Definitions
Developing New Products
Segmentation & Targeting
Pricing
Brand Management
100

The identification and profiling of distinct groups of buyers who might prefer or require varying product and service mixes is known as this.

segmentation

100

This is the systematic design, collection, analysis and reporting of data and findings relevant to a specific marketing situation facing the company.

Marketing research

100

This type of segmentation divides customers based on their usage rate, loyalty, or readiness to buy.

Behavioral

100

Setting high initial prices for early adopters before lowering them is known as this.

Skim pricing

100

This can be defined as a deeply held commitment to rebuy or repatronize a preferred product or service in the future despite situational influences and marketing efforts having the potential to cause switching behavior.

Loyalty

200

This is the art and science of choosing target markets and getting, keeping and growing customers through creating, delivering and communicating superior customer value.

Marketing Management

200

Awareness, Interest, Consideration, Purchase, and Loyalty are all stages in this visual representation describing the customer journey.

Marketing funnel

200

This loyalty group describes consumers who switch between 2–3 brands regularly.

Split loyals

200

Pricing is the only "P" in the marketing mix that generates this.

Revenue

200

"Just do it." is Nike's example of this, a useful "hook" or "handle" to help consumers grasp what the brand is about and makes it special.

Slogan

300

The process of selecting one or more market segments to enter is called this.

Market targeting

300

This is the difference between the prospective customer’s evaluation of all the benefits and all the costs of an offering and the perceived alternatives.

Customer-perceived value

300

Attributes shared with competitors that allow a brand to be considered are known as this.

Points-of-parity

300

This pricing method relies on the assumption that costs will drop with volume and experience.

Penetration pricing

300

Jennifer Aniston for smartwater is an example of this element of 360 brand marketing.

Brand ambassador

400

This describes the net present value of the stream of future profits expected over the customer’s lifetime purchases.

Customer lifetime value

400

This is a company's ability to perform in one or more ways that competitors cannot or will not match.

Competitive advantage

400

If a marketing manager segments the market into culture-oriented, sports-oriented, or outdoor-oriented groups, he or she is segmenting on the basis of this.

Psychographic lifestyle
400

The total demand for shaving razors is not much affected by price changes. Therefore, we would say that the demand is this.

Inelastic

400

What kind of brand strategy aims to evoke emotions or create a lifestyle association with the product?

Transformational creative strategy

500

This is the act of designing the company’s offering and image to occupy a distinctive place in the minds of the target market.

Positioning

500

These are the four stages of the product lifecycle.

Introduction, Growth, Maturity, and Decline

500

The two segments that Crocs chose to target were these:

"Feel Goods" and "Explorers"

500

In this pricing method, value can be created by reducing lifecycle costs such as usage or maintenance.

Value-based pricing

500

Tide Detergent and Gain Detergent are both owned by Proctor and Gamble. Those brands are examples of this kind of brand strategy.

Multi-brand

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