Session 9 gm product decision
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Transcript of Session 9 gm product decision
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International Marketing Mix: Using the example of any one country (USA / UK any other)
Product Decisions
Product Decisions –
Concepts, positioning, design, geographic expansion, strategic alternatives, new products; Statutory Compliance; Product Customization
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When launching a product into foreign markets firms can use a standard marketing mix or adapt the marketing mix, to suit the country they are carrying out their business activities in.
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Product: The P, that carries your substance
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Product Why Crucial???
• Basic marketing concepts tell us that we will sell more of a product if we aim to meet the needs of our target market.
• Product decisions are probably the most crucial as the product is the very epitome of marketing planning.
• The decision whether to sell globally standardized or adapted products is too simplistic for today's market place. Many product decisions lie between these two extremes.
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Product??
• A product can be defined as a collection of physical, service and symbolic attributes which yield satisfaction or benefits to a user or buyer. A product is a combination of physical attributes say, size and shape; and subjective attributes say image or "quality".
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Product???
A product's physical properties are characterized the same the world over. They can be convenience or shopping goods or durables and nondurables; however, one can classify products according to their degree of potential for global marketing:
i) local products - seen as only suitable in one single market. ii) international products - seen as having extension potential into other
markets. iii) multinational products - products adapted to the perceived unique
characteristics of national markets. iv) global products - products designed to meet global segments.
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Basic Product Concepts
• A product is a good, service, or idea– Tangible Attributes– Intangible Attributes
• Product classification– Consumer goods– Industrial goods
Products can also be classified as:
Based on users Consumer Goods Industrial Goods
Based on purchaseConveniencePreferenceShopping Specialty goods
Based on life span Durable,Non-durable Disposable
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Product & brands categories:
• Local products
• National products
• International products
• Global products
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Product: What to Sell ?
• The international marketer needs to determine what the market offering should be in a foreign market :
– Defining the product offering– Products versus Services/Rights
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The Product Offering
Core Benefit
Generic Product
Expected Product
Augmented Product
Potential Product
Source : Adapted from: P. Kotler, Marketing Management, 1994
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International Product Strategies
StraightExtension
Product ProductAdaptation Innovation
The firm adopts the same policy used in its home market.
The company caters to the needs and wants of its foreign customers.
The firm designs aproduct from scratchfor foreign customers.
Source: W.J. Keegan, Multinational Product Planning: Strategic Alternatives, Journal of Marketing, 33, 1969, pp.58-62
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Extend, Adapt, Create: Strategic Alternatives in Global Marketing
• Extension – offering product virtually unchanged in markets outside of home country
• Adaptation – changing elements of design, function, and packaging according to needs of different country markets
• Creation – developing new products for the world market
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International strategic alternatives
Product strategy
Communications strategy
Product/functions Met
Conditions of product use
Examples
1 Extension Extension Same Same Pepsi
2 Extension Adaptation Different Same Soups
3 Adaptation Extension Same Different Agriculture chemicals
4 Adaptation Adaptation Different Different Farm implements
5 Invention New Same - Tyson turbine water pump
Thailand tuna
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Product Warranty and Service
• Product Warranty :– Should a company keep the same warranty for all
markets or adapt it country by country ?– Should the firm use warranty as a competitive
weapon ?
• Product Service :– Service capability to accredit the firm with foreign
suppliers – high investment in facilities, staffing, training, and
distribution network
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Goods versus Services/Rights
• Instead of marketing a product abroad, the company may also sell rights or services in a foreign market:
- rights : brand / trademark / patent
- services : management skills (hotel chain)
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Sales of Rights - Examples
• Franchising business :
- Coca-Cola : use of its name to licensedbottlers around the world.
- Pilkington: licensing of the process of float glass.
- Other : Manpower, McDonald's, etc.
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Sales of Rights - Examples
• Management Contracts :
- Sheraton Hotels :• Management contract for hotels abroad• Sale of consulting and management contracts• Little equity invested : Sheraton manages almost
400 hotels worldwide but has equity in only 40 of them.
