The basics
Marketing planning
Market research
Seven Ps
Seven Ps (continued)
100

The management task that links the business to the customer by identifying and meeting the needs of customers profitably – it does this by getting the right product at the right price to the right place at the right time.

Marketing

100

A coffee brand identifies both active, health-conscious individuals and busy, late-night workers to market metabolism-boosting coffee or high-caffeine energy drinks, respectively.

Market segmentation

100

A methodology that gathers and integrates both numerical and narrative data within a single study.

Mixed methods research

100

The key decisions that much be made in the effective marketing of a product or service.

Marketing Mix
100

Incentives such as special offers or special deals directed at consumers or retailers to achieve short-term sales increases and repeat purchases by consumers.

Sales promotion

200

(sales of business in time period)/(total market sales in time period) x 100

Formula for market share

200

The special feature of a product or customer service that makes it different from those of competitors.

Unique selling point (USP)

200

A group of people who are asked about their attitude towards a product, service, advertisement or new style of packaging.

Focus group

200

The pattern of sales recorded by a product from launch to withdrawal from the market.

Product life-cycle

200

The chain of intermediaries a product passes through from producer to final consumer.

Channel of distribution

300

The percentage change in the total size of a market over a period of time.

Market growth

300

Porter's Generic Strategies identify these four frameworks.

Cost leadership, differentiation, cost focus, differentiation focus

300

Marketing a new product in a geographical region before a full-scale launch.

Test marketing

300

add features, repackage a product, discount the price, rebrand, sell into new markets

Product extension strategies

300

Setting a relatively low price often supported by strong promotion in order to achieve a high volume of sales.

Penetration pricing

400

An inward-looking approach that focuses on making products that can be made and then trying to sell them.

Product orientation

400

A method of analysing the product portfolio of a business in terms of market share and market growth.

BCG Matrix

400

Drawing representative selection of people because of the ease of their volunteering or selecting people because of their availability or easy access.

Convenience sampling

400

The premium that a brand has because customers are willing to pay more for it than they would for a non-branded generic product.

Brand value/brand equity

400

A pricing strategy which is illegal in Canada under the Competition Act.

Predatory pricing

500

An outward-looking approach basing product decisions on consumer demand, as established by market research

Market orientation

500

Anthropologie (a clothing brand) sells unique women's apparel and home furnishings. This is an example of...

differentiation focus strategy

500

In what kind of sampling would these biases (hidden subgroups, subgroup overrepresentation) have an important effect?

Quota sampling

500

A measure of the responsiveness of demand for a product following a change in its price.

Price elasticity demand

500

Air Canada’s' fares are often lower the further in advance they are booked, or higher around the holidays.

An example of dynamic pricing

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