015 Section-5-What-We-Market - (FreeCourseWeb - Com)
015 Section-5-What-We-Market - (FreeCourseWeb - Com)
Definitions
Product – is anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use or consumption
that might satisfy a need or want.
Service – is any activity or benefit that one party can offer to another that is essentially intangible
and does not result in the ownership of anything.
Core Benefit
Actual Product
•Brand name
•Product features
•Design
•Packaaging
•Quality
Augmented
Product
•Delivery
•After-sale service
•Warranty
•Installation
The most basic level is the core benefit, which addresses the question, what is the buyer really
buying? When designing a product, marketers must first define the core, problem-solving benefits or
services that consumers seek.
At the second level, product planners must turn the core benefit into an actual product. They need to
develop product and service features, design, a quality level, a brand name and packaging.
Finally, product planners must build an augmented product around the core benefit and actual
product by offering additional consumer services and benefits.
Kotler, P., Armstrong, G. and Tait, M. (2010). Principles of marketing. Cape Town: Pearson Education
South Africa, p.288.
3. Concept
1. Generate Ideas 2. Screen Ideas Development
and Testing
8.
7. Test Marketing
Commercialisation
1. Idea Generation
Idea generation is the systematic search for new-product ideas.
2. Idea Screening
Idea screening is screening new-product ideas in order to spot good ideas and drop poor ones as
soon as possible.
Product concept is a detailed version of the idea stated in meaningful consumer terms.
5. Business Analysis
Business analysis is a review of the sales, costs and profit projections for a new product to find out
whether these factors satisfy the firm’s objectives.
6. Product Development
Product development is developing the product concept into a physical product in order to ensure
that the product idea can be turned into a workable product.
This step calls for a large jump in investment. It will show whether the product idea can be turned
into a workable product.
7. Test Marketing
Test marketing is the stage in new-product development in which both the product and the entire
marketing programme are tested in more realistic market settings.
When using test marketing, consumer-products firms usually choose one of the following
approaches:
1) Standard test markets:
Here, the firm finds a small number of representative test cities, conducts a full marketing
campaign in these cities and uses store audits, consumer and distributor surveys, and other
measures to gauge product performance.
8. Commercialisation
Commercialisation is introducing a new product into the market.
The firm launching a new product must first decide on introduction timing.
Next, the firm must decide where to launch the new product.
They will develop a planned market rollout over time.
The Consumer Decision-Making Process
1 – Problem recognition of an unfulfilled need;
2 – Information search;
3 – Evaluation of alternatives;
4 – Purchase; and
5 – Post-purchase behaviour.