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1 
Marketing Management 
Dr. C. M. Chang 
Only to be used by instructors who adopt the text: 
C. M. Chang, “Engineering Management: 
Challenges in the New Millennium,” Pearson 
Prentice Hall (2005) 
Copyright © 2005 by Dr. Carl Chang
2 
Chapter Contents 
• Introduction 
• Marketing Function 
• Market Forecast -- 
Four-step Process 
• Market 
Segmentation 
• Product Strategy 
• Pricing Strategy
3 
Chapter Contents 
• Marketing Communications (Promotion) 
• Distribution (Placement) Strategy 
• Other Factors Affecting Marketing Success 
• Summary 
• Appendices 
(1) Product Testing Program, 
(2) Market Attractiveness and Marketplace 
Acceptance
4 
Introduction 
• Basic functions of an enterprise: Marketing 
and Innovation - special roles for engineers! 
• Marketing: Provide products/services meeting 
the needs and wants of customers, Focusing on 
basic marketing concepts and applications 
• Innovation: Strengthen the firm’s competitive 
marketing position and sustain profitability by 
technology, supply chains, product design, etc.
5 
Marketing Function 
Information 
(Advertising, 
Promotion) 
Suppliers Customers 
Firm 
Purchase 
(Response, Vote, Attitude) 
Information 
(Market Research, 
Wants/needs Preferences)
6 
Selling Versus Marketing 
Production 
Capacities 
Manufacturing 
Products 
Aggressive 
Sales Efforts 
Aim at 
Customer 
as a Target 
Potential 
Marketing 
Opportunities 
Production 
Capabilities 
Market 
Products/ 
Services 
Actual Wants/ 
Needs of 
Potential 
Customers 
Marketing 
Program 
Customer
7 
Marketing Orientation 
• Customer Focus - Understand needs, create 
value, and serve to assure customer 
satisfaction, with inter-functional teamwork 
• Competitor Focus - Seek advantages 
relative to competitors, monitor behavior and 
respond to strategic moves (foes or friends) 
• Profit Focus - Manage to assure short- and 
long-term profitability
8 
Marketing Process 
Define 
Problem 
Analyze 
Market 
(Environment, 
Competition, 
Strength, 
Weakness, 
Needs/Interests 
of Defining 
Segments 
Select Segment (s): 
Profitability, Fit with 
Company/Product/Market 
Improve 
Program 
Develop 
Marketing 
Program 
(Set strategies 
for Product, 
Pricing, 
Promotion and 
Distribution) 
Evaluate 
Program
9 
Levels of Marketing Strategy 
• Corporate Level: Set future direction of what 
businesses to pursue (product, service, total 
solution, etc.) and what value to be emphasized 
• Business Level: Bring products/services to the 
marketplace and achieve/maintain competitive 
advantages 
• Operational Level: Plan marketing program 
and implement/control marketing efforts
Marketing Effectiveness Diagram 
10 
Low Customer Retention 
High 
Customer Attractiveness 
Low 
High
11 
Marketing Effectiveness 
• Total Success: High profitability at 
maximum possible rate 
• Partial Success: New customers replace 
lost customers 
• Partial Failure: Sales slow or fall due to a 
lack of new customers 
• Total Failure: Sales fall as customers leave
12 
Key Elements in Marketing 
• Market (size, growth 
rate, location) 
• Environment 
(competition, entry 
barriers, constraints) 
• Customers (who, 
why, when, where 
how, what) 
• Marketing Mix
13 
Market Forecast 
• Demand forecast is critically important 
• Four-step process by Barnett (Source: F. William 
Barnett, “Four Steps to Forecast total Market Demand,” Harvard 
Business Review, July/August 1988) 
• (1) Define the market - Total Sales revenue 
per year of all products delivering similar 
benefits to customers regardless of physical 
and functional features
14 
Market Forecast 
• (2) Segment the market - Subdivide total 
market into homogeneous customer 
subgroups with similar buying behavior and 
preferences 
• (3) Determine segment drivers and predict 
their changes - key factors affecting the 
segment growths
15 
Market Forecast 
• (4) Conduct sensitivity analyses - assess 
risks and check assumptions 
• Application examples: (a) Industrial 
product - Segments based on industries with 
individual segment growth rates as drivers, 
assuming product demand is proportional to 
growth and business levels involved
16 
Market Forecast 
• (b) Electricity - segments of industrial, 
commercial and residential; drivers are: 
business climate and industrial growth rate 
for industrial; Internet sales increase, 
consumer confidence, stock market 
performance for commercial; new home 
sales, change in home size and energy 
efficiency of appliances for residential
17 
Environment 
• Market study is needed to assess: 
• Competition (market share distribution, 
technology, brand strength, marketing 
position, customer loyalty, etc.) 
