Deck 8: Elements of Product Planning for Goods and Services

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Question
A service mark is the same as a trademark, except that it refers to a service offering.
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Product means the need-satisfying offering of a firm.
Question
An individual product is a particular product within a product line.
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A "Product" should be thought of as potential customer satisfaction or benefits.
Question
"Branding" includes the use of trademarks and brand names to identify a product.
Question
A trademark can be a word, but cannot be a symbol.
Question
Brand preference means customers usually choose the brand over other brands, perhaps out of habit or past experience.
Question
Branding is more likely to be successful if the product is the best value for the price, and quality can be consistently maintained.
Question
When comparing two similar products, the product with the most features is the higher quality product.
Question
Goods are intangible and services are tangible.
Question
The "Product" area is concerned with what goods and services are produced, but not with decisions about installation, instructions on use, packaging, a brand name, a warranty, or after-sale service.
Question
A service is not a "Product" because services do not include any physical good.
Question
A "Product" might involve a physical good, a service, or a combination of the two.
Question
Brand familiarity means how well customers recognize and accept a company's brand.
Question
The definition of quality focuses on the producer.
Question
A product line is a set of individual products that are closely related.
Question
Branding would be more likely to be successful if dependable and widespread availability of a product is possible.
Question
A trademark explains what the seller promises about its product.
Question
A product assortment is the set of all product lines and individual products that a firm sells.
Question
A service logo refers to a type of trademark used for a service offering.
Question
Brand equity is the value of the brand's overall strength in the market.
Question
If a trademark is to be used in foreign markets, it is wise to register it under the Lanham Act.
Question
The Lanham Act spells out the exact method for protecting registered trademarks, but does not force firms to register their trademarks.
Question
Brand insistence means that target customers usually choose one brand over other brands, perhaps because of habit or favorable past experience.
Question
A licensed brand can be used by only one company.
Question
A product which has no brand other than the identification of the contents is a generic product.
Question
Brand equity is likely to be lower if customers insist on buying a product and retailers are eager to stock it.
Question
There is no real reason for a firm to use individual brands rather than a family brand--except to avoid confusion.
Question
A firm can lose all rights to a brand name if the name becomes a common descriptive term for that kind of product.
Question
The "battle of the brands" is the competition between dealer brands and manufacturer brands.
Question
Brand names that convey a positive image in one language may be meaningless in another.
Question
Manufacturer brands are always advertised and distributed more widely than dealer brands.
Question
The "battle of the brands" hurts consumers by driving up prices.
Question
Family brands may cut promotion costs because the goodwill attached to one or two products may help the others.
Question
Some nations require that a trademark be registered in its home country before it can be registered in a foreign country.
Question
Dealer brands are brands created by producers.
Question
A marketing manager should make sure the firm's brand names do not become so familiar that they become common descriptive terms for certain kinds of products.
Question
A major advantage of dealer brands is that the intermediary usually earns a better margin than the intermediary would earn with manufacturer brands.
Question
It is usually necessary for a firm to use a family brand rather than individual brands if it plans to offer products at different quality and price levels to different target markets.
Question
Generic products are popular in the U.S. and other developed nations, but not in less-developed nations.
Question
A warranty must be available for inspection before a purchase is made.
Question
Good packaging can provide a product with an important competitive advantage.
Question
A warranty explains what the seller promises about its product.
Question
The four groups of consumer products are: convenience products, shopping products, specialty products, and unsought products.
Question
According to the text, the consumer product classes are based on why consumers use products.
Question
Federal Fair Packaging and Labeling Act requires that consumer goods be clearly labeled in easy-to-understand terms to give consumers more information.
Question
A universal product code (UPC) contains the manufacturer's suggested retail price for the product on which it appears.
Question
It is illegal for a firm to use a package that cannot be recycled.
Question
Total distribution costs may increase because of packaging.
Question
Because packaged products are regularly seen in retail stores, a good package may give a firm more promotion effect than it could possibly afford with advertising.
Question
Spending money to improve protective packaging may be necessary, but it usually results in higher total distribution costs for a firm's product.
Question
There are two broad groups of product classes based on the type of customer that will use the product.
Question
Products which a consumer needs but isn't willing to spend much time shopping for are convenience products.
Question
Customer service guarantees are becoming less common because service companies can't live up to their promises.
Question
The Federal Fair Packaging and Labeling Act of 1966 requires that firms in a product-market reduce the number of package sizes to three or fewer for any product.
Question
The Federal Fair Packaging and Labeling Act of 1966 requires that consumer products be clearly labeled in understandable terms.
