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The Marketing Mix

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... Oxo Bovril Hovis Persil Heinz Baked Beans Kelloggs Cornflakes Smarties Extension strategies Methods employed to prolong life of the product and stop them ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Marketing Mix


1
The Marketing Mix
  • To market or sell its product successfully, a
    business must develop a strategy based on four
    key elements.

PRODUCT
PRICE
MARKETING MIX
PROMOTION
PLACE
How the elements are combined in the marketing
strategy is called the marketing mix
2
PRODUCT
  • Marketing

3
Product
  • The actual item that a customer purchases,
    including the packaging, image, guarantee and
    after-sales service.
  • It is the means by which a business provides
    benefits for its customers. It is useless unless
    it provides a benefit for the user.
  • A good or service that the business is trying to
    sell must be one that actual or potential
    customers want, meets their needs and they are
    willing and able to buy.
  • Tends to be most important part of marketing mix
    as it determines price, how it will be promoted
    and where it is sold.

4
Core, actual and augmented product
  • Level 1 - Core
  • this is the basic product or service - consists
    of the benefits customers are provided with when
    they buy and use a product
  • Level 2 - Actual
  • This consists of 5 elements - brand, quality,
    styling, features and packaging. These elements
    make up the product concept
  • Level 3 - Augmented
  • This includes additional features which help to
    enhance the products attractiveness and give a
    competitive edge - extended warranty, after-sales
    service, 0 credit

5
Product Life Cycle
  • In a modern industrial society changes are
    continually occurring in the market place.
  • Technological developments
  • Fashion
  • Political pressures
  • Economic circumstances
  • Many other factors
  • The consequence - products sooner or later become
    obsolete!

6
Product Life Cycle
  • Changes dictate that their will always be demand
    for new products while, at the same time, others
    will be in decline.
  • Product life cycle helps organisations anlalyse
    process by which products emerge, grow, stabalise
    and decline over time.

7
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8
Product Life Cycle
  • Development
  • Product undergoing research development
  • Costly and time-consuming period
  • Development of prototypes extensive testing
  • No revenue generated and high costs
  • Introduction
  • growth slow
  • volume of sales low
  • limited awareness of product
  • necessary to create demand - heavy advertising
  • losses made

9
The Product Life Cycle
  • Growth
  • higher product awareness
  • rapid increase in sales
  • little competition
  • highest unit profits
  • Maturity
  • fully established product
  • sales level out
  • more competition
  • new marketing strategy required to hold market
    share (cut prices, increase advertising)
  • development costs should have been paid back and
    product at its most profitable

10
The Product Life Cycle
  • Saturation
  • Supply starts to outstrip demand
  • Decline
  • sales and profit in decline
  • product old
  • new products enter market
  • consumers may switch loyalty

11
Marketing Task 1
  • Describe the three levels of product.
  • (3 marks)
  • Draw the product life cycle.
  • (4 marks)
  • Distinguish between the growth phase and the
    decline phase of the product life cycle.
  • (2 marks)

12
Solution Question 1
  • The core product is the basic product or service
    and consists of the benefits customers are
    provided with when they buy and use a product
  • The actual product is what the consumer actually
    buys and consists of elements such as brand,
    quality, styling, features and packaging
  • The augmented product includes additional
    features which help to enhance the products
    attractiveness and give a competitive edge -
    extended warranty, after-sales service, 0 credit

13
Solution 3
  • During the growth phase, there is little
    competition from rival businesses whereas during
    the decline phase, new products are entering the
    market.
  • During the growth phase, there is a rapid
    increase in sales whereas in the decline phase,
    sales have started to fall.
  • During the growth phase, unit profits are high
    whereas during the decline phase, profits have
    started to fall.

