Deck 9: Product Strategy

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Question
The dominant choice attribute for a consumer in buying convenience item is:

A) brand name.
B) price.
C) access.
D) situation specific.
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Question
Cannibalization refers to a situation when:

A) the market territory of two contiguous markets overlap.
B) the breadth and depth of a product line complicate the marketing of a service line.
C) the sale of one product takes away sales from another of the same company.
D) two competing companies confuse the other's position in the consumers' mind, thus cannibalizing their unique position.
Question
In the introduction stage of the product life cycle, the major concern for the organization is:

A) to correctly price the product or service.
B) to ensure that the product or service is a quality offering.
C) to ensure a sufficient supply in the channel of distribution.
D) to ensure that there is a value-added difference.
Question
In a skimming price strategy, the organization tends to:

A) set a high price relative to competing products or substitutable services.
B) skim off the high-end customers.
C) set a high price to allocate as much cost to this service line as possible.
D) All of these are correct.
Question
One of the key advantages of a skimming strategy for services is that:

A) it gives a service a way to develop a position to negotiate with consumers.
B) it is a useful mechanism for structuring all the costs of the services.
C) it allows for a high price because no one understands the costs.
D) it can be useful to control demand until the organization is sure that processes are in place to handle flow.
Question
The major disadvantage of a skimming strategy is that it:

A) encourages competitors to enter.
B) allows for rate-setting commissions to begin an investigation into price-setting practices.
C) ignores where the bulk of the market is.
D) All of these are correct.
Question
To implement a penetration strategy, an organization must have a good understanding of:

A) the price sensitivity of the market.
B) its cost structure.
C) its ability to deal with a reaction from competitors.
D) its debt-financing capacity.
Question
Generating primary demand is the major objective in which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Mature
D) Decline
Question
A manufacturer of proton beam therapy publishes a magazine showing articles and stories of patients whose diseases have been treated with great results using this technology. This is an example of a strategy to create:

A) differentiation.
B) skimming.
C) secondary demand.
D) primary demand.
Question
When competitors enter the market, the organization should recognize that it has entered which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Question
Intuitive Surgical has entered the market with a robotics surgical device. Because it is in the growth stage of the life cycle, it has decided to:

A) lower prices.
B) generate primary demand.
C) target different market segments for usage of its device.
D) All of these are correct.
Question
The first proton beam therapy center has now closed, and in some markets two competing centers have decided to merge. These trends indicate that the market for such facilities has entered which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Question
Generating selective demand is the key promotional objective of which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Question
In the growth stage of the life cycle, the focus on the middleman becomes one of:

A) negotiating the price.
B) gaining a presence.
C) solidifying loyalty.
D) gaining an image of the service in the channel.
Question
In the early phase of the mature life cycle, growth in sales/revenues continues to occur due to:

A) marginal competitors exiting the marketplace.
B) the lessening battle for market share.
C) stronger players beginning to solidify their position.
D) customers beginning to recognize their preferences for the brand.
Question
In the mature stage of the product life cycle, a key objective becomes one of:

A) maintaining price margins.
B) maintaining the existing customer base.
C) recognizing when it is necessary to withdraw from the market first.
D) developing selective demand.
Question
Developing new product or service lines to reposition the organization to enjoy future revenue streams should occur during which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Question
Aggressive price discounting is most common during which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Question
In the decline stage of the product life cycle, many organizations struggle with dropping an unprofitable service or product because:

A) it is often an emotional decision for the organization.
B) there is always revenue that can be obtained.
C) some people always need every service.
D) every product has value.
Question
In the life cycle of a high-learning product, the key strategic challenge is to:

A) price it at the appropriate value level.
B) educate the market as to the benefits of the product.
C) get people to learn to adapt to change.
D) get the channel to adopt to new use alternatives.
Question
Competition enters rapidly in a _______ product life cycle.

A) high-learning
B) fashion
C) fad
D) low-learning
Question
Which product life cycle has only two stages: introduction and decline?

A) High learning
B) Low learning
C) Fad
D) Fashion
Question
In health care, a major factor that affects life cycles is:

A) demographics.
B) technology.
C) reimbursement.
D) All of these are correct.
Question
Hospital-based sleep centers and many outpatient sleep centers were dramatically affected by externalities in the environment. The result was that many outpatient centers closed. What two factors affected the changes in these institutions' life cycles?

