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Homework answers / question archive / University of Houston, Downtown MBA 6208 Chapter 15 Introducing New Market Offerings Which of the following is most closely related with the organic growth of an organization? acquiring a product or service brand entering new marketplaces increasing the operational profitability increasing productivity of employees developing new products from within   New-to-the-world products are                

University of Houston, Downtown MBA 6208 Chapter 15 Introducing New Market Offerings Which of the following is most closely related with the organic growth of an organization? acquiring a product or service brand entering new marketplaces increasing the operational profitability increasing productivity of employees developing new products from within   New-to-the-world products are                

Management

University of Houston, Downtown

MBA 6208

Chapter 15 Introducing New Market Offerings

  1. Which of the following is most closely related with the organic growth of an organization?
    1. acquiring a product or service brand
    2. entering new marketplaces
    3. increasing the operational profitability
    4. increasing productivity of employees
    5. developing new products from within

 

  1. New-to-the-world products are                 .
    1. low-cost products designed to obtain an edge in highly competitive markets
    2. new product enhancements that supplement established products
    3. new versions of an existing product that has been less successful
    4. new products that create an entirely new market
    5. existing products that are targeted to new geographical markets

 

  1. Which of the following firms is most likely to seek radical innovation?
    1. a traditional publishing company
    2. a small scale FMCG company
    3. a firm that procures and markets wheat
    4. a high-tech firm in telecommunications
    5. a firm that sells mineral water

 

  1. Most new-product activities are devoted to                .
    1. changing the target markets
    2. developing new-to-the-world products
    3. introducing backward integration
    4. improving existing products
    5. changing the existing market dynamics

 

  1. Which of the following is the best example of a new-to-the-world product?
    1. Walmart, the retail giant, opens new stores in an underdeveloped African country.
    2. Pestorica, a publishing company, decides to launch a new sports magazine.
    3. Tata Motors, an Indian automobile company, acquires Jaguar to extend its business.
    4. An Asian company licenses a US apparel brand name though the brand is not familiar in Asia.
    5. Kids-Med, a company that produces childcare products, launches a non-contact thermometer.

 

  1. Most established companies focus on                  innovation when they aim to enter new markets by tweaking existing products, or they want to stay one step ahead in the market by using variations on a core product.
    1. incremental
    2. continuous
    3. spontaneous
    4. radical
    5. competitive

 

  1. Jordan's firm enters new markets by tweaking products for new customers, uses variations on a core product to stay one step ahead of the market, and creates interim solutions for industry-wide products. In other words, it uses                                                                                                                                                                                                                         .
    1. disruptive technologies
    2. incremental innovation
    3. complex innovations
    4. discontinuous innovations
    5. radical innovations

 

  1. Fewer than 10 percent of all new products are truly innovative and new to the world.

 

  1. It has been observed that most new products have shorter product life cycles. What is the reason for this?
    1. Most new products do not use technology.
    2. Most new products are not backed by a marketable idea.
    3. New products do not get adequate management support.
    4. Social and governmental constraints lead to this failure.
    5. Rivals quickly copy products that are successful.

 

  1. Which of the following strategies for new-product development incorporates buyers' preferences in the final design of the product?
    1. quality function deployment
    2. market leadership
    3. cost leadership
    4. incremental innovation
    5. disruptive technology

 

  1. Pager, a simple personal device for short messages, became famous in the 1990s. Troveron Communications launched a pager in the early twenty-first century. Due to the introduction of mobile phones and text messaging, the pager industry was on a decline. The company's innovations were not well received by the market and the product was a failure. Which of the following is the most likely reason for the product's failure in this case?
    1. poor launch timing of the product
    2. a small and fragmented target market
    3. high cost of development
    4. social and economic constraints
    5. hasty product development

 

  1. After creating a product prototype, a company tests it within the firm to see how it performs in different applications. The company refines the prototype to correct the mistakes found in in-house testing. What should be the next step?
    1. commercializing the product
    2. performing concept testing
    3. conducting beta testing with customers
    4. creating a marketing strategy for the product
    5. performing business analysis

 

  1. Organic growth refers to increasing the profitability of the organization by increasing employee productivity.

 

  1. Companies typically must create a strong R&D and marketing partnership to pull off a radical innovation.

 

  1. High-tech firms that function in a market with high technological uncertainty, high market uncertainty, and high investment costs are not likely to seek radical innovation.

