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Market Development, Information, and Bargaining Power • Reasons for market development • Strategy in market development • Tools and outcomes • Participation in commodities market development • Bargaining power and market “stabilization” • Market information MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 1 Promotion: Strategic and Tactical Objectives • Awareness • Trial • Attitude toward the product Emerging Markets/ New Products – Beliefs – Preference • Temporary sales increases Mature markets /established products MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 2 Marketing Strategy ASSESS AND RE-EVALUATE MARKETING OBJECTIVES What we want to accomplish STRATEGY How to best use available resources to accomplish objectives under circumstances. Make tough choices! TOOLS Use resources such as distribution, advertising, sales promotion, demonstrations ASSESS MKTG 442AND RE-EVALUATE TACTICS AND ADAPTATION Implementing strategy as things change. More tough choices! OUTCOME CONSUMER/ MARKET RESPONSE Consumers or intermediaries respond MARKET DEVELOPMENT Sales are influenced (e.g., volume, frequency, switching, price sensitivity) Lars Perner, Instructor 3 Market Development Issues DECREASE CONSUMER PRICE SENSITIVITY GET MORE PEOPLE TO BUY PRODUCT TRIAL AWARENESS INCREASED SALES OF PRODUCT BUYING CONVENIENCE GET PRODUCT USED FOR NEW PURPOSES MKTG 442 JOINT VENTURES/ COBRANDING DEVELOP PREFERENCE RELATIVE TO OTHER PRODUCTS OR BRANDS MARKET DEVELOPMENT “Big picture . only”—details not important! ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTION ENHANCEMENT GET CURRENT USERS TO USE MORE SALES PROMOTION Lars Perner, Instructor 4 Market Development: The Objectives GET CURRENT USERS TO USE MORE “Snickers satisfies you!” ● “Ask for A-1 Steak Sauce” ● “A sandwich just isn’t a sandwich without miracle whip” ● “Beef—it’s what’s for dinner” ● “The Incredible, Edible Egg” ● Fast food restaurant advertising GET MORE PEOPLE TO BUY PRODUCT Hungry Man dinners ● Hot Pockets ads ● Variety seeking advertising ● Spam luncheon meets advertising GET PRODUCT USED FOR NEW PURPOSES “Orange juice—it isn’t just for dinner anymore” ● “Beef—it’s what’s for dinner” ● Spam luncheon meets advertising ● Baking soda ads DEVELOP PREFERENCE RELATIVE TO OTHER PRODUCTS OR BRANDS Kraft cheese ads suggesting that Kraft has more calcium ● Total cereal ads suggesting vitamins ● “Coke is the real thing” ● “The Pepsi generation” ● “The night belongs to Michelob” ● Florida orange juice “Maxwell—it’s good to the last drop” ● Progresso and Campbell’s soup ads DECREASE CONSUMER PRICE SENSITIVITY “Costs a little more, but it’s worth it” ● Zachy farms chicken ads ● Campbell’s soup ads MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 5 Strategy Issues • Deciding on objectives – Realism – Suitability for • Company strengths • Competitor positions • Market structure and change • How much to spend on objectives – Cost of advertising and/or other promotion relative to gains – Most appropriate ways of achieving objectives based on • Cost • Effectiveness • Synergy • Consistency of objectives MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 6 Some Tools • Advertising – – – – – • Price/sales promotion Awareness Trial Preference Reminder New uses – – – – • Joint ventures/cobranding • Demonstrations • Product investment • Distribution – Availability in retail stores – Quality of placement within retail stores MKTG 442 Coupons Sales Value Premium – – – – MARKET DEVELOPMENT Quality Differentiation Packaging Usability convenience Lars Perner, Instructor 7 Consumer Adoptions of New Foods or New Food Uses TRIAL PROMOTION ADOPTION BY LIMITED GROUP WORD OF MOUTH TRIAL INCREASING ADOPTION/ ADAPTATION OBSERVATION MEDIA COVERAGE MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 8 Effects and Outcomes AWARENESS TRIAL SALES Volumes Prices REPEAT PURCHASES PREFERENCE REDUCED PRICE SENSITIVITY USE BY MORE PEOPLE MKTG 442 USED IN MORE SITUATIONS USED MORE FREQUENTLY MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 9 Market Development • Levels – Commodity • Differentiation from competing commodities • Increase in demand for commodity – Corporate product category (e.g., Coca Cola drinks, including Dasani) – Product category brand—e.g., Kraft