Product Positioning (Mba
Product Positioning (Mba
Product Positioning (Mba
Product positioning is what comes to mind when your target market thinks about your product compared to your competitors products.
Probably: highest-end luxury and exclusivity. Thats their positioning. Theres no confusing the positioning of Rolls Royce and Hyundai.
PRODUCT POSITIONING
The place an offering occupies in consumers minds on important attributes relative to competitive offerings. Exactly how the company should present the product to the target market(s) so its perception is most advantageous relative to competition.
PRODUCT POSITIONING
o
The illustration below shows an example taken from Philip Kotler's book, Marketing Management published by Prentice Hall. This two-dimensional perception map shows how Kotler analyses the positioning of an instant breakfast drink relative to variables of the price of the product and speed of preparation.
PRODUCT POSITIONING
Another common framework for product positioning is taken from a series of questions. You can position a product using a positioning statement that answers these important questions:
For whom is the product designed? What kind of product is it? What is the single most important benefit it offers? What is its most important competitor? How is your product different from that competitor? What is the significant customer benefit of that difference?
POSITIONING CHARACTERISTICS
To be successful, product positioning must achieve three objectives: Differentiate your product from the competitions Address important customer buying criteria Articulate key product (or company) characteristics During the process of generating product positioning strategies, periodically review each one against the following list of characteristics. Is your product positioning strategy: Single-mindeddoes it convey one primary message at a time? Meaningfulwill it connect with the target audience? Differentiatingdoes it contrast your strengths against the competition? Importantis it pertinent and significant to the target audience? Sustainablewill it resonate with the target audience well into the future? Believablewill it ring true with the target audience? Crediblecan you clearly substantiate your claims?
POSITIONING STRATEGIES
Against a Competitor: Positioning your product directly against a competitors typically requires a specific product superiority claim. A memorable example is Avis Rental Cars Were #2. We try harder. Away from a Competitor: Positioning yourself as the opposite of your competitor can help you get attention in a market dominated by some other product. A famous example is 7-UP calling itself the Uncola. Benefits: This strategy focuses on a benefit your product provides to your target audience. Examples include Volvos emphasis on safety and Crest toothpastes focus on reducing cavities. Product Attributes: Highlighting a specific attribute of your product can also be compelling. For example, Ritz Carlton hotels focus on luxury; Motel 6 focuses on economy.
Your product
Competitive positioning
Competitive positioning
Company C Company B
Competitive positioning
Company C
#2
#1 #3
Company B
PRODUCT DIVERSIFICATION
"Even if you are on the right track, youll get run over if you just sit there.
DIVERSIFICATION
Corporate Level
entering a promising business outside of the scope of the existing business unit
Forms of Diversification
Horizontal Diversification
Geographical Diversification
Vertical Integration
Integrating your business along your value chain both upstream and downstream, so that one efficiently feeds the other
The firm is able to leverage its technical know-how to gain some advantage.
Horizontal Diversification
Also called Conglomerate Diversification Add new & unrelated products/services Moving into more than one industry; the new business usually somehow relates to the existing one
Geographical Diversification
Moving into new geographical area to overcome limited growth opportunities in the local market and/or to gain global leadership positions
Means of Diversification
Do It Yourself Internal R&D projects Spinouts managing innovative product/service development separately Do It with Others Implementing projects through new company formation Strategic alliances joint R&D and implementation Acquisitions Joint Ventures
Risks in Diversification
Risk of product rejection in unknown market Significant expansion of human & financial resources Detraction of focus from commitment and sustained investments in core industries
Measuring the chances of success in product diversification
The attractiveness test: the industry that has been chosen has to be either attractive or capable of being made attractive. The cost-of-entry test: the cost of entry must not capitalize all future profits. The better-off test: the new unit must either gain competitive advantage
from its link with the corporation or vice versa.
Case in Point GE
Jack Welch transformed GE from a purely manufacturing company into a more diversified company with an increasingly important service component. In his 1996 annual report, Welch wrote: "Services is so great an opportunity for the Company that our vision for the next century is GE that is 'a global service company that also sells high-quality products. When asked if GE was going to become a more product-oriented or service-oriented company, Welch replied, "It's got to be a big combination... It's an integrated game." In 1996, GE Capital Services earned US$4 billion. In 2005, GE services agreements increased to $87 billion, up 15% from 2004. In particular, financial services revenues increased 12% to $59.3 billion.
Product Simplification
When a products performance is falling short of expectations and continued support is no longer justified, its time to pull it out of the marketplace How?
Line-simplification