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PRODUCT AND DISTRIBUTION Module 6

PRODUCT AND DISTRIBUTION

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PRODUCT AND DISTRIBUTION. Module 6. PRODUCT CONCEPTS. OUTLINE. Positioning Branding New Product Development Product Elimination. THE KEY TO PRODUCT SUCCESS……POSITIONING. POSITIONING. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: PRODUCT AND DISTRIBUTION

PRODUCT AND DISTRIBUTION

Module 6

Page 2: PRODUCT AND DISTRIBUTION

PRODUCT CONCEPTS

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OUTLINE

• Positioning• Branding• New Product Development• Product Elimination

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THE KEY TO PRODUCT SUCCESS……POSITIONING

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POSITIONING

• …placing your product in that part of the market where it will receive a favorable reception compared to competing products (Jain, 1996).

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BRANDING

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BRAND

• ...a term, symbol, or design that identifies a seller’s products and differentiates them from the competitor’s products.

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OBJECTIVES OF BRANDING

• Identification• Differentiation• Repeat Sales• New Product Sales

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BRANDING STRATEGIES

• Individual branding• Private labels• Corporate or manufacturer’s brands• Generic brands• Family brands

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INDIVIDUAL BRANDING

• Provide each product with a distinctive name

• Reduces a company’s risk that a failure is not associated with its other products

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PRIVATE LABELS

• It creates store loyalty• They are profitable• Middlemen can sometimes be avoided

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MANUFACTURERS’ BRANDS

• Advertising expenditures are reduced• Well-known brands can attract new

customers to the store

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GENERIC BRANDS

• “No-name” products• Decline in popularity

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FAMILY BRANDING

• The same name is used to cover a group of products

• Reduced costs• Transfer of customer satisfaction

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PLANNING FOR NEW PRODUCTS

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NEW PRODUCT STRATEGIES

• ...firms are better able to sustain competitive pressures on their existing products and make headway.

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THE ROLE OF TOP MANAGEMENT

• Establish policies and broad strategic directions

• Create the organizational climate needed to stimulate innovation

• Get involved!

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NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT

• Product improvement/modification• Product imitation• Product innovation

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PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT / MODIFICATION

• Typically in the maturity phase of the product life cycle.

• Improvements are achieved through redesigning , remodeling, or reformulating the product to satisfy customer needs more fully.

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PRODUCT IMITATION

• Imitators design and produce products not very different from an innovator’s product.

• This strategy reduces risk

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PRODUCT INNOVATION

• An innovation strategy sees the introduction of a new product to replace an existing product in order to provide a new approach to satisfying an existing need.

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ENCOURAGING INNOVATION

• Keep divisions small• Tolerate failure• Motivate champions• Maintain liaison with customers• Share technology throughout firm• Sustain projects despite initial

discouraging results

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THE PRODUCT INNOVATION PROCESS

• Idea generation• Screening and evaluation• Business analysis• Development and testing• Test marketing• Commercialization

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IDEA GENERATION

• Search• Marketing Research• Internal and External Development• Suggestion Systems

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BUSINESS ANALYSIS

• Preliminary market plan• Revenue forecasting• Cost estimation• Profit projections

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DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING

• Development of a prototype

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TEST MARKETING

• Simulated test marketing• Conventional test marketing

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COMMERCIALIZATION

• Continuous monitoring

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PRODUCT ELIMINATION

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ALTERNATIVES

• Divestment• Harvesting (Controlled Divesting)• Line Simplification

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PRODUCT LINE STRATEGY

ADD NEWPRODUCTS

PRODUCTIMPROVEMENTS

ELIMINATEPRODUCTS

PRODUCT LINE STRATEGY

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DISTRIBUTION

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OUTLINE• Introduction• Distribution Scope Strategies• Channel Strategies• Power and Conflict

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CHANNELS OF DISTRIBUTION

• “What is a channel?”• “A channel is an organized structure

of buyers and sellers that bridge the gap of time and space between the manufacturer and the customer.”

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MARKETING IS AN EXCHANGE PROCESS

• Concentration• Dispersion

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WHOLESALING TRENDS• Low margins• Producers bypass wholesalers• Acquisitions and mergers• Increase of value added services

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RETAILING TRENDS• Innovation• Growth of large chains• Increase in scrambled

merchandising• Internet

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DISTRIBUTION SCOPE STRATEGIES

• Exclusive• Intensive• Selective

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EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTION• One retailer serving an area is

granted sole rights to carry a product• Relevant for products that

individuals seek out.

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ADVANTAGES OF EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTION• Dealer loyalty and sales support• Retailer control• Forecasting and inventory control

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DISADVANTAGES OF EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTION• Lost volume• “Eggs in one basket”

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INTENSIVE DISTRIBUTION• Product is available to all possible

retail outlets• Convenience goods

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ADVANTAGES OF INTENSIVE DISTRIBUTION• Increased sales• Wider customer recognition• Impulse buying

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DISADVANTAGES OF INTENSIVE DISTRIBUTION• Quick turnaround required• Control is difficult to maintain

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SELECTIVE DISTRIBUTION• Several outlets in a given area

distribute a product• Shopping goods

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DISADVANTAGES OF SELECTIVE DISTRIBUTION• Not adequately covering the market

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CHANNEL ALTERNATIVES• Conventional• Vertical marketing system (VMS)– (channel is managed as a coordinated

or programmed system)

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VMS CHARACTERISTICS• Channel captain• Three types– Ownership– Contractual– Administered

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POWER• Power reflects the degree to which

one firm can influence the actions and decisions of another firm

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SOURCES OF POWER• Reward power• Coercive power• Expertise power• Referent power• Legitimate power

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CONFLICT• A situation in which one channel

member perceives another channel member to be engaged in behavior that is preventing or impeding it from achieving its goals.

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RESOLVING CONFLICT• Bargaining• Diplomacy• Interpenetration Strategy• Conciliation