Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Week 8 EOC: Disasterous New Products

First released in November 2006, the Zune was Microsoft’s “me too” answer to the iPod. While it had some nifty product features that the iPod lacked (like sharing music from player to player), the Zune, despite an expensive marketing effort by Microsoft, never really caught on. At its best, it was able to crack into low double-digit market share while the dominant iPod took around 65%. More ominously, in a filing with the SEC in January, Microsoft disclosed that it had seen Zune revenues decline 54% in the preceding quarter. (At the same time, iPod revenues increased by 3%.) Of all MP3 players listed on Amazon.com currently, the first Zune model comes in at 36 behind an army of iPods and a few Sansoms.Why did it fail? On a design level, the Zune lacked style and the simplicity of Apple’s interface. The Zune seemed clunky in comparison. Perhaps more importantly, though, the Zune could not be used with Apple’s iTunes program, an even more dominant product in its market than the iPod. By integrating the music experience (from cradle to grave, so to speak), Apple created strong disincentives to any competitor that just could not be overcome.

Betamax was the first home video recording tape to hit the market in May 1975. Sony, however, was not the only company that had been working on recording video data on magnetic tapes. In 1976, JVC rolled out the VHS format and a format war began. As every American born before the DVD era knows, Betamax lost. But why?Several explanations have been advanced to explain Betamax’s market failure. Sony was slower to license the technology to other manufacturers. VHS was, for a time, less expensive. Sony refused to let the pornography industry use Betamax. The main problem, though, was time. When VHS was first introduced, the tapes could hold two hours of video compared to Betamax’s one. By 1977, when JVC partnered RCA, VHS could hold four hours. As everyone knows, an hour does not a movie make. As a result, forty production companies adopted VHS instead of Betamax. In 1988, Sony conceded defeat and began producing its own VHS VCRs.

Fianl Project: Implementation Evaluation Control

Marketing implementation is the process that turns marketing plans into marketing actions in order to accomplish strategic marketing objectives. Whereas marketing planning addresses the what and why of marketing activities, implementation addresses the who, where, when, and how.

Once a location has been selected, it will be necessary to evaluate how to improve the costs of supplementary equipment installation required by the manufacturing process. Operational cost will be refined as well. Preliminary design for contractor bids will be drawn from this study as well as investment figures for start up. Direct cost for the plant engineering study is $12,000. Extensive sensitivity analysis will have to be performed, with feedback from consumer research, an engineering study, transfer agreement preparation, and brand-building (advertising effort) design, with the variables being price, cost, sales volume, and preliminary investment. Income statements, cash flow analysis, and a balance sheet will be produced. Also, the structure of the next financial round will be proposed. The direct cost of financial plan is $7,000.

Many managers think that “doing things right” (implementation) is as important as, or even more important than, “doing the right things” (strategy). The fact is that both are critical to success, and companies can gain competitive advantages through effective implementation. One firm can have essentially the same strategy as another, yet win in the marketplace through faster or better execution. Still, implementation is difficult—it is often easier to think up good marketing strategies than it is to carry them out.

We will buy the competitor's product and test it for quality, freshness, and shelf life. We will then make results available to store buyers and consumer groups. Meanwhile, we will prepare to enter this market with better standards than the competitor, making any necessary modification of our production line quality control measures.

We may also enter markets where competition already exists with products signficantly differentiated from the competitive product. This may require us to replace packaging materials or graphics, or modify our mix of lettuces.





Final Project: Distribution

One key loyalty factor is good repair service, which in turn depends on fast and reliable parts distribution.

The market entry strategy is to enter regional markets progressively. Las Vegas is seen as the first entry market due to its closeness to produce suppliers in the year-round Salinas growing area. Las Vegas also has the demographic/up-scale profile of a Salad Ready-accepting market. Edwards Salads intends to explore the possibility of export to Asian markets, particularly Japan. The current unfavorable export climate caused by the strong US dollar may impede rapid development of Edwards Salads markets, but several Nevadan produce brokerages have begun to offer lettuce to Edwards Salads customers.

Companies often pay too little attention to their distribution channels, sometimes with damaging results. In contrast, many companies have used imaginative distribution systems to gain a competitive advantage.

The first facility will be established close to the Las Vegas, NV Area market (either NorthWest or SouthWest). The proximity of the supply region will be a cost-reducing factor. A specific sity will be chosed by focusing on the following issues: wage rates, labor unions, access to transportation, taxes, and county inspections.