• Advantages : minimum risk & strong competitive position.
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Sales of Rights - Examples
•Turn-Key operations :
–The firm is selling technical and engineering skills.
–The firm is training foreign nationals to run a plant.
–The firm is supplying material and equipment.
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Product design
• Changes in design are largely dictated by whether they would improve the prospects of greater sales, and this, over the accompanying costs. Changes in design are also subject to cultural pressures. The more culture-bound the product is, for example food, the more adaptation is necessary. Most products fall in between the spectrum of "standardisation" to "adaptation" extremes.
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Standardization versus Customization
• Although the products sold abroad generally are not identical to their domestic counterparts, there is always a core of expertise that the firm can carry abroad.
• Principle " All Business is local."
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Reasons for Product Standardization
• Economies of scale : Production, R&D, Marketing• Common Consumer
needs : Drinking patterns, car sizes
• Consumer Mobility : Customer retention & LoyaltyAmerican Express, Kodak, ...
• Home Country Image : US jeans, French Perfumes,...
• Impact of technology : B to B Markets
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Reasons for Product Adaptation
• Climate: US Air-conditioning equipment • Skill level of users : Computers in Africa• National consumer habits :
- front-loading/top-loading washing machines- car models : four-door (F) - two-door (Germ.)
• Government regulations on products, packaging, and labels.
• Company history and operations (subsidiaries)
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Example:European Toothpaste Market
• Market Size in France: FF 1,8 Bill. (1996)
• Trends:– Multiple number of
toothpastes/family– Therapeutic /
sophisticated products– Cosmetic products– Volume– Price
• Competitors in France :– Unilever 33%– Colgate 22,5%– Henkel 19%– Smithkline B. 12%– P&G 0%
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Drivers of Product AdaptationExample COLGATE Toothpaste
• (1) Differences in National Regulations – Triclosan forbidden in Germany– High fluorine content in local water (UK)– Obligation to sell high fluorine content toothpaste
in pharmacy (France)– Stringent clinical tests in France
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Drivers of Product AdaptationExample COLGATE Toothpaste
• Packaging:– Ecological Stand-up tubes in Germany– Failure in France (Carrefour)
• Distribution:– Role of pharmacy in Italy and Spain– Role of drugstore in UK
• Communication:– Medical in Italy and Spain (recommended by dentist)– Non-medical in UK
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Factors behind Standardization
• Factors encouraging standardisation are: • i) economies of scale in production and
marketingii) consumer mobility - the more consumers travel the more is the demandiii) technologyiv) image, for example "Japanese", "made in".
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Factors encouraging adaptationi) Differing usage conditions. These may be due to climate, skills, level
of literacy, culture or physical conditions. ii) General market factors - incomes, tastes etc. iii) Government - taxation, import quotas, non tariff barriers, labelling,
health requirements. Non tariff barriers are an attempt, despite their supposed impartiality, at restricting or eliminating competition.
iv) History. Sometimes, as a result of colonialism, production facilities have been established overseas.
v) Financial considerations. In order to maximise sales or profits the organisation may have no choice but to adapt its products to local conditions.
vi) Pressure. Sometimes, as in the case of the EU, suppliers are forced to adapt to the rules and regulations imposed on them if they wish to enter into the market.
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Production decisions
• In decisions on producing or providing products and services in the international market it is essential that the production of the product or service is well planned and coordinated, both within and with other functional area of the firm, particularly marketing.
• The main elements to consider are the production process itself, specifications, culture, the physical product, packaging, labelling, branding, warranty and service
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Aesthetics
• Global marketers must understand the importance of visual aesthetics
• Aesthetic Styles (degree of complexity found on a label) differ around the world
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Product Warranties
• Express Warranty is a written guarantee that assures the buyer is getting what they paid for or provides a remedy in case of a product failure
• Warranties can be used as a competitive tool
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New Products in Global Marketing
• Pursue opportunities in competitive arenas of global marketplace
• Focus on one or only a few businesses• Active involvement from senior
management• Ability to recruit and retain best employees• Understand the importance of speed in
bringing product to market
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Identifying New Product Ideas
• What is a new Product?– New to those who use it or buy it– New to the organization– New to a market
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The International New Product Department
• How big is the market for this product at various prices?