• Barriers of entry (capital, technology, 
supply chains, distribution channels, 
governmental regulations, etc.)
18 
Customer Orientation 
• Define needs through research (real value of a 
product to customer - prestige, convenience) 
• Define market segments (groups with similar 
needs to facilitate product customization) 
• Differentiate products and communications 
(e.g., “Dude” selling Dell computers) 
• Create differentiated advantages for 
customers
19 
Customers 
• Who (Profile, who buy from competitors, 
who does the buying, for whom is the buying 
done) 
• Why (Reasons for product preference: price, 
product performance, convenience, product 
styling, service, packaging) 
• What (What for, what value benefit, what 
they really want? what needed in the future?)
20 
Customers 
• Where (where to get product information, 
where is buying decision made, where to 
buy from: Retail store, mail order, via 
internet, department store, discount store ) 
• How (How to decide, how to compare) 
• When (When to buy, weekly, monthly, 
special occasions, etc.)
21 
Who Makes What Decisions 
Buyer 
(Purchaser) 
Consumer 
(End-user) 
Prescriber 
(specifier 
deciding 
on needs 
and its 
satisfaction) 
for Whom?
22 
Market Segmentation 
• Purpose 
• Segmentation Steps 
• Criteria for Creating 
an Effective 
Segmentation Strategy 
• Pitfalls of Market 
Segmentation
23 
Purpose 
• Divide consumers into groups having similar 
product/service preferences (divide/conquer) 
• Value to Company: (1) Match products/ 
service better to the groups, (2) Create suitable 
channels of distribution to reach them, 
(3) Uncover new consumer groups, not being 
served sufficiently in the past, (4) Focus on 
niches being neglected by competition
24 
Additional Segmentation 
Benefits to Company 
• Develop suitable marketing strategies 
• Formulate better-fitting marketing programs 
• Track changes of buying behavior over time 
• Evaluate company’s competitive position in 
these segments 
• Achieve improved effectiveness in utilizing 
marketing resources
25 
Pitfalls 
• Over-Segmentation (small sizes, 
fragmented segments difficult for company 
to serve -scale of economy) - Newer supply 
chains allows “build-to-order” strategies to 
serve smaller segments (Dell, Custom beer, 
Chinese foods, etc.) 
• Over-concentration (lack of balance 
between segments)
26 
Problem 9.1 
• Which are the bases for tradeoffs between 
conflicting wants and needs of different 
customers with respect to the same 
product? How important is it to emphasize 
product quality, when a new, unique 
product is launched?
27 
Answer 9.1 
• Customers make the following typical 
tradeoffs: (1) Quality versus price, (2) 
Common features versus customization, (3) 
Automated self-service versus personalized 
attention, (4) Technical functionality versus 
styling and other aesthetic values 
• When launching new products, quality is 
secondary to time-to-market and price. The 
strength of a new product lies in its novelty
28 
Marketing Mix 
Distribution 
Strategy 
Pricing 
Strategy 
Product 
Strategy 
Customer 
Promotion 
Strategy
29 
Marketing Mix 
• Product Strategy: Functional attributes, 
compatibility to customer needs, 
distinguishable features over competition, 
product-line strategy, product/market fit 
• Promotion/Communication Strategy: 
How to promote, adopt pull/push, which 
media to use, fit promotion to market 
segment selected
30 
Marketing Mix 
• Pricing Strategy: Skimming or penetration 
based pricing, value-added pricing, target 
pricing, pricing fit to market segment 
• Placement (Distribution) Strategy: 
Intensive, exclusive or selective distribution, 
relationship with intermediaries (retailers, 
wholesalers), changes in distribution 
logistics and technologies
31 
Product Strategy 
• Nature of Products 
• Life Cycle of 
Products 
• New Product 
Development Process 
• Product Failure 
(Rate, Reasons) 
• Summary
32 
Product Positioning 
• What product features to include and 
emphasize - critically important 
• Selection of product features to place new 
(or existing) products in a favorable 
position with respect to competition - 
customer preferences and gap created by 
existing products in marketplace 
• Example: Automobiles
33 
Product Life Cycle 
• Every Product goes through a number of 
phases: (1) Initiation (product development, 
testing, market development, advertising), 
(2) Growth (product promotion, market 
acceptance, profit growth), (3) Stagnation 
(price competition, substitution, new 
technologies), (4) Decline (cash cow 
strategy, product withdrawal)
34 
Product Life Cycle 
Product Life Cycle 
50 
40 
30 
20 
10 
0 
-10 
-20 
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 
Product Life (%) 
$ 
Sales 
Profit
35 
Product Supply Curve 
• Product supply curve describes the market 
behavior of companies -- supplying larger 
quantity of products in the product price is 
raising to higher levels in search of higher 
profits 
• Product innovations -- better products or 
lower product price, causing demand to 
increase and downward shift of supply curve
36 
Impact of Product Innovation 
Downward Shift of Supply Curve 
10 
8 
6 
4 
2 
0 
10 15 20 25 30 35 
Quantity 
Price ($/Unit) 
Old Suppy 
Demand 
New Supply
37 
Product Portfolio 
High Low 
Market Share 
High 
Low 
? 