One production line consists of the following items:

  • 1 preparation table with conveyors (operated by 16 people): raw leaf lettuce heads are trimmed and cored by hand
  • 1 water chiller: to maintain wash water at low temperature
  • 1 automatic cutter: selected raw material is cut to required size
  • 2 automatic washers: one to wash cut leaves in agitated water; one to wash and rinse cut leaves
  • 5 spin dryers (operated by two people): cut leaves are dried
  • 1 dumper: cut leaves return to original shape
  • 1 electronic scale: cut leaves are weighed in lots
  • 2 automated fill-form & seal machines: cut leaves are packaged in air-filled sealed bags
  • 1 automated carton packing machine: bags are put in cartons
  • 8 transfer conveyors: product is transferred from each one of above units to the next







Final Project: Promotion

Marketers must decide how to promote and distribute the promotion program itself. A $2-off coupon could be given out in a package, at the store, via the Internet, or in an advertisement.

All indications are that the U.S. market is poised for growth in the green, leafy lettuces category, and that salads are increasingly important as a component of everyday American diets.

Fresh fruits and vegetables are already the fastest growing category in U.S. supermarkets. This fact is propelled by the strong consumer trend to eat more fresh produce. Per capita fresh vegetable consumption in the United States (excluding potatoes) increased to a record 100.9 pounds in 1982, up from 89.1 pounds in 1972. According to the USD A, which tracks trends in the sale of specific vegetables, fresh lettuce consumption increased 28% between 1962 and 1982.

Many companies fail to evaluate their sales promotion programs, and others evaluate them only superficially. Yet marketers should work to measure the returns on their sales promotion investments, just as they should seek to assess the returns on other marketing activities.

Most of this lettuce consumption takes place in the form of salads, although some is used as garnish on sandwiches. A study done for Progressive Grocer Magazine in 1984, by Leo J. Shapiro Associates, polled American consumers at random about their salad usage. The results, which are projectible to the population at large, were:

  • 21% are serving more salads
  • 72% are serving the same number of salads
  • 7% are serving fewer salads

The length of the promotion is also important. If the sales promotion period is too short, many prospects (who may not be buying during that time) will miss it. If the promotion runs too long, the deal will lose some of its “act now” force.

Final Project: Price

PRICE

For most purchases, consumers don’t have all the skill or information they need to figure out whether they are paying a good price. They don’t have the time, ability, or inclination to research different brands or stores, compare prices, and get the best deals. Instead, they may rely on certain cues that signal whether a price is high or low.

FOB prices will be set with three objectives in mind:

  1. The price will be right in order to penetrate the market
  2. The price should always cover the costs of production
  3. The price should allow for profitability

Product cost will not vary greatly with size of package, since the form-fill-seal machinery has maximum speed regardless of size. Thus, price will decrease with volume of production. We estimate that the experience curve effect will allow a decrease of cost of 20% when sales volume doubles.

Allowing for 15% profit before taxes, the FOB price will be:



12,000/day

24,000/day

8 oz packet

$0.93

$0.83

4 oz packet

$0.83

$0.66

FOB price will be adjusted every week in order to take into account daily variations in the price of the raw material (raw materials account for 20% of product cost).

Edwards Salads pricing policy will be flexible enough to maintain market position once competition arrives. This will be done by providing for better quality and extra features without necessitating dramatic price reductions which may jeopardize "positioning" as a high quality product.

In assessing competitors’ pricing strategies, the company should ask several questions. First, how does the company’s market offering compare with competitors’ offerings in terms of customer value? If consumers perceive that the company’s product or service provides greater value, the company can charge a higher price.

Final Project: Product

Product Description

A company’s product mix has four important dimensions: width, length, depth, and consistency. Product mix width refers to the number of different product lines the company carries.

Edwards Salad is a consumer food product — fresh, washed, bite-sized, detached leaves of leaf lettuce, contained in a sealed, transparent, polypropylene bag.

The product concept flows from the European culinary tradition of "salad" – a tasteful selection of appetizing and eye-appealing green leafy lettuces. These lettuces include romaine, radicchio, mache, etc.

The packaged version of this concept places it in the rapidly growing group of high-quality, premium-priced, convenience-based products which fit with the emerging American family and lifestyle.

