Topic 5: Crafting customer value - offerings and brands Flashcards
Define product and describe the major classifications of products and services.
Broadly defined, a product is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might satisfy a want or need. Products include physical objects but also services, events, persons, places, organizations, ideas, or mixtures of these entities. Services are products that consist of activities, benefits, or satisfactions offered for sale that are essentially intangible, such as banking, hotel, tax preparation, and home-repair services.
Products and services fall into two broad classes based on the types of consumers who use them.
- Consumer products – those bought by final consumers – are usually classified according to consumer shopping habits (convenience products, shopping products, specialty products, and unsought products).
- Industrial products – those purchased for further processing or for use in conducting a business – include materials and parts, capital items, and supplies and services.
Other marketable entities – such as organizations, persons, places, and ideas – can also be thought of as products.
What are the three levels that product planners need to think about products and services on?
- Core customer value, which addresses the question: what is the buyer really buying?
- actual product: product and service features, design, quality level, brand name, packaging.
- augmented product built around the core benefit and actual product by offering additional consumer services and benefits.
What is social marketing?
This is the use of commercial marketing concepts and tools in programs designed to influence individuals’ behavior to improve their well-being and that of society.
Describe the decisions companies make regarding their individual products and services, product lines, and product mixes.
Individual product decisions involve product attributes, branding, packaging, labeling, and product support services.
- Product attribute decisions involve product quality, features, and style and design.
- Branding decisions include selecting a brand name and developing a brand strategy.
- Packaging provides many key benefits, such as protection, economy, convenience, and promotion.
- Package decisions often include designing labels, which identify, describe, and possibly promote the product.
- Companies also develop product support services that enhance customer service and satisfaction and safeguard against competitors.
Most companies produce a product line rather than a single product. A product line is a group of products that are related in function, customer-purchase needs, or distribution channels. All product lines and items offered to customers by a particular seller make up the product mix. The mix can be described by four dimensions: width, length, depth, and consistency. These dimensions are the tools for developing the company’s product strategy.
- Product mix width refers to the number of different product lines the company carries.
- Product mix length refers to the total number of items a company carries within its product lines.
- Product mix depth refers to the number of versions offered for each product in the line.
What is product quality?
These are the characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied customer needs. Product quality has two dimensions: level and consistency.
- In developing a product, the marketer must first choose a quality level that will support the product’s positioning. Here, product quality means performance quality – the product’s ability to perform its functions.
- Beyond quality level, high quality also can mean high levels of quality consistency. Here, product quality means conformance quality – freedom from defects and consistency in delivering a targeted level of performance. All companies should strive for high levels of conformance quality.
What is Total Quality Management (TQM)?
Total quality management (TQM) is an approach in which all of the company’s people are involved in constantly improving the quality of products, services, and business processes.
What is a brand?
A brand is a name, term, sign, symbol, or design, or a combination of these, that identifies the products or services of one seller or group of sellers and differentiates them from those of competitors. Consumers view a brand as an important part of a product, and branding can add value to a consumer’s purchase. Customers attach meanings to brands and develop brand relationships. As a result, brands have meaning well beyond a product’s physical attributes.
What is packaging?
Packaging includes the activities of designing and producing the container or wrapper for a product. Companies are realizing the power of good packaging to create immediate consumer recognition of a brand.
Identify the four characteristics that affect the marketing of services and the additional marketing considerations that services require.
Services are characterized by four key aspects:
- Intangible: Services cannot be seen, tasted, felt, heard, or smelled before they are bought.
- Inseparable: Services are produced and consumed at the same time and cannot be separated from their providers.
- Variable: The quality of services may vary greatly depending on who provides them and when, where, and how they are provided.
- Perishable: Services cannot be stored for later sale or use.
Each characteristic poses problems and marketing requirements. Marketers work to find ways to make the service more tangible, increase the productivity of providers who are inseparable from their products, standardize quality in the face of variability, and improve demand movements and supply capacities in the face of service perishability. Good service companies focus attention on both customers and employees. They understand the service profit chain, which links service firm profits with employee and customer satisfaction. Services marketing strategy calls not only for external marketing but also for internal marketing to motivate employees and interactive marketing to create service delivery skills among service providers.
To succeed, service marketers must create competitive differentiation, offer high service quality, and find ways to increase service productivity.
What is the service profit chain and what do the links consist of?