• What are the likely competitive moves in response to our activity?
• Can we market the product through existing structure?
• Can we source the product at a cost that will yield an adequate profit?
• Does product fit our strategic development plan
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Testing New Products
• When do you test a new product?– Whenever a product interacts with human,
mechanical, or chemical elements because there is the potential for a surprising and unexpected incompatibility
• Test could simply be observing the product being used within the market
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Key terms and concepts
• Product– It is everything (both favorable and unfavorable)
that a buyer receives in a transaction.
– It is not just the “thing” - it’s the need satisfying offering of a firm
• Quality– the ability of a product to satisfy a customer
– relative to competitors
– a moving target - changing expectations
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Product Differentiation
• Defined: the degree to which competing products are perceived to be different.
• Some products are difficult to differentiate.• Product differentiation is a key to profitability –
Motorola had it – have they lost it?• Consider the entry of a new product/service to
the market.
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Classifications of Consumer Products
ProductsProducts
Consumer Products
Consumer Products
Business Products
Business Products
ConvenienceProducts
ConvenienceProducts
ShoppingProducts
ShoppingProducts
SpecialtyProducts
SpecialtyProducts
UnsoughtProductsUnsoughtProducts
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Classification of Consumer Products
• Convenience products– Inexpensive, little shopping effort expended– Location is paramount
• Shopping products– More expensive and found in fewer stores than convenience
products. There are two types:• Homogenous shopping products: difference is on price• Heterogeneous shopping products: difference is on
style/features– What are the implications of marketing each of these two
types?
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Classification of Consumer Products
• Specialty products– Products the consumer is willing to spend
considerable effort to locate– Need to maintain image, limit outlets to those that
will provide specific attention to the product.
• Unsought products– Products the consumer does not actively seek.– Key is identification of buyers and targeted
promotions, including personal selling
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The Product Life Cycle (typical)
Intro. Growth Maturity Decline
TotalIndustrySales
TotalIndustryProfit
Time
$0
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Introduction Stage
• Product category has recently been introduced into the market - consumers are unaware of the product.
• Proper capitalization is important.• Industry sales are low, but growing.• Industry profits are negative.• Advertising frequently includes an orientation toward
primary demand.• Creating awareness and trial are common marketing
objectives.• Sales promotion used to trigger product trial.
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Growth Stage
• Sales are rising rapidly.• Profits appear, peak, and begin to decline just before the
end of the period.• Profit possibilities attract competitors, but many
competitors will be “shaken out” during this phase as well. Why?
• Promotion shifts from primary to selective demand.• Building market share is a common marketing objective.
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Growth Stage (continued)
• Keys in the growth stage– Maintain strong distribution networks (must be able to
get products to consumers)– Control costs– Product differentiation (better at meeting customer
needs)– Incremental improvements in product
features/benefits and product quality are critical (competitors are refining/improving marketing mixes)
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Maturity Stage• Sales rise to their peak, then level off.• Industry profits are in a slow decline.• Competition increases.• Promotional costs increase (selective demand),
and sales promotion to trigger switching is more common
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Maturity Stage (continued)
• Products become more homogenous, triggering price competition. Need to differentiate brand.
• Diversify brand and models.• Can be difficult to enter the market in this phase
(capturing vs. retaining share)• Efficiency is a key.
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Decline Stage
• Sales decrease.• Profits decrease and eventually disappear.• Declining numbers of competitors.• Spend enough on promotion to retain hard
core brand loyal customers.• Eliminate unprofitable outlets.• Marketing objective: reduce costs and milk
the brand, or drop it.
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How to use the PLC (or, how not to get used by the PLC)
• The PLC applies to product categories/ideas, not individual brands.
