the alternative ways to classify retail outlets.
LO 16-3
Describe the many methods of nonstore retailing.
LO 16-4
Classify retailers in terms of the retail positioning matrix, and specify retailing mix actions.
LO 16-5
Explain changes in retailing with the wheel of retailing and the retail life cycle concepts.
LO 16-6
Describe the types of firms that perform wholesaling activities and their functions.
I
F
Y
OU
L
IKE TO
S
HOP
, Y
OU
W
ILL
L
OVE
G
OOGLE
G
LASS(ES)!
You’ve shopped in a store. You’ve also shopped online. Now you can enjoy the benefits of both thanks to new technologies such as Google Glass!
Google Glass products resemble a pair of eyeglasses with a small display screen visible to the wearer. Image and voice recognition capabilities identify relevant information to display on the screen. The sound, video, and graphics accessed through the glasses create an
augmented reality
that overlays the physical, real-world environment being viewed at the same time. When used by shoppers, this technology adds rich content to the shopping experience, improving the purchase decision process. It’s a perfect way to combine the fast, personalized, and customized information consumers enjoy when they shop online with the traditional brick-and-mortar in-store shopping experience!
In addition to the head-worn displays being developed by Google, other companies are developing augmented reality software and apps for smartphones, tablet devices, and 3D projectors. IBM, for example, is developing a mobile app that uses the camera in a smartphone to identify a product and then display information about the product (e.g., price, nutritional value, etc.) based on preferences specified by the consumer. Similarly, a company called Aurasma is developing image and pattern recognition technology to identify real-world objects and then activate interactive animations for consumers to view. Augmented reality technology platforms such as these are being used by Kellogg’s, to provide additional information on 80 million cereal boxes; by Taylor Swift, to support her Wonderstruck fragrance; and by the Rolling Stones, to augment an advertising campaign in 50 cities around the world.
Retailers are excited about the opportunity to enhance the customer experience. IKEA’s new catalog allows consumers to access information, videos, and 3D models through a tablet image recognition app. A Japanese furniture manufacturer is developing an app that allows customers to take a picture of a room in their house and then overlay digital images of furniture items in the photo to simulate the appearance of furniture arrangements before making a purchase. Toshiba offers a similar app that allows customers to see what a television will look like in their home. In addition, clothing retailers are d.
Abstract:
In
this
whitepaper
we
present
an
efficient
way
to
research
what
consumers
really
want
for
their
money.
We
have
learnt
from
consumers
that
“The
Number"
is
the
most
engaging
way
to
talk
about
financial
services.
“The
Number”
is
the
amount
of
resources
(financial
and
other)
that
people
think
they
need
to
feel
safe
for
the
rest
of
their
life.
Understanding
how
people
see
"their
Number"
brings
a
fresh
and
actionable
way
to
design
and
communicate
financial
services.
We
developed
our
own
proprietary
connector
research
tool,
eConceptLab.com,
making
use
of
simple
Google
and
Facebook
ads.
Connectors
are
small
sentences/visuals
like
the
ones
used
in
Google
or
Facebook
ads
that
generate
interest
and
create
a
mental
frame
of
expectations
about
a
product
or
service.
They
are,
in
this
sense,
a
great
door-‐opener
to
help
sell
in
a
relevant
way.
Keywords:
Concept
Lab,
online
advertising,
Google
and
Facebook,
Internet
consumer
research,
Address
stated
behaviour
Every CEO's Secret Weapon for Growth: Know Your Consumer
November 2013
You've heard the mandate "Know Your Consumer" but do you understand its true value to your company? Leaders who regularly tap consumer insight know that this is the key lever for sustained business growth. In this white paper, we examine methods of closing the company-consumer gap, and dig into examples of well-known companies that have done so successfully.
at least 2 references in each peer responses! I noticed .docxcockekeshia
at least 2 references in each peer responses!
I noticed that there are many proposed policies on the agenda that are related to healthcare. Some of them are specific to the nursing practice. This creates the opportunity for the nurse to advocate for policies that impact nursing and healthcare directly by providing first-hand accounts and professional opinions supported by research. Nurses have insight on issues, such as patient safety and satisfaction, health disparities, access to care, and promoting positive outcomes (Abood, 2016).
The problem is that some nurses are unable to navigate through the politics of regulation and policy (Abood, 2016). This can create a challenge and become discouraging for nurses looking to make an impact or promote an agenda (Abood, 2016). Nurses can overcome this difficulty by participating in internships and workshops that provide the opportunity for a nurse to learn about the legislative process and the current issues being discussed (Abood, 2016). Understanding the political process is an essential method for effectively advocate for an issue. Nurses have to learn to play the game to promote change or obtain the scarcely rationed funding available.
According to Milstead and Short (2019), key opportunities to advocate for policy lies in knowledge and perception. Being knowledgeable on an issue can increase your influence as an advocate. Perception is a significant key in politics. Being perceived as a valuable collaborator or obtaining the support of a mentor that is respected can help push your agenda (Milstead & Short, 2019). Networking plays a significant role in politics. being introduced respected mentor or partner can help a nurse gain influence with rallying for support of a proposed agenda (Milstead & Short, 2019).
Probably the most significant opportunity for a nurse to advocate for a policy comes with becoming a member of a nursing association. Nurses associations like the American Nurses Association (ANA) are set up with the mission of influencing policy and advocating for the nurses and patients (ANA, 2019). The strength lies in numbers with the nursing association. Many of these organizations have built relationships with politicians and political parties to gain influence to support their agendas. For example, the ANA tends to favor and support democratic candidates (Milstead & Short, 2019). Nurses associations have enough members to get the attention of lawmakers. However, the nurse still has to task of advocating within the association to gain support from its members.
.
At least 2 pages longMarilyn Lysohir, an internationally celebra.docxcockekeshia
At least 2 pages long
Marilyn Lysohir, an internationally celebrated ceramic artist, started Cowgirl Chocolates to provide some funding support for a yearly published arts magazine, High Ground, that she and her husband, Ross Coates, started in 1995. Her love of chocolates and hot and spicy foods spurred the idea of making hot and spicy chocolates to be sold in creative, artistic tins and packaging, which she labeled Cowgirl Chocolates. Her small business, begun in 1997, had won a number of awards in fiery food competitions. While Cowgirl Chocolates had grown steadily over its four years in business, it still had only generated $30,000 in sales revenue in 2000, which was not enough to cover expenses. Marilyn had drained much of her personal savings to keep Cowgirl Chocolates in business. Her cash accounting methods and record keeping were not very sophisticated although she seemed to have a good sense of her costs in production and raw materials and the packaging. However, Marilyn had taken a shotgun approach to most of her marketing efforts and had tried a number of activities to increase product demand. She allowed herself to make one risky financial move each year in her pursuit of profitability and increased sales. She had just made her one risky move for year 2001: She had taken out a full-page ad in Chile Pepper magazine for $3,000.
Questions
1. The suggested retail price and wholesale prices of Cowgirl Chocolates products are displayed in Exhibit 2 (p. 491) along with the product and packaging costs. Based on this information, discuss the relative merits of using a cost-based, demand-based, and competition-based pricing method. (50 points)
2. What are four (4) options that Cowgirl Chocolates may consider as far as pricing? What would you recommend? (50 points)
.
At least 2 citations. APA 7TH EditionResponse 1. TITop.docxcockekeshia
At least 2 citations. APA 7TH Edition
Response 1. TI
Top of Form
Dr. Joubert and colleagues, the study of leadership has developed, giving forth new theories and structures that explore the description of what it means to be a leader, and how to carry out the same effect. It would be pragmatic to note that one is not made a leader by a job title but through practical impact in. The situational theory is one such theory that can be effective in the medical field. This theory, often referred to as the Hersey-Blanchard situational leadership theory, suggests that no single leadership theory style is the best. However, Researchers and developers of leadership theories have not agreed on the leadership theories (Duggan et al., 2015)
.
Nursing leadership is a multidimensional concept. The nursing profession involves role model leaders that can transform their environment and leading their teams to succeed by overcoming obstacles. Situational leadership requires the leader to transform their leadership style to meet the followers' leadership needs (Marshall & Broome, 2017). Developing a single satisfying leadership theory has become problematic due to these phenomena. Leadership style has a direct impact on the quality of care administered by the nurse team. The leadership style defines the quality of the relationship between the leader and the followers and sets the tone and mood of the work environment (Laureate Education, 2018).
Our director of nursing practice a contingency leadership style. Aware of the different dispositions on our team, she treats each nurse based on their abilities and needs. At times, she exercises Laissez-fair leadership, dictatorial, transformational, democratic, and other transformational styles. I was amazed by the approach. It helped to manage the team. For instance, the recalcitrant nurse received warnings, punishment for mistakes, and reward for an excellent performance. These restrained her actions and caused her to develop positive behaviors and care towards patients.
In Addition to the application of situational leadership style, she had leadership characteristics such as charisma, honesty, communication skills, creativity, innovativeness, decision-making, and integrity. Combination of the style and the qualities facilitated leading our team initiatives. to create a leader that we were all revered. According to Calderon-Mafud and Pando-Moreno (2018), organizations experience cultures of flexibility, social support, innovation, an also increased personal confidence, and openness to change. Furthermore, the implementation of an authentic leadership style mostly behaved as a middleman in the organization as it increased work productivity, helped implement staff engagement, and improving job satisfaction.
References
Calderon-Mafud, J. L., & Pando-Moreno, M. (2018). Role of authentic leadership in
organizational socialization and work engagement among workers.
Psychology
, 9, 46-62. doi:10.4236/psych.2018.91.
At each decision point, you should evaluate all options before selec.docxcockekeshia
At each decision point, you should evaluate all options before selecting your decision and moving throughout the exercise. Before you make your decision, make sure that you have researched each option and that you evaluate the decision that you will select. Be sure to research each option using the primary literature.
.
At an elevation of nearly four thousand metres above sea.docxcockekeshia
A
t an elevation of nearly four thousand metres above sea
level, Comitancillo, a province in northwestern Guate
mala, was a formidable place to farm. The air was thin
and cold. I followed Rosa towards her home along a
well-trodden path on the side of the mountain. My lungs were
crying for oxygen, overworking like moth wings. Maya-Mam
communities had lived on these barren slopes in northwestern
Guatemala for nearly five hundred years. Before the arrival
of the Spanish in the 1500s, the Mam splintered off from the
Mayan Empire, which had chased them off the lush green flats
and up into the Sierra Madre. Looking down the mountainside,
I witnessed how the Mam adapted to live on their mountain
fortress: they'd carved steps into the mountainside, thousands
of terraces that cascaded down to the bottom of the valley. I
was awestruck by such architecture. "We've been cultivating la
milpa for hundreds of years," said Rosa. Milpa was a Spanish
word that summed up the three crops that had sustained the
Mam for centuries: maize, beans, and squash. Planting all three
crops together formed a sacrosanct principle of Mam farming.
The Mam were one of twenty-four indigenous cultures in
Guatemala, a country where nearly 50 per cent of the popu
lation were indigenous people, most of whom dwelled in rural
areas and depended on subsistence and small-scale agricul
ture for survival. Despite having a near majority of indigenous
people comprising its population, the country had never elected
an indigenous president. The mestizo elite owned politics and
power in Guatemala, while the Mam formed only a minus
cule fraction of the country's population. Marginalized to the
mountains in the northwest, they survived on growing food and
grazing livestock. Traditionally, men played a larger role in farm
management while women were responsible for grazing sheep,
grinding maize, cooking, cleaning, and nurturing the family.
The dusty husks of the harvest and the season past dried in
the slanted fields on the mountainsides. The bright sun caught
and illuminated their yellow leftovers into gold. Nothing
would be wasted on the mountains. Rosa would harvest the
dried crops for pig and sheep feed.
GUATEMALA 31
"Our seeds are hardy and meant for these mountains. The
seeds people try to sell us don't do well in Comitancillo. They
grow and the wind breaks them."
Years of living on the mountains had also ground Rosa into a
hardy woman. The fifty-year-old woman barely reached five feet.
She wore a striking turquoise blue huipil, a traditional blouse,
embroidered with magenta flowers. She parted her long black
hair in the middle and braided it down her back in a single
rope. Rosa was a widow. Her husband had died twelve years
earlier after falling from the rickety scaffolding on a construc
tion site and quickly dying of his injuries. He'd been working
as a migrant labourer in Xela, a city situated in one of the valley
flats, nearly th.