Market Growth Rate
38 
Products/Brands 
• Brand - A Distinct identity that 
differentiates a relevant, enduring and 
creditable promise of value associated with a 
product, service or organization that 
indicates the source of that promise. It 
represents all images and experience 
customers have of and with the 
organization.
39 
Promise of Value - 
Brand Examples 
• IBM - Superior Service and support 
• Apple - Simple and easy to use 
• Lucent - Newest technologies 
• Gateway - Friendly service
40 
Brand Pyramid 
5 - Personality 
4 - Value relevance 
3 - Benefits (Emotional 
and Psychological) 
2 - Benefits (Technical) 
1 - Product features and 
characteristics 
5 
4 
3 
2 
1
41 
Problem 9.3 
• Is it better to market a new product quickly 
and then improve the design later or to 
incorporate all design modification/ 
improvements before launching the 
product?
42 
Answer 9.3 
• Marketing product quickly is a superior 
strategy for new products, as doing so will 
allow (1) Brand name build up, (2) Customer 
loyalty creation, (3) Customer retention due to 
“switching costs,” and (4) earlier customer 
response assessment, (5) Steady product design 
improvements, and (6) Larger gross margin for 
lack of competition in earlier phase of product 
life cycle.
43 
Answer 9.3 
• Waiting to market the new product until all 
conceivable design improvements have 
been incorporated suffers from two 
drawbacks: (1) Not offering what exactly 
what the customers want and need (due to a 
lack of customer feedback), (2) Loss of a 
preemptive marketing advantage
44 
Problem 9.4 
• How can product development costs be 
reduced by entering the market late?
45 
Answer 9.4 
• Some companies follows the “best follower” 
strategy; Wait until a new product is about to take 
off, reverse engineer the competitor’s products, 
modify the product features, and enter the market 
with imitation products to compete at a slightly 
lower price 
• In 1985-86, IBM started with the innovative PCs, 
followed by many clones thereafter 
• Follower realizes smaller gross margin, never a 
leader
46 
Problem 9.5 
• For products intended for the global 
markets, customers’ wants and needs are 
regionally different. How can a centralized 
concurrent engineering team develop a 
product, which serves as the common 
“platform” for the global markets?
47 
Answer 9.5 
• One option is to segregate the mechanical 
aspects (functionality) of the products from 
their aesthetic aspects (look and feel) 
• General Motors is accomplishing this 
challenging objective by: (1) Build identical 
assembly plants for Buick cars at four global 
locations, (2) Outsource major subassemblies 
to local industries to reduce import duties and 
to satisfy local content laws
48 
Answer 9.5 
• (3) Standardize the technical specifications so 
that parts are globally interchangeable for load 
balancing (market demands, labor disputes, 
regulations, etc.), (4) Allow design changes to 
account for local market conditions (cultural 
preferences in car names, styling, color), (5) 
Retain centralized concurrent engineering 
approach to implement global business 
strategy and realize scale of economy benefit
49 
Pricing Strategy 
• Pricing Options 
• Factors affecting 
Price 
• Pricing Methods
50 
Pricing Options 
• Skimming Strategy - Set premium price 
initially to capture high profitability from 
affordable customers and then reduce price in 
time to reach additional customers in the 
marketplace (e.g., new books, ginger) 
• Penetration Strategy - Set price low to 
penetrate the market rapidly for setting barrier 
of entry to late-coming competitors (e.g., 
Microsoft Office 2000, Japanese motor cycles)
51 
Pricing Methods 
• Cost: Price = Cost + Markup (e.g., 30% of cost) 
• Profit: Price = Cost + Profits (e.g., ROI) 
• Market: Set price to what the buyers are willing 
to pay (imperfect information distribution, the 
next best alternative available to buyer) 
• Value: Set price in proportion to product’s value 
added to buyer (application know-how) 
• Competition: Set price at level charged by 
competition (Target Pricing)
52 
Target Pricing 
• Set the selling price based on customer inputs 
and market survey and determine pertinent 
product features 
• Add a gross margin that company must have 
• Obtain the Cost of Goods Sold (CGS) that 
must not be exceed 
• Define material/parts, design, product 
development, and production method to meet 
CGS target
53 
Internet-Enabled 
Communications Options 
Manufacturer/ 
Supplier 
Customers 
B-to-B Intermediary 
B-to-C 
Virtual Market 
Source: “Leverage Web for Corporate Success,” 
Business Horizon (1999) 
Direct
54 
Internet-Enabled 
Communications Options 