14
The exceptions to the rule..
  • Some brands seem to go on for ever without any
    sign of decline
  • Oxo
  • Bovril
  • Hovis
  • Persil
  • Heinz Baked Beans
  • Kelloggs Cornflakes
  • Smarties

15
Extension strategies
  • Methods employed to prolong life of the product
    and stop them going into decline stage - may lead
    to periods of sales growth.
  • Promoting more frequent use of product
  • Developing new markets for existing products
  • Finding new uses for existing products
  • Develop a wider range of products
  • Developing style changes
  • Altering packaging to appeal to different market
  • Changing channels of distribution
  • Changing prices
  • Altering methods of promotion and advertising

16
The Product Mix/Portfolio/Range
  • A firms product mix or portfolio is the range of
    products that it produces.
  • Very few single-product organisations
  • No need for a direct relationship between items
    in an organisations product mix.
  • e.g. Unilever - large multinational organisation
    with approx 400 brands worldwide. 40 in UK
    including Persil, Domestos, Birds Eye, Lynx,
    Knorr Slim-Fast.

17
Advantages Disadvantages of a Product Mix
  • Advantages
  • Spreads risks
  • Meets needs of different market segments
  • Increases profits
  • Raises profile of firm to become market leader
  • Disadvantages
  • If firm only produced one product and it failed,
    firm would fail.

18
The Product Mix/Portfolio/Range
  • Doesnt make sense to wait until products go into
    decline before launching a replacement.
  • Loss of sales profits.
  • Launch new products before existing ones become
    unprofitable.
  • Different stages in the life cycle allows profit
    levels to be relatively stable.
  • Profits can support development and launch of new
    products.

19
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20
Marketing Task 2
  • Explain why a good product mix would help a
    business to remain successful
  • (3 marks)
  • Explain how an organisation can extend the life
    of a product.
  • (3 marks)

21
Solution
  • The business can spread the risk of failure among
    a range of products which means that should one
    product fail, they would have other profitable
    backups to take the financial impact.
  • Profit levels will be more stable and easier to
    manager as the business does not have to contend
    with financial peaks and troughs which makes it
    difficult to budget.
  • Profitable products can support the development
    and launch of new products as they profits can be
    reinvested into this area rather than the
    business having to seek external sources of
    finance which could be risky.

22
Solution
  • A business could extend the life of a product by
    changing the price of it. If it reduced the
    price, it could lead to an increase in sales and
    sale revenue as more people are likely to buy it.
  • They could also extend the life by developing new
    markets for existing products. This would give
    the business access to a whole new market segment
    which would in turn increase sales.
  • They could also update the packaging or alter the
    packaging to appeal to a different market. This
    could renew the products popularity amongst a
    different market segment e.g. teenagers, and
    extend the products life.

23
Product line
  • The product mix may contain product lines.
  • These are groups of products that are similar.
  • For example, Procter Gamble manufacture a hair
    care product line that includes Pantene, Herbal
    Essences and Head Shoulders.

24
Costs benefits of having a product line
  • Benefits
  • Spreads the risk
  • Gives consumers impression that organisation is a
    specialist producer in particular line of
    products
  • Allows new products to be launched as existing
    customers willing to try them
  • Costs
  • Bad publicity for one product could affect sales
    across range
  • Complicated operations with different machinery
    and processes for each different product

25
Adding new product lines
  • Tends to happen over time
  • In response to new trends e.g. healthy eating
  • To make more profits
  • To show innovation to retailers
  • To add interesting new tastes for consumers
  • Products may also be dropped to increase
    profitability if product line is too long!

26
Keeping product line fresh
  • Important that organisations invest in research
    development.
  • New products give competitive edge
  • Improve quality and safety of products
  • If product first on the market, allows monopoly
    situation for a period and higher prices.
  • Very important to meet changing needs of
    customers

27
Product innovation
  • Development of new products is essential if
    businesses are to replace those in decline.
  • Generation of idea from research or brainstorming
  • Analyse idea
  • Produce a prototype and test it
  • Test market
  • Adapt product - solve any problems
  • Launch product
  • Extremely high failure rate - 501 and costs huge
    sums of money and time

28
Marketing Task 3
  • Distinguish between a product mix and a product
    line.
  • (1 mark)
  • Explain the costs and benefits of a business
    having a product line.
  • (4 marks)

29
Solution
  • A product mix is the range of products that a
    business produces whereas a product line is a
    group of products that are similar.

