CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

33
SETTING PRODUCT SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY STRATEGY CHAPTER 12 MARKETING MANAGEMENT 13 TH EDITION by Philip Kotler & Kevin Keller v49 MARKETING MANAGEMENT MBA in Health, Batch 8 Ateneo Graduate School of Business Anna Sofia Victoria S. Fajardo, M.D. May 15, 2010 http://riafajardo.blogspot.com

description

 

Transcript of CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

Page 1: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

SETTING PRODUCT SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGYSTRATEGY

CHAPTER 12MARKETING MANAGEMENT

13TH EDITIONby Philip Kotler & Kevin Keller

v49 MARKETING MANAGEMENT MBA in Health, Batch 8

Ateneo Graduate School of Business

Anna Sofia Victoria S. Fajardo, M.D.

May 15, 2010

http://riafajardo.blogspot.com

Page 2: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

OVERVIEW

• PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS & CLASSIFICATIONS

• DIFFERENTIATION

• PRODUCT & BRAND RELATIONSHIPS

• PACKAGING, LABELING, WARRANTIES & GUARANTEES

Page 3: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT

• ANYTHING OFFERED TO MARKET

• TO SATISFY A WANT OR NEED– Goods, services,

experiences, events, persons, places, organizations, ideas

• MOST IMPORTANT ELEMENT OF MARKETING MIX

Page 4: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS

Page 5: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

MARKET OFFERING

PRICE

PRODUCT SERVICES

Page 6: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

5 PRODUCT LEVELS

CORE BENEFIT

BASIC PRODUCT

EXPECTED PRODUCT

AUGMENTED PRODUCT

POTENTIAL PRODUCT

Page 7: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

5 PRODUCT LEVELSCORE BENEFIT HEALTHY FOOD

BASIC PRODUCT FRUITS & VEGETABLES

EXPECTED PRODUCT FRESH FRUITS & VEGGIES, JUICES, CANNED GOODS

AUGMENTED PRODUCT VEGGIES PREPARED WITH DIPS, FRUITS IN BASKETS

POTENTIAL PRODUCT NEW WAYS TO SATISFY CUSTOMERS

Page 8: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT CLASSIFICATION

DURABILITY & TANGIBILITY

1. NON-DURABLE GOODS– Tangible, few uses – Induce trial & build preference– Ex. Beer, soap

Page 9: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT CLASSIFICATION

2. DURABLE GOODS– Tangible, many uses– Personal selling &

service– Ex. Refrigerators,

clothing

Page 10: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT CLASSIFICATION

3. SERVICES– Intangible,

inseparable, variable

– Quality control, supplier credibility

– Ex. Legal advice, health services

Page 11: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION

Page 12: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION

• FORM

• FEATURES

• CUSTOMIZATION

• PERFORMANCE QUALITY

Page 13: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION

• CONFORMANCE QUALITY– All products identical & meet specifications

• DURABILITY– Product’s expected operating life

• RELIABILITY– Product will not malfunction or fail within

specified time period

Page 14: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION

• REPAIRABILITY– Ease of fixing a

product – DIY

• STYLE– Product’s look and

feel to the buyer

Page 15: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

DESIGN

• WELL-DESIGNED PRODUCT– Pleasant to look at– Easy to open– Install, repair & dispose of

Page 16: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

SERVICES DIFFERENTIATION

ORDERING EASE

INSTALLATION

DELIVERY

Page 17: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

SERVICES DIFFERENTIATION

CUSTOMER

CONSULTING

CUSTOMER TRAINING

Page 18: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

SERVICES DIFFERENTIATION

• MAINTENANCE & REPAIR– Ex. HP offers “e-

support”

• RETURNS– Unavoidable reality

of doing business

Page 19: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT & BRANDRELATIONSHIPS

Page 20: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT HIERARCHY

NEED FAMILY SECURITY

PRODUCT FAMILY SAVINGS & INCOME

PRODUCT CLASS FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

PRODUCT LINE LIFE INSURANCE

PRODUCT TYPE TERM LIFE INSURANCE

ITEM PRUDENTIAL RENEWABLE TERM LIFE INSURANCE

Page 21: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PRODUCT SYSTEMS & MIXES PROCTOR & GAMBLE

PRODUCT-

MIX

WIDTH

DETERGENTS TOOTHPASTE BAR SOAP DISPOSABLE

DIAPERS

PAPER

PRODUCTS

PRODUCT

LINE

LENGTH

Ivory Snow (1930)

Tide (1946)

Gleem (1952)

Crest (1955)

Ivory (1879)

Camay (1926)

Zest (1952)

Safeguard (1963)

Oil of Olay (1993)

Pampers (1961)

Luvs (1976)

Charmin (1928)

Bounty (1965)

Page 22: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PACKAGING, LABELING, WARRANTIES &GUARANTEES

Page 23: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

PACKAGING

• All activities of designing and producing the container for a product.

• 3 LEVELS OF MATERIALS

1. Primary Package

2. Secondary Package

3. Shipping Package

Page 24: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

OBJECTIVES OF PACKAGING

1. IDENTIFY THE BRAND

2. CONVEY DESCRIPTIVE & PERSUASIVE INFORMATION

3. FACILITATE PRODUCT TRANSPORTATION & PROTECTION

4. ASSIST AT-HOME STORAGE

5. AID PRODUCT CONSUMPTION

Page 25: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

MARKETING TOOL

• SELF-SERVICE– Ex. Shopper in

supermarket

• CONSUMER AFFLUENCE– Ex. Customer willing

to pay more for better packaging

Page 26: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

MARKETING TOOL

• COMPANY & BRAND IMAGE– Ex. Garnier Fructis -

bright green hair care packaging

• INNOVATION OPPORTUNITY– Ex. Heinz EZ Squirt

ketchup & upside-down bottle

Page 27: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

LABELING

1. IDENTIFIES PRODUCT

2. DESCRIBE PRODUCT

3. PROMOTE PRODUCT

Page 28: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

WARRANTIES & GUARANTEES

• All sellers are legally responsible for buyer’s normal or reasonable expectations.

• WARRANTIES– Formal statements of expected product

performance by manufacturer.– Products can be returned to manufacturer

for repair, replacement, or refund.

Page 29: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

WARRANTIES & GUARANTEES

• EXTENDED WARRANTIES– Best Buy & Circuit City

• GENERAL & SPECIFIC GUARANTEES– P&G - product returned if customer

satisfaction not met– CROSS - pens & pencils guaranteed for

life

Page 30: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

SUMMARY

1. PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS

2. 5 PRODUCT LEVELS

3. DURABILITY & TANGIBILITY

4. PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION

5. SERVICE DIFFERENTIATION

Page 31: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

SUMMARY

6. PRODUCT HIERARCHY

7. PRODUCT SYSTEMS & MIXES

8. PACKAGING

9. PACKAGING AS MARKETING TOOL

10.WARRANTIES & GUARANTEES

Page 32: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY
Page 33: CH. 12 - SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGY

SETTING PRODUCT SETTING PRODUCT STRATEGYSTRATEGY

CHAPTER 12MARKETING MANAGEMENT

13TH EDITIONby Philip Kotler & Kevin Keller

v49 MARKETING MANAGEMENT MBA in Health, Batch 8

Ateneo Graduate School of Business

Anna Sofia Victoria S. Fajardo, M.D.

May 15, 2010

http://riafajardo.blogspot.com