• Business to Business: Manufacturer’s Intranet 
for intermediaries 
• Business to Consumer: Web portals of 
distributors for selling to consumers 
• Direct: Manufacturer’ web sites (Dell, Gateway), 
buyer’s portals (Covisint, ChemConnect) 
• Virtual Market: Third party search portals 
(Yahoo), auction site (e-Bay), e-marketplace
55 
B-to-B E-Hubs 
Manufacturing Inputs Operational Inputs 
Systematic Sourcing Catalog Hubs MRO Hubs 
Chemdex Ariba 
SciQuest.com W.W. Grainger 
PlasticsNet.com MRO.com 
BixBuyer.com 
Spot Sourcing Exchangers Yield Manager 
e-steel Employease 
PaperExchange.com Adauction.com 
Alta Energy CapacityWeb.com 
IMX Exchange 
Source: Steven Kaplan and Mohanbir Sawhney, "E-Hubs: The New B-to-B Marketplaces," 
Harvard Business review, May-June 2000.
56 
Contextual Marketing 
• Bringing marketing messages directly to 
customer at the point of need (“hitting the 
iron while it is hot”) 
• Johnson & Johnson - Banner ads for 
Tylenol, when stock market drops more 
than 100 points 
• Google - List ads ahead of list of hits 
• Dell - Product Specs in CNET and ZDNET
57 
Distribution Strategy 
• Channels of Distribution 
• Functions of Distribution 
Channels 
• Type of Distribution 
• Organizational Structures 
• Impact of E-Commerce 
on Distributions
58 
Other Factors Affecting 
Marketing Success 
• Alliances & 
partnerships 
• Customer 
Interactions and 
Loyalty 
• Organizational 
effectiveness
59 
Customer Loyalty 
• Five determinants of Customer Loyalty: 
(1) Quality customer support, (2) on-time 
delivery, (3) compelling product 
performance, (4) convenient and reasonable 
priced shipping and handling, and 
(5) clear and trustworthy privacy policies. 
• Dell - Customer Experience Council: Order 
fulfillment, product performance, post- sale 
service and support.
60 
Best Practice Examples 
• Amazon.com - Tailor product offerings to 
individual preference, one-click 
convenience, error-free delivery; 59% 
business from repeat customers 
• EBay - Assure satisfaction of auction, 
buyer and seller rate each other, insurance 
of firs $200, Money in escrow account until 
buyers are satisfied, 50% of customers are 
referrals
61 
Summary 
• What Engineering Managers should strive to do? 
(1) Understand the very important roles played 
by marketing and certain marketing issues 
affecting engineering, (2) Become versed in 
marketing mix, (3) Recognize the uncertainties 
involved in marketing (customer perceptions, 
competitive analysis, sales forecasts), (4) Adopt 
the customer orientation in all engineering 
programs, (5) Provide required supporting 
engineering inputs.
62 
Summary - Engineering Inputs 
• Product: Innovative design, product features, 
use of technologies, efficient production 
systems and processes, reliability, service, 
quality, maintenance. 
• Price: Cost control, improved cost analysis 
(ABC) 
• Promotion: Brochures, training, analysis of 
feedback 
• Distribution: Logistic optimization
63 
Summary 
• Marketing and Innovation are two principal 
functions of an enterprise 
• Engineers know how to innovate, they also 
need to become effective in interacting with 
marketing to assure business success of any 
enterprise - This combination of capabilities 
will enable them to become major contributors 
to product-based profit-seeking enterprises
64 
References 
• Philip Kotler, "Marketing Management: Analysis, 
Planning,Implementation and Control,” 7th Edition, Prentice- 
Hall (1991) 
• William Lazer, “Marketing 2000 and Beyond,” American 
Marketing Association (1990) 
• Gilbert A. Churchill, Jr.., ad J. Paul Peter, “Marketing: 
Creating Value for Customers,” Irwin/McGraw-Hill (1998) 
• Houston E. Elam and Norton Paley, “Marketing For Non- 
Marketers: Principles and Tactics that Everyone in Business 
Must Know,” AMACOM (1992)
65 
References 
• Robert Hartley, “Marketing Mistakes and Successes,” 
John Wiley (1998) 
• Edwin W. Cundiff and Mary Tharp Hilger, “Marketing In 
the International Environment,” Prentice-Hall (1988) 
• Peter K. Francese, “Marketing Know-how: Your Guide to 
the Best Marketing Tools and Sources,” American 
Demographic Books (1996) 
• Don Debelak, “Marketing magic: Innovative and Proven 
Ideas for Finding Customers, Making Sales and Growing 
Your business,” B. Adam (1994)
66 
References 
• Jan Zimmerman, “Marketing on the Internet,” 
Maximum Press (2000) 
• Bud E. Smith and Frank Catalano, “Marketing Online 
for Dummies,” IDG Books (1998) 
• Kevin J. Clancy and Robert S. Schulman, “The 
Marketing Revolution: A Radical Manifesto for 
Dominating the Marketplace,” HarperBusiness (1991) 
• For business cases, articles and selected trade 
publications, see the text.