At a minimum, your outline should include the followingIntroducti.docxcockekeshia
At a minimum, your outline should include the following:
Introduction
Identify the topic
What makes this a global ethical dilemma
Why we should care about this
Thesis statement
Rationale for one side of dilemma
Evidence based support #1 (reason and resource)
Evidence based support #2 (reason and resource)
Evidence based support #3 (reason and resource)
Rationale for the OTHER side of the dilemma (at least three points)
Evidence based support #1 (reason and resource)
Evidence based support #2 (reason and resource)
Evidence based support #3 (reason and resource)
Compare this issue in different countries
Identify country #1 and how they view/experience this issue
Identify country #2 and how they view/experience this issue
Identify country #3 and how they view/experience this issue
Conclusion
References
Compose your work in a .doc or .docx file
.
At least 500 wordsPay attention to the required length of these.docxcockekeshia
At least 500 words
Pay attention to the required length of these assignments. These assignments consist of reading a newspaper article about a designated region of the world--specific for each assignment--and writing an essay about it.
Primary sources are documents or other materials such as photographs, art work, coins, tapestries, etc. produced at the time period under consideration. https://library.uncw.edu/guides/finding_primary_sources is a website that gives information on what a primary source is and how historians [or anyone writing about history] use them. Look at the attached file for questions to ask of any source that you would consider a primary source.
For these newspaper article and extra credit assignments you are to find a substantive newspaper article [most newspapers are available online--it must be from a newspaper, not a website only or cablenews organization--NOT yahoonews, not cnn.com, not foxnews, not msnbc--only a published newspaper.] about the region designated for that assignment. If the article you choose is too short you will have trouble doing the assignment. Also, note that if an article is about birds, or insects or any non-human source that is not connected to humanity, it is not appropriate for this assignment. Any good newspaper article is based on sources, which historians would designate as primary sources. So an important part of these assignments is to identify the primary sources used by the author of the article you choose. Primary sources are the building blocks of history. You can think of them like eyewitness accounts or physical evidence produced at the time of an incident or crime being considered in a courtroom proceeding or trial. Without evidence a jury couldn’t make a fair decision in a case. In the same way, without primary sources, history cannot be written--and good newspaper articles cannot be written. So part of this assignment is asking you to decide if the reporter writing the article you select has actually used good primary sources. Does he or she have real evidence and enough of it to write the article? Does the reporter have a particular viewpoint or bias? Could you imagine the article being used as a primary source by a historian in the future for writing history about this time period? How useful would the document be and does it have any weaknesses or drawbacks as a piece of evidence? What else might a historian need, besides the article you are analyzing, to give a more complete or balanced discussion of the topic?
Your assignments will be graded on:
Formatting: 1 inch margins; your name, course number & assignment number [first, second or third] on top of first page. No other information is needed for a heading, and no repeat headers allowed. Following this formatting, cite the author(s) of the article, the title of the article, the name of the newspaper in which it appears [the title of the newspaper should be underlined] and the date of its publi.
At a generic level, innovation is a core business process concerned .docxcockekeshia
At a generic level, innovation is a core business process concerned with renewing what the
organization offers the world and the ways in which it creates and delivers that offering. And
to do this they all need to carry out these activities:
• Searching – scanning the environment (internal and external) for, and processing relevant signals about, threats and opportunities for change.
• Selecting – deciding (on the basis of a strategic view of how the enterprise can best
• develop) which of these signals to respond to
• Implementing – translating the potential in the trigger idea into something new and launching it in an internal or external market. Making this happen is not a single event but requires attention to:
Acquiring the knowledge resources to enable the innovation (for example, by creating something new through R&D, market research, etc., acquiring knowledge from elsewhere via technology transfer, strategic alliance, etc.).
Executing the project under conditions of uncertainty which require extensive problem-solving.
Launching the innovation and managing the process of initial adoption
Sustaining adoption and use in the long-term – or revisiting the original idea and modifying it – reinnovation.
Learning – enterprises have (but may not always take) the opportunity to learn from progressing through this cycle so that they can build their knowledge base and can improve the ways in which the process is managed.
But they differ widely in the ways in which this is done and the importance of different elements.
In this exercise pick a sector – e.g. food retailing, airlines, chemicals, public administration – and draw a map of their particular version of this process. How does it work out in practice? Where are they likely to need or to place most emphasis?
.
Asymmetric Cryptography•Description of each algorithm•Types•Encrypt.docxcockekeshia
Asymmetric Cryptography•Description of each algorithm•Types:•Encryption•Digital Signature•Hashing Function•Key Distribution•Strengths/weaknesses of each algorithm•Relevant examples of modern applications/industry that utilize each algorithm•Public Key Infrastructure•Define•Discuss the components•How is it used with asymmetric cryptography
.
Astronomy HWIn 250-300 words,What was Aristarchus idea of the.docxcockekeshia
Astronomy HW/
In 250-300 words,
What was Aristarchus idea of the phases of Venus, and at that time when he presented his information was it rejected/ was it a big issue/ or did the issue never come up?
This has to be 100% original. I will check for plagirium. Furthermore, when after answering you can put your own input on why was it a big issue, or why do you think the issue never came up when Aristarchus present the idea of the phases of Venus.
If you cite something/someone, you have to make a reference page. And do the cited in MLA format.
.
Astronomy ASTA01The Sun and PlanetsDepartment of Physic.docxcockekeshia
Astronomy ASTA01:
The Sun and Planets
Department of Physical & Environmental Sciences,
UTSC
Fall 2018
Problem Set 3
DUE: Tuesday November 13, 2018
Where: Hand in your solutions in the mailbox marked for your tutorial,
on the 5th floor corridor of the Science Wing, near office SW506C in the
Physics & Astrophysics section.
Reminder: Write your name on your solutions. Also make sure you
carefully read the entire problem set policy that was distributed on
Quercus. It will help you avoid standard mistakes and score higher. We will
assume that you have read this policy document by the time you return your
solution.
How to write your solutions: Be precise and clear. Explain what you
are calculating. The method of calculation you adopt and your reasoning are
the most important. In case of a computational mistake, you will still get
credits if your method is right, so explain it clearly.
1
1. If the Solar System had formed right after the Big Bang, it would
have lacked oxygen (O), and therefore water (H2O). Using the solar
nebula theory, describe what would have been most different about
the planet formation process and the planets formed in this alternative
Solar System. [NO MORE than 15 sentences].
2. Halley’s comet is the only-naked eye comet that might appear twice in
a human lifetime (since it comes back every 76 years).
(a) Based on this comet’s orbital period, would you say that it is more
likely to have originated from the Kuiper belt or from the Oort
cloud? [A quantitative answer is expected to justify your choice]
(b) What other orbital feature, besides the comet’s orbital period,
could be used to distinguish its origin [NO MORE than 5 sen-
tences]
3. (a) Collect data on the mass and radius of Earth (made of rock) &
Jupiter (made of gas) and calculate the overall average density of
each planet, expressed in g/cm3.
(b) The density of water that we drink is about 1 g/cm3. Use your
everyday experience to describe the difference in density between
rock, air, and water. [State your answers in terms of “much
more/much less” or “a little more/a little less”].
(c) Is the mean density of Earth consistent with our everyday experi-
ence of similar composition material? What about Jupiter (same
question)?
(d) Propose a physical mechanism that might explain the discrepancy
between the mean density of a planet and the density of similar
composition material as we experience it in our everyday life.
4. Mean-motion resonances with Jupiter shape the Kirkwood gaps in the
main asteroid belt. A resonance written as “5:2” refers to the inner
body completing exactly 5 orbital revolutions when the outer body
completes exactly 2.
(a) Using Kepler law, find the orbital radius in AU of the following
important resonances for the Kirkwood gaps: 2:1, 3:1 and 5:2.
Compare your values to those shown in the diagram on Kirkwood
gaps in the class lectures (see lecture 12 slides).
(b) High-value mean-motion resonances, such as 2001:1000, are usu-
ally co.
Astronomers have been reflecting laser beams off the Moon since refl.docxcockekeshia
Astronomers have been reflecting laser beams off the Moon since reflectors were left there by Apollo astronauts. This has resulted in the conclusion that the Moon is moving away from the Earth at a rate of 3.8 cm per year. Discuss the specific cause of what is making the Moon recede, the likely end result for the Earth-Moon system, and what you think this might mean for life on Earth.
.
A strategic plan to inform emerging fashion retailers
about social media research and best practices.
2
Proposal Overview
Social media can take the form of various outlets, including, but not limited to: Instagram,
Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, YouTube, etc. Each social media platform has its specific use and
benefits, with a wide range of active users. It is important to note that successful retailers are
using these online strategies to penetrate new markets, to champion for social media
movements, and to effectively develop connections with consumers.
In this social media blueprint, we suggest using Instagram as our company’s main social media
platform. Our primary research examines H&M, Topshop, and Uniqlo’s Instagram accounts and
revealed the importance of using models, creating effective hashtags, and providing customer
service. The secondary research presents the best practices of social media and how the public
and specific individuals view social media. To conclude the proposal, we will provide a
comprehensive strategy that includes a detailed plan with suggestions for a stellar social media
presence.
Primary Research Summary & Key Takeaways
We have compiled the following key takeaways using Instagram. Our primary research includes
a variety of retailers who specialize in different products and promote to diverse markets.
These three key findings will provide an all-encompassing approach which will ultimately tie
into our strategic recommendations going forward.
#1: Using models to showcase the retailer's products increases follower satisfactions. Each one
of our retailers uses this form of posting. The following three pictures are example images used
by retailers to promote their products through outfit modeling. Our retailers provide
consumers with the option to directly purchase clothing, accessories, and shoes via online
portals. These types of posts provide followers with a visualization of how the products will look
once worn, which is part of the purchasing decision many consumers take into account. In
addition, these types of images also provide outfit inspirations when consumers are in need of
assistance with outfit coordination.
(Uniqlo) (H&M) (Topshop)
3
#2: The use of hashtags connects posts to a broader conversation and trend. Our retailers use
various hashtags that either connected their post to an on-going product line, style, event, or
motto and “catchphrase”. For example, Uniqlo wants to be known for their fashionable, yet
simple clothing. Their hashtag, #simplemadebetter, allows Uniqlo to actively promote the
company’s business strategy of revamping basic clothing to make it ‘better’ quality and more
fashion forward. London Fashion Week is one of the most prominent events in the fashion
industry, known to set the latest fashion trends. The #LFW (London Fashion Week) establishes
Topshop as a brand that is compatible against the haute couture f.
Asthma, Sleep, and Sun-SafetyPercentage of High School S.docxcockekeshia
Asthma, Sleep, and Sun-Safety
Percentage of High School Students Who Had Ever Been Told by a Doctor or Nurse That They Had Asthma, by Sex, Grade, and Race/Ethnicity,* 2017
*B > H, B > W (Based on t-test analysis, p < 0.05.)
All Hispanic students are included in the Hispanic category. All other races are non-Hispanic.
Note: This graph contains weighted results.
National Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 2017
Data for this slide are from the National Youth Risk Behavior Survey. This slide shows percentages of high school students who had ever been told by a doctor or nurse that they had asthma.
The percentage for all students is 22.5. The percentage for Male students is 22.4. The percentage for Female students is 22.5. The percentage for 9th grade students is 22.9. The percentage for 10th grade students is 22.9. The percentage for 11th grade students is 21.2. The percentage for 12th grade students is 23.0. The percentage for Black students is 29.8. The percentage for Hispanic students is 21.1. The percentage for White students is 20.9. All Hispanic students are included in the Hispanic category. All other races are non-Hispanic. Note: This graph contains weighted results.
For this behavior, the prevalence for Black students is higher than for Hispanic students. The prevalence for Black students is higher than for White students. (Based on t-test analysis, p < 0.05.)
2
Series 1
Total Male Female 9th 10th 11th 12th Black Hispanic White 22.5 22.4 22.5 22.9 22.9 21.2 23 29.8 21.1 20.9
Percent
Range and Median Percentage of High School Students Who Had Ever Been Told by a Doctor or Nurse That They Had Asthma, Across 29 States and 20 Cities, 2017
State and Local Youth Risk Behavior Surveys, 2017
These are results from the state and local Youth Risk Behavior Surveys, 2017. This slide shows the range and median percentages of 29 states and 20 cities for high school students who had ever been told by a doctor or nurse that they had asthma.
