Types of Products
Product Mix
Product Life Cycle
Brands
Misc.
100

Products purchased to satisfy personal and family needs

Consumer Products

100

A specific version of a product that can be designated as a distinct offering among a firm’s products

Product Item

100

What is the first stage of the product life cycle?

Introduction


100

The marketing and financial value associated with a brand’s strength in a market

Brand Equity

100

Using two or more brands on one product

Co-Branding

200

Products bought to use in a firm’s operations, to resell, or to make other products

Business Products

200

A group of closely related product items viewed as a unit because of marketing, technical, or end-use considerations

Product Line

200

The stage of a product’s life cycle when sales fall rapidly

Decline Stage


200

Brand Extension

An organization uses one of its existing brands to brand a new product in a different product category

200

Branding all of a firm’s products with the same name or part of the name

Family Branding

300

Relatively inexpensive, frequently purchased items for which buyers exert minimal purchasing effort

Convenience Products

300

Width of product mix

The number of product lines a company offers

300

The product life-cycle stage when sales rise rapidly, profits reach a peak, and then they start to decline

Growth Stage


300

The degree of brand loyalty in which a customer prefers one brand over competitive offerings

Brand Preference

300

Using similar packaging for all of a firm’s products or packaging that has one common design element

Family Packaging

400

Items with unique characteristics that buyers are willing to expend considerable effort to obtain

Specialty Products

400

Name 3 Product Lines for Adidas

Shoes, Accessories, Apparel 

400

What are two ways that you can extend the life cycle of a product?

Extension, Modification, Improvement

400

The degree of brand loyalty in which a customer strongly prefers a specific brand and will accept no substitute

Brand Insistence

400

The part of a brand that is not made up of words, such as a symbol or design

Brand Mark (Logo)

500

Unsought Products

Products purchased to solve a sudden problem, products of which customers are unaware, and products that people do not necessarily think of buying

500

depth of product mix

The average number of different products offered in each product line

500

The stage of a product’s life cycle when the sales curve peaks and starts to decline, and profits continue to fall

Maturity Stage

500

The degree of brand loyalty in which a customer is aware that a brand exists and views the brand as an alternative purchase if their preferred brand is unavailable

Brand Recognition
500

The five-stage process of buyer acceptance of a product: awareness, interest, evaluation, trial, and adoption

Product Adoption Process