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10 marketing management

  • 1. 1 Marketing Management Dr. C. M. Chang Only to be used by instructors who adopt the text: C. M. Chang, “Engineering Management: Challenges in the New Millennium,” Pearson Prentice Hall (2005) Copyright © 2005 by Dr. Carl Chang
  • 2. 2 Chapter Contents • Introduction • Marketing Function • Market Forecast -- Four-step Process • Market Segmentation • Product Strategy • Pricing Strategy
  • 3. 3 Chapter Contents • Marketing Communications (Promotion) • Distribution (Placement) Strategy • Other Factors Affecting Marketing Success • Summary • Appendices (1) Product Testing Program, (2) Market Attractiveness and Marketplace Acceptance
  • 4. 4 Introduction • Basic functions of an enterprise: Marketing and Innovation - special roles for engineers! • Marketing: Provide products/services meeting the needs and wants of customers, Focusing on basic marketing concepts and applications • Innovation: Strengthen the firm’s competitive marketing position and sustain profitability by technology, supply chains, product design, etc.
  • 5. 5 Marketing Function Information (Advertising, Promotion) Suppliers Customers Firm Purchase (Response, Vote, Attitude) Information (Market Research, Wants/needs Preferences)
  • 6. 6 Selling Versus Marketing Production Capacities Manufacturing Products Aggressive Sales Efforts Aim at Customer as a Target Potential Marketing Opportunities Production Capabilities Market Products/ Services Actual Wants/ Needs of Potential Customers Marketing Program Customer
  • 7. 7 Marketing Orientation • Customer Focus - Understand needs, create value, and serve to assure customer satisfaction, with inter-functional teamwork • Competitor Focus - Seek advantages relative to competitors, monitor behavior and respond to strategic moves (foes or friends) • Profit Focus - Manage to assure short- and long-term profitability
  • 8. 8 Marketing Process Define Problem Analyze Market (Environment, Competition, Strength, Weakness, Needs/Interests of Defining Segments Select Segment (s): Profitability, Fit with Company/Product/Market Improve Program Develop Marketing Program (Set strategies for Product, Pricing, Promotion and Distribution) Evaluate Program
  • 9. 9 Levels of Marketing Strategy • Corporate Level: Set future direction of what businesses to pursue (product, service, total solution, etc.) and what value to be emphasized • Business Level: Bring products/services to the marketplace and achieve/maintain competitive advantages • Operational Level: Plan marketing program and implement/control marketing efforts
  • 10. Marketing Effectiveness Diagram 10 Low Customer Retention High Customer Attractiveness Low High
  • 11. 11 Marketing Effectiveness • Total Success: High profitability at maximum possible rate • Partial Success: New customers replace lost customers • Partial Failure: Sales slow or fall due to a lack of new customers • Total Failure: Sales fall as customers leave
  • 12. 12 Key Elements in Marketing • Market (size, growth rate, location) • Environment (competition, entry barriers, constraints) • Customers (who, why, when, where how, what) • Marketing Mix
  • 13. 13 Market Forecast • Demand forecast is critically important • Four-step process by Barnett (Source: F. William Barnett, “Four Steps to Forecast total Market Demand,” Harvard Business Review, July/August 1988) • (1) Define the market - Total Sales revenue per year of all products delivering similar benefits to customers regardless of physical and functional features
  • 14. 14 Market Forecast • (2) Segment the market - Subdivide total market into homogeneous customer subgroups with similar buying behavior and preferences • (3) Determine segment drivers and predict their changes - key factors affecting the segment growths
  • 15. 15 Market Forecast • (4) Conduct sensitivity analyses - assess risks and check assumptions • Application examples: (a) Industrial product - Segments based on industries with individual segment growth rates as drivers, assuming product demand is proportional to growth and business levels involved
  • 16. 16 Market Forecast • (b) Electricity - segments of industrial, commercial and residential; drivers are: business climate and industrial growth rate for industrial; Internet sales increase, consumer confidence, stock market performance for commercial; new home sales, change in home size and energy efficiency of appliances for residential
  • 17. 17 Environment • Market study is needed to assess: • Competition (market share distribution, technology, brand strength, marketing position, customer loyalty, etc.) • Barriers of entry (capital, technology, supply chains, distribution channels, governmental regulations, etc.)