The range across states was 19.3% to 33.4%. The median across states was 24.3%. The range across cites was 17.4% to 33.4%. The median across cities was 23.9%.
3
Min
States Cities 19.3 17.399999999999999 Max
States Cities 33.4 33.4 Med
States Cities 24.3 23.9
Percent
No Data
19.3% - 21.6%
21.7% - 24.2%
24.3% - 25.9%
26.0% - 33.4%
Percentage of High School Students Who Had Ever Been Told by a Doctor or Nurse That They Had Asthma
State Youth Risk Behavior Surveys, 2017
This slide shows the percentage of students who had ever been told by a doctor or nurse that they had asthma, 2017. The values range from 19.3% to 33.4%. Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Virginia, Wisconsin, range from 19.3% to 21.6%. California, Florida, Illinois, New Mexico, Texas, Utah, West Virginia, range from 21.7% to 24.2%. Delaware, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, range from 24.3%.
Assumption-Busting1. What assumption do you have that is in s.docxcockekeshia
Assumption-Busting
1. What assumption do you have that is in some way limiting? Please be specific.
2. What is the exact opposite of that assumption?
3. How can you start acting differently, based on the fact that the opposite of your assumption is true? Be specific.
Idea Presentation Form
1. Describe the idea in two-three sentences or bullets.
2. What need or desire does your idea address?
3. For whom is the idea intended (men age 45-50, punk rock fans in Philadelphia…)?
4. How is your idea better than other solutions that exist to address this need or desire?
.
Assuming you have the results of the Business Impact Analysis and ri.docxcockekeshia
Assuming you have the results of the Business Impact Analysis and risk assessment in hand, discuss in detail steps in selecting a strategy. Reference one additional article, in addition to the textbook itself.
Format: Times 12, 1 inch margin, minimum of 2.5 pages double spaced (not counting references and other information such as your name, etc.)
The attached content supports to navigate towards the core objectives of completing this paper
Text book :
Title:
The Disaster Recovery Handbook
Subtitle: **PLEASE SEE BOOKSTORE LINK BELOW TO PURCHASE REQUIRED MATERIALS
Authors: Michael WALLACE, Lawrence WEBBER
Publisher: AMACOM
Publication Date: 2017-12-28
.
Assuming you are hired by a corporation to assess the market potenti.docxcockekeshia
Assuming you are hired by a corporation to assess the market potential of a foreign country for their products.
Demographic Environment
1)
Population
2)
Gender Breakdown
3)
Life Expectancy
4)
Language
5)
Education
Cultural Environment
1)
Religion
2)
Lifestyle (segments by age)
3)
Values
4)
Customs
5)
Holidays
6)
Colors and Music (National Flag and Anthem)
.
Assuming that you are in your chosen criminal justice professi.docxcockekeshia
Assuming that you are in your chosen criminal justice profession, e.g. law enforcement officer, probation officer, or criminal investigator, examine the Fourth and Fifth Amendments and discuss the steps you would take to ensure that actions do not violate the citizen’s Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights.
.
assuming that Nietzsche is correct that conventional morality is aga.docxcockekeshia
assuming that Nietzsche is correct that conventional morality is against our natural expression of passions, argue a case that suggests that while he is correct, the truth is that people must be restricted in their natural expression,
which moral statements clearly recognize dangerous natural inclinations and restrict them?
what benefits do these restrictions provide to the individual as well as to society as a whole?
how might Nietzsche react to your argument?
.
Honest Reviews of Tim Han LMA Course Program.pptxtimhan337
Personal development courses are widely available today, with each one promising life-changing outcomes. Tim Han’s Life Mastery Achievers (LMA) Course has drawn a lot of interest. In addition to offering my frank assessment of Success Insider’s LMA Course, this piece examines the course’s effects via a variety of Tim Han LMA course reviews and Success Insider comments.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Acetabularia Information For Class 9 .docxvaibhavrinwa19
Acetabularia acetabulum is a single-celled green alga that in its vegetative state is morphologically differentiated into a basal rhizoid and an axially elongated stalk, which bears whorls of branching hairs. The single diploid nucleus resides in the rhizoid.
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
2. on the music, entertainment, and
mobile connectivity industry has been huge because the product
revolutionized how we stay in
touch and conduct our lives.
This week, we focus on how to define and categorize offerings
and then how to develop new
offerings based on consumer needs. These are important
concepts to marketers because new
offerings generally serve a specific target market. We will use
many commonly known offerings to
illustrate these concepts, most of which you are probably
familiar, and perhaps you are even a
member of the product's target market or current customer.
5.1 What Composes an Offering?
L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S
1. Distinguish between the three major components of an
offering: product, price, and service.
2. Explain, from both a product-dominant and a service-
dominant approach, the mix of components
that compose different types of offerings.
3. Distinguish between technology platforms and product lines.
3. People buy things to solve needs. In the case of the iPad, the
need is to have better access to
music, connectivity functions, productivity function, games and
other entertainment, to look cool
on the go, or all of the above. Offerings are products and
services designed to deliver value to
customers—either to fulfill their needs, satisfy their "wants," or
both. This week, we discuss how
marketing fills consumer needs through the creation and
delivery of offerings.
Product, Price, and Service
Most offerings consist of a product, or a tangible good people
can buy, sell, and own. Purchasing
a classic iPad, for example, will allow you to store thousands of
songs and hundreds of hours of
http://www.saylor.org/site/textbooks/Principles%20of%20Marke
ting.pdf
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
2
video, connect to your e-mail and other social media, search the
web and just about everything
4. you can do on a desktop computer, but not be tethered to the
desktop. The amount of storage is
an example of a feature, or characteristic of the offering. If your
iPad playlist consists of 20,000
songs, then this feature delivers a benefit—the benefit of plenty
of storage. However, the feature
will only benefit you to a point. For example, you won't be
willing to pay more for the extra
storage if you only need half that much. When a feature
satisfies a need or want, then there is a
benefit. Features, then, matter differently to different consumers
based on each individual's
needs. Remember the value equation introduced in Week 1,
which is different for every customer.
An offering also consists of a price, or the amount people pay to
receive the offering's benefits.
The price paid can consist of a one-time payment, or it can
consist of something more than that.
Many consumers think of a product's price as only the amount
they paid; however, the true cost of
owning an iPad, for example, is the cost of the device itself plus
the cost of the music, videos,
books, games, and other applications downloaded onto it. The
5. total cost of ownership (TCO),
then, is the total amount someone pays to own the product, use
the product, and eventually
dispose of the product.
TCO is usually thought of as a concept businesses use to
compare offerings. However, consumers
also use the concept. For example, suppose you are comparing
two sweaters, one that can be
hand-washed and one that must be dry-cleaned. The hand-
washable sweater will cost you less to
own in dollars but may cost more to own in terms of your time
and hassle. A smart consumer
would take that into consideration. When we first introduced the
personal value equation in Week
1, "What Is Marketing?", we discussed hassle as the time and
effort spent making a purchase. A
TCO approach, though, would also include the time and effort
related to owning the product—in
this case, the time and effort to hand-wash the sweater.
A service is also a product. A service is an action that provides
a buyer with an intangible benefit.
A haircut is a service. When you purchase a haircut, it's not
something you can hold, give to
6. another person, or resell. "Pure" services are offerings that don't
have any tangible characteristics
associated with them. Skydiving is an example of a pure
service. You are left with nothing after
the jump but the memory of it (unless you buy a DVD of the
event). Yes, a plane is required, and it
is certainly tangible. But the plane isn't the product—the jump
is. At times, people use the term
"product" to mean an offering that's either tangible or
intangible. Banks, for example, often
advertise specific types of loans, or financial "products," they
offer consumers. Yet, these products
are financial services. The term "product" is frequently used to
describe an offering of either type.
Many tangible products have intangible service components.
When Apple introduces a product, it
comes with a service component. Apple provides staff for
troubleshooting questions in its Genius
3
Bars at its stores. Apple supports user groups, services Apple
products and provides training, and
7. Apple owners can access online and telephone help. A buyer of
an Apple product may never take
advantage of these services, but buyers do consider these
benefits when considering the personal
value equation.
Some Apple products require a pure service component to be
operational, such as the iPhone that
requires a cell phone carrier. The customer experience with the
cell phone carrier is all part of the
iPhone ownership experience, and both Apple and the cell
phone carriers are interconnected in
the consumer's mind.
Figure 5.1
Sport Clips is a barbershop with a sports-bar atmosphere. The
company's slogan is "At Sport
Clips, guys win." So, although you may walk out of Sport Clips
8. with the same haircut you could
get elsewhere, the experience you had getting it was different,
which adds value for some
buyers.
Source: Photo by M.O. Stevens (2012). Wikimedia Commons.
Used under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
Unported license.
What services do you get when you purchase a can of soup?
You might think that a can of soup is
as close to a "pure" product devoid of services that you can get.
But think for a moment about
your choices in terms of how to purchase the can of soup. You
can buy it at a convenience store, a
grocery store, or online. Your choice of how to get it is a
function of the product's intangible
service benefits, such as the way you are able to shop for it.
4
Figure 5.2
9. Even what seems like a "pure" product like a can of soup can
have an intangible service
component associated with it, such as the way you are able to
shop for it—say, at a convenience
store, a grocery store such as Publix, or perhaps online.
Source: (Left): Photo from Wikimedia Commons.(2005). Used
under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
license.
(Right) Photo by Alexf. (2008). Wikimedia Commons. Used
under the
terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
Unported license.
The Product-Dominant Approach to Marketing
From the traditional product-dominant perspective of business,
marketers consider products,
services, and prices as three separate and distinguishable
characteristics. To some extent, they
are. Whirlpool could, for example, change some of the features
of its washers and not change its
service policies or the equipment's price.
The product-dominant marketing perspective has its roots in the
10. Industrial Revolution when
businesspeople focused on the development of products that
could be mass-produced cheaply.
New models every year with product improvements were
common. In other words, firms
became product-oriented, meaning that they believed the best
way to capture market share
was to create and manufacture better products at lower prices.
Marketing remained oriented that
way until after World War II, when the service-dominant
approach to marketing was born.
The Service-Dominant Approach to Marketing
Who determines which products are better? Customers do, of
course, and the emphasis on the
consumer in marketing is the major theme of this course. Thus,
taking a product-oriented
approach can result in marketing professionals focusing too
much on the product itself and not
5
enough on the customer or service-related factors that
customers want. Most customers will
11. compare tangible products and the prices charged for them in
conjunction with the services that
come with them. In other words, the complete offering is the
basis of comparison. So, although a
buyer will compare the price of product A to the price of
product B, in the end, the prices are
compared in conjunction with the other features and services of
the products. The dominance of
any of these dimensions is a function of the buyer's needs.
The advantage of the service-dominant approach is that it
integrates the product, price, and
service dimensions of an offering. This helps marketers think
more like customers, which can
help them add value to their firm's products. In addition to the
offering itself, marketers should
consider what services it takes for the customer to acquire their
offerings (e.g., the need to learn
about the product from a sales clerk, the need to acquire
software, etc.), to enjoy them, and to
dispose of them (e.g., someone to move the product out of the
house), because each of these
activities create costs for their customers—either monetary
costs or time and hassle costs.
12. Customers are now becoming more involved in the creation of
benefits. Let's go back to that
"pure" product, Campbell's Cream of Chicken Soup. The
consumer may prepare that can as a
bowl of soup, but it could also be used as an ingredient in
making chicken casserole. As far as the
consumer goes, no benefit is experienced until the soup is eaten;
thus, the consumer played a part
in the creation of the final "product" when the soup was an
ingredient in the chicken casserole. Or
suppose your office's cafeteria made chicken casserole for you
to consume; in that case, you both
ate a product and consumed a service.
Some people argue that focusing too much on the customer can
lead to too little product
development or poor product development. These people believe
that customers often have
difficulty seeing how an innovative new technology can create
benefits. Researchers and
entrepreneurs frequently make many discoveries, and then
products are created as a result of
those discoveries. 3M's Post-it Notes are an example. The
adhesive that made it possible for Post-
13. it Notes to stick and restick was created by a 3M scientist who
was actually trying to make
something else. Post-it Notes came later. Both the microwave
oven and ATM machines were
developed long before they were commercialized. The
consumers could not understand nor trust
these products until their busy lifestyles created needs for more
time-saving offerings.