 

 

  1. Companies that fail to develop new products leave their existing offerings vulnerable to increased domestic and foreign competition.

 

 

  1. Most established companies focus on incremental innovation rather than radical innovation.

 

  1. Shorter product life cycles are common in industries characterized by low level of competition.

 

  1. Identify a shortcoming of giving the responsibility to develop new products to the product managers of a company.
    1. They would not be familiar with the industry standards.
    2. Product managers would not have an operational focus.
    3. Product managers are often busy managing existing lines.
    4. They will find it difficult to gain support from employees.
    5. Product managers are less likely to use participative management.

 

  1.                      teams are cross-functional groups charged with developing a specific product or business.
    1. Virtual
    2. Venture
    3. Fundamental
    4. Elemental
    5. Transitory

 

  1. Intercom Inc., together with its subsidiaries, primarily engages in the generation, transmission, and distribution of electric power in the United States. The company observes that its growth has stagnated over a period of two years. In an attempt to promote growth, it considers adding new features to the existing products and introducing a few new products. The company forms a committee consisting of three top executives, one of the production mangers, a few operational managers, and a representative of the HR department to generate ideas. This team is called a(n)                                                                                                                                                     team.
    1. virtual
    2. venture
    3. fundamental
    4. elemental
    5. transitory

 

  1. A team formed at Intercom Inc. to generate ideas for new products conducts frequent meetings and engages in activities such as mind mapping and brainstorming. Most of the meetings are conducted at informal locations away from office. These workplaces are called              .
    1. skunkworks
    2. idea funnels
    3. research centers
    4. stage-gate systems
    5. contextual bases

 

  1. A                      divides the innovation process into stages with a checkpoint at the end of each stage.
    1. reverse assumption analysis technique
    2. skunkworks system
    3. stage-gate system
    4. spiral development process
    5. new-product department technique

 

  1.                      are informal workplaces, sometimes garages, where intrapreneurial teams attempt to develop new products.
    1. Stage-gate systems
    2. Skunkworks
    3. Funnels
    4. Opportunity spaces
    5. Research centers

 

  1. Which of the following questions is answered during the business analysis of ideas?
    1. Will this product meet our profit goals?
    2. Have we got a technically and commercially sound product?
    3. Can we find a cost-effective, affordable marketing strategy?
    4. Can this product meet sales expectations?
    5. Can we find a good concept consumers say they would try?

 

  1. During which of the following stages in new product development decision making do managers analyze if they can find a good thought consumers say they would try?
    1. idea generation
    2. idea screening
    3. business analysis
    4. concept development and testing
    5. product development and testing

 

  1. A                      process recognizes the value of returning to an earlier stage to make improvements before moving forward.
    1. spiral development
    2. reactive development
    3. market testing
    4. proactive development
    5. concept testing

 

  1. Companies should use normal investment criteria to budget for new-product developments.

 

  1. Almost all companies use the conventional percentage-of-sales figure while budgeting for new product development.

 

  1. Skunkworks are formal workplaces where intrapreneurial teams attempt to develop new products.

 

  1. Venture teams are cross-functional groups charged with developing a specific product or business.

 

  1. A business analysis is performed mainly to identify if a company has got a technically and commercially sound product.

 

 

  1. A spiral development process recognizes the value of returning to an earlier stage to make improvements before moving forward.

 

 

  1. Angell Healthcare, the world's largest manufacturer of protective gloves and clothing, adopted a spiral development process, which divided the innovation process into stages with checkpoints at the end of each stage, to develop products that increased overall sales from 4.6 percent to 13 percent in a little over two years.

 

 

  1.                      means inviting the Internet community to help create content or software, often with prize money or a moment of glory involved.
    1. Stage-gating
    2. Cocreation
    3. Microstocking
    4. Buzzing
    5. Crowdsourcing

 

  1. Companies such as Edison Nation and the Big Idea Group have sprung up to tap into                                             possibilities, often combining its own design, branding, engineering, and sales teams with online participants, forming a community for devising new products.
    1. stage-gating
    2. cocreation
    3. microstocking
    4. buzzing
    5. crowdsourcing

 

  1. Surgeons and ER nurses would be considered           for surgical equipment.
    1. venture agents
    2. internal customers
    3. buzz agents
    4. lead users
    5. connectors

 

  1. Many people believe that customer focus does not help to create better, or new, products. This belief rests on which of the following ideas?
    1. Such new product developments decrease the chances of success.
    2. Customers do not consider the cost of design when making suggestions.
    3. Customers are at times unaware of what they really want.
    4. It increases the cost of testing a product or service.
    5. Having too much customer focus leads to a negative brand image.