• The PLC is market-specific.• The PLC is not deterministic.
– Increase frequency of use by current customers– Add new users to the product.– Add new uses for the product.– Packaging/quality improvements (industry-wide)
which add significant consumer benefits.
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New Product Development Process
• Idea Generation• Screening
– Strengths/weaknesses, compatible, ROI estimate
• Idea Evaluation– Concept testing, cost/sales estimates
• Development– Develop prototype, test marketing mix, revise ROI estimate
• Commercialization– Finalize all plans, start production, final ROI estimate
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Why New Products Sometimes Fail
• Inadequate marketing research
• Product deficiencies
• Cost overruns
• Unanticipated competitor reactions
• Poor timing
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Case: Cotton Production/Marketing Interface Spinners Machines are highly flexible, that is they can usually switch to a variety of yarn requirements. The machines are geared to high production, are automated and are of a precision for constant quality provision. There are strict process controls and built - in quality control. Poor raw material, especially when contaminated with metal particles, damages opening mills, grid knives, fans and card clothing. Previous devices employed to remove these (magnets) are becoming less effective. The consequences are damage in the blowroom and carding and danger of fire. Quality is therefore defined as properties of the end use (clothing etc.), efficiency of weaving and knitting and the efficient running of the spinning plant. Spinners require raw cotton which is free of trash, dust, sugar and honey dew contamination, seed coats, bark and foreign fibres and, will not nep the cloth. Further requirements are a certain length (could be short, medium or long), uniformity of length, strength, fineness, maturity and a certain elongation and colour. Suppliers In order to meet these high quality demands, the growers have to ensure that the production, picking and ginning is of a very high standard. Cotton grading The Liverpool Cotton exchange, for one, relied on the skills of its experts to manually classify raw fibre purchases for its clients. It still holds the "standards" for length, colour and trash content. As well as the demands of modem machinery, the lack of standardised measuring and cotton classification procedures has resulted in commercial conflict and legal disputes about the true nature of traded cotton. Now, computer based high volume instrument listing systems of raw cotton (HVI systems) are available. The system can handle large numbers of bales, reduce variation in classification and the need for highly trained bate classifiers.
For cotton exporters the system offers the following advantages: enhanced objectivity in classification improve communication if similar systems are used by sellers or buyers reduced conflict and need for arbitration enhanced competitiveness against synthetic fibres improved integration with modern spinning machines reduced costs on training of experts and in measuring time.
The system can process 2000 bales per day and give a printout on the seven parameters of grading. These include length and length uniformity, strength and elongation, micronaire or fineness, leaf and colour. Manufacturers include SPINLAR INC. of Knoxville, USA.
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managing marketing
from global headquarters
.
International Marketing Mix Decisions
What aspects of Product can be modified?
Attributes
Brand (Global vs. Local)
Packaging
Quality
Services (after-sale services, support)
Positioning
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managing marketing
from global headquarters
.
