AVA10004 Ppt+5 Marketing+Mix+-+Products+modified+-+Adam+v2 CH
AVA10004 Ppt+5 Marketing+Mix+-+Products+modified+-+Adam+v2 CH
AVA10004 Ppt+5 Marketing+Mix+-+Products+modified+-+Adam+v2 CH
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Aviation Marketing
Adam Phillips:
Studied Economics
Experienced AN, GF, EY
Linkedin linkedin.com/in/ajgphillips
Week 5
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Re-cap: What is marketing
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Re-cap: Maslows Theory
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Summary
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Re-cap: Value
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Marketing Mix
▪ Is the set of controllable tactical marketing tools (4Ps or
7Ps) that the firms blend to produce the response it
wants in the target market (Kotler and Armstrong, 2010).
▪ 4Ps
▪ Product: tangible, physical product, as well as its values
created
▪ Price: pricing strategy
▪ Place: is a marketing channel, a set of interdependent
organisations that help make a product or service available
for use or consumption by the consumer or business user
(Kotler et al, 2010)
▪ Promotion: all marketing communication activities, including
personal selling, sales promotion, public relations, direct
marketing, trade fairs and exhibitions, advertising and
sponsorship
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Marketing Mix
▪ 7Ps for service industry:
▪ Process: the actual procedures, mechanisms, and
the flow of activities by which the service is delivered.
▪ People: all human actors who play a part in service
delivery and thus influence the buyer’s perceptions.
E.g. the firm’s personnel, the customer, and other
customers in the service environment
▪ Physical evidence: the environment in which the
service is delivered, and where the firm and
customer interact, and any tangible components
that facilitate performance or communication of the
service (Zeithaml et al. 2008)
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Marketing Mix
Price:
List price
Discount Products: goods, services and
Allowances experiences:
Physical evidence: use of other tools Settlement and credit time variety/quality/design/features
and techniques in the environment is /brand name/packaging/
important warranties/returns
Marketing mix—
targeted customers
and intended
Process: contact with positioning Promotion : advertising/personal
customers in the process of selling/direct marketing/online
delivery, aiming at creating and marketing
enjoying experience
Placement logistics:
People: relationship demand
marketing chain/logistics/channel
management
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Agenda
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Service as a Product
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Service as a Product
▪ Most products are a combination of goods
and services
▪ Product is sold with assistance of sales agents
▪ Service delivered with the assistance of front line
employees
▪ Experience is used to differentiate offerings
(e.g. Apple stores)
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Airlines
- Good or Service?
- Is it is collection of products?
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Three levels of product/service offer
Core product:
Core benefit or service
Augmented:
After sale service, warranty, delivery and credit,
installation
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Qantas Product
Core product:
Time critical transport
Augmented:
Qantas Club/FFP/holiday package/car rental
package/tours/priority baggage/fly-drive
package
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BUT
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Product concept applied to airline
industry
▪ Aerospace industry
▪ Aircraft
▪ Airline industry
▪ Route/Destination
▪ Cabin configuration
▪ Package (hotel and destination)
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Route/destination
• Qantas network
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Holiday packages
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Classification of product/service
Product/Service
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Agenda
(Source: URENIO) 26
stage Indications Strategies
Introduction Less competition, Launching strategy is crucial:
stage Consumers not ready to accept Promotion focusing on raising awareness
Rely on word-of-mouth or Price crucial
experience/experiment Free trial
Highlight functions, outcome
Growth More competitors, Improve quality/features
stage Compete on price,/product Highlight values/status
quality/features/ Shift promotion from raising awareness to
service/values convincing
Profits increase
Maturity Slow down in sales and Identify a niche within the market
stage revenues Increase promotion and advertisement
More competitors Push for R&D for new features/value
Customers
bored/insensitive/critical
Declining Increased competition Monitor market performance
stage Shift of consumer taste Repositioning
Advancement of technology Reduce cost
Replacement by better product Develop a new product
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Managing PLC
Relationship between PLC and consumer
behaviour
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3 ways to manage products
1. Modify the product
➢ Altering a product’s characteristics to try to increase and
extend the product’s sales
➢ Quality
➢ Performance
➢ Appearance
2. Modify the market
➢ Finding new users
➢ Increasing use among existing users
➢ Creating new use situation
3. Reposition the product
➢ Changing the place a product occupies in a consumer’s mind
relative to competitive products
➢ Reposition a product by changing one of the 4 marketing mix
elements
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Managing Product Portfolio
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Agenda
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A New Service
➢ A new service means:
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Examples: Cathay Pacific
We are among the first airlines to have rice
cookers, toasters and skillets on board,
enabling our flight attendants to prepare freshly
cooked rice, toast and eggs to your liking. First
Class passengers can also go à la carte and
choose their own meals and dine anytime they
wish. Hmm, how about having fried eggs, sunny-
side up?
(Source:
www.cathaypacific.com) 35
Cabin service (BA vs. Emirates)
Contrast Etihad
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2C24vrbrKxo
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A new service launch –BA new service to
Chengdu
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NswZx1TC
BFE
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Product Innovation
➢ Frontline staff is key to provide feedback of
customers to stimulate new service
development and delivery:
➢ Improvement of process, such as queuing
➢ Introduction of a new feature
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Individual Product Decisions
Product
Product Branding Packaging Labelling support
services
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Product Attributes
▪ Refers to the benefits a product offers to the
marketplace, which are then communicated
and delivered by product attributes, including:
➢ Quality
➢ Features
➢ Design
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Product Quality
➢ Refers to the ability of a product to perform its
functions. Including:
➢ Durability
➢ Reliability
➢ Precision
➢ Ease of operation and repair, etc…
Remember:
Companies choose a quality level that matches the expectations of the target
market or the quality levels of competing products
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Can you rank them?