Product Levels and Product Lines
A product's technology platform is the core technology on
which it is built. Take, for example,
the iPod, which is based on MP3 technology. In many cases, the
development of a new offering is
to take a technology platform and rebundle its benefits in order
to create a different version of an
6
already-existing offering. For example, in addition to the iPod
Classic, Apple offers the Shuffle
and the Nano. Both are based on the same core technology.
In some instances, a new offering is based on a technology
14. platform originally designed to solve
different problems. For example, a number of products
originally were designed to solve the
problems facing NASA's space-traveling astronauts. Later, that
technology was used to develop
new types of offerings. EQyss's Micro Tek pet spray, which
stops pets from scratching and biting
themselves, is an example. The spray contains a trademarked
formula developed by NASA to
decontaminate astronauts after they return from space.
A technology platform isn't limited to tangible products.
Knowledge can be a type of technology
platform in a pure services environment. For example, the
"bioesthetic" treatment model was
developed to help people who suffer from TMJ, a jaw disorder
that makes chewing painful. A
dentist can be trained on the bioesthetic technology platform
and then provide services based on
it. There are, however, other ways to treat TMJ that involve
other platforms, or bases of
knowledge and procedures, such as surgery.
Few firms survive by selling only one product. Most firms sell
15. several offerings designed to work
together to satisfy a broad range of customers' needs and
desires. A product line is a group of
related offerings. Product lines are created to make marketing
strategies more efficient.
Campbell's condensed soups, for example, are basic soups sold
in cans with red labels. But
Campbell's Chunky is a ready-to-eat soup sold in cans that are
labeled differently. Most
consumers expect there to be differences between Campbell's
red-label chicken soup and Chunky
chicken soup, even though they are both made by the same
company.
Figure 5.3 Campbell's Soup Varieties
Source: (Left) Photo by Mike Mozart. (2014). Flickr. Used
under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic
license.
(Right) Photo by theimpulsivebuy. (2013). Flickr. Used under
the terms
16. of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic
license.
A product line can be broad, as in the case of Campbell's
condensed soup line, which consists of
several dozen different flavors. Or, a product line can be
narrow, as in the case of Apple's iPod
line, which consists of only a few different MP3 devices. The
number of offerings there are in a
7
single product line—that is, whether the product line is broad or
narrow—is called line depth.
When new but similar products are added to the product line, it
is called a line extension. If
Apple introduces a new MP3 player to the iPod family, that
would be a line extension. Companies
can also offer many different product lines. Line breadth (or
width) is a function of how many
different, or distinct, product lines a company has. For example,
Campbell's has a Chunky soup
line, condensed soup line, Kids' soup line, lower sodium soup
line, and a number of nonsoup lines
17. like Pace Picante sauces, Prego Italian sauces, and crackers.
The entire assortment of products
that a firm offers is called the product mix.
As Figure 5.4, "Product Levels," shows, there are four offering
levels. Consider the iPod Shuffle.
There is (1) the basic offering (the device itself), (2) the
offering's technology platform (the MP3
format or storage system used by the Shuffle), (3) the product
line to which the Shuffle belongs
(Apple's iPod line of MP3 music players), and (4) the product
category to which the offering
belongs (MP3 players as opposed to iPhones, for example).
Figure 5.4 Product Levels
So how does a technology platform become a new product or
service or line of new products and
services? We will explore that question a little later under new
product development.
5 . 1 K E Y T A K E A W A Y
A company's market offering is composed of a combination of
tangible and intangible characteristics for
certain prices. During the Industrial Revolution, firms focused
primarily on products and not so much on
18. customers. The service-dominant perspective to marketing
integrates three different dimensions of an
8
offering—not only the product but also its price and the
services associated with it. This perspective helps
marketers think more like their customers, which helps firms
add value to their offerings. An offering is
based on a technology platform, which can be used to create a
product line. A product line is a group of
similar offerings. A product line can be deep (many offerings of
a similar type) and/or broad (offerings
that are very different from one another and cover a wide range
of customers' needs). The entire
assortment of products that a company offers is called the
product mix.
5.2 Types of Consumer Offerings
L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S
1. Define the various types of offerings marketed to individual
consumers.
2. Explain why a single offering might be marketed differently
to different types of consumers.
Products and services can be categorized in a number of ways.
19. We will use these categories
throughout the course because they are the most commonly
referred to by marketers and because
there are marketing implications for each. Consumer offerings
fall into four general categories:
1. Convenience offerings
2. Shopping offerings
3. Specialty offerings
4. Unsought offerings
In this section, we will discuss each of these categories. Keep in
mind that the categories are not a
function of the characteristic of the offerings themselves.
Rather, they are a function of how
consumers want to purchase them, which can vary from
consumer to consumer. What one
consumer considers a shopping good might be a convenience
good to another consumer.
Convenience Offerings
Convenience offerings are products and services for which
consumers generally don't want to
put much effort into shopping because they see little difference
between competing brands. For
20. many consumers, bread is a convenience offering. A consumer
might choose the store in which to
buy the bread but be willing to buy whatever brand of bread the
store has available. Marketing
convenience items is often limited to simply trying to get the
product in as many places as
possible where a purchase could occur.
9
Figure 5.5
The Life Savers Candy Company was formed in 1913. Its
primary sales strategy was to create
an impulse to buy Life Savers by encouraging retailers and
restaurants to place them next to
their cash registers and include a nickel—the purchase price—in
the customer's change.
Source: Photo by Scott Ehardt. (2005). Wikimedia Commons. In
the public domain.
Closely related to convenience offerings are impulse offerings,
21. or items purchased without any
planning. In general, impulse offerings are purchased in
conjunction with another type of
purchase such as a shopping offering. The classic example is
Life Savers, originally manufactured
by the Life Savers Candy Company, beginning in 1913. The
company encouraged retailers and
restaurants to display the candy next to their cash registers and
to always give customers a nickel
back as change so as to encourage them to buy one more item—
a roll of Life Savers, of course!
Figure 5.6 Impulse and/or Convenience Goods
Whether a product is considered an impulse good or a
convenience good is in the mind of the
consumer. Candy displays near grocery store registers appeal to
both. Notice some of the candy
also offers a price promotion, or a further incentive for making
the purchase without much
thought.
10
22. Source: Photo by Doc Brown (2007). Flickr. Used under the
terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0
Generic license.
Shopping Offerings
A shopping offering is one for which the consumer will make an
effort to compare and select a
brand. Consumers believe there are differences between
shopping offerings and want to find the
right one or the best price. Buyers might visit multiple retail
locations or spend a considerable
amount of time visiting websites and reading reviews about the
product, such as the reviews
found in Consumer Reports.
Consumers often care about brand names when they're
shopping. If a store is out of a particular
brand, then another brand might not do. For example, if you
prefer Crest Whitening Expressions
toothpaste and a store is out if it, you might put off buying the
toothpaste until your next trip to
the store. Or, you might go to a different store or buy a small
tube of some other toothpaste until
23. you can get what you want. Note that even something as simple
as toothpaste can become a
shopping good for someone very interested in dental health—
perhaps after reading online
product reviews or consulting with the dentist. That's why
companies such as Procter & Gamble,
the maker of Crest, work hard to influence not only consumers
but also people such as dentists
who influence the sale of their products.
Specialty Offerings
Specialty offerings are highly differentiated offerings, and the
brands under which they are
marketed are very different across companies, too. For example,
an Orange County Chopper or
Iron Horse motorcycle is likely to be far different feature-wise
than a Kawasaki or Suzuki
motorcycle. Typically, specialty items are available only
through limited channels. For example,
exotic perfumes available only in exclusive outlets are
considered specialty offerings. Specialty
offerings are purchased less frequently than convenience
offerings, and consumers will generally
do some preplanning in terms of finding the right retailers and
traveling farther. Therefore, the
24. profit margin on specialty offerings tends to be greater.
11
Figure 5.7
Specialty offerings, such as this custom-made motorcycle, are
highly differentiated. People will
go to greater lengths to shop for these items and are willing to
pay more for them.
Source: Photo by Nick Knouse. (2006). Wikimedia Commons.
Used under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic
license.
Marketing specialty goods requires building brand name
recognition in the minds of consumers
and educating them about your product's key differences. This
is critical. For fashion goods, the
only point of difference may be the logo on the product (for
example, an Izod vs. a Polo label).
25. Even so, marketers spend a great deal of money and effort to try
to get consumers to perceive
these products differently than their competitors' products.
Unsought Offerings
Unsought offerings are those that buyers do not generally want
to have to shop for until they
need them. Towing services and funeral services are generally
considered unsought offerings.
Marketing unsought items is difficult. Some organizations try to
presell the offering, such as
preneed sales in the funeral industry or towing insurance in the
auto industry or as part of an
automobile club membership. The club merges unsought
offerings with other tangible goods and
services to create a strong bundle of value so that consumers
associate the club when the need for
an unsought offering occurs.
12
5 . 2 K E Y T A K E A W A Y
26. Convenience offerings, shopping offerings, specialty offerings,
and unsought offerings are the major types
of consumer offerings. Convenience offerings often include
life's necessities (bread, milk, fuel), for which
there is little difference across brands. Shopping goods do vary,
and many consumers develop strong
preferences for some brands. Specialty goods are even more
exclusive. Unsought goods are a challenge
for marketers because customers do not want to have to shop for
them until they need them.
5.3 Branding, Labeling, and Packaging
L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S
1. Understand the branding decisions firms make when they are
developing new products.
2. Identify the various levels of packaging for new products.
What comes to mind when someone says Coke or Nike or
Microsoft? According
to BusinessWeek magazine, the Coca-Cola brand is the
strongest brand in the world. However, a
global study of consumers sponsored by Reuters found that
Apple has the best brand. What is a
"brand," and what do these studies mean when they report that
one brand is the strongest or the
27. best?
Branding
What is a brand? A brand is a name, picture, design, or symbol,
or combination of those items,
used by a seller to identify its offerings and to differentiate
them from competitors'
offerings. Branding is the set of activities designed to create a
brand and position it in the minds
of consumers.
Did you know that The Beatles started a recording studio called
Apple? When Apple Computer
(the iPod company) was formed, Apple Corp., Ltd. (the Beatles'
recording studio), sued Apple
Computer because two companies with the same name can
create confusion among consumers.
This wasn't much of a problem when Apple was only selling
computers, but following the release
of the iPod and launch of Apple's iTunes program, a case could
be made that the companies'
offerings are similar enough for consumers to confuse the two
companies and their products. In
fact, the matter took about 30 years to settle, long after the
28. initial lawsuit was filed. Nonetheless,
the situation signifies how important brand names are to the
companies that own them.
13
Figure 5.8
According to Forbes Magazine, Apple is the world's most
valuable brand. A valuable brand
allows the company to charge a premium price and expand its
offerings with the advantage of a
positive brand image in the minds of consumers. Following
Apple, the top 15 valuable brands
include Microsoft, Google, Coca-Cola, IBM, McDonald's,
General Electric, Samsung, Toyota,
Louis Vuitton, BMW, Cisco, Intel, Disney, and Oracle
(Badenhausen, 2014).
Source: Photo by CbMeeks. (2008). Wikimedia Commons. In
the public domain.
A successful branding strategy is one that accomplishes what
29. Coke and Apple have done—it
creates consumer recognition of what the brand (signified by its
name, picture, design, symbol)
means. Consider Kleenex, a brand name of facial tissue, which
is now a commonly used term to
refer to any facial tissue. That is a strong brand. Consequently,
when marketing professionals are
considering whether a potential new offering fits a company's
image, they are concerned about
whether the offering supports the organization's brand and
position in the mind of the consumer.
When Coke ventured into diet drinks, it launched Tab, a cola
product containing an artificial
sweetener. When consumers eventually accepted artificially
sweetened sodas, Coke launched Diet
Coke to take advantage of the consumer confidence and
acceptance of its Coke name.