  • Variety of salad greens eliminates need to buy heads of several kinds of lettuces, mix portions of those heads, and store the unused portions
  • Sustained freshness for at least five days if bag is maintained at proper temperature
  • Ready-to-use - eliminates trimming, washing, drying and cutting the salad
  • Pre-selection of highest quality green
  • Maintenance of nutritional content through the retail cold-chain
  • Hygienic protection of produce from dust, uncontrolled spraying spill-overs, or easy touching and tampering

Edwards Salad is manufactured through an industrial process. The bag containing the lettuces is made of transparent polypropylene. Pressurized air is added to the pouch before sealing to allow vapor exchange and to protect leaves from being crushed or bruised.

The recommended shelf life varies between 5 and 20 days, depending on the quantity of lettuce involved, the combination of leaf lettuce types, and the quality of the customer's storage facilities.

Developing the product concept into a physical product in order to ensure that the product idea can be turned into a workable market offering.

Final Project: Target Market Strategy

Market segmentation involves dividing a market into smaller segments of buyers with distinct needs, characteristics, or behaviors that might require separate marketing strategies or mixes. The company identifies different ways to segment the market and develops profiles of the resulting market segments.

Eating salads is a super-convenient way to work in a couple of servings of vegetables and/or fruit. Green salads are on the menu of almost every restaurant. You can even buy a side salad (with Romaine lettuce, carrots and tomatoes, available with fat-free or reduced-calorie salad dressing) for a buck at many fast food chains these days. And you can make a green salad at home in 5 minutes, armed with a bag of pre-washed Edwards Salads, and a bottle of light salad dressing. Not only that, but salads are cool, crunchy, and fun to eat (lots of textures, colors, and flavors). Most people enjoy eating salads--even kids! You can customize them to include the fruits and vegetables that appeal to you the most, and whichever ones you have on hand.

Dividing a market into smaller segments with distinct needs, characteristics, or behavior that might require separate marketing strategies or mixes.

For years, researchers have noted a link between eating lots of fruits and vegetables and lower risks of many diseases, particularly cancer. A recent study from the National Cancer Institute suggests that people whose diets are rich in fruits and vegetables may have a lower risk of developing cancers of the head and neck -- even those who smoke and drink heavily.

Final Project: SWOT Analysis

“Managing the marketing function begins with a complete analysis of the company’s situation. The marketer should conduct a SWOT analysis, by which it evaluates the company’s overall strengths (S), weaknesses (W), opportunities (O), and threats (T).”

This SWOT Analysis company profile is a crucial resource for industry executives and anyone looking to quickly understand the key information concerning Edwards Salads business.

Strengths: Edwards Salads has a significant market share in many markets covering 48 states. This geographical diversity helps the business sustain its competitive strengths. With a valuable private label business, innovative formats and customer service focus, the company can compete against the likes of other salad companies.

Weaknesses: Edwards Salads operates 42 manufacturing plants including dairies, bakeries, beverage plants, and meat plants. Food manufacturing represents a risk of food contamination. A serious contamination can damage the company's brand and hurt corporate profits.

Opportunities: The expansion of the company into the finance market provides a strong future opportunity. Edwards Salads Personal Finance brand provides convenience to grocery shoppers and can potentially mimic the success of salad companies that have been established earlier.

Threats: A slowing economy with higher levels of inflation affecting the price of food and greater fuel costs impacting transportation cost, Edwards Salads can have lower profit margins. Cost conscious consumers will shift their buying habits to less high-end foods and gourmet items (with greater margins) to lower margin food items.

Final Project: Objectives

Edwards Salad is a pre-packaged, ready-to-eat salad created by a company seeking to fill the market desire for foods that are both convenient and healthy. This plan is an example of a company attempting to make an innovative food product available to larger markets. The aim of Edwards Salads is to manufacture and market an innovative food product: a fresh and ready-to-eat leaf lettuce salad package. The product Edwards Salad will have wide appeal to a large variety of market segments nationwide, from consumers to the hotel, restaurant, and institutional markets. The strategy, however, is to build a consumer brand in successively larger segments of the market, region by region, and to build sales to at the same time. Profitability will be demonstrated in the first year of operation: cash flow will be generated in amounts that will permit extension of existing operations, and new regional market entries, in the first five projected years. The firm's financial objective is to reach a point where stock can be offered publicly. The factors that make this possible are the size of the market, lead time of the company over competitors, and its dedication to stay ahead through an aggressive marketing strategy and a solid program.