A) Reimbursement and demographics
B) Technology and physician resistance
C) Technology and reimbursement
D) Physician resistance and demographics
Question
A major criticism of the product life cycle concept has been that:

A) it is difficult to determine when to change strategy over the life cycle.
B) it is difficult to determine when one enters each stage.
C) the industry curve and product curve often intersect at different points.
D) there is no standard product life cycle curve.
Question
In recent years, the greatest change in hospital revenues has been the increase occurring in revenue from:

A) outpatient services.
B) ancillary services.
C) inpatient services.
D) emergency services.
Question
Which of the following is not a way to stretch the product life cycle?

A) Market modification
B) Product modification
C) Market repositioning
D) Product repositioning
Question
When it is touted to "brush after every meal," this is an example of:

A) creating new users.
B) market modification.
C) product modification.
D) market enhancement.
Question
Off-label use of a pharmaceutical product is an example of:

A) a high-learning product.
B) a shopping product.
C) a repositioning strategy.
D) market stretching.
Question
In terms of off-label use, Food and Drug Administration regulations:

A) allow for promotion of the off-label benefits.
B) prohibit promotion of the off-label benefits.
C) have not addressed the issue of off-label benefits.
D) allow companies to promote off-label benefits if they specifically state in the advertisements the drug was not tested for that specific condition.
Question
The Louisiana Heart Hospital focuses only on the care of heart-related diseases. This is an example of a:

A) niche strategy.
B) product-focused strategy.
C) selective-demand strategy.
D) key market strategy.
Question
Focusing on a very narrow segment of the market is a definition of a:

A) selective strategy.
B) single-segment strategy.
C) niche strategy.
D) targeted strategy.
Question
In order for a brand or service mark to have legal protection, it must have which of the following?

A) A clear registered trade or service mark that cannot be confused with those of others brands or services
B) At least three letters or symbols in its name
C) A visible logo that is used in signage and letterhead
D) A certificate showing that is registered in a state registry
Question
Brand equity is the:

A) worth of the brand in actual dollars in the marketplace.
B) total dollars a company spends in promoting its brand name.
C) equity a company has in its stock price.
D) association a consumer places with the organization's brand.
Question
Which of the following is not one of the many advantages that have been cited of having a strong brand?

A) It aids in establishing a competitive advantage.
B) It allows an organization to establish a successful digital presence.
C) It can create a barrier to entry.
D) All of these are correct.
Question
In following a house of brands strategy, it is of paramount importance to ensure that:

A) each brand has a distinct name.
B) the co-brands are of similar value.
C) there is consistency across the organization with regards to service and clinical quality.
D) the multibrand approach is understood throughout the organization.
Question
The principal/agent notion is a central concept in health care because:

A) consumers pay physicians as agents to buy medical services for them, such as laboratory and radiology tests.
B) principals such as companies hire agents to help them contract with health systems.
C) a patient trusts a doctor to make the decisions for them.
D) a doctor trusts that the patient will follow their advice.
Question
A multispecialty clinic has established a surgical center, a rehab group, and a durable medical equipment company. All of these entities are under the name of the multispecialty practice. This branding strategy would be considered:

A) co-branding.
B) a multibrand.
C) a multiproduct.
D) a reseller.
Question
A hospital has decided to acquire practices throughout its primary and secondary service area. As it acquires each practice, it allows each group to retain the name of the group. However, under the practice's name, it places the name of the health system. This is an example of:

A) multiproduct branding.
B) co-branding.
C) multibranding.
D) mixed branding.
Question
Using the same brand name across all the products or services in the organization's line is an example of which type of branding strategy?

A) Multibranding
B) Co-branding
C) Reseller
D) Multiproduct
Question
A major tertiary center has decided to generate significant revenue by staffing the laboratories of smaller hospitals in the region on a contractual basis. The tertiary center has hired a large number of pathologists. However, as they place the pathologists in these local hospitals, there will be no identification with the major tertiary center. The pathologists and their support staff will wear the lab coats of the local facility. This approach is an example of which branding strategy?