A brand name, such as Apple, is the spoken part of a brand's
identity. A brand mark is the
symbol, such as Coke's wave or Apple Computer's multicolor
apple (not to be confused with Apple
Records' green apple), associated with a brand. Brand names
and brand marks are important to
30. companies because consumers use them to make choices. That's
why it was important to sort out
the Apple brand. Each company wanted to make sure that
consumers were getting what they
wanted and would know what each brand meant.
14
An important decision companies must make is under which
brand a new offering will be
marketed. For example, Black & Decker makes power tools for
consumers under its Black &
Decker brand, while tools for more serious do-it-yourselfers and
professionals are under its
Dewalt brand. If Black & Decker decided to add to its Dewalt
line new products such as coolers,
portable radios, CD players, and other accessories construction
professionals might find useful at
a job site, the company would be creating a brand extension. A
brand extension involves
utilizing an existing brand name or brand mark for a new
product category.
Why would Black & Decker add these accessories to the Dewalt
31. line? If the company did, it would
be because Dewalt already has a good reputation for high-
quality, long-lasting durability, and
performance among construction professionals. These same
professionals would trust the Dewalt
brand to deliver. Let's consider whether it is better for a
company to market a new product via a
brand extension or create an entirely new brand.
One thing firms have to consider when they're branding a new
offering is the degree of
cannibalization that can occur across products. Cannibalization
occurs when a firm's new
offering eats into the sales of one of its older offerings.
(Ideally, when you sell a new product, you
hope that all of its sales come from your competitors' buyers or
buyers that are new to the
market.) A completely new offering will not result in
cannibalization, whereas a line extension
likely will. A brand extension will also result in some
cannibalization if you sell similar products
under another brand. For example, if Black & Decker already
had an existing line of coolers,
portable radios, and CD players when the Dewalt line of them
32. were launched, the new Dewalt
offerings might cannibalize some of the Black & Decker
offerings.
Some marketers argue that cannibalization can be a good thing
because it is a sign that a company
is developing new and better offerings. These people believe
that if you don't cannibalize your
own line, then your competitors will. The goal would be to
increase the company's revenues
overall even though revenues of one product line might be
reduced due to cannibalization.
Packaging Decisions
Another set of questions to consider involves the packaging on
which a brand's marks and name
will be prominently displayed. Sometimes the package itself is
part of the brand. For example, the
curvaceous shape of Coca-Cola's Coke bottle is a registered
trademark. If you decide to market
your beverage in a similar-shaped bottle, Coca-Cola's attorneys
will have grounds to sue you.
33. 15
Figure 5.9
Sometimes the package itself is part of a licensed brand.
Coke's curvaceous bottle is an example.
Source: Photo by Cokewww. (2005). Wikimedia Commons. In
the public domain.
Packaging has to fulfill a number of important functions,
including
• communicating the brand and its benefits
• protecting the product from damage and contamination during
shipment, as well as
damage and tampering once it's in retail outlets
• preventing leakage of the contents
• presenting government-required warning and information
labels.
Sometimes packaging can fulfill other functions, such as
serving as part of an in-store display
designed to promote the offering.
34. Primary packaging holds a single retail unit of a product. For
example, a bottle of Coke, a bag
of M&Ms, or a ream of printer paper (500 sheets) are all
examples of primary packages. Primary
packaging can be used to protect and promote products and get
the attention of consumers.
Primary packaging can also be used to demonstrate the proper
use of an offering, provide
instructions on how to assemble the product, or any other
information. If warning or nutrition
labels are required, they must be on the primary packaging.
Primary packaging can be bundled
together as well. Consumers can buy bottles of Coke sold in six-
packs or cans of Coke in 12-packs.
16
Secondary packaging holds a single wholesale unit of a product.
A case of M&M bags is an
example, as are cartons of reams of paper. Secondary packaging
is designed more for retailers
than consumers. It does not have to carry warning or nutrition
labels but is still likely to have
35. brand marks and labels. Secondary packaging further protects
the individual products during
shipping.
Tertiary packaging is packaging designed specifically for
shipping and efficiently handling
large quantities. When a Coca-Cola bottler ships cases of Cokes
to a grocery store, they are
stacked on pallets (wooden platforms) and then wrapped in
plastic. Pallets can be easily moved by
a forklift truck and can even be moved within the grocery store
by a small forklift.
A product's packaging can benefit the customer beyond just
protecting the offering while it's
being shipped. No-spill caps, for example, can make it easier
for you to use your laundry
detergent or prevent spills when you're adding oil to your car's
engine. And, as we have noted,
secondary packaging (and also tertiary packaging) can serve as
part of an in-store display, thereby
adding value for your retailers.
5 . 3 K E Y T A K E A W A Y
36. A brand is a name, picture, design, or symbol, or combination
of those items, used by a seller to identify
its offerings and differentiate them from competitors' offerings.
Branding is the set of activities designed
to create a brand and position it relative to competing brands in
the minds of consumers. An important
decision companies must make is under which brand a new
offering will be marketed. A brand extension
involves using an existing brand name or brand mark for a new
product or category (line) of products.
Cannibalization occurs when a company's new offering eats into
the sales of one of its older offerings. It is
something to be avoided in most cases, but it can also be a sign
of progress because it means a company
is developing new and better products. Packaging protects
products from damage, contamination,
leakage, and tampering, but it is also used to communicate the
brand and its benefits, product warnings,
and proper use.
5.4 Managing the Offering
L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S
1. Understand the people involved in creating and managing
offerings.
2. Recognize the differences in organizing product marketing
for consumer vs. business-to-business
(B2B) companies.
37. 17
Managing all of a company's offerings presents a number of
challenges. Depending on the size of
the company and the breadth of the company's offerings, several
positions may be needed.
A brand manager is one such position. A brand manager is the
person responsible for all
business decisions regarding offerings within one brand. By
business decisions, we mean making
decisions that affect profit and loss, which include such
decisions as which offerings to include in
the brand, how to position the brand in the market, and pricing
options. Indeed, a brand manager
is often charged with running the brand as if it were its own
separate business.
A brand manager is much more likely to be found in consumer
marketing companies. Typically,
business-to-business (B2B) companies do not have multiple
brands, so the position is not
38. common in the B2B environment. What you often find in a B2B
company is
a product manager, someone with business responsibility for a
particular product or product
line. Like the brand manager, the product manager must make
many business decisions, such as
which offerings to include, and advertising selection.
Companies with brand managers include
Microsoft, Procter & Gamble, SC Johnson, Kraft, Target,
General Mills, and ConAgra Foods.
Product managers are found at Xerox, IBM, Konica-Minolta
Business
Solution
s, Rockwell
International, and many others.
The University of Georgia was the first to launch a graduate
program in brand management, and
the University of Wisconsin features a major program managed
39. through the university's Center
for Brand and Product Management. Most brand managers
simply have an undergraduate degree
in marketing, but it helps to have a strong background in either
finance or accounting because of
the profitability and volume decisions brand managers have to
make.
In some companies, a category manager has responsibility for
business decisions within a
broad grouping of offerings. For example, a category manager
at SC Johnson may have all home
cleaning products, which would mean that brands such as
Pledge, Vanish, Drano, Fantastik,
Windex, Scrubbing Bubbles, and Shout would be that person's
responsibility. Each of those
brands may be managed by a brand manager, who then reports
40. directly to the category manager.
At the retail level, a category manager at each store is
responsible for more than just one
manufacturer's products. The home cleaning category manager
would have responsibility for
offerings from SC Johnson, as well as Procter & Gamble,
Colgate-Palmolive, and many other
producers.
18
Another option is to create a market manager, who is
responsible for business decisions within
a market. In this case, a market can be defined as a geographic
41. market or region; a market
segment, such as a type of business; or a channel of
distribution. For example, SC Johnson could
have regional insect control managers. Regional market
managers would make sense for insect
control because weather has an influence on which bugs are
pests at any given time. For example,
a southern regional manager would want more inventory of the
repellent Off! in March because it
is already warm and the mosquitoes are breeding and biting in
the southern United States.
Market managers sometimes report to brand managers or are a
part of their firms' sales
organizations and report to sales executives. Market managers
are less likely to have as much
flexibility in terms of pricing and product decisions and have no
42. control over the communication
content of marketing campaigns or marketing strategies. These
managers are more likely to be
tasked with implementing a product or brand manager's strategy
and be responsible for their
markets. Some companies have market managers but no brand
managers. Instead, marketing
vice presidents or other executives are responsible for the
brands.
5 . 4 K E Y T A K E A W A Y
Brand managers decide what products are to be marketed and
how. Other important positions include
category managers, market managers, and vertical market
managers. Category managers are found in
consumer markets, usually in retail. Some companies have
market managers but no brand managers.
Instead, a vice president of marketing or other executive is
responsible for the brands.
43. 5.5 New Products
L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S
1. Identify an effective process for creating offerings and
bringing them to market.
2. Understand the relative importance of each step in the new
offering development process and the
functions within each step.
3. Distinguish between the various forms of testing and analysis
that take place before a new offering is
brought to the market.
Having something that customers want to buy is important to
any company. Most companies are
started by people who get an idea about how to make something
44. better. Hewlett-Packard, for
example, began in 1939 in a garage (now a California historic
landmark) when two young
engineers, Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard, thought they had a
better idea for designing and
making a precision audio oscillator, which is an electronic
device that tests sound. Their product
was so much more precise than competitors' products that it was
manufactured and sold around
19
the world for over 30 years. In fact, it is probably one of the
longest-selling electronic devices
ever. It also sold for just $54, whereas competing products sold
for over $200. Hewlett-Packard,
45. now more commonly known as HP, has not been located in a
little garage for many years. Yet the
company's ability to grow by successfully designing and
marketing new offerings continues.
Figure 5.10
Hewlett-Packard was founded in this California garage, which is
now a landmark.
Source: Photo by selbst. (2002). Wikimedia Commons. Used
under the terms
of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
license.
Developing new offerings is a constant process in most
companies. In some instances, a company
starts with a price and then develops products and services to fit
that price. IKEA is an example of
46. such a company. IKEA looks at the prices consumers want to
pay for home furnishings and then
works backward to design products that match those prices
(using a demand backward pricing
strategy is discussed in Week 6).
In other situations, the goal is simply to develop a better
product that adds value to existing
products, and the price comes later. Hewlett-Packard's audio
oscillator is an example.
Keep in mind that a "new" product can be a "new and improved"
product, such as laundry
detergent; an addition to a product or service line, such as
Marriott adding the Courtyard by
Marriott and the Fairfield Inn, or Capri Sun adding new flavors;
a repositioned product or
47. company, such as Hyundai Motor Company trying to change the
perceptions of Hyundai
automobiles from being inexpensive to being "an overachieving,
underappreciated brand that
smart people are discovering" (BusinessWeek, 2007); or a
totally new innovation, such as the
mobile phone. What is new for one company may not be new to
another. For example, one hotel
20
may already have budget properties, but when a luxury hotel
adds a budget property, that
property is considered a new offering.
Most new offerings go through similar stages in their
48. development process. Although the size of a
company will affect how the different stages of the new product
development process are conducted
and whether products are test-marketed before being introduced,
the steps are generally the
same. Figure 5.11, "The New Offering Development Process,"
summarizes these steps.
Figure 5.11 The New Offering Development Process
21
Step 1: Idea Generation
Many companies, HP and Apple included, were launched in
someone's garage after the founders
got an idea for a product and then tried to make and sell it. HP's
49. first product was an audio
oscillator that two Stanford University students developed.
While there was some debate, Apple's
Macintosh microcomputer appeared to be a low-cost knockoff of
the Xerox Star, a software-
equipped workstation. Apple's cofounder, Steve Jobs, saw the
product demonstrated at a Xerox
research center (Fisher, 1989).
Employees often come up with new product ideas, too. At
Motorola, engineers worked on a
mobile phone that can be recharged by rubbing it on a smooth
surface. A Motorola engineer came
up with the idea while rollerblading. He wondered if a small
generator could be created to capture
and store the energy generated by rollerblade wheels. This idea,
in turn, led to the development of
50. a small roller ball (like you would find on an old-style computer
mouse) built into the mobile
phone. To power up the phone, you just give it a roll.
Ideas can come from anywhere, including your customers. In
fact, in B2B markets, customers are
probably the biggest source of new product ideas. Customers
know what customers need and
want, which provides organizations an indication of market
needs. Customers who are good at
generating new product ideas or applications of products are
called lead users. These people are
often courted by manufacturers. Lead users exist in consumer
markets, too. JCPenney, for
example, uses a panel of women who help develop the
company's Ambrielle line of lingerie.
