Answer: Marketing Era
Explanation:
The Marketing Era is one of the so-called eras of Marketing which defined how producers related to customers and hence try to show how marketing has changed over the years.
In the Marketing Era
, the focus of producers was to give the customers items they actually needed and wanted so that instead of having to convince customers to buy goods that the company made which the customers may not have wanted, by making what the customer actually wanted, they would not have to spend so much on convincing them.
Answer:
a. Maturing of a product
When the product reaches its maturity stage, its sales volume reduces considerably. This would require different marketing strategies like product enhancement, price changing or developing new designs, etc.
b. Technology innovation in the manufacturing process
This will cause many changes in the strategy as technological innovation would reduce manual labor cost. Also, the organization would need skilled employees to deal with the new technology.
- Cost cutting is instituted.
- Product changes decrease.
- Design compromises are instituted.
- Labor Skills decrease
- Optimum capacity may be achieved
- Manufacturing process stabilizes
Answer:
I believe that the answer would be true
Explanation:
Answer:
Hi you haven't provided the options to the question so I will just give the answer in my own words and you can check with the options.
Answer is ASSIGNABLE VARIATION.
Explanation:
Variation is a lack of consistency. It can introduce waste and errors into a process, for example, a manufacturing process.
There are two sources of variation which are:
1. Natural variations: are random variations that are expected and are a part of almost every production process which results from a number of chance causes.
2. Assignable variations: are trend factors that can be traced to a specific reason, such as machine tear, fatigued workers or untrained workers, flawed principles, equipment that is not properly adjusted or calibrated, or raw material problems.
According to the question, a machine was not properly set-up/calibrated which caused a wide variation of quality of the products it produced. Since the cause (improper setup/calibration) can be traced to a specific reason, therefore, the type of variation is an example of ASSIGNABLE VARIATIONS.