 

  1. The technique for stimulating creativity lists all the characteristics of an object and then modifies each to try to arrive at a new idea.
    1. reverse assumption analysis
    2. lateral marketing
    3. attribute listing
    4. forced relationship
    5. morphological analysis

 

  1. The technique used for stimulating creativity identifies a problem and then considers the dimension, the medium, and the power source.
    1. attribute listing
    2. reverse assumption analysis
    3. mind mapping
    4. lateral marketing
    5. morphological analysis

 

  1. In an attempt to improve the product, a company that manufactures screwdrivers discusses the modification of each attribute, such as replacing the wooden handle with plastic, providing torque power, adding different screw heads, and so on. This creativity technique is called                                                                             .
    1. attribute listing
    2. mind mapping
    3. morphological analysis
    4. lateral analysis
    5. reverse analysis

 

  1. Electro Locomotors (EL) Inc. engages in the manufacture, distribution, and marketing of custom vehicles in Brazil. Bono, a hybrid car brand that the company produces, is a market leader in the hybrid vehicles segment. With the increased global focus on nature-friendly vehicles and governmental subsidies for companies that manufacture hybrid vehicles, competition has increased for flex-fuel cars like Bono. The heads of the R&D team at EL are in a creative session to generate ideas for improvements to Bono. They consider each part of the car and discuss the possibilities of improvements in each of them. Identify the creativity technique used here.
    1. attribute listing
    2. forced relationship analysis
    3. morphological analysis
    4. reverse assumption analysis
    5. mind mapping

 

  1.   works by listing all the normal assumptions about an entity and then turning them around.
    1. Lateral marketing
    2. Attribute listing
    3. Reverse assumption analysis
    4. Forced relationships
    5. Morphological analysis

 

  1. The creativity technique begins with a thought that is written down, then proceeds to develop other thoughts that are linked to the first thought, and finally a new idea materializes by associating all of the thoughts.
    1. mind mapping
    2. contextual analysis
    3. attribute listing
    4. reverse assumption analysis
    5. morphological analysis

 

  1. Increasingly, new-product ideas arise from      that combines two product concepts or ideas to create a new offering.
    1. reverse assumption analysis
    2. lateral marketing
    3. attribute listing
    4. forced relationships
    5. morphological analysis

 

  1. A group of college graduates decides to start a business. Though they are knowledgeable in various business domains, they are unable to arrive at a valuable business idea. They decide to search for ideas in a structured manner. They meet and start discussing everyone's ideas. Each idea is recorded and then the thoughts that come up in relation to the ideas are written down and discussed. This process helps them to finalize a business plan. What technique is used here?
    1. morphological analysis
    2. forced relationship analysis
    3. reverse assumption analysis
    4. attribute listing
    5. mind mapping

 

  1. Morboro Energy Inc. is a large chain of fuel stations in Europe. The company decided to expand its business by incorporating restaurants and automobile service stations as a part of its fuel outlets. This is an example of                                                                                                                                                                                                                  .
    1. lateral marketing
    2. brand extension
    3. market development
    4. internal marketing
    5. brand personification

 

  1. A                      error occurs when the company dismisses a good idea.
    1. probability
    2. performance
    3. double counting
    4. DROP
    5. GO

 

  1. The stage in the new product process that occurs first and has a pass ratio of 1:4 is the                stage.
    1. idea screening
    2. product development
    3. test marketing
    4. product soft launch
    5. concept testing

 

  1. Crowdsourcing means inviting an Internet community to help create content or software, often with prize money or a moment of glory as an incentive.

 

 

  1. Cocreation can help a company create favorable word of mouth.

 

  1. Employees can be a source of ideas for improving production, products, and services.

 

  1. Attribute listing lists several ideas and considers each in relationship to the others.

 

  1. Reverse assumption analysis lists all the normal assumptions about an entity and then turns them around.

 

  1. Morphological analysis starts by forming a new dimension and then thinks about the possible problems of the dimension.