Final Project: Mission Statement

At Edwards Salads, our customers come first at all costs. We strive to make each customer feel special by saying, “yes” to every request and making each person that enters the store feel special. Always remember, to err is human to recover is Edwards Salads. Integrity and honesty are Edwards Salads hallmarks. We always stand for the good and noble while having a positive effect on our community and environment. Don’t try to be all things to all people – you will mean nothing to anyone. Every day we are innovative and diligent in our pursuit to fanatically please our customers. The Edwards Salads way means embracing change and encouraging risk taking which yields giant results and creates fanatical fans. In order for Edwards Salads to be the greatest restaurant brand, we must recruit and cultivate the best people. This is accomplished by hiring for attitude (energy, ambition and passion), training for skill and empowering our employees to make decisions. Fostering honest feedback and celebrating winners breeds confident and successful future leaders. A humble leader should know that each member is an important component and necessary for a successful team. We must recognize and praise the attempts, abilities and accomplishment of all associates in order to achieve our mission of providing a fanatical customer experience. Be fanatical about everything you do. At Edwards Salads, we reject stupid rules allowing our team to grow fearless leaders who understand that we will make mistakes and learn from them. We only provide superior products and services to our customers, which feeds our goal of being the best.

Week 7 EOC, Final Project: My Product Pitch


The product I am choosing to pitch is salad. Everyone is trying to live healthier these days. People are taking better care of their selves by the way they eat. Women love a healthy man. They don’t want a fat out of shape man. The ladies are attracted to fit, athletic, and healthy men who are in shape. Smoking and poor eating habits are not attractive attributes to the ladies. These are just some of the reasons I plan on marketing my bags of mixed salads. When men eat a meal they usually have French fries, potatoes, chips, or baked beans as side dishes with their food. As tasty as some of these foods are, they are not healthy choices to be consumed daily. Salad is a healthy choice. I plan on marketing my product to men by telling them that if they buy salad they will attract more ladies. Not only will they attract more ladies, but they will attract a different kind of woman… a healthier woman. People attract the kind of person they are. Thus, if a man goes to the grocery store and purchases my product they will become healthier themselves and attract more/healthier women. I am a man and I believe in this product. I love to eat salads, and all different types. I think if salads are promoted and marketed correctly men will rush to grocery stores weekly to keep a fresh bag in the house.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Week 6 EOC: 9 apps

3 Good Apps:

Twitter is the number one reason I’m staring at my iPhone when I’m supposed to be paying attention to people at the bar, or at the dining table, or anywhere really. Without Twitter, I’m not sure how much we'd ever use the phone.

There's some debate here about the best weather option for the iPhone. Some of us just bookmark Weatherunground's mobile site, and save it to the home screen. The rest of us go with the Weather Channel app, which is informative and comprehensive.

When you're out, or in, it's always nice to know what's going on in sports world. (Assuming you care about sports.) I’ve used a few sports apps, and I found ESPN's Scorecenter to be the best for getting just the score of a game. I particularly like using the notification system to get an alert on the Rebels games.

3 Bad Apps:

Teen Drug Use: 34 Warning Signs FREE The picture for this application is astonishing, the ‘teen’ looks like he’s 30? Was this found in a box of 70′s Health class materials? If you whip this out to look at the gradient of your teens bloodshot eyes, you have bigger problems than a drug-using teen.

TeeNiner: Turn Phone Numbers into Words FREE My number turned into absolotely nothing. If you have trouble remembering your numbers or you just want to see if your number is accidently “You-Are-Dumb” then this is a great waste of time.

Say It! Digital Lips $0.99 I understand trying to help people get socially brave, but having an application of lips (you choose ones closest to your race and generic make-up) say things for you like, “You want to go to the bar with me?” is a serious deal breaker.

3 App Ideas

(A) Have an app that alerts you when NEW apps are coming out.

(B) Create an app for AiLV students that gives them updates and information about school activities.

(C) Make an app that is synced with your car and alerts you when your car needs servicing.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

EOC Week 5: Best and Worst Super Bowl Commercials

THE BEST


Volkswagen: The Force

Starting with a kid in a Darth Vader costume is almost cheating. You'd have to be kind of heartless not to smile at that. It would be like heckling kittens. You knew eventually The Force would work for the kid, but the reveal is still funny.



Bridgestone - Reply All
Fun gag, and relatable. This might be the funny one people talk about this week.




