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        | their intangibility makes them difficult to portray in advertisements |  | 
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        | sold primarily to customers for either personal or household use |  | 
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        | purchased frequently without much time taken for making a decision |  | 
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        | purchased less frequently and require time and comparison shopping |  | 
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        | the buyer will not accept a substitute |  | 
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        | people are not normally planning to purchase these products (e.g. life insurance) |  | 
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        | sold by one company to another company |  | 
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        | pencils, printer ink cartridges, staples, etc. |  | 
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        | more expensive equipment and machinery (e.g. computers, printers) |  | 
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        | plastic sheets, iron ore, lumber used to produce other products |  | 
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        | become part of a manufacturer's finished good (e.g. a computer chip, a stereo for a new car) |  | 
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        | buildings, production lines, major machinery |  | 
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        | desks, phones, FAX machines |  | 
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        | legal advice, consultant advice, advertising agencies, maintenance services |  | 
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        | from R&D phase to the entry of the product into the marketplace |  | 
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        | sales increase rapidly as does competition |  | 
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        | sales level off and start to decline as competition heats up |  | 
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        | sales and profits nosedive and eventually the product may be taken off the market |  | 
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        | an attempt to "refresh the marketing efforts" to try to save the product from being taken off the market |  | 
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        | thinking up new products that may satisfy consumers |  | 
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        | reducing the long list of possible products to a more manageable number of ideas |  | 
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        | a study of costs, likely sales and profits to see if they meet the company's objectives |  | 
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        | developing a working physical product |  | 
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        | trying out the sales of the product in one or more cities to gauge market share and profitability |  | 
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        | bring the product to the marketplace to see if it succeeds or fails with consumers |  | 
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        | a unique name, symbol, or design that identifies the product as different from competitive products. |  | 
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        | how often a consumer continues to purchase the same brand |  | 
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        | — a consumer is aware of the brand in terms of what type of product it is. |  | 
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        | a consumer will prefer to buy this brand if it is available when the consumer wants to purchase it. |  | 
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        | the buyer will not accept a substitute brand for this product |  | 
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        | the part of the brand that cannot be expressed verbally (e.g. a Nike swoosh, McDonald's golden arches) |  | 
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        | produced and advertised by a national advertiser |  | 
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        | brand names owned by wholesalers or retailers |  | 
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        | plain wrapped products that do not give the name of the manufacturer, but only the type of product (e.g. aluminum foil). |  | 
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        | two companies link their brand names to sell a single product |  | 
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        | an agreement to manufacture the product and to use the owner's brand name (e.g. Spalding sporting goods) |  | 
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        | protects the product from damage and makes the product easy to find in a group of products |  | 
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        | listing the ingredients or contents of a product (e.g. food) |  | 
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        | Universal product code (UPC) |  | Definition 
 
        | a set of black stripes on the package that is used to track sales and price at checkout scanners at supermarkets and other retail outlets. |  | 
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        | a set of closely related products (e.g. cereals, detergents, diapers, laptop computers, printers)a set of closely related products (e.g. cereals, detergents, diapers, laptop computers, printers) |  | 
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        | the company's entire set of products that it sells |  | 
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        | using a familiar brand to identify products made by the same manufacturer (e.g. Kellogg's, Campbell's, Kenmore) |  | 
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        | adding a new product to an established brand name (e.g. Vanilla coke). |  | 
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        | should the product be standardized or customized to fit the culture, language, and needs of consumers in another country? |  | 
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        | what objectives are you trying to achieve with your price |  | 
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        | two companies agree on what price to charge consumers (this is illegal) |  | 
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        | charging different customers who are the same type different prices (this is illegal) |  | 
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        | misleading consumers as to the actual price |  | 
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        | setting a price at a certain percentage above the cost of producing the product |  | 
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        | determining how many units must be sold so that the company's sales revenues exactly equal its expenses |  | 
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        | do not change with the number of units produced (e.g. rent, managerial salaries, utilities costs) |  | 
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        | change with the number of units produced (e.g. raw materials, direct labor costs) |  | 
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        | keeping the production cost per unit low enough to allow the company to make a profit at a specific selling price. |  | 
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        | charging a price for each item so that it differs in different retail outlets |  | 
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        | purposely charging an initial high price for a new product to "skim the cream" off of the market by attracting less–price sensitive customers. |  | 
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        | charging an initial low price for a new product to discourage competition and build market share. |  | 
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        | a price reduction intended to give wholesalers and retailers a profit when they sell the item |  | 
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        | setting an affordable price for a higher quality item |  | 
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        | occurs when two competitors continuously try to underprice each other |  | 
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        | grouping two or more products together with a single price (e.g. McDonald's Value Meal #3). |  | 
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        | re–pricing products to meet supply and demand (e.g. American Airlines changing its fares several times each day up until departure). |  | 
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        | eBay to sell products at the highest price possible |  | 
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