 

 

  1. A DROP-error occurs when the company accepts a bad idea.

 

  1. A(n)                      is a possible product the company might offer to the market.
    1. test brand
    2. alpha product
    3. beta version product
    4. product idea
    5. product concept

 

  1. A(n)                      is an elaborated version of a product idea expressed in consumer terms.
    1. test brand
    2. alpha product
    3. beta product
    4. business schedule
    5. product concept

 

  1. A category concept defines the product's attributes and features.

 

  1. When a company combines two product concepts or ideas to create a new offering, it is called reverse assumption analysis.

 

 

  1.                      means presenting the product concept to target consumers, symbolically or physically, and getting their reactions.
    1. Perceptual mapping
    2. Brand-positioning mapping
    3. Brand attribute mapping
    4. Concept development
    5. Concept testing

 

  1. Modern firms use the          tool to design products on a computer and then produce rough models to show potential consumers for their reactions.
    1. morphological analysis
    2. rapid prototyping
    3. concept testing
    4. perceptual mapping
    5. conjoint analysis

 

  1. Brown & Smith Inc. engages in the design, development, making, and retail selling of designer jewelry in North America. Before approving a new design, the company draws it on a computer and then produces models to show potential consumers and get their reactions. This allows the company to analyze the possible customer reaction. Identify the concept testing method used here.
    1. conjoint analysis
    2. perceptual mapping
    3. virtual reality testing
    4. rapid prototyping
    5. digital fabrication

 

  1. Consumer preferences for alternative product concepts can be measured through                                    , a method for deriving the utility values that consumers attach to varying levels of a product's attributes.
    1. concept testing
    2. perceptual mapping
    3. gap level analysis
    4. conjoint analysis
    5. morphological analysis

 

  1. With              , respondents see different hypothetical offers formed by combining varying levels of the attributes, then rank the various offers.
    1. gap level analysis
    2. conjoint analysis
    3. perceptual mapping
    4. concept testing
    5. morphological analysis

 

  1. Universal Services Inc. provides communication services to residential and business customers in rural and small urban communities primarily in northern England. The company offers services such as local and long distance voice, data, and Internet and broadband product offerings. The company, in an attempt to increase the attractiveness of its offerings, decides to provide special voice and data packages to its customers. The company designs eight different packs that offer varying voice and data benefits to customers. The company then asks a few of its customers to rank the packs in order to choose two best packs. Which of the following testing methods is being used in this scenario?
    1. virtual reality testing
    2. conjoint analysis
    3. perceptual mapping
    4. product fabrication
    5. rapid prototyping

 

  1. The trade-off approach may be easier to use when there              .
    1. are many variables
    2. are only a few alternatives
    3. are observers that are biased
    4. are possible offers that are limited
    5. is only one highly desirable solution

 

  1.   is a "hybrid" data collection technique that combines self-explicated importance ratings with pair-wise trade-off tasks.
    1. Sales wave analysis
    2. Simulative data testing
    3. Adaptive conjoint analysis
    4. Business analysis
    5. Exponential data collection
  2.   exhibit replacement cycles dictated by physical wear or obsolescence associated with changing style, features, and performance.
    1. Frequently purchased products
    2. High-moving goods
    3. Inexpensive products
    4. Commodity products
    5. Infrequently purchased products

 

  1. To estimate replacement sales, management must research the product's                                                                  , the number of units that fail in year one, two, three, and so on.
    1. survival-age distribution
    2. life-cycle ratio
    3. obsolescence rate
    4. business turnover ratio
    5. product-performance usage

 

  1.   contribution lists the changes in income to other company products caused by the introduction of a new product.
    1. Supplementary
    2. Dragalong
    3. Gross
    4. Cumulative
    5. Net

 

  1. The highest loss a project can create is called                   .
    1. rapid prototyping income
    2. payback income
    3. maximum investment exposure
    4. incremental yearly exposure
    5. cannibalized income

 

  1. The job of translating target customer requirements into a working prototype is helped by a set of methods referred to as          .
    1. quality function deployment
    2. quality control processes
    3. rapid prototyping
    4. marketing control
    5. control system formation

 

  1. Which of the following methodologies takes the list of desired customer attributes (CAs) generated by market research and turns them into a list of engineering attributes (EAs) that engineers can use?
    1. quality control processes
    2. quality function deployment
    3. rapid prototyping
    4. marketing control
    5. control system formation

 

  1.   testing is a customer test that involves placing the product within the firm to see how it performs in different applications.
    1. Beta
    2. Research
    3. Sales-wave
    4. Alpha
    5. Simulated