A) Multibrand
B) Multiproduct
C) Mixed
D) Reseller
Question
The diffusion of innovation refers to:

A) who adopts new products or services.
B) the time when a new innovation is adopted in the population.
C) how new diseases or epidemics spread.
D) how individuals are profiled.
Question
The major difference between innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards is:

A) their use of media.
B) their income distribution.
C) the time when they adopt a new product or service.
D) their price consciousness.
Question
Which of the following is not a factor affecting adoption?

A) Relative advantage
B) Consistency
C) Compatibility
D) Communicability
Question
Giving free samples to physicians as part of the diffusion of innovation is trying to affect which factor of adoption?

A) Divisibility
B) Complexity
C) Compatibility
D) Homophility
Question
Adoption increases when the group of people considering the new technology is more similar. This is referred to as the dimension of:

A) commonality.
B) congruency.
C) homophilous.
D) homogeneity.
Question
A surgeon hesitates to use Google glasses in the operating room. What criterion does this demonstrate with regard to the adoption of new products?

A) Complexity
B) Divisibility
C) Financial risk
D) None of these is correct.
Question
In the adoption of digital technology, two key barriers are:

A) privacy and cost.
B) cost and difficulty of understanding the product's benefit.
C) difficulty of understanding of the product's benefit and safety.
D) safety and privacy.
Question
The entire range of products or services offered by an organization is referred to as its product mix.
Question
A hospital has a comprehensive cancer center that has surgery, interventional radiology, counseling, gynecological surgery, breast reconstructive surgery, and many other related aspects pertaining to the treatment of adult cancer. This would be referred to as its product line.
Question
Specialty heart hospitals represent depth rather than breadth in terms of a product line perspective.
Question
Cross-subsidization of the business unit is when a company steals sales from itself.
Question
When a multispecialty group that has primary care satellites establishes a telemedicine division that provides primary care access, there is a risk of cannibalization.
Question
The stage a product goes through from introduction to its final withdrawal is referred to as the product life cycle.
Question
In the introduction stage, setting a high initial price is possible because buyers always want a new product and it encourages people to buy the item.
Question
A skimming strategy tends to encourage competitors to enter the market.
Question
The less sure an organization is of demand relative to capacity, the more likely it is to use a penetration pricing approach in the introduction stage of the product life cycle.
Question
Over the course of the product life cycle, prices for a product or service tend to stabilize as competition enters.
Question
The focus of primary demand is to generate demand for an entire product class.
Question
A key goal in the introduction stage of the life cycle is to generate selective demand for the new product.
Question
The key sign that a product has entered the growth stage of the life cycle is that a competitor has entered the market.
Question
Loyalty of the middleman in the channel of distribution must be obtained in the introduction stage of the life cycle before competitors enter the market.
Question
When no new competitors enter the market, this is a key sign that the product life cycle is now in the mature phase.
Question
The goal in the mature stage of the product life cycle is to retain customers through promotion.
Question
Many hospitals have begun to drop inpatient pediatric beds as a harvesting strategy, which indicates the decline stage of the life cycle of this service.
Question
Products that have a very protracted introductory period before reaching the growth phase are referred to as extended learning products.
Question
Google glasses for surgical use are most likely a case of a fad product.
Question
Fads have three stages: introduction, quick acceptance, and demise.
Question
When a new product enters the market and consumers immediately see the benefit, such as with walk-in urgent care centers, and competitors then quickly enter, it is an considered a low-learning product or service.
Question
The Duncan Yo-Yo Company has periodic times when sales are quite high; then it goes out of favor, only to return again among younger consumers as a product of interest. This product exhibits a fad product life cycle.
Question
A major externality that can affect the life cycle of any service in health care is reimbursement changes.
Question
Services can move to the decline stage as a function of technological changes.
Question
Rural hospital decline is most affected by changes in reimbursements.
Question
The major advantage of the product life cycle concept is that there is a standard life cycle by which all strategies can be formulated and developed.
Question
A hospital has decided to add more services to its health and wellness program. In this case it has undertaken a market modification program.
Question
When a company tries to create new uses for its product, it is undertaking a market modification program.
Question
Off-label uses of pharmacological products are an example of market modification programs.
Question
Off-label use of a pharmaceutical by a physician is illegal.
Question
In an undifferentiated positioning approach, a service is positioned to appeal to the broadest possible market.
Question
Shouldice Hospital in Canada did hernia repairs at its hospital and attracted patients from all of North America. This was an example of a mass market strategy.
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Deck 9: Product Strategy
1
The dominant choice attribute for a consumer in buying convenience item is:

A) brand name.
B) price.
C) access.
D) situation specific.
C
2
Cannibalization refers to a situation when:

A) the market territory of two contiguous markets overlap.
B) the breadth and depth of a product line complicate the marketing of a service line.
C) the sale of one product takes away sales from another of the same company.
D) two competing companies confuse the other's position in the consumers' mind, thus cannibalizing their unique position.
C
3
In the introduction stage of the product life cycle, the major concern for the organization is:

A) to correctly price the product or service.
B) to ensure that the product or service is a quality offering.
C) to ensure a sufficient supply in the channel of distribution.
D) to ensure that there is a value-added difference.
B
4
In a skimming price strategy, the organization tends to:

A) set a high price relative to competing products or substitutable services.
B) skim off the high-end customers.
C) set a high price to allocate as much cost to this service line as possible.
D) All of these are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
One of the key advantages of a skimming strategy for services is that:

A) it gives a service a way to develop a position to negotiate with consumers.
B) it is a useful mechanism for structuring all the costs of the services.
C) it allows for a high price because no one understands the costs.
D) it can be useful to control demand until the organization is sure that processes are in place to handle flow.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The major disadvantage of a skimming strategy is that it:

A) encourages competitors to enter.
B) allows for rate-setting commissions to begin an investigation into price-setting practices.
C) ignores where the bulk of the market is.
D) All of these are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
To implement a penetration strategy, an organization must have a good understanding of:

A) the price sensitivity of the market.
B) its cost structure.
C) its ability to deal with a reaction from competitors.
D) its debt-financing capacity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Generating primary demand is the major objective in which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Mature
D) Decline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
A manufacturer of proton beam therapy publishes a magazine showing articles and stories of patients whose diseases have been treated with great results using this technology. This is an example of a strategy to create:

A) differentiation.
B) skimming.
C) secondary demand.
D) primary demand.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
When competitors enter the market, the organization should recognize that it has entered which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Intuitive Surgical has entered the market with a robotics surgical device. Because it is in the growth stage of the life cycle, it has decided to:

A) lower prices.
B) generate primary demand.
C) target different market segments for usage of its device.
D) All of these are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The first proton beam therapy center has now closed, and in some markets two competing centers have decided to merge. These trends indicate that the market for such facilities has entered which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Generating selective demand is the key promotional objective of which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In the growth stage of the life cycle, the focus on the middleman becomes one of:

A) negotiating the price.
B) gaining a presence.
C) solidifying loyalty.
D) gaining an image of the service in the channel.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
In the early phase of the mature life cycle, growth in sales/revenues continues to occur due to:

A) marginal competitors exiting the marketplace.
B) the lessening battle for market share.
C) stronger players beginning to solidify their position.
D) customers beginning to recognize their preferences for the brand.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In the mature stage of the product life cycle, a key objective becomes one of:

A) maintaining price margins.
B) maintaining the existing customer base.
C) recognizing when it is necessary to withdraw from the market first.
D) developing selective demand.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Developing new product or service lines to reposition the organization to enjoy future revenue streams should occur during which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Aggressive price discounting is most common during which stage of the product life cycle?

A) Introduction
B) Growth
C) Maturity
D) Decline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
In the decline stage of the product life cycle, many organizations struggle with dropping an unprofitable service or product because:

A) it is often an emotional decision for the organization.
B) there is always revenue that can be obtained.
C) some people always need every service.
D) every product has value.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In the life cycle of a high-learning product, the key strategic challenge is to:

A) price it at the appropriate value level.
B) educate the market as to the benefits of the product.
C) get people to learn to adapt to change.
D) get the channel to adopt to new use alternatives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Competition enters rapidly in a _______ product life cycle.

A) high-learning
B) fashion
C) fad
D) low-learning
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Which product life cycle has only two stages: introduction and decline?

A) High learning
B) Low learning
C) Fad
D) Fashion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In health care, a major factor that affects life cycles is:

A) demographics.
B) technology.
C) reimbursement.
D) All of these are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Hospital-based sleep centers and many outpatient sleep centers were dramatically affected by externalities in the environment. The result was that many outpatient centers closed. What two factors affected the changes in these institutions' life cycles?