51. Customers are particularly important cocreators of offerings
when they are consuming products
with service components. For example, if you provide your
hairdresser with feedback while your
hair is being cut, your input will alter the final style you
receive. Similarly, a businessperson who
provides her certified public accountant (CPA) with information
and feedback about her firm will
help the CPA develop better financial and tax plans for her
business.
Suppliers provide another source of ideas for new products. A
supplier might develop a new product
or technology that can be used to make yet another product, and
then go to the makers of those
products and suggest new versions. For example, McClancy
Seasoning Co. makes spices that
52. restaurants and food processing companies use in their food
products. McClancy's research and
development department works with companies such as
Campbell's to help develop new and
better offerings.
Of course, companies also watch their competitors to see what
they're doing. Some offerings are
protected by patents or copyrights and can't be legally
duplicated. The software that runs Apple's
22
iPhone is an example. There are, however, different ways to
achieve the same results as Apple has
with its iPhone. The Omnia, manufactured by Samsung, and the
53. G1, a T-Mobile product, are
devices similar to the iPhone that operate with software serving
the same purpose.
Figure 5.12, "New Offering Ideas," shows some product ideas
that came from each of the sources
we have discussed—employees, customers, suppliers, and one's
competitors. Innovations such as
the iPhone are rare. However, many new ideas (and
consequently new products) aren't actually
new but rather are versions of products and services already
available. A line extension occurs
when a company comes out with another model (related
product) based on the same platform
and brand as one of its other products. When Apple added the
Nano and the Shuffle to its iPod
line, these were line extensions.
54. Figure 5.12 New Offering Ideas
Keep in mind that idea generation is typically the least
expensive step in the process of developing
a new offering, whether you involve customers or not. As you
move through the product
development process, each step is usually more expensive than
the last. Ideas for new products
are relatively cheap and easy to generate; what is difficult and
expensive is making them a reality.
23
Step 2: Idea Screening
55. Figure 5.13
Better idea screening might have helped Coca-Cola avoid
the problems it encountered marketing its "New Coke" formula.
Source: Photo by My 100cans. (n.d.). Wikimedia Commons. In
the public domain.
Not all new product ideas are good ones. Famous product
blunders include Ford Motor
Company's Edsel, Clear Pepsi, and Coca-Cola's New Coke. Less
famous is Dell's cell phone for
aging baby boomers. The phone's large size, large buttons, and
large screen screamed "I'm old
and blind!" That led potential users to shun it in droves. Yes,
even the big companies make
mistakes.
56. The purpose of idea screening is to try to avoid mistakes early
in the development process. The
sooner bad ideas are discarded, the less the investment made
and lost. In the idea screening stage,
the company tries to evaluate the new offering by answering
these questions:
• Does the proposed product add value for the customer? Does it
satisfy a market need?
• Can the product be made within a stated time period to get it
to market when needed?
• How many units of it will sell and at what price?
• Can we manufacture and sell the product within budget and
still make money?
• Do we need to provide the customer with after-sales service?
If so, do we have the
57. resources to do that?
• Does the product fit our image and corporate strategy?
Some organizations conduct concept testing at this stage.
Concept testing involves running the
idea of the offering by potential consumers. The purpose is to
get early consumer feedback before
24
investing too much money in an offering that won't work. Some
of the methods used to test
concepts include focus groups, in which groups of eight to 12
consumers gather and react to the
concept, and depth interviews, in which individuals are
presented with the concept and can
58. react to it individually.
Focus groups and depth interviews are research techniques that
can also be used later in the
offering development process to test ideas, or for other
purposes. Focus groups working virtually
on the web and by phone helped to develop this textbook.
Concepts may also be tested online by
creating an image and having people representative of the target
market provide feedback.
Whether using focus groups, depth interviewing, or online
methods, concepts must be evaluated
by people representative of the target market, or the feedback is
not relevant.
Because screening considers the feasibility of actually making
and servicing an offering, price and
59. cost are important components. If the company cannot sell the
product in sufficient quantities to
generate a profit, the idea must be scrapped. Understanding the
customer's personal value
equation is an important consideration, too. If the value
consumers receive from the product is
less than the price the company charges for it, they will not buy
it. In other words, the offering
must be financially feasible to justify investing in it.
The offering must also have process feasibility. Process
feasibility is the degree to which the
company can actually make and service the product. Process
feasibility
affects financial feasibility. If the product's costs cannot be
controlled when it's being made or
serviced, the firm's financial goals won't be met.
60. Process feasibility also affects customer satisfaction. For
example, many manufacturers make
great-looking faucets, yet one of the authors of this book had to
have the "guts" of one faucet
replaced three times before it would work, only to find two
other friends had the same experience
with the same model. A great-looking design is really only great
if it works right.
25
Figure 5.14
A good product doesn't just look right. It also works
61. right, which is the idea behind process feasibility.
Source: Photo by Nicole-Koehler. (n.d.). Wikimedia Commons.
Used under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
Unported license.
The question of strategic fit is a difficult one. The history of
business is rife with examples of
companies failing to develop winning new products only to see
their competitors do so. For
example, when the inventor Chester Carlson approached IBM
executives with the idea of
photocopying—the technology platform that later became the
heart of Xerox Corporation—they
turned Carlson down. IBM did not see the product fitting with
its strategy and stopped before
62. fully considering the potential. Nor did IBM see the
moneymaking opportunity the product
presented.
At this point in the process, the company begins to assess two
types of risk. The first is
investment risk, or the possibility that the company will fail to
earn the appropriate return on
the money and effort (the investment) it puts into the new
product. The second
is opportunity risk, or the risk that there is a better idea that
gets ignored because the firm has
invested in the idea at hand. When a company is assessing fit, it
is assessing its opportunity risk.
When it is assessing feasibility (both financial and process), it
is assessing its investment risk.
63. Other risk-related questions include whether or not the offering
can be developed on time and
within budget. Assessing a product's feasibility continues
throughout the entire new product
development process.
26
Step 3: Feature Specification
The next step involves narrowing the product's features. Again,
price enters the picture as the
company considers which features are important to consumers at
different price points. A
premium (high-priced) offering is likely to be loaded with extra
features. By contrast, a low-priced
64. offering is likely to be a "bare-bones" product with few
features.
Quality function deployment (QFD) is a process whereby a
company begins with the
customer's desired benefits and then designs an offering that
delivers those benefits. The benefits
are linked to certain characteristics of the offering, which are
then broken down into component-
part characteristics. From this list of component parts, the
product is designed. Thus, the feature
specifications process begins with a strong understanding of
what consumers want and need.
HP has developed a number of computer printers using the QFD
process. The QFD process has
been particularly helpful when it comes to bundling the right
features within HP's printer line
65. because each printer model can be targeted to specific customer
needs. Customers can then
purchase the model that suits their needs and don't have to buy
features that don't add value for
them.
Step 4: Development
In the development stage, the actual offering is designed,
specifications are written, and
prototypes are developed. It is also during this stage that the
firm considers the product's
manufacturing process. For example, when a restaurant is
developing a new dish, it must not only
taste good; it must also be a dish that can be made in a
reasonable amount of time once it's
ordered and prepared at a cost that earns the restaurant a profit.
In terms of a manufacturer's
66. offerings, using the same technology platform as another
product (such as Apple has done with
iPods) can be effective and cheaper. Using the same platform
also generally makes it easier for a
company to train its technicians to service a new product.
Step 5: Testing
During the testing stage, the offering is tested, first in the lab
and then with real customers. Lab
testing is also called alpha testing. Alpha testing ensures that
the offering works as it's supposed
to in a variety of different environments—that it meets its
specifications, that is. For example,
Kraft might launch a new food product that has to work in hot
climates, cold climates, high
humidity, dry climates, and high altitudes—conditions that can
change how well the product
67. works.
27
The next step is beta testing. During beta testing, actual
customers make sure the offering works
under real-world conditions. Beta testing not only tests whether
the offering works as advertised
but also tests the offering's delivery mechanisms, service
processes, and other aspects of
marketing the product. This step can be an expensive.
Depending on the product, some
companies might find it better to simply launch the product and
let the market respond to, or test,
the product once it is available for purchase.
68. Simultaneous to testing the offering's ability to meet its specs,
the company is also developing and
testing the marketing communication plan that will be used to
launch the product. Many
companies involve consumer panels or user communities, both
for testing the offering and the
communication plan. As we mentioned in Week 2, JCPenney
solicits the advice of a user
community for its Ambrielle line of lingerie. The company
frequently runs concepts by the group
as well as sends actual prototypes to users to try on and report
back to the company. Similarly, the
data warehousing company Teradata has a "partners"
organization that consists of a community
of users who participate in the firm's product design and testing.
69. Step 6: Launch or Commercialization
Once an offering has been designed and tested, it is made
available to customers. Sometimes a
company launches the offering to all of its markets at once.
Other companies may use
a rolling launch in which the offering is made available to
certain markets first and then other
markets later. A rolling launch might make sense if the
company's service technicians need
training. The company makes the offering available to one
market after the first batch of its
employees are prepared to service the product; then as new
batches of employees are prepared to
service the product, the company enters more markets.
Some companies test the complete launch of a product's
marketing plan to ensure that it reaches
70. buyers, gets positive feedback, and generates sales of the
product or service. This is called
a market test. Companies may conduct market tests in limited
markets or nationwide. For
example, when one beverage maker tested the marketing plan
for a new wine cooler, the firm first
launched the product on the East Coast, where the beverage was
promoted as a "Polynesian"
drink; on the West Coast, the beverage was promoted as an
"Australian" drink. The Polynesian
version proved more popular, so in other new markets, that's
how the beverage was advertised
and packaged.
28
71. Step 7: Evaluation
Once an offering is launched, a firm's executives carefully
monitor its progress. You have probably
heard about the "box office" sales for new movies the first
weekend following their release. The
first weekend is a good predictor of how much money a movie
will make overall. If the ticket sales
for it are high during the first weekend, a studio's executives
might decide to beef up the
promotions. If the ticket sales are low, the studio might stop
screening the movie in theaters and
release it on DVD instead. For other types of offerings,
important milestones might be the first 90
days after the product is launched, followed by a second period
of 90 days. However, be aware
that firms are constantly evaluating their offerings and
72. modifying them by either adding or
subtracting the features and services associated with them,
changing their prices, or how they are
marketed. The length of time for milestones used to evaluate
products may vary depending on the
organization and other products or services being developed.
5 . 5 K E Y T A K E A W A Y
Most companies put new offering ideas through a seven-step
process, beginning with the idea generation
stage. Ideas for new offerings can come from anywhere,
including one's customers, employees, suppliers,
and competitors. The next step in the process is the idea
screening stage, followed by the feature
specifications, development, testing, and launching stages.
After an offering is launched, it is evaluated. A
company must balance an offering's investment risk (the risk
associated with losing the time and money
put into developing the offering) against the offering's
opportunity risk (the risk associated with missing
73. the opportunity to market the product and profit from it).
5.6 Managing New Products: The Product Life Cycle
L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S
1. Explain how organizations manage offerings after being
introduced to the marketplace.
2. Explain how managing an offering may be different in
international markets.
3. Explain the product life cycle and the objectives and
strategies for each stage.
Over 20,000 new offerings, including convenience foods, health
and beauty aids, electronics,
automobiles, pharmaceutical products, hotels, and restaurants
enter the marketplace each year.
For example, in 2006 almost 1,400 food products making a
74. "whole grain claim" were introduced
(Roskelly, 2007). Other new product introductions include many
technological products such as
Nintendo's Wii, iPods, and digital video recorders (DVRs);
many personal care products such as
fragrances of shampoo and conditioner and flavors of
toothpaste; and convenience foods such as
frozen meals, "100 calorie pack" snacks, and cereal bars
(Hunter, 2008).
29
Once a product is created and introduced in the marketplace, the
offering must be managed
effectively for the customer to receive value from it. Only if
this is done will the product's
75. producer achieve its profit objectives and be able to sustain the
offering in the marketplace. The
process involves making many complex decisions, especially if
the product is being introduced in
global markets. Before introducing products in global markets,
an organization must evaluate and
understand factors in the external environment, including laws
and regulations, the economy and
stage of economic development, the competitors and substitutes,
cultural values, and market
needs.