International Marketing Mix DecisionsStrategic Alternatives in international and
global marketing mix decisions. Managerial issues
Advantages and Disadvantages of International Brands
Strong customer recognition/reassurance Economies of scale and scope Leverages power with retailers Consolidates efforts across countries Potential for extension
Not locally responsive Demotivating for country managers Difficult to manage Need to maintain consistency across
countries and product-lines
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Product Types
• Buyer orientation– Amount of effort expended on purchase– Convenience– Preference– Shopping– Specialty
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Brands
• Bundle of images and experiences in the customer’s mind
• A promise made by a particular company about a particular product
• A quality certification• Differentiation between competing
products• The sum of impressions about a brand is
the Brand Image
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Brands
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Brands
• The added value that accrues to a product as a result of investments in the marketing of the brand
• An asset that represents the value created by the relationship between the brand and customer over time
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Brands
“We have to shift to high value-added products, and to do that we
need to improve our brand.”- Noboru Fujimoto, President Sharp Electronics
Corporation
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Local Products and Brands
• Brands that have achieved success in a single national market
• Represent the lifeblood of domestic companies
• Entrenched local products/brands can be a significant competitive hurdle to global companies
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International Products and Brands
• Offered in several markets in a particular region– ‘Euro-brands’
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Naming your product
Alu-Fanny: French Foil wrap
Crapsy Fruit: French cereal
Kum Onit: German pencil sharpeners
Plopp: Scandinavian chocolate
Pschitt: French lemonade
Atum Bom: Portuguese tuna
Kack: Danish sweets
Mukk: Italian yogurt
Pocari Sweat: Japanese sport drink
Poo: Argentine curry powder
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Naming your product
Phonetic Problems with Brand Names- Bardok (Sounds like Brothel in Russian)- Misair (Sounds like Misery in French)
Translations
Intent Translation- Stepping Stone - Stumbling Block- Car Wash - Car Enema- Highly Rated - Over Rated
Symbols- Owl - Bad Luck in India
Other Countries make mistakes too- Zit (Chocolate from Germany)- Koff (Beer)
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Global Products and Brands
• Global products meet the wants and needs of a global market and is offered in all world regions
• Global brands have the same name and similar image and positioning throughout the world
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Global Products and Brands
A multinational has operations in different countries. A global company views the world as
a single country. We know Argentina and France are different, but we treat them the same. We
sell them the same products, we use the same production methods, we have the same
corporate policies. We even use the same advertising—in a different language, of course.
- Alfred Zeien Former Gillette CEO
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Country of Origin effect • Country-of-Origin (COO) Influences on Consumers
– For many products, the “made in” label matters a great deal to consumers.
Key research findings of COO effects:•COO effects are not stable•Consumers prefer domestic products over imports•Both the country of design and the country of manufacturing/assembly play a role in consumer attraction.
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Branding Strategies
• Combination or tiered branding: allows marketers to leverage a company’s reputation while developing a distinctive identity for a line of products– Sony Walkman
• Co-branding features two or more company or product brands– NutraSweet and Coca-Cola– Intel Inside
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Branding Strategies
• Brand acts as an umbrella for new products– Example: The Virgin Group
• Virgin Entertainment: Virgin Mega-stores and MGM Cinemas• Virgin Trading: Virgin Cola and Virgin Vodka• Virgin Radio• Virgin Media Group: Virgin Publishing, Virgin Television,
Virgin Net• Virgin Hotels• Virgin Travel Group: Virgin Atlantic Airways, Virgin Holidays
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Global Brand Development
• Questions to ask when management seeks to build a global brand:– Will anticipated scale economies materialize?– How difficult will it be to develop a global
brand team?– Can a single brand be imposed on all markets
successfully?
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Global Brand Development
• Global Brand Leadership– Using organizational structures, processes,
and cultures to allocate brand-building resources globally, to create global synergies, and to develop a global brand strategy that coordinates and leverages country brand strategies
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Global Brand Development
• Create a compelling value proposition• Think about all elements of brand identity and
select names, marks, and symbols that have the potential for globalization
• Research the alternatives of extending a national brand versus adopting a new brand identity globally
• Develop a company-wide communication system
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Global Brand Development
• Develop a consistent planning process
• Assign specific responsibility for managing branding issues
• Execute brand-building strategies
• Harmonize, unravel confusion, and eliminate complexity
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Local versus Global Products and Brands: A Needs-Based Approach
Physiological
Safety
Social
External/Internal Esteem
Self-actualization
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Country of Origin as Brand Element
• Perceptions about and attitudes toward particular countries often extend to products and brands known to originate in those countries– Japan– Germany– France– Italy
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Packaging
• Consumer Packaged Goods when the packaging is designed to protect or contain the product during shipping
• Eco-Packaging because package designers must address environmental issues
• Offers communication cues that provide consumers with a basis for making a purchase decision
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Product Packaging and Labeling
Protection
Legal ConstraintsPromotion
ClimateTransport & HandlingBuyer's slow usage rateLack of storage facilites
Merchandising ( income level, shopping habits)Minimum breakage / theftEase of handlingMultilingual Labels to Convey an International Image (Zara, Hollywood Chewing Gum)
Recycling of Packaging(Duales System, Eco-Emballage)Regulations on consumer info.(Origin, weight, ingredients)
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• POM brand Pomegranate juice used a distinctively shaped bottle to gain attention on the grocery shelf
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Labeling
• Provides consumers with various types of information
• Regulations differ by country regarding various products– Health warnings on tobacco products– American Automobile Labeling Act clarifies the
country of origin, and final assembly point– European Union requires labels on all food products
that include ingredients from genetically modified crops
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As Americans become increasingly concerned about cholesterol, the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) has responded by requiring food manufacturers to list trans fat (i.e., trans fatty acids) on the Nutrition Facts portion of product labels, effective 1/1/06.