A) Reimbursement and demographics
B) Technology and physician resistance
C) Technology and reimbursement
D) Physician resistance and demographics
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
A major criticism of the product life cycle concept has been that:

A) it is difficult to determine when to change strategy over the life cycle.
B) it is difficult to determine when one enters each stage.
C) the industry curve and product curve often intersect at different points.
D) there is no standard product life cycle curve.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
In recent years, the greatest change in hospital revenues has been the increase occurring in revenue from:

A) outpatient services.
B) ancillary services.
C) inpatient services.
D) emergency services.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which of the following is not a way to stretch the product life cycle?

A) Market modification
B) Product modification
C) Market repositioning
D) Product repositioning
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
When it is touted to "brush after every meal," this is an example of:

A) creating new users.
B) market modification.
C) product modification.
D) market enhancement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Off-label use of a pharmaceutical product is an example of:

A) a high-learning product.
B) a shopping product.
C) a repositioning strategy.
D) market stretching.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
In terms of off-label use, Food and Drug Administration regulations:

A) allow for promotion of the off-label benefits.
B) prohibit promotion of the off-label benefits.
C) have not addressed the issue of off-label benefits.
D) allow companies to promote off-label benefits if they specifically state in the advertisements the drug was not tested for that specific condition.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The Louisiana Heart Hospital focuses only on the care of heart-related diseases. This is an example of a:

A) niche strategy.
B) product-focused strategy.
C) selective-demand strategy.
D) key market strategy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Focusing on a very narrow segment of the market is a definition of a:

A) selective strategy.
B) single-segment strategy.
C) niche strategy.
D) targeted strategy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
In order for a brand or service mark to have legal protection, it must have which of the following?

A) A clear registered trade or service mark that cannot be confused with those of others brands or services
B) At least three letters or symbols in its name
C) A visible logo that is used in signage and letterhead
D) A certificate showing that is registered in a state registry
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Brand equity is the:

A) worth of the brand in actual dollars in the marketplace.
B) total dollars a company spends in promoting its brand name.
C) equity a company has in its stock price.
D) association a consumer places with the organization's brand.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Which of the following is not one of the many advantages that have been cited of having a strong brand?

A) It aids in establishing a competitive advantage.
B) It allows an organization to establish a successful digital presence.
C) It can create a barrier to entry.
D) All of these are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
In following a house of brands strategy, it is of paramount importance to ensure that:

A) each brand has a distinct name.
B) the co-brands are of similar value.
C) there is consistency across the organization with regards to service and clinical quality.
D) the multibrand approach is understood throughout the organization.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The principal/agent notion is a central concept in health care because:

A) consumers pay physicians as agents to buy medical services for them, such as laboratory and radiology tests.
B) principals such as companies hire agents to help them contract with health systems.
C) a patient trusts a doctor to make the decisions for them.
D) a doctor trusts that the patient will follow their advice.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A multispecialty clinic has established a surgical center, a rehab group, and a durable medical equipment company. All of these entities are under the name of the multispecialty practice. This branding strategy would be considered:

A) co-branding.
B) a multibrand.
C) a multiproduct.
D) a reseller.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
A hospital has decided to acquire practices throughout its primary and secondary service area. As it acquires each practice, it allows each group to retain the name of the group. However, under the practice's name, it places the name of the health system. This is an example of:

A) multiproduct branding.
B) co-branding.
C) multibranding.
D) mixed branding.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Using the same brand name across all the products or services in the organization's line is an example of which type of branding strategy?

A) Multibranding
B) Co-branding
C) Reseller
D) Multiproduct
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
A major tertiary center has decided to generate significant revenue by staffing the laboratories of smaller hospitals in the region on a contractual basis. The tertiary center has hired a large number of pathologists. However, as they place the pathologists in these local hospitals, there will be no identification with the major tertiary center. The pathologists and their support staff will wear the lab coats of the local facility. This approach is an example of which branding strategy?

