Several product classification systems have been devised for the efficient marketing of products and services. In the first place, all products and services can be broadly grouped into two major classes on the bases of the types of consumers that use them. These classes are: consumer products and industrial products. In the second place, these two groups are further subdivided into various subgroups
(see Figure 8.2).
These are goods or services bought by the final consumer for personal consumption, in such a form that they may be used without further commercial processing.
The purpose of the marketing process is the satisfaction of consumers. Hence, to develop and market products effectively, it is necessary to know how customers feel about the products most especial y their basis of choice. It follows from here that any sub-division of consumers goods should be based on consumer behaviour. In this regard, all customer goods can be separated into four categories.
( a)Convenience products
A closer examination of these categories of products will reveal that they differ in the ways consumers buy them, hence there are differences in how they are marketed.
Convenience products are those products and services for which the probable gain from making price and quality comparisons is thought to be small relative to the value of the customer in time and efforts Examples include cigarettes, soap, newspapers, magazines, chewing gums and most grocery products. These products are frequently and readily purchased, require little service or selling efforts, are not very expensive, and may even be bought by habit.
Convenience products can be subdivided further into three types, based primarily on how customers think about and buy such products:
(i )Staples products
( i i i ) Emergency products.
Staples: Staples such as food and drug items used regularly in every household, are usually bought without much thought beyond the initial decision to buy such products. Staples are usual y purchased frequently. Here branding
becomes important since brand recognition or preference helps the customer reduce his shopping effort. In addition, if prices change occasionally on these items, he does not need to reconsider which items to purchase, since he can make do with familiar ones.
Table or figure
Usually, staple items are offered for sale in many convenient places because of customers’ reluctance to search very far. Hence, they an found mostly in food stores, drugstores, supermarkets etc.
Impulse Products:- These are products which customers typically do not seek, they are often purchased with little planning or search effort. These products are normally widely available. This is why candy bars, magazines, etc are placed next to checkout counters in many stores since shoppers may not otherwise think of buying them.
It has been observed that as the income and buying power of customers grow, the number of impulse items seems to the expanding. We should however note that not all impulse items are purchased for emotional reasons alone. To be sure, these products may satisfy both emotional and economic motives.
Emergency Products:- These are purchased only when the need is urgent, and are thus purchased less frequently. Considerations for price and quality are of little importance if the need is immediate enough. Examples include ambulance services, umbrellas or raincoats during a rainstorm.
Shopping product are those for which the probable gain from making price, style, suitability and quality comparisons is thought to be large relative to the time and effort needed to shop properly for these products. Consumers spend much time and efforts in gathering information and making comparisons when buying shopping product. Examples include furniture, clothing, used cars, and major appliances.
Shopping products can be subdivided into two classifications, depending on what customers are seeking; (1) homogenous and (2) heterogeneous.
Homogenous Shopping products are seen by the consumer to be similar in quality but different enough in price to justify shopping comparison. Examples here include refrigerators, television sets, and automobiles. Thus, each competitor has an almost perfect elastic demand curve. In such a case, a slight price cut would substantially increase sales volume, therefore, we might expect price competition among the various competitors in the market.
Heterogeneous:-Shopping products are seen by the consumer as nonstandardized, hence wants to inspect for quality and suitability because the product features are more important than price.
It is important therefore that a seller of heterogeneous shopping products carry a wide assortment to satisfy individual tastes. In addition, the seller must have well-trained salespeople to give information and advice to customers since they often prefer to be guided. Furthermore, draperies, dishes and clothing are good examples of this category of shopping product.
Speciality products are those consumer products with unique characteristics or brand identification for which or significant group of buyers is willing to make a special purchase effort. The special effort the consumer makes is not to compare the product with others, but merely to locate it, hence searching in the shopping products sense does not take place here.
Specialty products are usually specific branded items rather than product categories, i.e. they are specific products which have passed the brand preference stage and reached the brand insistence stage. For instance, consumers have been observed asking for a drug product by its brand name, and when offered a substitute actually leaving the store in anger.
Some well-advertised food and drug products seem to have carved out a market for themselves. If they achieve the brand insistence stage, we refer to them as speciality products. The demand for speciality products is relatively inelastic at least within reasonable price ranges since customers are willing to insist upon the product. Typical examples of speciality products include specific brands and types of cars, high-priced photographic equipment and custom-made men’s suits.
These are consumer products that the consumer either does not know about or knows about, but does not normal y think of buying. There seem to be two types of unsought products: Almost all new products in the introductory stages may be classified as “Unsought” until the consumer becomes aware of them through advertising.
Yet there are some consumer products that seem to perpetually remain unsought for the majority of potential customers. Aggressive and continuous promotion is, therefore, necessary for both types to move new products out of this category and simply to sell the later group (which very often never gets out of the introductory stage). Examples of unsought products include life insurance, encyclopedias, and blood donation to the Red Cross.
Industrial products are those purchased for further processing or for use in conducting a business. When this description is compared with that of consumer products, it would be seen that the distinction between then is simply based on the purpose for which the particular product was bought.
For example, if a consumer buys a camcorder for the recording of important event for personal and private use, the camcorder is seen as a consumer product If on the other hand, the consumer buys the same camcorder for the recording of events such as wedding, funeral, birthdays with the intention of receiving financial rewards, this camcorder is considered an industrial product.
The industrial product can be classified into three groups:
( a ) Materials and parts
(b )
( c)Supply and services
These are industrial products that enter the manufacturer’s product completely, including raw materials and manufactured materials and parts.
Raw Materials include farm products (e.g. Maize, wheat, cot on, cocoa beans, livestock, fruits, vegetables etc) and are supplied by many small producers who turn them over to marked intermediaries that process and sell them. The other component of raw materials are natural products (e.g. lumber, fish, crude petroleum, iron ore etc). They usually have great bulk and low unit value, and require a lot of transportation to move them from producer to user. They are also supplied by fewer but lager producers, who often tend to supply these products directly to industrial users.
Manufactured materials consist of component materials (e.g. yam, cement, wires, iron etc) and component parts (e.g. castings, engines, tires, bulbs etc).
Production is the first and the most important element in the marketing mix. A product can be defined as a set of tangible and intangible attributes, including packaging, colour, price, quality and brand, plus the seller’s services and reputation. A product may be a good, service, place, person or idea. In essence, then, consumers are buying much more than a set of physical attributes when they buy a product. They are buying want satisfaction in the form of the benefits they expect to receive from the product.
To manage its products effectively, a firm’s marketers must understand the full meaning of a product, which stresses that consumers are buying want satisfaction. Products can be classified into two basic categories i.e., consumer products and industrial products. Each category is then subdivided, because a different marketing program is required for each distinct group of product.
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