B2B Products & Services Strategies
B2B Products & Services Strategies
B2B Products & Services Strategies
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Outline
Product Strategy in Business Marketing Product Lines Defined Business New Product Development Organization of the New Product Effort Product Life-Cycle Analysis Determinants of the Product Mix The Product AdoptionDiffusion Process Product Portfolio Classification, Analysis, and Strategy Product Deletion Strategy Marketing of Business Services Important Characteristics of Business Services Business Service MarketingChallenges and Opportunities
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Proprietary or catalog
Standard products offered to many customers and usually inventoried in anticipation of sales orders. For example, the DoAll Company keeps a large inventory of model No. C916A Band Saws to ensure quick delivery to customers.
Custom-built
Different variations of accessories and options to complement proprietary or catalog products offered. For example, the DoAll company fills a request from a major company for a custom, made-to-order saw with a larger motor size, larger table size, and automatic indexing.
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Custom-designed
Products designed for (and usually only for) a particular user. For example, DoAll designed a unique band saw with a custom-fixtured table and remote-control operation for Army to use to cut up live ammunition.
Industrial services
Intangibles, e.g., maintenance, machine repair, consulting. For example, DoAll provides a saw and coolant specialist who makes courtesy inspections at customers plants to assist in using DoAll in product applications.
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Custom: BMW designs a windshield washer fluid container for their new model and sends part prints to a custom plastics component manufacturer. Manufacturer must build production equipment but BMW owns molding dies and rights to product. Supplier sales build relationship, work with customer on design, finalize terms of sale. Proprietary standard line: BMW picks a standard wheel bearing for its new model and orders it directly from manufacturer. Manufacturer sells same wheel bearing to others. Supplier sales build relationship, work with customer on application, finalize terms of sale.
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Business analysis
Product development Product testing Product commercialization and introduction
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5. Product testing: involves conducting commercial experiments necessary to verify earlier business judgements
6. Product commercialization and introduction: includes launching the new product through full-scale production and sales and committing the company's reputation and resources to the product's success
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Product Manager
Individuals responsible for marketing mix decisions for specific product line as it travels through life cycle
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Decline
As a strategy planning tool, a PLC diagram is a visual representation of a tendency (many nonbusiness systems tend to same shape, such as to show income and height). On one level, it is a reminder to planner of what is comingif an inflection point is reached, you should know what is coming (even though you only have actual life cycle to that point). In business, PLC is often driven by experience curve, economies of scale, competitive attraction to market opportunities, rate of diffusion factors, and eventual market saturation. Planners must adjust for actual impact of these factors on a particular product.
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Decline
On another level, marketers continuously monitor and adjust their strategy and tactics as products cycle progresses. As a reference, they can refer to standard mix strategies for each PLC stage (usually represented in a table directly under PLC diagram on most texts). Marketers objective is to adjust strategy to changing life cycle situation to maximize the results. As maturity approaches, marketer often decides to attempt a PLC extension by (1) finding ways to increase current markets usage, (2) finding totally new uses, (3) finding new target segments, (4) developing new distribution, or (5) perhaps a major product improvement and repositioning.
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Actual PLC curves can be any shapefrom product that doesnt sell at all, to fad that grows fast but has short life, to seasonal product, etc. Company depends on its marketers to understand what factors determine success and to make appropriate strategic decisions. It is often tempting for new students to want to learn PLC superficially, but in real world many people depend on in-depth understanding.
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Technology Competition Changes in Levels of Business Activity Operating Capacity Market Factors
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What is a Product Portfolio? Diagnosing the Product Portfolio Product Portfolio Strategies
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High
Business strength, Growth rate, Cash use
Low
Low
(continued)
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Defend position
Low
Low
Industry attractiveness axis Self-defined as a function of: size, market growth, strength of competitors, industry profitability, technical strength, and positive acting market environmental factors.
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Problem #1:
Medium
Low
Medium
Problem #1:
Medium
Low
Medium
Problem #1:
High
Medium
Low High Medium Low Coca-Cola as a part of the all types of drinks market
Problem #1:
Note: Coca-Cola slides are for the purpose of demonstrating the concept of SBU position shifting as axes are redefined; they do not represent actual strategic position of Coca-Cola.
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Problem #2:
When portfolio models were first introduced, marketers did what the grid position indicated rather than using them as a tool to help visualize companys mix of SBUs, interrelationships, relative strengths, etc. If a larger percentage of business is in products in which company is not strong, margins are low, and market is not attractive, they may still be providing important coverage of fixed overhead. Dont automatically get rid of dog-quadrant products.
Bottom line: Two-factor portfolio models are not decision models; they are tools to help marketers with their thinking. Even with multiple-factor computer decision support systems, the decision is still the marketers.
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Intangibility
Freight forwarding, consulting, repair, etc. can seldom be tried out/tested in advance of purchase; instead, buyers must view advertising copy, listen to sales presentation, or consult current users to gain insight into expected performance.
Simultaneity
Production and consumption of services are inseparable; this typically puts marketer in very close contact with customer, requiring them to be highly professional.
Heterogeneity
A service is an experience and thus cannot be duplicated; difficult to standardize and thus output quality may vary.
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Service Marketing Vs. Product Marketing Positioning Strategy Bundling of Services Service Strategy and the Marketing Mix
Product Price Place Promotion
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