30
Solution
  • Having a product line allows new products to be
    launched as existing customers are more willing
    to try them which increases the chance of them
    being successful.
  • It also spreads the risk because if one product
    is unsuccessful and ultimately fails, the
    business has other lines to fall back on.
  • A cost of having a product line is that any bad
    publicity for one product could have a
    detrimental affect on affect sales across range.
  • Another cost is that complicated operations with
    different machinery and processes for each
    different product would have a huge financial
    impact on the business.

31
Branding
  • Marketing

32
Branding
  • This can be a very successful marketing tool.
  • Business chooses a word or symbol then registers
    them so they can only be used on its products.
  • A brand is a product with a personality
  • The aim of branding is to
  • distinguish a product from its competitors
  • make it instantly recognisable to the consumer

33
Well known brands
  • Name of the company
  • Baxters
  • Oxo
  • Cadbury
  • Heinz
  • Name of the product
  • Mr Kipling
  • Fairy

34
Benefits of branding
  • Allows instant recognition
  • Increased customer loyalty
  • Repeat purchases
  • Stable level of demand allows for better
    production planning
  • Possibility to charge premium prices
  • Opportunity to enter new markets
  • Can convey image to consumer - snob value
  • Money value of brand as an intangible asset on
    balance sheet
  • Easier to launch new products on strength of the
    brand name.

35
Drawbacks of branding
  • Takes a great deal of time to establish
  • High promotion costs to establish and maintain
  • Bad publicity can affect whole brand
  • Possibility of imitators and fake products -
    premium priced goods most vulnerable
  • Danger of fashion change

36
Marketing task
  • Explain the costs and benefits of branding.
  • (4 marks)
  • (ID then explain why it is a cost or benefit)

37
Solution - Positives
  • Branding allows instant recognition of the
    product This is a benefit because consumers are
    more likely to buy the product instead of a
    competitors ensuring sales are maintained.
  • A branded product enables a business to charge
    premium prices as it is seen by the consumers as
    being of higher quality and thus worth paying a
    little bit extra for. This should increase
    turnover/profitability
  • Branding encourages increased loyalty from
    consumers who are less likely to be enticed away
    by rival products, in turn ensuring sales remain
    high.

38
Solution - Negatives
  • It takes a great deal of time to establish a
    brand name and during this time, sales may remain
    low which could have a detrimental financial
    impact on the business. Time could be better
    spent elsewhere.
  • There is also a danger of fashion changing and
    the product no longer being regarded as worth
    having. This in turn would lead to reduced demand
    and reduced sales. Money spent establishing the
    brand would be wasted
  • High promotion costs to establish and maintain
    the brand could outweigh the possible income from
    sales and put negative financial pressure on the
    organisation.

39
Types of brands
  • There are 2 main types of brands
  • Manufacturers Heinz
  • Own brands Tesco, Boots, Sainsburys

40
Unique Selling Point (USP)
  • A feature that allows a product to stand out from
    its rivals.
  • Should offer the consumer some unique benefit
    that may motivate them to switch brands.
  • e.g. Dyson

41
Own brands
  • Most major supermarket and retail chains offer a
    wide range of products under their own brand
    name.
  • High-volume selling products would be considered.
  • Retailers have reputation for value and/or
    quality e.g. Sainsburys, Boots
  • Offers customers an additional choice.

42
Benefits costs of Own Brands
  • Benefits
  • They can have goods made to their specification
    and price
  • Own-brands often cheaper and attract more
    customers and therefore sales.
  • Costs
  • May be seen as lower quality than established
    brand
  • Bad publicity will be associated with the
    supermarket or retailers name, not the
    manufacturer

43
Marketing Task
  • Describe the advantages of selling
  • branded and
  • own label goods
  • for the supermarket and its consumers
  • (4 marks)

44
Solution
  • Branded goods
  • Consumers perceive these goods to be of higher
    quality and are more likely to purchase them
    which will increase the supermarkets sales.
  • Consumers will enjoy the image of using branded
    products which give an additional snob value.
  • Own label goods
  • By selling own label products, the supermarket
    may be able to have a higher mark up as they may
    be able to resource products cheaper and do not
    have to spend as much on packaging.
  • Consumers will benefit as they will have access
    to cheaper alternatives.
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