 

  1. In consumer-goods market testing, the company seeks to estimate four variables. These four variables are: trial, first repeat, adoption, and   .
    1. guaranteed response
    2. price sensitivity
    3. purchase frequency
    4. usage convenience
    5. preferential treatment

 

  1. A large FMCG company decides to test market Kora, a new brand of face cleanser, to be launched soon. The company initially distributes a few free samples to some prospective consumers. Later it offers the product to the customers at a discounted price and observes that not only more than seventy percent of the customers are purchasing it but the same number are also satisfied using it. The company keeps using this process 3-4 times to obtain a correct count of the number of people purchasing the product repeatedly. Which of the following testing methods is being used here?
    1. simulated testing
    2. controlled testing
    3. full test marketing
    4. parallel testing
    5. sales-wave research

 

  1. Which of the following is an advantage of sales-wave research?
    1. It gives surprisingly accurate results on advertising effectiveness.
    2. It allows the brand to gain favorable shelf position.
    3. It guarantees immediate brand recognition and high sales volume.
    4. It can be implemented quickly with a fair amount of security.
    5. It easily creates a buzz in the minds of customers.

 

  1. Which of the following is usually referred to as a full-blown test market?
  1. an internal focus group
  2. a discussion group
  3. a country
  4. a city or a few cities
  5. a laboratory Answer: D

 

  1. The least costly way of consumer-goods market testing is                 .
  1. simulated test marketing
  2. controlled test marketing
  3. a few test markets
  4. sales-wave research
  5. test marketing in 25 percent of the country

 

  1. Which of the following products is most likely to undergo alpha and beta testing?
  1. food products
  2. industrial goods
  3. consumer products
  4. commodities
  5. FMCG products

 

  1. During  testing, the company's technical people observe how customers use the product, a practice that often exposes unanticipated problems of safety and servicing and alerts the company to customer training and servicing requirements.
  1. beta
  2. research
  3. sales-wave
  4. alpha
  5. simulated

 

  1. Concept testing means validating the product concept by discussing within the design group.

 

  1. Rapid prototyping refers to designing products on a computer and then producing rough models to show potential consumers for their reactions.

 

 

  1. Perceived value refers to the gap between actual needs and satisfied needs of a customer.

 

  1. Consumer preferences for alternative product concepts can be measured with conjoint analysis.

 

  1. A major drawback of conjoint analysis is that it cannot be used to measure objective attributes such as estimated market share and profit.

 

 

  1. The trade-off approach may be easier to use when there are only a few variables and alternatives.

 

  1. Beta testing tests the product within the firm to see how it performs in different applications.

 

  1. Sales-wave research can be implemented quickly and carried out without final packaging and advertising.

 

  1. Expensive industrial goods and new technologies will normally undergo alpha and beta testing.

 

  1. In response to a short-term oversupply of wine in the marketplace, the makers of Kendall-Jackson developed two new brands by using rapid prototyping — designing products on a computer and producing rough models to show potential consumers for their reactions — to quickly bring its ideas to life.

 

 

  1. Cannibalized income is additional income to a company as a result of a new product.

 

  1. Customers of a proposed truck may want a certain acceleration rate, which is a desired customer attribute. Engineers can turn this into the required horsepower and other engineering attributes through a process known as alpha testing.

 

  1. For a frequently purchased new product, the seller estimates repeat sales as well as first-time sales. A high rate of repeat purchasing means customers        .
  1. value price more than differentiation
  2. do not support innovation on brands
  3. value differentiation more than price
  4. prefer personalized products rather than standard ones
  5. are satisfied with the product

 

  1. Poga International, a multinational beverage corporation identifies that one of its competitors is launching an apple flavored drink. The company decides to launch an apple flavor brand along with its competitor. What timing strategy is used here?
  1. first entry
  2. blunt entry
  3. parallel entry
  4. late entry
  5. exchange entry

 

  1. Some firms might delay the launch of their products until after the competitor has borne the cost of educating the market. Such an entry is called            entry.
  1. strategic payoff
  2. parallel
  3. balancing
  4. late
  5. compensating

 

  1. After a test, the most customer-appealing offer will be the most profitable offer to make.

 

  1. A business analysis is typically performed after management has developed the product concept and marketing strategy.

 

 

  1. Survival-age distribution refers to the number of customers that the product has in year one, two, three, and so on.

 

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