A) Multibrand
B) Multiproduct
C) Mixed
D) Reseller
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The diffusion of innovation refers to:

A) who adopts new products or services.
B) the time when a new innovation is adopted in the population.
C) how new diseases or epidemics spread.
D) how individuals are profiled.
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43
The major difference between innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards is:

A) their use of media.
B) their income distribution.
C) the time when they adopt a new product or service.
D) their price consciousness.
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44
Which of the following is not a factor affecting adoption?

A) Relative advantage
B) Consistency
C) Compatibility
D) Communicability
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45
Giving free samples to physicians as part of the diffusion of innovation is trying to affect which factor of adoption?

A) Divisibility
B) Complexity
C) Compatibility
D) Homophility
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46
Adoption increases when the group of people considering the new technology is more similar. This is referred to as the dimension of:

A) commonality.
B) congruency.
C) homophilous.
D) homogeneity.
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47
A surgeon hesitates to use Google glasses in the operating room. What criterion does this demonstrate with regard to the adoption of new products?

A) Complexity
B) Divisibility
C) Financial risk
D) None of these is correct.
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48
In the adoption of digital technology, two key barriers are:

A) privacy and cost.
B) cost and difficulty of understanding the product's benefit.
C) difficulty of understanding of the product's benefit and safety.
D) safety and privacy.
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49
The entire range of products or services offered by an organization is referred to as its product mix.
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50
A hospital has a comprehensive cancer center that has surgery, interventional radiology, counseling, gynecological surgery, breast reconstructive surgery, and many other related aspects pertaining to the treatment of adult cancer. This would be referred to as its product line.
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51
Specialty heart hospitals represent depth rather than breadth in terms of a product line perspective.
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52
Cross-subsidization of the business unit is when a company steals sales from itself.
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53
When a multispecialty group that has primary care satellites establishes a telemedicine division that provides primary care access, there is a risk of cannibalization.
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54
The stage a product goes through from introduction to its final withdrawal is referred to as the product life cycle.
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55
In the introduction stage, setting a high initial price is possible because buyers always want a new product and it encourages people to buy the item.
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56
A skimming strategy tends to encourage competitors to enter the market.
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57
The less sure an organization is of demand relative to capacity, the more likely it is to use a penetration pricing approach in the introduction stage of the product life cycle.
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58
Over the course of the product life cycle, prices for a product or service tend to stabilize as competition enters.
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59
The focus of primary demand is to generate demand for an entire product class.
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60
A key goal in the introduction stage of the life cycle is to generate selective demand for the new product.
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61
The key sign that a product has entered the growth stage of the life cycle is that a competitor has entered the market.
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62
Loyalty of the middleman in the channel of distribution must be obtained in the introduction stage of the life cycle before competitors enter the market.
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63
When no new competitors enter the market, this is a key sign that the product life cycle is now in the mature phase.
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64
The goal in the mature stage of the product life cycle is to retain customers through promotion.
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65
Many hospitals have begun to drop inpatient pediatric beds as a harvesting strategy, which indicates the decline stage of the life cycle of this service.
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66
Products that have a very protracted introductory period before reaching the growth phase are referred to as extended learning products.
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67
Google glasses for surgical use are most likely a case of a fad product.
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68
Fads have three stages: introduction, quick acceptance, and demise.
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69
When a new product enters the market and consumers immediately see the benefit, such as with walk-in urgent care centers, and competitors then quickly enter, it is an considered a low-learning product or service.
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70
The Duncan Yo-Yo Company has periodic times when sales are quite high; then it goes out of favor, only to return again among younger consumers as a product of interest. This product exhibits a fad product life cycle.
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71
A major externality that can affect the life cycle of any service in health care is reimbursement changes.
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72
Services can move to the decline stage as a function of technological changes.
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73
Rural hospital decline is most affected by changes in reimbursements.
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74
The major advantage of the product life cycle concept is that there is a standard life cycle by which all strategies can be formulated and developed.
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75
A hospital has decided to add more services to its health and wellness program. In this case it has undertaken a market modification program.
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76
When a company tries to create new uses for its product, it is undertaking a market modification program.
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77
Off-label uses of pharmacological products are an example of market modification programs.
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78
Off-label use of a pharmaceutical by a physician is illegal.
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79
In an undifferentiated positioning approach, a service is positioned to appeal to the broadest possible market.
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80
Shouldice Hospital in Canada did hernia repairs at its hospital and attracted patients from all of North America. This was an example of a mass market strategy.
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