then a little deli. A supermarket will sell more of your product. The problem with the four P’s is that this is all about the producer’s point of view. They don’t go buy the consumers. A lot of company’s want the consumers point of view so they use the 4 C’s. The four C’s are customer solution‚ customer cost‚ communication‚ and convenience. The first C is consumer cost. Consumer cost has to due with price. Price has a lot to do with how much your product is going to be bought and sold. You can’t put
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The 4 P’S of Hooters The first Hooters opened April 1st‚ 1983 in Clearwater‚ Florida. Six fun-loving businessmen with roots in the Midwest and with no experience in the foodservice business were opening doors to a restaurant with an owl logo‚ chicken wings as the featured item‚ and girls in orange shorts. Hooters is running at full speed with restaurants opening throughout the Sunbelt‚ the Rockies‚ the Eastern Seaboard‚ the beautiful Canadian country with expansion plans for the entire U.S.
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4 p’s for cannon . When one talks about canon ones mind is instantly associated with the best high end cameras . The company is committed in taking on the world with sheer determination and new concepts. Creating new ideas and new . It has many competitors and some of them are Nikon‚ Sony‚ Samsung. Product Canon has the bragging rights of of being first in many things like the Rangefinder camera‚ a 10-key Japanese calculator‚ a camera with single lens reflex‚ the AE-1 camera with a microcomputer
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Product Levels: Core benefit Core benefit is the fundamental service or benefit that the consumer is really buying. Here‚ in washing machines‚ “Clean clothes” can be called the core benefit. Basic Product Basic product involves adding features‚ benefits to ensure that product offers a differential advantage from the other one’s product in the market. Basic product of any washing machine is the features that get the work of washing clothes done. Expected product Expected product is a set
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Event Marketing 1 4 “P”’s of general marketing and the 4 “P”’s of the “sports marketing mix” Traditional four "P"’s of general marketing: Product‚ Price‚ Promotion and Place‚ another four "P"’s are added to sport marketing: Planning‚ Packaging‚ Positioning and Perception. The addition of the four extra elements is called the "sport marketing mix.” Task: In teams of 4-5 members‚ choose a sporting brand (consumer product or service). Consumer product examples: Nike‚ Adidas‚ P&G‚ Visa‚ McDonalds
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Procter & Gamble Procter & Gamble. (n.d.). Retrieved February 22‚ 2012‚ from Mahalo.com: http://www.mahalo.com/procter-and-gamble/ Procter and Gamble Sunsilk. (n.d.). Retrieved February 22‚ 2012‚ from Unilever: http://www.unileverpakistan.com.pk/brands/personalcarebrands/sunsilk.aspx Unilever Company History Official Website of Pantene. (n.d.) Retrieved February 22‚ 2012‚ from http://www.pantene.com/en-US/pages/index.aspx Appendix B (questionnaire)
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Case Study : Fighting for the next billion shoppers The eternal battle between Procter & Gamble and Unilever Jun 30th 2012 A TRIP to Paris is not usually a miserable way to celebrate your birthday‚ but so it was this year for Bob McDonald. On June 20th‚ as he turned 59‚ the chief executive of Procter & Gamble (P&G) for the past three years gave a faltering and apologetic speech at a conference there hosted by Deutsche Bank‚ in which he predicted lower-than-expected profits in the coming
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Ben & Jerry’s Homemade – The Unilever Scoop Case With four offers on the table‚ Ben & Jerry’s had quite the decision to make. When it came down to it‚ they chose the most attractive offer which turned out to be with Unilever. As time passed‚ this was shown to ultimately be a very wise choice as the financial results would later show impressive results. These impressive results could be seen by looking at how the operating margins tripled and were able to maintain a 700M operating profit in succeeding
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Unilever has experienced quite a rollercoaster of marketing success and failure over the last 5 years. Originally its new 5-year strategic plan entitled Path to Growth’ had special promise and forecast for success. The primary objective of this plan was to cull Unilever’s tail’ brands and place extra emphasis on those which were market leaders. Niail Fitzgerald believes that too many brands often confuse the customer and thus lead to poor purchasing decisions. The paradox of choice between Unilevers’
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Unilever and P&G – Comparative Analysis Executive Summary The Consumer Products Industry is the biggest industry in the world at the moment‚ with total revenues amounting to about 50% of all goods sold. It is comparable to the GDP of the 4th biggest economy in the world‚ and entails most of the products we use in our every day lives. There are 3 key factors that drive the industry today: developing markets‚ the emerging middle-class of developing countries and the millions of baby boomers in
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