Companies also need expertise to successfully launch products
in foreign markets. Given many
possible constraints in international markets, companies might
initially introduce a product in
limited areas abroad. Other organizations, such as Coca-Cola,
76. decide to compete in markets
worldwide (Interbrand, 2009).
The product life cycle (PLC) includes the stages the product
goes through after development,
from introduction to the end of the product. Just as children go
through different phases in life
(toddler, elementary school, adolescent, young adult), products
and services also age and go
through different stages. The PLC helps marketers manage the
stages of a product's acceptance
and success in the marketplace, beginning with the product's
introduction, its growth in market
share, maturity, and possible decline in market share.
Other tools such as the Boston Consulting Group matrix and the
General Electric approach
77. (see Week 2, "Strategic Planning" for discussion) may also be
used to manage and make decisions
about what to do with products. For example, when a market is
no longer growing but the product
is doing well (cash cow in the BCG approach), the company
may decide to use the money from the
cash cow to invest in other products rather than continuing to
invest in a no-growth market.
The product life cycle can vary for different products and
different product categories. Figure 5.15,
"Life Cycle," illustrates an example of the product life cycle,
showing how a product can move
through four stages. However, not all products go through all
stages, and the length of a stage
varies. For example, some products never experience market
share growth and are withdrawn.
78. 30
Figure 5.15 Life Cycle
Other products stay in one stage longer than others. For
example, in 1992, PepsiCo introduced a
product called Clear Pepsi, which went from introduction to
decline very rapidly. By contrast, Diet
Coke entered the growth market soon after its introduction in
the early 1980s and then entered
(and remains in) the mature stage of the product life cycle. New
computer products and software
79. and video games often have limited life cycles, whereas product
categories such as diamonds and
durable goods (kitchen appliances) generally have longer life
cycles. How a product is promoted,
priced, distributed, or modified can also vary throughout its life
cycle.
Figure 5.16
Diet Coke changed its can (right) to keep from getting outdated.
Source: Photo by My 100cans. (2009). Wikimedia Commons. In
the public domain.
31
Let's now look at the various product life cycle stages and what
80. characterizes each.
Stage 1: Introduction
The first stage in a product's life cycle is the introduction stage.
The introduction stage is the
same as commercialization, or the last stage of the new product
development process. Marketing
costs are typically higher in this stage than in other stages. As
an analogy, think about the amount
of fuel a plane needs for takeoff relative to the amount it needs
while in the air. Just as an airplane
needs more fuel for takeoff, a new product or service needs
more funds for introduction into the
marketplace. Communication (promotion) is needed to generate
awareness of the product and
persuade consumers to try it, and placement alternatives and
supply chains are needed to deliver
81. the product to the customers. Profits are often low in the
introductory stage due to the research
and development costs and the marketing costs to launch the
product.
The length of the introductory stage varies for different
products. However, by law in the United
States, a company is only allowed to use the label "new" on a
product's package for six months. An
organization's objectives during the introductory stage often
involve educating potential
customers about its value and benefits, creating awareness, and
getting potential customers to try
the product or service. Getting products and services,
particularly multinational brands, accepted
in foreign markets can take even longer. Consequently,
companies introducing products and
82. services abroad generally must have the financial resources to
make a long-term (longer than one
year) commitment to their success.
The specific promotional strategies a company uses to launch a
product vary depending on the
type of product and the number of competitors it faces. Firms
that manufacture products such as
cereals, snacks, toothpastes, soap, and shampoos often use mass
marketing techniques such as
television commercials and Internet campaigns, and promotional
programs such as coupons and
sampling to reach consumers. Many firms promote to
customers, retailers, and wholesalers.
Sometimes other, more targeted advertising strategies are
employed, such as billboards and
transit signs (signs on buses, taxis, subways). For more
83. technical or expensive products such as
computers or plasma televisions, many firms use personal
selling, informational promotions, and
in-store demonstrations so consumers can see how the products
work.
During introduction, an organization must have enough
distribution outlets (places where the
product is sold or the service is available) to get the product or
service to the customers. The
product quantities must also be available to meet demand. For
example, IBM's ThinkPad was a
32
big hit when it was first introduced, but the demand for it was
so great that IBM wasn't able to
84. produce enough of the product. Cooperation from a company's
supply chain members—its
manufacturers, wholesalers—helps ensure that supply meets
demand and that value is added
throughout the process.
When you were growing up, you may remember eating Rice
Krispies Treats cereal. The product
was so popular that Kellogg's could not keep up with initial
demand and placed ads to consumers
apologizing for the problem. When demand is higher than
supply, the door opens for competitors
to enter the market, which is what happened when the
microwave was introduced. Most people
own a microwave, and prices have dropped significantly since
Amana introduced the first
85. microwave at a price of almost $500. As consumers in the
United States initially saw and heard
about the product, sales increased, many competitors entered
the market, and prices dropped.
Product pricing strategies in the introductory stage can vary
depending on the type of product,
competing products, the extra value the product provides
consumers vs. existing offerings, and
the costs of developing and producing the product.
Organizations want consumers to perceive
that a new offering is better or more desirable than existing
products. Two strategies that are
widely used in the introductory stage are penetration pricing
and skimming. A
penetration pricing strategy involves using a low initial price to
encourage many customers
86. to try a product. The organization hopes to sell a high volume in
order to generate substantial
revenues. New varieties of cereals, fragrances of shampoo,
scents of detergents, and snack foods
are often introduced at low initial prices. The low initial price
of the product is often combined
with advertising, coupons, samples, or other special incentives
to increase awareness.
A company uses a skimming pricing strategy, which involves
setting a high initial price for a
product, to more quickly recoup the investment related to its
development and marketing. The
skimming strategy attracts the top, or high end, of the market.
Generally this market consists of
customers who are not as price-sensitive or who are early
adopters of products. Firms that
87. produce electronic products such as DVRs, plasma televisions,
and digital cameras set their prices
high in the introductory stage. However, the high price must be
consistent with the nature of the
product as well as the other marketing strategies being used. For
example, engaging in more
personal selling to customers, running ads targeting specific
groups of customers, and placing the
product in a limited number of outlets are likely to be strategies
used with a skimming approach.
Stage 2: Growth
If a product is accepted by the marketplace, it enters the growth
stage of the product life cycle.
The growth stage is characterized by increasing sales, more
competitors, and higher profits.
88. 33
Unfortunately for the firm, the growth stage attracts competitors
who enter the market quickly.
For example, when Diet Coke experienced great success, Pepsi
soon entered with Diet Pepsi.
You'll notice that both Coca-Cola and Pepsi have similar
competitive offerings in the beverage
industry, including their own brands of bottled water, juice, and
sports drinks. As additional
customers begin to buy the product, manufacturers must ensure
that the product remains
available to customers or run the risk of them buying
competitors' offerings. For example, the
producers of video game systems such as Nintendo's Wii could
not keep up with consumer
demand when the product was first launched. Consequently,
89. some consumers purchased
competing game systems such as Microsoft's Xbox.
Figure 5.17
Demand for the Nintendo Wii increased sharply after the
product's introduction.
Source: Greyson Orlando, modified by Jecowa. (2006).
Wikimedia Commons.
Used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-
ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.
A company sometimes increases its promotional spending on a
product during its growth stage.
However, instead of encouraging consumers to try the product,
the promotions often focus on the
specific benefits the product offers and its value relative to
90. competitive offerings. In other words,
although the company must still inform and educate customers,
it must counter the competition.
Emphasizing the advantages of the product's brand name can
help a company maintain its sales
in the face of competition. Although different organizations
produce personal computers, a highly
recognized brand such as IBM strengthens a firm's advantage
when competitors enter the market.
New offerings that use the same successful brand name as a
company's existing offerings, which is
what Black & Decker does with some of its products, can give a
company a competitive advantage.
Companies typically begin to make a profit during the growth
stage because more units are being
sold and more revenue is generated.
91. 34
The number of distribution outlets (stores and dealers) used to
sell the product can also increase
during the growth stage as a company tries to reach as much of
the marketplace as possible.
Expanding a product's distribution and increasing its production
to ensure its availability at
different outlets usually results in a product's costs remaining
high during the growth stage. The
price of the product itself typically remains at about the same
level, although some companies
reduce their prices slightly to attract additional buyers and meet
the competitors' prices.
92. Companies hope by increasing their sales, they also improve
their profits.
Stage 3: Maturity
After many competitors enter the market and the number of
potential new customers declines,
the sales of a product typically begin to level off. This indicates
that a product has entered
the maturity stage of its life cycle. Most consumer products are
in the mature stage of their life
cycle; their buyers are repeat purchasers vs. new customers.
Intense competition causes profits to
fall until only the strongest players remain. The maturity stage
lasts longer than other stages.
Quaker Oats and Ivory Soap are products in the maturity
stage—they have been on the market for
over 100 years.
93. Given the competitive environment in the maturity stage, many
products are promoted heavily to
consumers by stronger competitors. The strategies used to
promote the products often focus on
value and benefits that give the offering a competitive
advantage. The promotions aimed at a
company's distributors may also increase during the mature
stage. Companies may decrease the
price of mature products to counter the competition. However,
they must be careful not to get
into "price wars" with their competitors and destroy all the
profit potential of their markets,
threatening a firm's survival. Intel and Advanced Micro Devices
(AMD) have engaged in several
price wars with regard to their microprocessors. Likewise,
Samsung added features and lowered
94. the price on its Instinct mobile phone, engaging in a price war
with Apple's iPhone. With the
weakened economy, many online retailers engaged in price wars
during the 2008 holiday season
by cutting prices on their products and shipping costs. Although
large organizations such as
Amazon.com can absorb shipping costs, price wars often hurt
smaller retailers. Many retailers
learned from their mistakes and ordered less inventory for the
2009 holiday season.
Companies are challenged to develop strategies to extend the
maturity stage of their products so
they remain competitive. Many firms do so by modifying their
target markets, their offerings, or
their marketing strategies.
95. 35
Modifying the target market helps a company attract different
customers by seeking new users,
going after different market segments, or finding new uses for a
product in order to attract
additional customers. Financial institutions and automobile
dealers realized that women have
increased buying power and now market to them. With the
growth in the number of online
shoppers, more organizations sell their products and services
through the Internet. Entering new
markets provides companies an opportunity to extend the
product life cycles of their offerings.
96. Figure 5.18 McDonald's in China
While McDonald's is in the mature stage of its life cycle
in the United States, it is in the growth stage in China.
Source: Wikimedia Commons. (2005). Used under the terms
of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Generic license.
Many companies enter different geographic markets or
international markets as a strategy to get
new users. A product that might be in the mature stage in one
country might be in the
introductory stage in another. For example, when the US market
became saturated, McDonald's
began opening restaurants in foreign markets. Cell phones were
popular in Asia before they were
97. introduced in the United States. Many cell phones in Asia were
being used to scan coupons and to
charge purchases before that type of technology in the United
States.
Modifying the product, such as changing its packaging, size,
flavors, colors, or quality can also
extend the product's maturity stage. The 100 Calorie Packs
created by Nabisco provide an
example of how a company changed the packaging and size to
provide convenience and 100-
calorie portions for consumers. While the sales of many
packaged foods fell, the sales of the 100
Calorie Packs increased to over $200 million, prompting
Nabisco to repackage more products
(Hunter, 2008). Kraft Foods extended the mature stage of
different crackers such as Wheat Thins
98. and Triscuits by creating different flavors. Although not popular
with consumers, many
36
companies downsize (or decrease) the package sizes of their
products or the amount of the
product in the packages to save money and keep prices from
rising too much.
Car manufacturers modify their vehicles slightly each year to
offer new styles and new safety
features. Every three to five years, automobile manufacturers do
more extensive modifications.
Changing the package or adding variations or features are
common ways to extend the mature
stage of the life cycle. Pepsi changed the design and packaging
99. of its soft drinks and Tropicana
juice products. However, consumers thought the new juice
package looked like a less expensive
brand, which made the quality of the product look poorer. As a
result, Pepsi resumed the use of
the original Tropicana carton. Pepsi's redesigned soda cans also
received negative reviews.