➢ Airlines, what are the measurement to determine
the quality?
➢ Singapore airlines
➢ Virgin Australia
➢ Qantas
➢ Jetstar
➢ Korean airlines
➢ United
➢ American
➢ Spirit
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Items to consider
▪ Fleet and schedule-related product features
➢ Cabin configuration and classes of service
➢ Network, frequency and timing
➢ Punctuality
▪ Customer service-related product features
➢ Point-of-sale service
➢ Reservation and overbooking
➢ On-board service
➢ Ground service
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Items to Consider:
➢ Point of sale
➢ Reservation vs. overbooking
➢ Airport service
➢Check in
➢Bag drop
➢Self check-in
➢ Queuing
➢ Lounge
➢ In-flight service
➢ Baggage claim, lost and misplacement
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Skytrax—quality certified airlines
➢ SKYTRAX Airline Quality Audit (SAQA) programme is a globally
recognized and respected Quality Certification system for front-
line operational product and service delivery standards of an
airline.
➢ Quality Certified Airlines are subjected to complex SAQA
evaluation across all areas of front-line Product and Service
standards. This covers more than 750 features of product and
service quality measurement, divided across the airport and
onboard environments. The airport service analysis is based
upon each airline's home base airport.
➢ SAQA guidelines ensure that Quality Certification is conducted in
a standardized manner, and deliver the highest professional
standards that have been associated with SKYTRAX for more
than 20 years. The SAQA programme is the benchmark for
Quality Performance management in airlines, and all studies are
carried out by experienced, SKYTRAX research staff.
(www.airlinequality.com) 45
Skytrax
“We have a complex set of product and service
delivery Quality targets that an airline must
meet, but one of the most important factors for
successful certification is the consistency of
Quality performance." (Skytrax)
5/4/3/2/1 star airlines
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5-Star Airlines
Latest ranking:
➢ Asiana
➢ Cathay Pacific
➢ Hainan
➢ Qatar
➢ Singapore
➢ Malaysia
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Products designed to meet Customer
Journey
▪ Traditional Silo: Think , Operate, Sell
▪ Moving to Customer Journey & Ancillary Sales
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Branding
A brand is a name, a term, sign, symbol, or design,
or a combination of these, intended to identify the
goods and services of one seller or group of sellers
and to differentiate them from those of competitors.
➢ Is a seller’s promise to deliver consistently a specific set
of features, benefits, and services to buyers.
➢ Includes the use of brand name, trademarks, and
practically all other means of product identification.
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A Trademark
➢ A legal term
➢ Includes only those words, symbols or marks
that are legally registered for use by a single
company
➢ It is not necessarily attached to the product
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Some Branding Concepts
• The value of company and brand name
• The added value a given brand name gives to a product
beyond the functional benefits provided
• Often represented by the premium a consumer will pay for
Brand equity one brand over another when the functional benefits
provided are identical
• Brand valuation is the process of estimating the total financial
value of a brand
Brand loyalty • Consistent preference for one brand over all others
• Leads to repeat purchase
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Brand Equity
The most valuable global brands 2012
Rank Rank Rank Category Brand Brand Value
2011 change 2012 2012 ($M)
1 0 1 Tech Apple 182,951
2 1 2 Tech IBM 155,985
3 -1 3 Tech Google 107, 857
4 0 4 Fast Food McDonald's 95,188
5 0 5 Tech Microsoft 76,651
6 0 6 Soft drinks Coca-Cola 74,286
8 7 7 Tobacco Marlboro 73,612
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Managing Brands
▪ Brands are known through advertising,
personal experience, word of mouth, the
internet, sponsorship
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Emirates’ branding strategy
➢ Boutros M. Boutros, Divisional Senior Vice-President,
Corporate Communications, Emirates Airline and Group,
told Gulf News that his organisation will soon roll out a new
branding strategy that will take the brand image of the
world's fastest growing airline to the next level.
➢ https://www.thedrum.com/news/2012/03/27/emirates-set-launch-
new-global-brand-platform-strawberry-frog
(Source: www.gulfnews.com) 60
Emirates
➢ Emirates has been involved with a wide range of sporting
events and teams around the world for over 20 years.
• In 1987, only two years after its inception, Emirates began
to build up its sponsorship portfolio.
• Today the airline is linked to some of the world's leading
sport events spread across the six continents to which
Emirates flies non-stop from Dubai.
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Emirates branding strategy
Emirates has been committed to sponsorship in both
the UAE and around the world for over twenty years,
beginning with the first powerboat race held in Dubai, in
1987.
➢ Football
➢ Rugby
➢ Tennis
➢ Horse racing
➢ Golf
➢ Cricket
➢ Sailing
➢ Australian rules football
➢ Arts and culture
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Emirates “Hello Tomorrow”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jnAvu-ADrQ
We deliver on dreams
Vietjet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sv-aB-
3mHRs
NZ:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLTUz9qk45o
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Etihad sponsorship
➢ As a global, innovative and young airline with a fresh
approach to everything we do, we associate ourselves
with a large number of events and causes that reflect
our own position as a catalyst for change.
We support the promotion of local culture in the UAE
and worldwide, and sponsor cultural and sporting
events that are consistent with our values of
hospitality, team spirit and helping to bring the world
together.
Summary
➢ What is Marketing Mix?
➢ What is product/service?
➢ Classification of product
➢ Product life cycle and developing a new
product
➢ Individual product decision
➢ Product quality
➢ Product features
➢ Branding