The service profit chain is the chain that links service firm profits with employee and customer satisfaction. This chain consists of five links:
- Internal service quality. Superior employee selection and training, a quality work environment, and strong support for those dealing with customers, which results in …
- Satisfied and productive service employees. More satisfied, loyal, and hardworking employees, which results in …
- Greater service value. More effective and efficient customer value creation, engagement, and service delivery, which results in …
- Satisfied and loyal customers. Satisfied customers who remain loyal, make repeat purchases, and refer other customers, which results in …
- Healthy service profits and growth. Superior service firm performance.
What else does service marketing require, aside from traditional external marketing using the four Ps?
Service marketing also requires internal marketing and interactive marketing.
- Internal marketing means that the service firm must orient and motivate its customer-contact employees and supporting service people to work as a team to provide customer satisfaction. Marketers must get everyone in the organization to be customer centered. In fact, internal marketing must precede external marketing.
- Interactive marketing means that service quality depends heavily on the quality of the buyer–seller interaction during the service encounter. In product marketing, product quality often depends little on how the product is obtained. But in services marketing, service quality depends on both the service deliverer and the quality of delivery. Service marketers, therefore, have to master interactive marketing skills.
Discuss branding strategy – the decisions companies make in building and managing their brands.
Some analysts see brands as the major enduring asset of a company. Brands are more than just names and symbols; they embody everything that the product or the service means to consumers. Brand equity is the positive differential effect that knowing the brand name has on customer response to the product or the service. A brand with strong brand equity is a very valuable asset.
In building brands, companies need to make decisions about brand positioning, brand name selection, brand sponsorship, and brand development.
- Brand positioning can be at three levels:
- Product attributes
- Benefits
- The most powerful brand positioning builds around strong consumer beliefs and values.
- Brand name selection involves finding the best brand name based on a careful review of product benefits, the target market, and proposed marketing strategies.
- A manufacturer has four brand sponsorship options:
- it can launch a national brand (or manufacturer’s brand)
- sell to resellers that use a private brand
- market licensed brands
- join forces with another company to co-brand a product.
- A company also has four choices when it comes to developing brands. It can introduce line extensions, brand extensions, multibrands, or new brands.
Companies must build and manage their brands carefully. The brand’s positioning must be continuously communicated to consumers. Advertising can help. However, brands are not maintained by advertising but by customers’ engagement with brands and customers’ brand experiences. Customers come to know a brand through a wide range of contacts and interactions. The company must put as much care into managing these touch points as it does into producing its ads. Companies must periodically audit their brands’ strengths and weaknesses.
What is brand equity?
Brand equity is the positive differential effect that knowing the brand name has on customer response to the product or the service. A brand with strong brand equity is a very valuable asset.
High brand equity provides a company with many competitive advantages. A powerful brand enjoys a high level of consumer brand awareness and loyalty. Because consumers expect stores to carry the particular brand, the company has more leverage in bargaining with resellers. Because a brand name carries high credibility, the company can more easily launch line and brand extensions. A powerful brand also offers the company some defense against fierce price competition.
Above all, however, a powerful brand forms the basis for building strong and profitable customer relationships. The fundamental asset underlying brand equity is customer equity – the value of customer relationships that the brand creates. A powerful brand is important, but what it really represents is a profitable set of loyal customers. The proper focus of marketing is building customer equity, with brand management serving as a major marketing tool. Companies need to think of themselves not as portfolios of brands but as portfolios of customers.
How does ad agency Young & Rubicam’s BrandAsset Valuator measure brand strength?
Ad agency Young & Rubicam’s BrandAsset Valuator measures brand strength along four consumer perception dimensions: differentiation (what makes the brand stand out), relevance (how consumers feel it meets their needs), knowledge (how much consumers know about the brand), and esteem (how highly consumers regard and respect the brand). Brands with strong brand equity rate high on all four dimensions. The brand must be distinct, or consumers will have no reason to choose it over other brands. However, the fact that a brand is highly differentiated doesn’t necessarily mean that consumers will buy it. The brand must stand out in ways that are relevant to consumers’ needs. Even a differentiated, relevant brand is far from a shoe-in. Before consumers will respond to the brand, they must first know about and understand it. And that familiarity must lead to a strong, positive consumer–brand connection.
What is brand value?
Brand value is the total financial value of a brand.