Kotler Pom 15e Inppt 08 GE
Kotler Pom 15e Inppt 08 GE
Kotler Pom 15e Inppt 08 GE
Product, Services,
and Brands:
Building Customer
Value
Copyright ©2014 by Pearson Education
Product, Services, and Branding
Strategy
Topic Outline
• Product, Services, and
Experiences
• Product and Services Decisions
• Services Marketing
• Branding Strategy: Building
Strong Brands
What Is a Product?
Products, Services, and Experiences
Product is anything that can be offered
in a market for attention, acquisition,
use, or consumption that might satisfy
a need or want
Service is a product that consists of
activities, benefits or satisfaction that
is essentially intangible and does not
result in the ownership of anything
Experiences represent what buying the product or service will do for the customer
• Product is a key element in the overall
market offerings. This offering becomes the
basis upon which the company builds
profitable customer relationships.
• A company’s market offering often
includes both tangible goods and services.
• At one extreme, the offer may consist of a
pure tangible good, such as soap or
toothpaste.
• At the other extreme are pure services, for
which the offer consists primarily of a
service
• To differentiate their offers, marketers are
creating and managing customer
experiences with their brands or company.
• Experiences represent what buying the
product or service will do for the customer
Levels of Product and Services
Levels of Product and Services
• 1- Core customer value:
• Product planners need to think about
products and services on three levels. Each
level adds more customer value. The most
basic level is the core customer value, which
addresses the question: What is the buyer
really buying? When designing products,
marketers must first define the core,
problem-solving benefits or services that
consumers seek.
2- Actual product:
• At the second level, product planners must
turn the core benefit into an actual product.
They need to develop product and service
features, a design, a quality level, a brand
name, and packaging. For example, the I Pad
is an actual product. Its name, parts, styling,
features, packaging, and other attributes
have all been carefully combined to deliver
the core customer value of staying
connected.
3- Augmented product:
• Finally, product planners must build an
augmented product around the core benefit
and actual product by offering additional
consumer services and benefits. The IPad is
more than just a digital device.
Product and Service
Classifications
Consumer
products
Industrial
products
Product and Service Classifications
Consumer products are products and
services for personal consumption
• Classified by how consumers buy
them
– Convenience products
– Shopping products
– Specialty products
– Unsought products
1. Convenience products
consumer products and services
that the customer usually buys
frequently, immediately, and with a
minimum comparison and buying
effort
– Newspapers
– Candy
– Fast food
2. Shopping products
consumer products and services
that the customer compares
carefully on suitability, quality, price,
and style
– Furniture
– Cars
– Appliances
3. Specialty products
consumer products and services with
unique characteristics or brand
identification for which a significant group
of buyers is willing to make a special
purchase effort
•Medical services
•Designer clothes
•High-end electronics
4. Unsought products
consumer products that the consumer
does not know about or knows about but
does not normally think of buying
•Life insurance
•Funeral services
•Blood donations
Type of Consumer Product
Marketing Convenience Shopping Specialty Unsought
Considerations
Customer buying Frequent purchase; Less frequent Strong brand Little product
In addition to traditional
marketing strategies,
service firms often require
additional strategies
• Service-profit chain
• Internal marketing
• Interactive marketing
Marketing Strategies for
Service Firms
Service-profit chain links service firm
profits with employee and customer
satisfaction
• Internal service quality
• Satisfied and productive service employees
• Greater service value
• Satisfied and loyal customers
• Healthy service profits and growth
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
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
1.Service differentiation
2.quality
3.Service productivity
1.Managing service
differentiation creates a
competitive advantage from the
offer, delivery, and image of the
service
• Offer can include distinctive
features
• Delivery can include more able
and reliable customer contact
people, environment, or process
• Image can include symbols and
branding
2.Managing service quality provides a
competitive advantage by delivering
consistently higher quality than its competitors
Service quality always varies depending on
interactions between employees and
customers
3.Managing service productivity refers
to the cost side of marketing strategies for
service firms
Employee recruiting, hiring, and training
strategies
Service quantity and quality strategies
Branding Strategy: Building
Strong Brands
Brands are powerful assets that must be carefully
developed and managed, we examine the key
strategies for building and managing product and
service brands.
