Product Positioning A product positioning statement has four main components – the target‚ the frame of reference‚ the differentiation‚ and the reason(s) to believe. THE TARGET The target is who the product is for – who is the target user or customer of the product. The key to a good target definition is to balance being specific with being concise‚ you need to describe the target well enough that they can be identified‚ without being so verbose that your positioning statement goes beyond
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* MARKET VALUE 1. Understand that the first component of value is "utility." It means that whatever you are delivering to your customer has to be fit for the purpose the customer will give to it. In essence‚ for any goods or service you deliver to a customer‚ having utility means that the customer can enhance the performance of their own assets‚ or remove some sort of constraint that prevents them from receiving more values from their assets * If it is a car wash‚ the car has to end up
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Media/Entertainment furniture Home sales expected to grow 30% in 2005‚ from $260 million Want to leverage manufacturing expertise and production capacity into household furniture Goal: To provide a complete family of household furniture products in the mid- to upper-price points. PAUL LOGAN • • • • Furniture Division revenues $990 million in in 2004 Number 1-2 in market share and brand recognition Well established sales force; strong ties to leading distribution channels;
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14 May 2013 | Project 1 | Option 2: Media Products | | Jessica Viljoen | 13000822 | | Media products are created with an audience in mind‚ and it is often the audiences’ interests that dictate the content of products that are available. In this assignment I will be using two distinctly different magazines‚ Men’s Health and Cosmopolitan‚ as a platform from which to work with to discuss how the content can be seen to define specific target market’s values with regards to semiotics
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For Pleasure Only Salon • Spa • Bar New Product/Service Development Plan Presented by: Christopher Amos Table of Contents Page 1. Executive Summary 2 2. Complete Product/Service Description 3 3. Benefits that customers will both recognize and realize 3 4. Competitive Analysis 4 5. Market-research steps necessary to test the concept 6 6. Safety or Health concerns with the use of your innovations 10 7. Development Strategy 10 8. Launch
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Tata Nano – The People’s Car 1) Why was this product a special one for market? With the concept of NANO‚ Ratan Tata Chairman of the TATA Group‚ had a vision of making “a common man’s car” which would be safe‚ affordable and made personal transportation available to anyone and everyone who could not afford to own a four-wheeler. It was meant to bring a new Dimension to the automobile industry with its low cost manufacturing. A new segment‚ Ultra Low Cost (ULC) was created‚ where Nano was
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Case 7-4 Aloha Products Question 1: Evaluate the current control systems for the manufacturing‚ marketing‚ and purchasing departments of Aloha Products From the case we can see that Aloha products has a centralized control system. What this means is that the main office or headquarters handled the purchasing‚ marketing and sales activities of each of the three plants. The problem with this was that the individual plant managers had no control over any of the major activities in their respective
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Din Badal - Banglalink’s New Television Advertisement A real life Din Badal Faizul Khan Tanim interviews Abul Kalam Azad‚ chairman and managing director of Azad Products pvt ltd‚ and relives the actual moments of the scenes depicted in the latest Banglalink ad to hit the television Gone are the days of advertisements with product-specific features only. The viewers are now welcoming creative television commercials sporting social messages‚ the company’s goodwill gestures and even depicting real
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THE COMMUNICATION PROCESS WHAT IS COMMUNICATION? Communication is the process of transmitting and receiving of information through verbal or nonverbal behavior. At the center of any definition of communication must be the intention of conveying a message‚ even if the message is abstract (eg. modern poetry). WHY WE COMMUNICATE Why do we communicate? The purpose of any given communication may be: * To initiate some action * To impart information‚ ideas‚ attitudes‚ beliefs or
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healthier by selecting more salad and less meat. This study investigates how bundling of salad with chicken can influence guests to eat more of this‚ and reduce their selection of meat. Product bundling is a common price marketing strategy to encourage customers to buy more or larger amounts of the combined products. However‚ it has not previously been explored how bundling can influence food choices when price is not the determinant factor for the consumers’ choices. Bundling often comes in the
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