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TOPIC: Product

Product 13 years 4 months ago #660

  • Amuthan
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In marketing, a product is anything that can be offered to a market that might satisfy a want or need. However it is much more than just a physical object. It is the complete bundle of benefits or satisfactions that buyers perceive they will obtain if they purchase the product. It is the sum of all physical, psychological, symbolic, and service attributes.

A product is similar to a good. In economics, a good is a physical object that is available in the marketplace. This differentiates it from a service which is a non-material product.

Three Aspects

There are three aspects to any product or service:

1 Core Benefits
2 Tangible Product or Service
3 Augmented Product or Service


Classifying Products

Product management involves developing strategies and tactics that will increase product demand (referred to as primary demand) over the product's life cycle.

One useful technique in understanding a product is the Aspinwall Classification System. It classifies and rates products based on five variables:

1) replacement rate - how frequently is the product repurchased
2) gross margin - how much profit is obtained from each product (average selling price less average unit cost)
3) buyer goal adjustment - how flexible are the buyers' purchasing habits in regards to this product
4) duration of product satisfaction - how long will the product produce benefits for the user
5) duration of buyer search search behaviour - how long will they shop for the product

Types of Products

There are several types of products:

consumer products - used by end users
industrial products - used in the production of other goods
convenience goods - purchased frequently and with minimal effort
impulse goods - purchase stimulated by immediate sensory cues
emergency goods - goods required immediately
shopping goods - some comparison with other goods
specialty goods - extensive comparisons with other goods and lengthy information search.
unsought goods - eg.: cemetery plots, insurance
perishable goods - goods that will deteriate quickly even without use
durable goods - goods that survive multiple use occations
non-durable goods - goods that are used up in one use occation
capital goods - installations, equipment, and buildings
parts and materials - goods that go into a finished product
supplies and services - goods that facilitate production
commodities - undifferentiated goods (eg.: wheat, gold, sugar)
by-products - a product that results from the manufacture of another product
Last Edit: 13 years 4 months ago by Amuthan.
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