  • 18. 18 Customer Orientation • Define needs through research (real value of a product to customer - prestige, convenience) • Define market segments (groups with similar needs to facilitate product customization) • Differentiate products and communications (e.g., “Dude” selling Dell computers) • Create differentiated advantages for customers
  • 19. 19 Customers • Who (Profile, who buy from competitors, who does the buying, for whom is the buying done) • Why (Reasons for product preference: price, product performance, convenience, product styling, service, packaging) • What (What for, what value benefit, what they really want? what needed in the future?)
  • 20. 20 Customers • Where (where to get product information, where is buying decision made, where to buy from: Retail store, mail order, via internet, department store, discount store ) • How (How to decide, how to compare) • When (When to buy, weekly, monthly, special occasions, etc.)
  • 21. 21 Who Makes What Decisions Buyer (Purchaser) Consumer (End-user) Prescriber (specifier deciding on needs and its satisfaction) for Whom?
  • 22. 22 Market Segmentation • Purpose • Segmentation Steps • Criteria for Creating an Effective Segmentation Strategy • Pitfalls of Market Segmentation
  • 23. 23 Purpose • Divide consumers into groups having similar product/service preferences (divide/conquer) • Value to Company: (1) Match products/ service better to the groups, (2) Create suitable channels of distribution to reach them, (3) Uncover new consumer groups, not being served sufficiently in the past, (4) Focus on niches being neglected by competition
  • 24. 24 Additional Segmentation Benefits to Company • Develop suitable marketing strategies • Formulate better-fitting marketing programs • Track changes of buying behavior over time • Evaluate company’s competitive position in these segments • Achieve improved effectiveness in utilizing marketing resources
  • 25. 25 Pitfalls • Over-Segmentation (small sizes, fragmented segments difficult for company to serve -scale of economy) - Newer supply chains allows “build-to-order” strategies to serve smaller segments (Dell, Custom beer, Chinese foods, etc.) • Over-concentration (lack of balance between segments)
  • 26. 26 Problem 9.1 • Which are the bases for tradeoffs between conflicting wants and needs of different customers with respect to the same product? How important is it to emphasize product quality, when a new, unique product is launched?
  • 27. 27 Answer 9.1 • Customers make the following typical tradeoffs: (1) Quality versus price, (2) Common features versus customization, (3) Automated self-service versus personalized attention, (4) Technical functionality versus styling and other aesthetic values • When launching new products, quality is secondary to time-to-market and price. The strength of a new product lies in its novelty
  • 28. 28 Marketing Mix Distribution Strategy Pricing Strategy Product Strategy Customer Promotion Strategy
  • 29. 29 Marketing Mix • Product Strategy: Functional attributes, compatibility to customer needs, distinguishable features over competition, product-line strategy, product/market fit • Promotion/Communication Strategy: How to promote, adopt pull/push, which media to use, fit promotion to market segment selected
  • 30. 30 Marketing Mix • Pricing Strategy: Skimming or penetration based pricing, value-added pricing, target pricing, pricing fit to market segment • Placement (Distribution) Strategy: Intensive, exclusive or selective distribution, relationship with intermediaries (retailers, wholesalers), changes in distribution logistics and technologies
  • 31. 31 Product Strategy • Nature of Products • Life Cycle of Products • New Product Development Process • Product Failure (Rate, Reasons) • Summary
  • 32. 32 Product Positioning • What product features to include and emphasize - critically important • Selection of product features to place new (or existing) products in a favorable position with respect to competition - customer preferences and gap created by existing products in marketplace • Example: Automobiles
  • 33. 33 Product Life Cycle • Every Product goes through a number of phases: (1) Initiation (product development, testing, market development, advertising), (2) Growth (product promotion, market acceptance, profit growth), (3) Stagnation (price competition, substitution, new technologies), (4) Decline (cash cow strategy, product withdrawal)
  • 34. 34 Product Life Cycle Product Life Cycle 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 -20 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Product Life (%) $ Sales Profit
  • 35. 35 Product Supply Curve • Product supply curve describes the market behavior of companies -- supplying larger quantity of products in the product price is raising to higher levels in search of higher profits • Product innovations -- better products or lower product price, causing demand to increase and downward shift of supply curve
  • 36. 36 Impact of Product Innovation Downward Shift of Supply Curve 10 8 6 4 2 0 10 15 20 25 30 35 Quantity Price ($/Unit) Old Suppy Demand New Supply
  • 37. 37 Product Portfolio High Low Market Share High Low ? Market Growth Rate
  • 38. 38 Products/Brands • Brand - A Distinct identity that differentiates a relevant, enduring and creditable promise of value associated with a product, service or organization that indicates the source of that promise. It represents all images and experience customers have of and with the organization.
