week 3 Flashcards
1
Q
how to identify and develop a positioning strategy
A
- place the product occupies in consumers’ minds relative to competing products
- typically defined by consumers on basis of important attributes
- ex. porche is positioned on basis of performance and freedom
2
Q
what are benefits and symbolism
A
- type of positioning
- emphasizes benefits of brand and psychological meaning of brand to consumers
3
Q
what are positioning methods?
A
- value
- product attributes
- benefits and symbolism
- competition
- market leadership
4
Q
what is positioning rleative to competition
A
- position against a specific competitor
- position against an entire product classification
5
Q
what are steps to positioning?
A
- determine consumers’ perceptions and evaluations in relation to competitors’
- identify competitors’ positions
- determine consumer preferences
- select position
- monitor positioning strategy
6
Q
what are issues to consider when thinking about positioning?
A
- what are central dimensions that underlie customers’ perceptions of brand in product class
- how do customers view our brand on these dimensions
- how do customers’ view competitors
- are there opportunities for new product introductions
- how to perceptions relate to preferences
- how can we improve competitive position (market share) given distribution of preferences in the market
6
Q
what is a positioning map
A
- place “competitors’ on a map
– products, comps, offerings - position them along relevant dimensions (relevant to customers)
- short distance = fierce competition
- easy to read, analyze
– graphical, 2d map
– human beings are good w/ graphical representations
– better than raw numbers - easy to communicate, convince, act
7
Q
what are mapping methods in marketing
A
- perceptual maps
- similarity based methods
- attribute based methods - preference maps
- ideal point model (unfolding model)
- vector model - joint space maps (both perception & preference
- simple joint space maps using modified perceptual mapping methods
- vector model using prefmap-3
- ideal point model using quasi-metric approach
8
Q
what are attribute based perceptual maps?
A
- perceptual maps derived from customer evaluations of competing products along pre-specified attributes
- identify products and product attributes for eval
- obtain perception data from questionnaires given to defined target segments
- select perceptual mapping method
- plot map
9
Q
what are attributes for positioning analysis
A
- performance: levels at which product’s primary characteristics
- durability: measure of product’s expected operating life
- reliability: measure of the probability that a product will malfunction/fail within specified time period
- serviceability: measure of ease of fixing a product that malfunctions/fails
- style: how well the product looks/feels to customer
- product image: conveying emotional aspects of products (ex. prestige, reputation, associated with product/comp)
- delivery: how product/service is delivered to customer
- other services:availability warranty/services that add value to customer’s purchase/use of product
- service image: number of attributes that contribute to overall perception of service (ex. competence, friendliness, courteousness of service employees)
- perceived quality: degree to which the product meets customers’ expectations of what the product/ service should be
10
Q
how to map brands/products
A
- brands that are close on map are close competitors
– customers have similar perceptions about these brands
– brands compete on the same dimensions but which ones? - attribute lines show along which key dimensions brands are positioned
– the smaller the angle, the higher the correlation
– dotted line = inexpensive, solid line = expensive
11
Q
what are preference maps?
A
- preferences allow customers to choose among alternatives
- ex. all customers may perceive volvo as safe but not all customers value safety equally
- preferences do not necessarily go according to magnitude of an attribute
- cannot indicate which attributes should be changed to make a focal product more appealing to target segment
12
Q
what are the 2 types of preference representation?
A
- ideal point preference model ^
– upside down parabola
– y axis: preference, x axis: ideal point - vector preference model x
– y axis: preference, x axis: increasing vs decreasing preference
13
Q
what are joint space maps?
A
- incorporate both perceptions and preferences into the same map
- two simple methods:
– averaged ideal point model: generating an average ideal point requires a hypothetical ideal brand and it includes average perceptions of the ideal brand
– averaged vector model: associated vector shows direction of increasing preference, the further a product appears along this vector the more it is preferred