Monday, 21 November 2011

Find out the various types of consumers in the consumer market and the business market


An individual who buys  products or services for personal use and not for manufacture or resale is known as a consumer. In other words, a consumer consumes the goods and services produced. A consumer is someone who can make the decision whether or not to purchase an item at the store, and someone who can be influenced by marketing and advertisements. Any time someone goes to a store and purchases a toy, shirt, beverage, or anything else, he or she is making that decision as a consumer.
Mahatma Gandhi said “a customer is the most important visitor in our premises. He said, consumers play a very important role in the survival of goods or services. He is not dependent on us, we are on him. He is not an interruption to our work; he is the purpose of it”.
The types of buyers and consumers are combined within several major categories, the consumer market and the business market. The consumer market comprised of individuals and households that purchase goods and services for personal consumption whereas the business market  are organisational entities that purchase goods and services for the use in the production of other products and services or for the purpose of reselling to others  at a profit.
Goods bought in the consumer market can be categorised in several ways, these include; Fast moving consumer goods (milk, sugar, ready meals etc), consumer durables (microwaves, cookers, fridges etc), soft goods (chlothes,shoes etc) and  services   (hairdressing,babering,dentist etc).
The consumer market is also made of the: Food and Beverage market which consists of the sub-market like market for diary product, bakery products, packaged food products, beverages etc. The Retail market which comprises of the supermarket, departmental stores, food chain outlets etc. and The Transportation Service market, this type of consumer market consists of postal services, courier and logistics services.
Consumers can be broadly categorised into two classes’ i.e. personal consumer and organisational consumer.

Personal consumer are consumers that buy goods and services for their own personal usage. This type of consumers make their own purchasing decision and consumes the product themselves. A typical example is a person or individual who walks into a shop on a sunny day to purchase a bottle water and drink it. This category is found in the consumer market

Organisational consumer is the type of consumer in the business market. This type of consumers are mostly manufacturing companies or firm, government agencies, factories etc who purchase goods and services for the production of other goods and services, or basically to run their own business. Most of the goods they purchase are raw materials to be used in producing their products.eg Fanmilk limited buys sugar, milk, flour, flavour etc to produce ice-cream for selling.

Business markets possess a smaller amount of large buyers, unlike the consumer market whose consuming traits are “more geographically concentrated”. Depending on the the type of consumer, characteristics through decision processes may differ. For instance the consumer markets behaviour is influenced by four sets of buyer characteristics namely social, cultural, personal and psychological. The business market‘s behaviour is influenced by a buying centre that displays three types of buying situations: straight rebuys, modified rebuys and new tasks.

  A study entitled “ marketing to the post recession consumers,” by the marketing and research firm Decitica identified  the distinct types of consumers the study reveals there are four group of consumers namely: Steadfast Frugalists, Involuntary Penny-Pinchers, Pragmatic Spenders and Apathetic Materialists

 These categories were derived by analyzing the frequency, satisfaction and the self-efficacy associated with a variety of spending, purchase and consumption behaviours.

Steadfast Frugalists
Steadfast Frugalists are committed to self-restraint, engaging in prudence with unequivocal enthusiasm. They make up about one-fifth of the American consumers, representing all income and age groups. This group are the least brand loyal group hence the switch between brands.

Involuntary Penny-Pinchers are mainly made up of households with less than $50,000 income, with more women than men.
This segment take extreme care when spending money, they are reluctant to spend money unnecessarily. Also, the recession has had a heavy emotional impact on Involuntary Penny-Pinchers; they admit to being more scared, stressed and worried about the future than other groups.
Pragmatic Spenders
"Pragmatic Spenders are the most attractive group for marketers because of their higher spending power," says Dr. Val Srinivas. "While it is true that they have also curbed their spending, they are the most capable, both psychologically and financially, to wilfully resurrect their past spending patterns," he added. This group comprises twenty-nine percent of consumers.

Apathetic Materialist shows little or no interest in things around them. They are the least driven by price: only eight percent admit to being much focused on value compared to thirty percent of Pragmatic Spenders and fifty-two percent of Involuntary Penny-Pinchers.
Analysis of motorists shows that they can be divided into seven types of consumers, these are as follows:
The status seeker-for whom the car is a status seeker
The pragmatist-for whom the car is a marriage of convenience
The rationalist-to whom the car is an implement and a work tool
The design lover- for whom the car is an aesthetic project
The city bohemian- for whom the car is a trendy rebellion project
The Environmentalist- for whom the car is an ethical project
The technology enthusiast- for whom the car is a hobby project.
REFERENCE


RETRIEVED FROM:www.investorwords.com/2975/marketing      
                            
Dr. Val Srinivas(2009),Principal Decitica, Marketing to the Post-Recession Consumers

What are the characteristics of the various stages in the Product Life Cycle? Identify the laggards in the Product Life Cycle.