American cheese slices – Brand (product line)—e.g., Kraft foods MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 10 Commodities Market Development Programs • Typically regional—e.g., Florida orange juice; Idaho potatoes; Hawaiian sugar cane; Washington Apples; Texas beef • Intention is to differentiate • Compulsory participation in advertising programs – Development is not worthwhile for the individual farmer – The individual farmer is assumed to benefit from overall campaign MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 11 Definitions Innovation: “An idea, practice, or product perceived to be new by the relevant individual or group.” Diffusion process: “The manner in which innovations spread through the market.” MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 12 To Adopt or Not to Adopt: How Will Consumers Answer the Question? • Some causes of resistance to adoption – Perceived risk--financial and social – Self image – Effort to implement and/or learn to use the product – Incompatibility – Inertia/overwhelming existing choices MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 13 Types of Innovations • Fashions—tastes go back and forth over time—e.g., food fat content • Fads—product is “in” for a short time and then fades (e.g., ostrich meat) • Trends—consumption of a food product either increases or decreases consistently over time MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 14 N u m b e r o f n e w a d o p to r s Innovators and Imitators: The Lifecycle of A Product Adoption of Innovations Over Time 40 30 20 10 0 Innovators -2.50 2.5% MKTG 442 Early -1.50 adoptors (13.5%) Early -0.50 m aj ority 34% MARKET DEVELOPMENT Late m aj ority 0.50 34% Laggards 1.50 2.50 (13.5%) Lars Perner, Instructor 15 P e r c e n t d iffu s io n One Diffusion Pattern--Nicely Balanced... The S-Shaped Diffusion Curve 1 0.8 100% adoption or saturation point 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 Tim e MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 16 Implications for Foods • • • • Many substitutes and individual tastes Trying new foods for variety is common Social opportunities for trial Food tastes tend to be “learned” early in life – Best opportunities for spread are with younger consumers MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 17 Influences on the Speed of Diffusion • Risk to expected benefit ratio (relative advantage)—usually not an issue for foods • Observability—is the product consumed in public • Product pricing—scarce foods are “rationed” through cost • Trialability—usually easy for foods • Switching difficulties and learning requirements/ ease of use—not a problem for foods eaten out but may be for foods to be produced at home MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 18 Pioneering Advantage • Consumer expectations are usually shaped by the first encountered brand • Satisficing and awareness by consumers • Order of entry vs. pioneering advantage • Positioning of existing pioneer vs. strategy of first entry MKTG 442 MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 19 Bargaining Power • Impact • Sources – Price – Conditions • Returns • Time of payment • Interest or finance charges • Quality or other adjustments • Transportation or other services MKTG 442 – Size, number, and concentration of firms – Supply control – Unequal information – Diversification (?) – Product differentiation – Control of resources – Financial resources – Ratio of fixed to variable costs MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 20 Marketing Orders and Agreements • Mandates intended to “stabilize” markets • Types of issues – – – – – – MKTG 442 Grades, size Packaging Market allocation (quotas) Minimum prices Contributions to research Advertising (market development) MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 21 Market Information • Some issues • Problems – Crop forecasts – Demand forecasts—quantity and prices • Government information programs MKTG 442 – Price specification (comparability of location, time, and other factors) – Net vs. gross prices (allowances and discounts) – Cost vs. accuracy of information – Changing market orientation and scope of market (proportion of buyers and sellers involved in open markets) – Voluntary cooperation MARKET DEVELOPMENT Lars Perner, Instructor 22