THE WORST


Motorola - Xoom

Very short, very poor commercial


Doritos - Best Part

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Week 4 EOC: B2B vs Consumer Marketing

The consumer market is made up of many things that influence consumer buyer behavior. Four of these items are culture, social, personal, and psychological influences. These four things can even be broken down into sub categories. There are also 5 different stages that take place in the consumer decision process. These stages are: need recognition, information search, evaluation of alternatives, purchase decision, and purchase behavior. There are two processes companies use for new products. They are called adoption and diffusion. “The mental process through which an individual passes from first hearing about an innovation to final adoption.” Consumers go through five stages in the process of adopting a new product: Awareness: The consumer becomes aware of the new product, but lacks information about it. Interest: The consumer seeks information about the new product. Evaluation: The consumer considers whether trying the new product makes sense. Trial: The consumer tries the new product on a small scale to improve his or her estimate of its value. Adoption: The consumer decides to make full and regular use of the new product. In the buying decision, locomotive performance plays an important role. In such big-ticket purchases, buyers carefully scrutinize factors such as cost, fuel efficiency, and reliability. By most measures, GE’s locomotives outperform competing engines on most of these dimensions.” The three most common ways for analyzing the buyer’s decision are: Economic models, psychological models and consumer behavior models. Economic models - These models are largely quantitative and are based on the assumptions of rationality and near perfect knowledge. The consumer is seen to maximize their utility. This can also be used in some circumstances. Psychological models - These models concentrate on psychological and cognitive processes such as motivation and need recognition. They are qualitative rather than quantitative and build on sociological factors like cultural influences and family influences. Consumer behavior models -These are practical models used by marketers. They typically blend both economic and psychological models.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Week 3 EOC Making Money For Good

DiscoverThis.com is a woman-owned business providing quality educational products at affordable prices. As a parent, owner Marianne Cursetjee, who started her business in 2001 after leaving the corporate world to start a family, continually seeks out the most engaging, entertaining and educational science toys and kits for children of all ages, including many that have won awards from science and parenting organizations. Marianne is committed to making a difference in the world not only by encouraging children to enjoy scientific discovery through DiscoverThis.com and nurturing early childhood development and literacy through her BabyClassroom.com, but also by supporting educational organizations, including the Clackamas County Library in Oregon, SMART (Start Making a Reader Today) and others. Her personal values shine through in the promises she makes to customers, most notably that she won't sell toys that promote violence and she won't sell toys she wouldn't buy for her own children. Over the past nine years, her business has grown tremendously and is a force in the online toy industry. Now, not only does she offer quality toys and educational products for children, but she's expanding into unique gifts for the whole family, too. Scandinavian Child began shortly after the birth of founder Brenda Berg’s first child, and Scandinavian Child officially launched in the spring of 2003 with its flagship product, the Svan High Chair. Brenda quickly found high demand for high-quality children's products that emphasize beautiful design, functionality and safety, and continues her pursuit of designs without compromise. The "designs without compromise" philosophy means every product must meet demanding criteria and be stylish, safe, multifunctional, eco-friendly, superior in quality and superior in service. From the start, Brenda had a multi-brand strategy, expecting that she would find ‘neat little brands’ in Scandinavia to add to the collection. That didn’t quite happen, as wonderful brands from across the globe started finding her. Scandinavian Child currently represents six brands from Sweden, Norway, United Kingdom, France and New Zealand.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Week 3 EOC My Demographic

I am a member of generation y, also known as the Millennials. My demographic was born between 1977 and 2000. We are the children of the baby boomers, and we are estimated at being numbered at 83 million. We have a purchasing power of 733 billion which makes my group a very attractive market. We are a group that embraces technology because we are the first generation to be raised with computers, cell phones, satellite TV, iPods, and online social networks. “A recent study found that 91 percent of Millennials are on the Web, making up 32 percent of all U.S. Internet users. According to another study, 77 percent of Millennials frequent social networking sites and 71 percent use instant messaging.” http://digitalbookshelf.artinstitutes.edu/#/books/9780558851903/pages/16446470 I definitely agree with many of the attributes that are used to describe generation y. I was born in 1981, and I came up in the explosion of the internet in the 90’s. My upbringing was a lot different from my baby booming parents. Both of my parents are from the south…Louisiana to be exact. They were not raised texting, emailing, face booking, or tweeting. They grew up using type writers and word processors not laptops and iPods. Things were a lot different for me than it was for them. I already see the changes and differences between my generation and the younger one coming after me. They will have advantages and new technology at their disposal that I did not have. A persons demographic is a huge part of who they are. It can be a extremely helpful tool for marketers to determine who their target audience is. If you don’t know your target audiences’ demographic you will be missing out on a lot of crucial information that can be helping your business further succeed.