  • 39. 39 Promise of Value - Brand Examples • IBM - Superior Service and support • Apple - Simple and easy to use • Lucent - Newest technologies • Gateway - Friendly service
  • 40. 40 Brand Pyramid 5 - Personality 4 - Value relevance 3 - Benefits (Emotional and Psychological) 2 - Benefits (Technical) 1 - Product features and characteristics 5 4 3 2 1
  • 41. 41 Problem 9.3 • Is it better to market a new product quickly and then improve the design later or to incorporate all design modification/ improvements before launching the product?
  • 42. 42 Answer 9.3 • Marketing product quickly is a superior strategy for new products, as doing so will allow (1) Brand name build up, (2) Customer loyalty creation, (3) Customer retention due to “switching costs,” and (4) earlier customer response assessment, (5) Steady product design improvements, and (6) Larger gross margin for lack of competition in earlier phase of product life cycle.
  • 43. 43 Answer 9.3 • Waiting to market the new product until all conceivable design improvements have been incorporated suffers from two drawbacks: (1) Not offering what exactly what the customers want and need (due to a lack of customer feedback), (2) Loss of a preemptive marketing advantage
  • 44. 44 Problem 9.4 • How can product development costs be reduced by entering the market late?
  • 45. 45 Answer 9.4 • Some companies follows the “best follower” strategy; Wait until a new product is about to take off, reverse engineer the competitor’s products, modify the product features, and enter the market with imitation products to compete at a slightly lower price • In 1985-86, IBM started with the innovative PCs, followed by many clones thereafter • Follower realizes smaller gross margin, never a leader
  • 46. 46 Problem 9.5 • For products intended for the global markets, customers’ wants and needs are regionally different. How can a centralized concurrent engineering team develop a product, which serves as the common “platform” for the global markets?
  • 47. 47 Answer 9.5 • One option is to segregate the mechanical aspects (functionality) of the products from their aesthetic aspects (look and feel) • General Motors is accomplishing this challenging objective by: (1) Build identical assembly plants for Buick cars at four global locations, (2) Outsource major subassemblies to local industries to reduce import duties and to satisfy local content laws
  • 48. 48 Answer 9.5 • (3) Standardize the technical specifications so that parts are globally interchangeable for load balancing (market demands, labor disputes, regulations, etc.), (4) Allow design changes to account for local market conditions (cultural preferences in car names, styling, color), (5) Retain centralized concurrent engineering approach to implement global business strategy and realize scale of economy benefit
  • 49. 49 Pricing Strategy • Pricing Options • Factors affecting Price • Pricing Methods
  • 50. 50 Pricing Options • Skimming Strategy - Set premium price initially to capture high profitability from affordable customers and then reduce price in time to reach additional customers in the marketplace (e.g., new books, ginger) • Penetration Strategy - Set price low to penetrate the market rapidly for setting barrier of entry to late-coming competitors (e.g., Microsoft Office 2000, Japanese motor cycles)
  • 51. 51 Pricing Methods • Cost: Price = Cost + Markup (e.g., 30% of cost) • Profit: Price = Cost + Profits (e.g., ROI) • Market: Set price to what the buyers are willing to pay (imperfect information distribution, the next best alternative available to buyer) • Value: Set price in proportion to product’s value added to buyer (application know-how) • Competition: Set price at level charged by competition (Target Pricing)
  • 52. 52 Target Pricing • Set the selling price based on customer inputs and market survey and determine pertinent product features • Add a gross margin that company must have • Obtain the Cost of Goods Sold (CGS) that must not be exceed • Define material/parts, design, product development, and production method to meet CGS target
  • 53. 53 Internet-Enabled Communications Options Manufacturer/ Supplier Customers B-to-B Intermediary B-to-C Virtual Market Source: “Leverage Web for Corporate Success,” Business Horizon (1999) Direct
  • 54. 54 Internet-Enabled Communications Options • Business to Business: Manufacturer’s Intranet for intermediaries • Business to Consumer: Web portals of distributors for selling to consumers • Direct: Manufacturer’ web sites (Dell, Gateway), buyer’s portals (Covisint, ChemConnect) • Virtual Market: Third party search portals (Yahoo), auction site (e-Bay), e-marketplace
  • 55. 55 B-to-B E-Hubs Manufacturing Inputs Operational Inputs Systematic Sourcing Catalog Hubs MRO Hubs Chemdex Ariba SciQuest.com W.W. Grainger PlasticsNet.com MRO.com BixBuyer.com Spot Sourcing Exchangers Yield Manager e-steel Employease PaperExchange.com Adauction.com Alta Energy CapacityWeb.com IMX Exchange Source: Steven Kaplan and Mohanbir Sawhney, "E-Hubs: The New B-to-B Marketplaces," Harvard Business review, May-June 2000.
