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Chapter 7 Developing Product and Brand Strategy. Introduction. Product strategy: is critical to the success of the overall marketing strategy. Value is obtained in two key areas: Product Strategy: Existing and proposed products. Branding: Value enhancement through awareness and image.
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Introduction • Product strategy: is critical to the success of the overall marketing strategy. • Value is obtained in two key areas: • Product Strategy: • Existing and proposed products. • Branding: • Value enhancement through awareness and image.
Product Strategy • Product value is taken from: • Features, and • Benefits received • Products can be tangible goods, services,, ideas,,
Features and Benefits • Features: Specific characteristics that enable a product or service to perform its function. • Benefits: Need-satisfaction outcomes.
Quality • Quality: • Superior quality attracts business. • Poor quality can lead to negative word-of-mouth.
Design • Design: Quality comes from design, components/ingredients and processes. • Includes “emotional quality”: the impact of design on how it makes the customer feel.
Packaging • Keeps products safe. • Helps companies display their brand images and highlight points of differentiation.
Labeling • Communicates product contents, uses and warnings. • Fits to national, regional and local laws and requirements mandating warnings, allowable use of certain phrases, and even the size and type of words used. • Helps attract attention.
Product Development Steps in the Product Development Process: • Idea generation. • Screening of new ideas. • Initial concept testing. • Business analysis. • Sample design. • Market testing. • Commercialization. • Monitoring customer reaction. Let’s look at product strategy from the perspective of this development process…
The Product Life Cycle • Marketers must carefully monitor the environment to determine where their industry or product may be among the following stages of the PLC: • Introduction • Growth • Maturity • Decline Let’s look at product strategy from the perspective of the Product Life Cycle…
Product Mix and Product Lines • Product Mix: The overall collection of all products or services offered. • Product Lines: A group of products that are all similar in some way. • Product Mix Width: Number of lines offered. • Product line Depth: Number of products in a line.
Line Extensions & Brand Extensions • Line extensions: occur when a company introduces additional items in the same product category under the same brand name such as new flavors, forms, colors, added ingredients, package sizes. • E.g., A low fat version of Lay’s potato chips.
The Brand Extension • The Brand Extension: is the marketing strategy where a new product is launched under the existing brand name. • The category in which product is launched may be related or unrelated to the brand’s current category. • E.g., Snicker’s brand ice cream.
Brand • A name becomes a brand when consumers associate it with a set of tangible and intangible benefits that they obtain from the product or service • It is the seller’s promise to deliver the same package of benefits/services consistently to buyers.
Brand Equity • When a product becomes a brand, it is said to have equity. • The difference between the perceived value and the essential value.
Planning Branding • Branding gives a product a different identity and differentiates it from competitive products using: words, designs, and symbols. • In terms of branding, a product may carry: • Company name and individual brand. • Courtyard by Marriott • Individual name. • Gap, Old Navy • Private-label brand. • Wal-Mart • Multiple Brands (co-branding, ingredient branding). • Dell PC with Intel computer chips
Brands Should Be…. • Meaningful. • Recognizable and memorable. • Capable of being legally protected. • Suitable for international markets.
Branding and Positioning • Branding not only identifies a particular product, but it sets it apart from the competition (both direct and indirect). • Positioning: What the target group perceives about your brand relative to how they perceive the competition.
The Power of Brand Equity • Brand Equity: the extra value customers perceive that enhances their long-term loyalty to a brand. • Can protect a company against competitive threats. • Can help new products achieve acceptance. • The Value of Strong Brands: • Encourages brand loyalty. • Increases customer lifetime value. • The total amount that a customer spends on a brand or with a company during the life of their relationship.
Pyramid of Brand Equity Keller's Brand Equity model is also known as the Customer-Based Brand Equity (CBBE) Model. Kevin Lane Keller developed the model and published it in his widely used textbook, "Strategic Brand Management." Within a pyramid, the model highlights four key levels that you can work through to create a successful brand.