A product, just like a human being has a life span, it does not live forever. At a point it is expected to die off. A product has an introduction stage, growth stage, maturity stage, saturation stage and the decline stage; this is known as the stages of a product life cycle, hence a product necessarily goes through a life cycle.
The various stages of the product life cycle has characteristics which distinguishes them from each other. These characteristics are as follows:

The introduction stage being the first of the product life cycle introduces the product into the market. At this stage, there should be more of advertising in which the advertisement should highlight the benefits and features of the product/service. An example is when Biotone cream emerged the ad message was how good the product is and  how it gives a beautiful skin tone hence their slogan “ Biotone, a beautiful tone” Here, advertisement should aim at gaining respect and a good reputation to attract customers. . The types of consumers here are called the innovators.
Costs of production are very high at the introduction stage but low sales are being recorded. Demands for the product are also being created and customers are prompted to try the product by giving them samples to go and try. Another important characteristic of the introduction stage is that profit or money is not made.

The growth stage is the second stage of the product life cycle, advertising is of prime importance since depending on your efforts, and the product can gain a certain market share or mindset. This stage is known as the teething stage; sales can increase impressively but diminish at a point in time. Promotional messages must therefore impress audience to avoid dipping.eg Expresso is experiencing a dip after taking over from kasapa.
Some characteristics of the growth stage are: cost reduced due to economies of scale, economies of scale is the increase in efficiency of production as the number of goods being produced increases.  Sales volume increases significantly and hence profits begins to rise. There is also increased competition which leads to price decrease; public awareness increasing is another important characteristic of the growth stage. The types of consumers you find here are called the early adopters.

The maturity stage is the third stage of the product life cycle, at this stage the product has been in existence for a while so consumers or customers know the attributes, qualities, benefits and features of it. Strategies like price reduction, distribution of incentives to distributors, wholesalers, retailers and vendors (e.g. is the fridges distributed wholesalers and retailers by Coca Cola), promotions and adding additional benefits to the existing products e.g. Omo -3-in-1
Some of the characteristics of the maturity stage also include: costs lowered as a result of production volume increasing and experience curve effects, it is the most profitable stage. The competing products may be very similar at this point increasing the difficulty of differentiating the products.

The saturation stage is the stage where there may be few or no customers left .the appropriate strategies  used at this stage are sales promotion like” buy-one-get-one-free”, gift vouchers, raffle draws and the ongoing Guinness football challenge program by Guinness Ghana; product or service innovation like “Gino rice”,” Gino oil”,” Gino tomato paste” and “Gino spaghetti”, and advertisement are towards reminder messages to remind customers about the product and reassure of the several benefits. Profits reduce drastically at this stage and few customers here are the late majority customers.

The final stage of the product life cycle is the declining stage; the product is dying at this stage. Revamping, relabeling and rebranding are the best strategies used at this stage.eg lifebuoy has rebranded, revamped and relabeled their product all over again.at this stage distribution are selective, channels that no longer profitable are faced out. Notwithstanding there are still few customers left at this stage, these customers are known as the laggards.

 Laggards are people who find it difficult accepting change or take a longer time to change. They will therefore continue to use the product until it fades out totally from the market.

References
Mr. Gyau (2011), lecture notes

Beryl Naa Amorkor Adom
Level 300 (Weekend)

Saturday, 29 October 2011

What are the criteria for selecting an international agency for an international advertising?


International advertising is  the advertising of goods, services and ideas across boundaries, that is advertising globally or internationally.
The company orientation, growth of global tourism, existence of large group of people across national boundaries who are potential consumers and the availability of international media that could be used for advertising are some of the reasons organizations advertise globally.
When advertising globally, the language, culture and tradition, illiteracy level of the people in the particular country an organisation wants to advertise in should be taken into consideration.
In advertising globally, you need to select an international agency to handle your publicity campaign. It is important to take into consideration certain factors. Some of which are as follows;
The budget of the organisation: it is important for the organisation to know the fee charged by international agencies to compare it to the budget allotted for the campaign. The organisation must make sure that it doesn’t exceed its budget.
The reputation of the international agency is another important criterion for selecting a particular advertising agency. The ad agency must be noted for its good works; this is to ensure reliability and quality of service.
The size of the ad agency is another important factor; The ad agency must have the required number of branches that has the ability to reach the organization’s market of target audience. This is called agency market coverage.
International coordination or the international ad agency is crucial to the selection of an ad agency. The agency must have the ability to coordinate internationally when it comes to campaigning in local countries.
Also, an organisation can research into the background of a particular ad agency to find out how familiar the ad agency is with the product or service it is to publicize. This is to help measure how effective the agency would carry out the campaign.
Other criteria include; language that is the ability of the ad agency to use and understand different languages. And the ability of the ad agency to have some expertise and level of professionalism.
Beryl Adom
Level 300 (weekend)