  • 56. 56 Contextual Marketing • Bringing marketing messages directly to customer at the point of need (“hitting the iron while it is hot”) • Johnson & Johnson - Banner ads for Tylenol, when stock market drops more than 100 points • Google - List ads ahead of list of hits • Dell - Product Specs in CNET and ZDNET
  • 57. 57 Distribution Strategy • Channels of Distribution • Functions of Distribution Channels • Type of Distribution • Organizational Structures • Impact of E-Commerce on Distributions
  • 58. 58 Other Factors Affecting Marketing Success • Alliances & partnerships • Customer Interactions and Loyalty • Organizational effectiveness
  • 59. 59 Customer Loyalty • Five determinants of Customer Loyalty: (1) Quality customer support, (2) on-time delivery, (3) compelling product performance, (4) convenient and reasonable priced shipping and handling, and (5) clear and trustworthy privacy policies. • Dell - Customer Experience Council: Order fulfillment, product performance, post- sale service and support.
  • 60. 60 Best Practice Examples • Amazon.com - Tailor product offerings to individual preference, one-click convenience, error-free delivery; 59% business from repeat customers • EBay - Assure satisfaction of auction, buyer and seller rate each other, insurance of firs $200, Money in escrow account until buyers are satisfied, 50% of customers are referrals
  • 61. 61 Summary • What Engineering Managers should strive to do? (1) Understand the very important roles played by marketing and certain marketing issues affecting engineering, (2) Become versed in marketing mix, (3) Recognize the uncertainties involved in marketing (customer perceptions, competitive analysis, sales forecasts), (4) Adopt the customer orientation in all engineering programs, (5) Provide required supporting engineering inputs.
  • 62. 62 Summary - Engineering Inputs • Product: Innovative design, product features, use of technologies, efficient production systems and processes, reliability, service, quality, maintenance. • Price: Cost control, improved cost analysis (ABC) • Promotion: Brochures, training, analysis of feedback • Distribution: Logistic optimization
  • 63. 63 Summary • Marketing and Innovation are two principal functions of an enterprise • Engineers know how to innovate, they also need to become effective in interacting with marketing to assure business success of any enterprise - This combination of capabilities will enable them to become major contributors to product-based profit-seeking enterprises
  • 64. 64 References • Philip Kotler, "Marketing Management: Analysis, Planning,Implementation and Control,” 7th Edition, Prentice- Hall (1991) • William Lazer, “Marketing 2000 and Beyond,” American Marketing Association (1990) • Gilbert A. Churchill, Jr.., ad J. Paul Peter, “Marketing: Creating Value for Customers,” Irwin/McGraw-Hill (1998) • Houston E. Elam and Norton Paley, “Marketing For Non- Marketers: Principles and Tactics that Everyone in Business Must Know,” AMACOM (1992)
  • 65. 65 References • Robert Hartley, “Marketing Mistakes and Successes,” John Wiley (1998) • Edwin W. Cundiff and Mary Tharp Hilger, “Marketing In the International Environment,” Prentice-Hall (1988) • Peter K. Francese, “Marketing Know-how: Your Guide to the Best Marketing Tools and Sources,” American Demographic Books (1996) • Don Debelak, “Marketing magic: Innovative and Proven Ideas for Finding Customers, Making Sales and Growing Your business,” B. Adam (1994)
  • 66. 66 References • Jan Zimmerman, “Marketing on the Internet,” Maximum Press (2000) • Bud E. Smith and Frank Catalano, “Marketing Online for Dummies,” IDG Books (1998) • Kevin J. Clancy and Robert S. Schulman, “The Marketing Revolution: A Radical Manifesto for Dominating the Marketplace,” HarperBusiness (1991) • For business cases, articles and selected trade publications, see the text.

Notas do Editor

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