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Marketing Test

Terms

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quantitative research
seeks structured responses that can e summarized in numbers, like percentages, averages, or other stats.
qualitative research
seeks in-depth, open-ended responses, not yes or no answers.
marketing research process
a five-step application of the scientific method
consumer panels
a group of consumers who provide information on a continuing basis
marketing model
a statement of relationships among marketing variables
validity
the extent to which data measures what it is intended to measure
confidence intervals
the range on either side of an estimate from a sample that is likely to contain the true value for the whole population
focus group interview
an interview of 6 to 10 people in an informal group setting
response rate
the percent of people contacted in a research sample who complete the questionnaire
battle of brands
the competition between dealer brands and manufacturer brands
licensed brand
a well-known brand that sellers pay a fee to use
brand preference
target customers usually choose the brand over other brands, perhaps because of habit or favorable past experience
trademark
those words, symbols, or marks that are legally registered for use by a single company
homogeneous shopping products
shopping products the customer sees as basically the same and wants at the lowest price
heterogeneous shopping products
shopping products the customer sees as different and wants to inspect for quality and suitability.
product assortment
the set of all product lines and individual products that a firm sells
manufacturer brands
brands created by producers
universal produce code
special identifying marks for each product readable by electronic scanners
brand rejection
potential customers won't buy a brand unless its image is changed.
fashion
currently accepted or poplar style
fad
an idea that is fashionable only to certain groups who are enthusiastic about it, ut these groups are so fickle that a fad is even more short-lived than a regular fashion.
product liability
the legal obligation of seller to pay damages to individuals who are injured by defective or unsafe products.
concept testing
getting reactions from customers about how well a new product idea fits their needs
product/brand managers
manage specific products, often taking over the jobs formerly handled by an advertising manager, sometimes called brand managers
federal trade commission
federal government agency that polices anti monopoly laws
consumer product safety act
a 1972 law that set up the consumer product safety commission to encourage more awareness of safety in product desgin and better quality control
product life cycle
the stages a new product idea goes through from beginning to end
new product
a product that is new in any way for the company concerned
channel of distribution
any series of firms or individuals who participate in the flow of products from producer to final user or consumer
channel captain
a manager who helps direct the activities of a whole channel and tries to avoid, or solve, channel conflicts.
vertical marketing system
channel systems in which the whole channel focuses on the same target market at the end of the channel
vertical integration
acquiring firms at different levels of channel activity
reverse channels
channels used to retrieve products that customers no longer want
intensive distribution
selling a product through all responsible and suitable wholesalers or retailers who will stock or sell the product
selective distribution
selling through only those middlemen who will give the product special attention
exclusive distribution
selling through only one middleman in a particular geographic area
bulk breaking
dividing larger quantities into smaller quantities as products get closer to the final market
direct marketing
direct communication between a seller and an individual customer using a promotion method other than face-to-face personal selling
distribution center
a special kind of warehouse designed to speed the flow of goods and avoid unnecessary string costs
customer service level
how rapidly and dependably a firm can deliver what customers want
electronic data interchange
an approach that puts information in a standardized format easily shared between different computer systems
inventory
the amount of goods being stored
logistics
the transporting, storing, and handling of goods in ways that match target customers' needs with a firm's marketing mix-both within individual firms and along a channel of distribution
piggyback service
loading truck trailers or flatbed trailers carrying containers on rail cars to provide both speed and flexibility
physical distribution concept
all transporting, storing, and product-handling activities of a business and a whole channel system should e coordinated as one system that seeks to minimize the cost of distribution for a given customer service level
supply chain
the complete set of firms and facilities and logistics activities that are involved in procuring materials, transforming them into intermediate and finished products, and distributing them to customers.
transporting
the marketing function of moving goods
total cost approach
evaluating each possible PD system and identifying all of the costs of each alternative.
specialty shop
a type of conventional limited-line store-usually small and with a distinct personality.
department stores
larger stores that re orgainzed into many separate departments and offer many product lines.
mass-merchandisers
large, self-service stores with many departments that emphasize soft goods and staples and selling lower margins to get faster turnover.
wheel of retailing theory
new types of retailers enter the market as low-status, low-margin, low-rice operators and then, if successful, evolve into more conventional retailers offering more services with higher operating costs and higher prices.
franchise operation
a franchisor develops a good marketing strategy, and the retail franchise holders carry out the strategy in their own units.
merchant wholesalers
wholesalers who own the products they sell.
rack jobbers
merchant wholesalers that specialize in hard-to-handle assortments of products that a retailer doesn't want to manage-and they often display the products on their own wire racks.
export agents
manufacturers' agents who specialize in export trade.
selling agents
agent middlemen who take over the whole marketing job of producers, not just the selling function.
wholesalers
firms whose main function is providing wholesaling activities
one-price policy
offering the same price to all customers who purchase products under essentially the same conditions and in the same quantities.
flexible-price policy
offering the same product and quantities to different customers at different prices.
price discrimination
injuring competition by selling the same products to different buyers at different prices.
zone pricing
making an average freight charge to all buyers within specific geographic areas
advertising allowances
price reductions to firms in the channel to encourage them to advertise or to other wise promote the firm's products locally.
cash discounts
reductions in the price to encourage buyers to pay their bills quickly.
cumulative quantity discounts
reductions in price for larger purchases over a given period, such as a year.
unfair trade practice acts
put a lower limit on prices, especially at the wholesale and retial levels.
dumping
pricing a product sold in a foreign market below the cost of producing it or at a price lower than it its domestic market.
stocking allowances
allowances given to middlemen to get shelf space for a product-sometimes called slotting allowances.
markup
a dollar amount added to the cost of products to get the selling price.
total fixed costs
the sum of those costs that are fixed in total-no matter how much is produced.
total variable cost
the sum of those changing expenses that are closely related to output-such as expenses for parts, wages, packaging materials, outgoing freight, and sales commissions.
target return pricing
pricing to cover all costs and achieve a target return.
break-even analysis
an approach to determine whether the firm will be able to break even-that is, cover all its costs-with a particular price.
marginal revenue
the change tin total revenue that results from the sale of one more unit of a product.
price leader
a seller who sets a price that all others in the industry follow.
leader pricing
setting some very low prices-real bargains- to get customers into retail stores
prestige pricing
setting a rather high price to suggest high quality or high status.
rule for maximizing profit
the highest profit is earned at the price where marginal cost is just less than or equal to marginal revue.

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