Question
The universal product code has been opposed by large supermarket chains because it slows down the checkout process.
Question
Packaging can add value to a market offering by promoting, protecting, or enhancing the product.
Question
Consumers in the U.S. generate more trash per person than anywhere else on the planet and packaging is a major contributor to this dilemma.
Question
Magnuson-Moss Act says that producers must provide a clearly written warranty if they choose to offer any warranty.
Question
Staples are consumer products which are sold in places like gourmet shops and health food stores, because convenience is not important to the customer.
Question
Shopping products that a customer sees as basically the same and wants at the lowest price are homogeneous shopping products.
Question
Consumer products which a customer buys on sight as unplanned purchases, may have bought the same way before, and wants "right now" are impulse products.
Question
For different people, the same product might be a convenience product, a shopping product, or a specialty product.
Question
Consumer products that a customer feels are worth the time and effort to compare with competing products are shopping products.
Question
Firms should try to show the value of unsought products through promotion because people do not want them or know that they are available.
Question
Consumer products that a customer really wants and is willing to make a special effort to shop for and compare different possibilities are specialty products.
Question
Shopping products are products that are purchased immediately when the need is great.
Question
Customers usually plan and shop for impulse products.
Question
Consumer products which offer really new ideas that potential customers don't know about yet are new unsought products.
Question
Without promotion, unsought products will probably stay unsold.
Question
Convenience products include staples, impulse products, and emergency products.
Question
Homogeneous shopping products are basically the same in the eyes of the customer and purchase decisions are often based on price.
Question
Personal selling is important for new unsought products, but it tends not to be important for regularly unsought products.
Question
Specialty products are usually only purchased once-in-a-lifetime, so the customer must search extensively before buying.
Question
Consumer products which are bought often, routinely, and without much thought are staples.
Question
Emergency products are purchased only when the need is great and urgent, and therefore price is usually not very important.
Question
Shopping for a specialty product involves comparing the special features of different brands.
Question
Shopping products that a customer sees as different and wants to inspect for quality and suitability are heterogeneous shopping products.
Question
Shopping products that a customer sees as basically the same and wants at the lowest price are heterogeneous shopping products.
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Deck 8: Elements of Product Planning for Goods and Services
1
A service mark is the same as a trademark, except that it refers to a service offering.
True
Explanation: A service mark is a trademark used for a service offering.
2
Product means the need-satisfying offering of a firm.
True
Explanation: Product means the need-satisfying offering of a firm. The idea of Product should be thought of as potential customer satisfaction or benefits.
3
An individual product is a particular product within a product line.
True
Explanation: An individual product is a particular product within a product line. It usually is differentiated by brand, level of service offered, price, or some other characteristic.
4
A "Product" should be thought of as potential customer satisfaction or benefits.
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5
"Branding" includes the use of trademarks and brand names to identify a product.
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6
A trademark can be a word, but cannot be a symbol.
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7
Brand preference means customers usually choose the brand over other brands, perhaps out of habit or past experience.
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8
Branding is more likely to be successful if the product is the best value for the price, and quality can be consistently maintained.
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9
When comparing two similar products, the product with the most features is the higher quality product.
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10
Goods are intangible and services are tangible.
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11
The "Product" area is concerned with what goods and services are produced, but not with decisions about installation, instructions on use, packaging, a brand name, a warranty, or after-sale service.
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12
A service is not a "Product" because services do not include any physical good.
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13
A "Product" might involve a physical good, a service, or a combination of the two.
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14
Brand familiarity means how well customers recognize and accept a company's brand.
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15
The definition of quality focuses on the producer.
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16
A product line is a set of individual products that are closely related.
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17
Branding would be more likely to be successful if dependable and widespread availability of a product is possible.
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18
A trademark explains what the seller promises about its product.
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19
A product assortment is the set of all product lines and individual products that a firm sells.
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20
A service logo refers to a type of trademark used for a service offering.
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21
Brand equity is the value of the brand's overall strength in the market.
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22
If a trademark is to be used in foreign markets, it is wise to register it under the Lanham Act.
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23
The Lanham Act spells out the exact method for protecting registered trademarks, but does not force firms to register their trademarks.
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24
Brand insistence means that target customers usually choose one brand over other brands, perhaps because of habit or favorable past experience.
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25
A licensed brand can be used by only one company.
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26
A product which has no brand other than the identification of the contents is a generic product.
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27
Brand equity is likely to be lower if customers insist on buying a product and retailers are eager to stock it.
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28
There is no real reason for a firm to use individual brands rather than a family brand--except to avoid confusion.
