Company G 3-Year Marketing Plan Assessment Code: MKT1 Student Name: Lauren Lambert Student ID: 295309 Date: 3/4/2014 Mentor Name: Aneesah Sultan Table of Contents Introduction 3 Mission Statement 3 The Product 3 Consumer Product Classification 4 Target Market 4 Competitive Situation Analysis 5 Analysis of Competition using Porter’s 5 Forces Model 5 SWOT Analysis 6 Strengths Error! Bookmark not defined. Weaknesses Error! Bookmark not defined. Opportunities Error! Bookmark not
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BUSINESS PLAN 1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Charming Joint-stock company is a distributor of products from manufacturers to retailers. The products that we distribute including Women’s Perfume and Men’s Aftershave. We intend to work on two markets are NAFTA and EU. The target customer of The Charming company are the person who find the attraction and the personality from themselves. Because our products make them discover the novelty from things familiar with them. The main market we aim to is the
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Directed Study in Marketing Chapter 1 Marketing’s Value to Consumers‚ Firms‚ and Society Questions and Problems 1. List your activities for the first two hours after you woke up this morning. Briefly indicate how marketing affected your activities. a. Awakened by alarm clock. Clock bought because of brand name loyalty: Seiko b. Had coffee. Brand name loyalty and preferred taste: Folgers c. Walked and fed dog. Purchased Purina Dog chow due to advertisements. d. Made breakfast
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Marketing Strategies Glenda Higgins Marketing 500 June 16‚ 2013 Dr. Adina Scruggs Strayer University Introduction Marketing Strategy is defined as a marketing plan designed to achieve marketing objectives. A Marketing Strategy combines all its marketing goals into one comprehensive plan. A good marketing strategy should be drawn from market research and focus on the right product mix in order to achieve the maximum profit potential and sustain the business. The marketing strategy
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3-Year Marketing Plan Valerie Wilson 000236748 05/20/2013 Table of Contents Introduction 3 Mission Statement 3 The Product 3 Consumer Product Classification 3 Target Market 3 Competitive Situation Analysis 4 Analysis of Competition using Porter’s 5 Forces Model 4 SWOT Analysis 4 Strengths 5 Weaknesses 5 Opportunities 5 Threats 6 Market Objectives 6 Product Objective 6 Price Objective 6 Place Objective 6 Promotion Objective 7 Marketing Strategies 7 Product Strategies
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REVIEW 1. Service marketing 2. Product 3. Price 4. Place (distribution) 5. Promotion 1 = mixture of general knowledge 2 = all about product 3 = also a mixture but there is a requirement to give examples 4 = services 5 = all about communication. (see and know: communication model and discuss how the model works.) Distribution intensity: INTENSIVE: Coca-Cola‚ milk‚ bread. Distribution through every reasonable outlet in a market. Where the product is available in every possible
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marketers‚ feel that the image of a particular channel in which they sell product does not matter- all that matters is that the right customers shop there and the product is displayed in the right way. Others maintain that channel images- such as retail store- can be critical and must be consistent with the image of the product. Take a position and justify: Whether channel images do not really affect the brand images of the products they sell versus channel images must be consistent with the brand image
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1. On the Basics: a. We have asserted that marketing is really the strategic idea of ‘connectedness’ with customers. From the perspective of your final project company‚ identify and discuss how your company connects with its customers – select from either the marketing concept or the selling concept. Be sure to define each concept and be detailed in your response. A: Marketing concept holds that achieving organizational goals depends on knowing the needs and wants of target markets and delivering
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with producing‚ packaging‚ transporting and using. It is small in size but water is cheap and plentiful in a corporation along with being durable. b) The reason that this product would be great for households are it is chemical free and very portable. This would be the only product needed for the whole household. The product could clean the bathroom‚ kitchen‚ kids toys‚ and safer for children. No more putting child proof locks on all the cabinet doors along with the concern of calling poison control
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Consisting of 77.2 million people‚ baby boomers — people born between 1946 and 1964 — represent a prized‚ yet often misunderstood‚ demographic for online marketers. In fact‚ they represent the largest group within the U.S. Internet population at 56.7 million users‚ a full 29.4 percent of all Internet users. So why is there such confusion about how to effectively market to them? A recent report from the online market research firm eMarketer‚ Boomers Online: Attitude Is Everything‚ addresses this issue
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