. Brand equity
The differential effect that knowing the
brand name has on customer response to
the product or its marketing.
Branding Strategy: Building Strong Brands
Brands are more than just names and symbols.
They are a key element in the company's
relationships with consumers.
Brands represent consumer's perceptions and
feelings about a product and its performance
everything that the product or the service means
to consumers. In the final analysis, brands exist in
the heads of consumers. As one well - respected
marketer once said, "Products are created in the
factory, but brands are created in the mind.
Building Strong Brands
Branding poses challenging decisions to the marketer.
Figure shows that the major brand strategy decisions
involve brand positioning, name selection,
sponsorship, and brand development.
1. Brand Positioning
Marketers need to position their brands
clearly in target customers minds. They can
position brands at any of three levels.
Brand strategy decisions
include:
1.Product attributes
2.Product benefits
3.Product beliefs and values
Brand Positioning
Desirable qualities
1. Suggest benefits and qualities
2. Easy to pronounce, recognize, and remember
3. Distinctive
4. Extendable
5. Translatable for the global economy
6. Capable of registration and legal protection
3. Brand Sponsorship
A manufacturer has four sponsorship options. The product
may be launched as a national brand (or manufacturer's
brand) Or the manufacturer may sell to resellers who give
the product a private brand (also called a store brand or
distributor brand). Other manufacturers market licensed
brands. Finally, two companies can join forces and co-
brand a product.
Manufacturer’s brand
Private brand
Licensed brand
Co-brand
4.Brand Development Strategies
Brand Development
Strategies
1. Line Extensions occur when a
company extends existing brand names
to new forms, colors, sizes, ingredients,
or flavors of an existing product
category. (low cost, low risk way to
introduce new products)
2. Brand Extensions extend a current
brand name to new or modified products
in a new category.
3. Multibranding Companies often market
many different brands in a given product
category. Introduces additional brands in the
same category. (P&G)
• Product development
– Sales are zero and investment costs mount
• Introduction
– Slow sales growth and profits are nonexistent
• Growth
– Rapid market acceptance and increasing profits.
• Maturity
– Slowdown in sales growth and profits level off or
decline
• Decline
– Sales fall off and profits drop
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
1. Introduction Stage
• Slow sales growth
• Little or no profit
• High distribution and promotion expense
The introduction stage starts when a new
product is first launched. Introduction
takes time, and sales growth is apt to be
slow. Well-known products such as frozen
foods and HDTVs lingered for many years
before they entered a stage of more rapid
growth.
2. Growth Stage
Sales increase
New competitors enter the market
Price stability or decline to increase volume
Consumer education
Profits increase
Promotion and manufacturing costs gain economies
of scale
Profits increase during the growth stage as
promotion costs are spread over a large volume and
as unit manufacturing costs decrease. The firm uses
several strategies to sustain rapid market growth as
long as possible. It improves product quality and
adds new product features and models.
3. Maturity Stage
• Slowdown in sales
• Many suppliers
• Substitute products
• Overcapacity leads to competition
• Increased promotion and R&D to
support sales and profits
Maturity Stage Modifying Strategies
Market modifying
Product modifying
Marketing mix modifying
• The company can try modifying the
marketing mix-improving sales by changing
one or more marketing mix elements.
• The company can offer new or improved
services to buyers. It can cut prices to
attract new users and competitors
customers. It can launch a better
advertising campaign or use aggressive
sales promotions – trade deals, cents-off,
premiums, and contests.
4. Decline Stage
• Maintain the product
• Harvest the product
• Drop the product
• The sales of most product forms and brands
eventually dip. The decline may be slow, as in
the cases of stamps and oatmeal cereal, or
rapid, as in the cases of VHS tapes. Sales may
plunge to zero or they may drop to a low level
where they continue for many years. This is the
decline stage.