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MARKETING MANAGEMENT 12 th edition. 10 Crafting the Brand Positioning. Kotler Keller. Marketing Strategy. Segmentation. Targeting. Positioning. Positioning. Act of designing the company’s offering and image to occupy a distinctive place in the mind of the target market.
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MARKETING MANAGEMENT12th edition 10 Crafting the Brand Positioning Kotler Keller
Marketing Strategy Segmentation Targeting Positioning
Positioning Act of designing the company’s offering and image to occupy a distinctive place in the mind of the target market.
Value Propositions • Perdue Chicken • More tender golden chicken at a moderate premium price • Domino’s • A good hot pizza, delivered to your door within 30 minutes of ordering, at a moderate price
Writing a Positioning Statement Mountain Dew: To young, active soft-drink consumers who have little time for sleep, Mountain Dew is the soft drink that gives you more energy than any other brand because it has the highest level of caffeine.
Product form Features Performance Conformance Durability Reliability Reparability Style Design Ordering ease Delivery Installation Customer training Customer consulting Maintenance Product Differentiation
Identity and Image Identity: The way a company aims to identify or position itself Image: The way the public perceives the company or its products
Facts about Life Cycles • Products have a limited life. • Product sales pass through distinct stages. • Profits rise and fall at different stages. • Products require different marketing, financial, manufacturing, purchasing, and human resource strategies in each stage.
Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies • Marketing Strategies: Growth Stage • Improve product quality and add new product features and improved styling • Add new models and flanker products • Enter new market segments • Increase distribution coverage and enter new distribution channels • Shift from product-awareness advertising to product-preference advertising • Lower prices to attract next layer of price-sensitive buyers
Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies • Marketing Strategies: Maturity Stage • Market Modification • Expand number of brand users by: • Converting nonusers • Entering new market segments • Winning competitors’ customers • Convince current users to increase usage by: • Using the product on more occasions • Using more of the product on each occasion • Using the product in new ways
Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies • Marketing Strategies: Decline Stage • Increase firm’s investment (to dominate the market and strengthen its competitive position) • Maintain the firm’s investment level until the uncertainties about the industry are resolved. • Decrease the firm’s investment level selectively by dropping unprofitable customer groups, while simultaneously strengthening the firm’s investment in lucrative niches • Harvesting (“milking”) the firm’s investment to recover cash quickly • Divesting the business quickly by disposing of its assets as advantageously as possible.
Table 11.5: Summary of Product Life-Cycle Characteristics, Objectives, and Strategies See text for complete table