Labeling
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Brands
• Brand: A name,sign, symbol intended to identify/differentiate a product from others.
• A brand can imply many things to a consumer, including quality and the image of the buyer/user.
• Key branding decisions:– Name– Brand sponsor– Brand strategy
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Major Branding Decisions
• Decision #1: Choosing a brand name– Should suggest product benefits/qualities
• Sunkist, Spic and Span, DieHard, Easy-Off– Easy to pronounce, recognize, remember
• Tide, Aim, Puffs, but “I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter” works too!
– Distinctive• Taurus, Kodak, Exxon
– Translates easily into foreign languages– Capable of registration and legal protection
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Major Branding Decisions
• Decision #2: Brand Sponsor– Manufacturer’s brand or private brand?– Retailers like private brands
• Builds loyalty to the retailer• Frequently better profit margins• But they can be expensive to develop
– Family brand or individual brand?• Do existing associations work for the new product?
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Major Branding Decisions
LineExtension
Brand Extension
Multibrands NewBrands
Product Category
Existing New
BrandName
Existing
New
Source: Kotler and Armstrong (1999). Principles of Marketing, 8th edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall
Decision #3:Brand Strategy
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International Branding Strategies
One brand name everywhere(greater identification of the product worldwide, but are allconsumer needs the same?)
One brand name everywhere(greater identification of the product worldwide, but are allconsumer needs the same?)
Adaptions and modifications
(modifying elements to fit each market – willthis help you achieveeconomies of scale?)
Adaptions and modifications
(modifying elements to fit each market – willthis help you achieveeconomies of scale?)
Different brand namesin different markets
(new marketing mixesfor each market –will this make youmore effective?)
Different brand namesin different markets
(new marketing mixesfor each market –will this make youmore effective?)
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Brand Equity
• A brand has value, called brand equity. Brand equity is based on brand loyalty, name awareness, perceived quality, strong associations, patents, etc.
• What are the top brands worldwide for brand equity?
• Brand equity makes brand and line extensions easier.
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Managing Brand Equity
• Brand equity is an asset, and needs to be managed.– maintain/improve top-of-mind awareness– improve perceptions of quality– create positive brand associations
• To manage brand equity, you should:– continuous R & D investment– skillful advertising– avoid short-term actions which undermine the brand
in the long-term
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Five levels of brand familiarity
• Brand rejection: won’t buy unless a relevant factor changes
• Brand non-recognition: consumers don’t pay attention to brands (commoditization)
• Brand recognition: consumers are aware of the brand and recognize it with/without prompting
• Brand preference: consumers usually choose a specific brand
• Brand insistence:consumers are willing to prolong search to find the desired brand
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Packaging
• Four primary functions– Containing and protecting products– Promoting products
• Persuasive labeling (critical for many products)• Informational labeling (helps make wsie purchase,
lowers cognitive dissonance)
– Facilitating storage, use and convenience– Facilitating recycling and reducing
environmental damage
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Summary
• The marketing mix, which is the means by which an organisation reaches its target market, is made up of product, pricing, distribution, promotion and people decisions. These are usually shortened to the acronym "5P's". Product decisions revolve around decisions regarding the physical product (size, style, specification, etc.) and product line management.