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29
A firm can lose all rights to a brand name if the name becomes a common descriptive term for that kind of product.
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30
The "battle of the brands" is the competition between dealer brands and manufacturer brands.
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31
Brand names that convey a positive image in one language may be meaningless in another.
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32
Manufacturer brands are always advertised and distributed more widely than dealer brands.
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33
The "battle of the brands" hurts consumers by driving up prices.
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34
Family brands may cut promotion costs because the goodwill attached to one or two products may help the others.
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35
Some nations require that a trademark be registered in its home country before it can be registered in a foreign country.
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36
Dealer brands are brands created by producers.
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37
A marketing manager should make sure the firm's brand names do not become so familiar that they become common descriptive terms for certain kinds of products.
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38
A major advantage of dealer brands is that the intermediary usually earns a better margin than the intermediary would earn with manufacturer brands.
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39
It is usually necessary for a firm to use a family brand rather than individual brands if it plans to offer products at different quality and price levels to different target markets.
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40
Generic products are popular in the U.S. and other developed nations, but not in less-developed nations.
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41
A warranty must be available for inspection before a purchase is made.
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42
Good packaging can provide a product with an important competitive advantage.
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43
A warranty explains what the seller promises about its product.
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44
The four groups of consumer products are: convenience products, shopping products, specialty products, and unsought products.
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45
According to the text, the consumer product classes are based on why consumers use products.
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46
Federal Fair Packaging and Labeling Act requires that consumer goods be clearly labeled in easy-to-understand terms to give consumers more information.
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47
A universal product code (UPC) contains the manufacturer's suggested retail price for the product on which it appears.
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48
It is illegal for a firm to use a package that cannot be recycled.
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49
Total distribution costs may increase because of packaging.
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50
Because packaged products are regularly seen in retail stores, a good package may give a firm more promotion effect than it could possibly afford with advertising.
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51
Spending money to improve protective packaging may be necessary, but it usually results in higher total distribution costs for a firm's product.
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52
There are two broad groups of product classes based on the type of customer that will use the product.
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53
Products which a consumer needs but isn't willing to spend much time shopping for are convenience products.
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54
Customer service guarantees are becoming less common because service companies can't live up to their promises.
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55
The Federal Fair Packaging and Labeling Act of 1966 requires that firms in a product-market reduce the number of package sizes to three or fewer for any product.
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56
The Federal Fair Packaging and Labeling Act of 1966 requires that consumer products be clearly labeled in understandable terms.
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57
The universal product code has been opposed by large supermarket chains because it slows down the checkout process.
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58
Packaging can add value to a market offering by promoting, protecting, or enhancing the product.
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59
Consumers in the U.S. generate more trash per person than anywhere else on the planet and packaging is a major contributor to this dilemma.
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60
Magnuson-Moss Act says that producers must provide a clearly written warranty if they choose to offer any warranty.
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61
Staples are consumer products which are sold in places like gourmet shops and health food stores, because convenience is not important to the customer.
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62
Shopping products that a customer sees as basically the same and wants at the lowest price are homogeneous shopping products.
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63
Consumer products which a customer buys on sight as unplanned purchases, may have bought the same way before, and wants "right now" are impulse products.
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64
For different people, the same product might be a convenience product, a shopping product, or a specialty product.
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65
Consumer products that a customer feels are worth the time and effort to compare with competing products are shopping products.
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66
Firms should try to show the value of unsought products through promotion because people do not want them or know that they are available.
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67
Consumer products that a customer really wants and is willing to make a special effort to shop for and compare different possibilities are specialty products.
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68
Shopping products are products that are purchased immediately when the need is great.
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69
Customers usually plan and shop for impulse products.
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70
Consumer products which offer really new ideas that potential customers don't know about yet are new unsought products.
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71
Without promotion, unsought products will probably stay unsold.
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72
Convenience products include staples, impulse products, and emergency products.
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73
Homogeneous shopping products are basically the same in the eyes of the customer and purchase decisions are often based on price.
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74
Personal selling is important for new unsought products, but it tends not to be important for regularly unsought products.
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75
Specialty products are usually only purchased once-in-a-lifetime, so the customer must search extensively before buying.
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76
Consumer products which are bought often, routinely, and without much thought are staples.
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77
Emergency products are purchased only when the need is great and urgent, and therefore price is usually not very important.
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78
Shopping for a specialty product involves comparing the special features of different brands.
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79
Shopping products that a customer sees as different and wants to inspect for quality and suitability are heterogeneous shopping products.
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80
Shopping products that a customer sees as basically the same and wants at the lowest price are heterogeneous shopping products.
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