When introducing products to international markets, firms must
decide if the product can
be standardized (kept the same) or how much, if any,
adaptation, or changing, of the product
to meet the needs of the local culture is necessary. Although it
is much less expensive to
standardize products and promotional strategies, cultural and
environmental differences usually
require some adaptation. Product colors and packages as well as
100. product names must often be
changed because of cultural differences. For example, in many
Asian and European countries,
Coca-Cola's diet drinks are called "light," not diet. GE makes
smaller appliances such as washers
and dryers for the Japanese market. Hyundai Motor Company
had to improve the quality of its
automobiles in order to compete in the US market. Companies
must also examine the external
environment in foreign markets since the regulations,
competition, and economic conditions vary
as well as the cultures.
Figure 5.19
In Europe, diet drinks are called "light," not diet.
This Coca-Cola product is available in Germany.
101. Source: Photo by FotoPhest. (2009). Wikimedia Commons.
Used under the
terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
Unported license.
37
Some companies modify the marketing strategy for one or more
marketing variables of their
products. For example, many coffee shops and fast-food
restaurants such as McDonald's now
offer specialty coffee that competes with Starbucks. As a result,
Starbucks' managers decided it
was time to change the company's strategy. Over the years,
Starbucks added lunch offerings and
102. moved away from grinding coffee in the stores to provide faster
service. However, customers
missed the coffee shop atmosphere and the aroma of freshly
brewed coffee, and didn't like the
smell of all the lunch items.
As a result of falling market share, Starbucks' former CEO and
founder Howard Schultz returned
to the company. Schultz hired consultants to determine how to
modify the firm's offering and
extend the maturity stage of Starbucks' life cycle. Subsequently,
Starbucks changed the
atmosphere of many of its stores back to that of traditional
coffee shops, modified its lunch
offerings in many stores, and resumed grinding coffee in stores
to provide the aroma customers
103. missed. The company also modified some of its offerings to
provide health-conscious consumers
lower-calorie alternatives (Horovitz, 2008). After the US
economy weakened in 2009, Starbucks
announced it would begin selling instant coffee for about a
dollar a cup to appeal to customers
who were struggling financially but still wanted a special cup of
coffee. The firm also changed its
communication with customers by using more interactive media
such as blogs.
Figure 5.20
The oldest operating McDonald's is in California.
Source: Photo by Bryan Hong. (2007). Wikimedia Commons.
Used under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5
104. Generic license.
Whereas Starbucks might have overexpanded, in 2008
McDonald's announced plans to add
14,000 coffee bars to selected stores (Economist, 2008). In
addition to the coffee bars, many
McDonald's stores are remodeling their interiors to feature flat-
screen televisions, recessed
38
lighting, and wireless Internet access. Other McDonald's
restaurants kept their original design,
which customers still like.
Stage 4: Decline
When sales decrease and continue to drop to lower levels, the
105. product has entered
the decline stage of the product life cycle. In the decline stage,
changes in consumer
preferences, technological advances, and alternatives that
satisfy the same need can lead to a
decrease in demand for a product. How many of your fellow
students do you think have used a
typewriter, adding machine, or slide rule? Computers replaced
the typewriter, and calculators
replaced adding machines and the slide rule. Ask your parents
about eight-track tapes, which
were popular before cassette tapes, which were popular before
CDs.
Some products decline slowly. Others go through a rapid
decline. Many fads and fashions for
young people tend to have very short life cycles and go "out of
106. style" very quickly. (If you've ever
asked your parents to borrow clothes from the 1990s, you may
be amused at how much the styles
have changed.) Similarly, many students don't have landline
phones or VCR players and cannot
believe that people still use the "outdated" devices. Similarly,
payphones are becoming obsolete.
Figure 5.21
How many of us have old videocassettes and no way to watch
them? Movie delivery is an
excellent example of technology divesting products in the
decline stage. Videocassettes were
replaced by DVDs, which are now replaced by streaming video.
Source: Photo by Groink. (2012). Wikimedia Commons. Used
under
107. the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0
Unported license.
Technical products such as digital cameras, cell phones, and
video games that appeal to young
people often have limited life cycles. Companies must decide
what strategies to take when their
products enter the decline stage. To save money, some
companies try to reduce their promotional
39
expenditures and the number of distribution outlets. They might
implement price cuts to get
customers to buy the product. Harvesting the product entails
gradually reducing all costs,
including investments made in the product and marketing costs.
108. By reducing these costs, the
company hopes that the profits from the product will increase
until inventory runs out. Another
option for the company is divesting (dropping or deleting) the
product from its offerings. The
company might choose to sell the brand to another firm or
simply reduce the price drastically in
order to get rid of all remaining inventory. If a company decides
to keep the product, it may lose
money or make money if competitors drop out. Many companies
decide the best strategy is to
modify the product in the maturity stage to avoid entering the
decline stage.
5 . 6 K E Y T A K E A W A Y
The product life cycle helps a company understand the stages
(introduction, growth, maturity, and
109. decline) a product or service may go through once it is launched
in the marketplace. The number and
length of stages can vary. When a product is launched or
commercialized, it enters the introduction stage.
Companies must try to generate awareness of the product and
encourage consumers to try it. During the
growth stage, companies must demonstrate the product's
benefits and value to persuade customers to
buy it vs. competing products. Some products never experience
growth. Most products are in the mature
stage. In the mature stage, sales level off and the market
typically has many competitors. Companies
modify the target market, the offering, or the marketing mix to
extend the mature state and keep from
going into decline. If a product goes into decline, a company
must decide whether to keep the product,
harvest and reduce the spending on it until all the inventory is
sold, or divest and get rid of the product.
W E E K 6 P R E V I E W
Now that we have covered the first element of the marketing
mix, offerings, next week we move on to
two other elements, marketing channels or distribution and
110. price, both of which are within the control of
the marketer and designed to create value for customers. We
will explore what channel systems look like
and the roles they play in delivering customer value. Types of
channels and channel design will be
covered, along with some specifics on transportation,
warehousing, wholesaling, and retailing. Price
communicates value to customers, and we will end the week
with a discussion on how price can be
determined, as well as some pricing strategies commonly used
by marketers.
Week 5 References
Section 5.3
Badenhausen, K. (2014, November 5.) Apple, Microsoft and
Google are world's most valuable brands.
Forbes.com. Retrieved January 26, 2015 from
http://www.forbes.com/sites/kurtbadenhausen/2014/11/05/apple-
microsoft-and-google-are-worlds-
most-valuable-brands/
Section 5.5
Business Week. (2007, May 21). At Hyundai, branding is job 2.
111. Retrieved January 20, 2010, from
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_21/b403506
9.htm
40
Fisher, L. M. (1989, December 15). Xerox sues Apple computer
over Macintosh copyright. New York Times.
Retrieved January 20, 2010, from
http://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/15/business/company-news-
xerox-
sues-apple-computer-over-macintosh-copyright.html?
pagewanted=1
Section 5.6
Economist. (2008, January 10). Starbucks v. McDonald's:
Coffee wars. Retrieved January 20, 2010, from
http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=
10498747
Horovitz, B. (2008, January 8). Starbucks orders an extra shot;
112. founder takes over as CEO to perk up
coffee chain. USA Today, 1B.
Hunter, M. (2008, July 15). The true cost of the 100-calorie
snack pack. ABC News. Retrieved January 20,
2010, from
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=5373173&page=1&medi
akit=adgallery10
Interbrand. (2009). Best global brands. Retrieved January 20,
2010, from
http://www.interbrand.com/best_global_brands.aspx?langid=100
0
Roskelly, N. (2007, March). Partial to whole grains. New
Products Online. Retrieved January 20, 2010,
from
http://www.newproductsonline.com/Archives_Davinci?article=1
979
Week 5Creating Offerings5.1 What Composes an
Offering?Product, Price, and ServiceThe Product-Dominant
Approach to MarketingThe Service-Dominant Approach to
MarketingProduct Levels and Product Lines5.1 KEY
TAKEAWAY5.2 Types of Consumer OfferingsConvenience
113. OfferingsWhether a product is considered an impulse good or a
convenience good is in the mind of the consumer. Candy
displays near grocery store registers appeal to both. Notice
some of the candy also offers a price promotion, or a further
incentive for making...Source: Photo by Doc Brown (2007).
Flickr. Used under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic
license.Shopping OfferingsSpecialty OfferingsUnsought
Offerings5.2 KEY TAKEAWAY5.3 Branding, Labeling, and
PackagingBrandingPackaging Decisions5.3 KEY
TAKEAWAY5.4 Managing the Offering5.4 KEY
TAKEAWAY5.5 New ProductsStep 1: Idea GenerationStep 2:
Idea ScreeningStep 3: Feature SpecificationStep 4:
DevelopmentStep 5: TestingStep 6: Launch or
CommercializationStep 7: Evaluation5.5 KEY
TAKEAWAYStage 1: IntroductionStage 2: GrowthStage 3:
MaturityStage 4: Decline5.6 KEY TAKEAWAYWeek 6 Preview
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Hello again we're going to have a lot
0:03
of fun now. We're going to talk about assessment
0:08
oftentimes assessment gets a bad
0:11
rap. this is mostly because some people believe it's good to
teach the test
0:16
and not teach to the individual student. But
0:21
115. assessment is our friend if we treat it right
0:24
assessments can be very useful
0:28
teachers can use assessments to understand what students
already know
0:32
and what they have learned in class. There are many types of
assessments
0:38
we're going to talk about pre-assessments, formative
assessments
0:42
and summative assessments. Assessments need to be
116. 0:46
on-going in order to help guide a teacher's instruction
0:50
let's start by talking about pre-assessments
0:53
a pre-assessment isn’t what you do right before the assessment
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according Chapman and King, the goal of the pre-assessment
1:03
is to expose each learner's prior knowledge,
1:06
skills, interest, and feelings before the information is presented
1:11
in other words, the teacher is trying to learn about student needs
and strengths
1:16
so that the instruction can be differentiated. Designing a pre-
assessment
118. 1:21
takes time
1:22
and planning. A pre-assessment doesn't have to be a formal pre-
test
1:27
it can be a survey, individual conference,
1:30
or KWL chart .A pre-assessment should be given a while before
the actual unit of
1:37
study
1:37
this allows for time to interpret data and differentiate
119. instructional plans
1:43
okay after the pre-assessment
1:46
and planning is completed assessment shouldn’t stop
1:50
there should be ongoing formative assessments
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1:54
during the learning. Formative assessment is used to ensure that
students are
1:59
actually learning
2:00
we need formative assessment in order to guide instruction
2:03
to meet at learners needs along the way towards mastery of a
concept
2:08
for example, formative assessment can identify learners that
121. need additional
2:14
help before the end of a unit
2:16
if johnnie doesn't understand the concept
2:20
during a unit, then the teacher can identify this
misunderstanding
2:24
and help johnnie
2:27
formative assessments also allow teachers to use flexible
grouping
2:31
122. strategies
2:32
leveled questioning techniques, and adjust assignments to
learners’ needs
2:37
there are a variety a formative assessments a teacher can use
2:41
they can be observations, response cards
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and even checkpoint quizzes. Finally,
2:48
the most recognized form of assessment, the summative
assessment.
2:53
summative assessments are given after
2:56
learning takes place. Summative assessments
3:00
124. show what a student has learned throughout the unit of study
3:04
this type of assessment that allows the teacher to evaluate the
effectiveness of
3:09
the unit. It also identifies which students need interventions
3:13
in order to achieve mastery. Summative assessments can also
come in many forms
3:19
a student might have to create a product that is turned in
3:22
as the summative assessment. It's okay to use a formal post-test
3:26
125. but differentiating the summative assessment is important
3:29
the student should be able to show what they have learned
3:33
through the summative assessment. Depending on the content
3:36
a teacher might use rubrics or checklists to assess student
learning
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the summative assessment might be to produce a music video
3:44
or create a brochure about the learned content. Assessment
3:49
is the backbone a differentiated instruction. Teachers must
differentiate
3:53
assessments
3:54
127. in order to guide the instruction of the many mixed ability
students in one class
3:59
planning good instruction is very difficult to do
4:04
without assessments. It's like trying to fly an airplane without a
navigation system
4:09
or walking aimlessly in the forest
4:13
without a compass. Assessments guide instruction
4:18
and ensure that every student learns. After all
4:22