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2005 Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) M.B.A
Business Administration MS6 : MARKETING FOR MANAGERS
Question paper
University Question Papers
2005 Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) M.B.A Business
Administration MS6 : MARKETING FOR MANAGERS Question paper
MANAGEMENT PROGRAMME
Term-End Examination
December, 2005
MS6 : MARKETING FOR MANAGERS
Time: 3 hours
Maximum Marks: 100
(Weightage 70%)
Note : (i) Attempt any three questions from Section A.
(ii) Section B is compulsory.
(iii) All questions carry equal marks.
SECTION A
1. (a) Briefly explain the various pricing methods available for Indian marketers, with suitable illustrations.
(b) Discuss the variables that affect the distribution decision for the following :
(i) Fast food joint restaurant
(ii) Personal Computers
2. Why and how do psychological factors influence consumer buying behaviour ? As a potential buyer of a latest brand
of DVD, briefly explain the social and cultural factors that affect your buying decision.
3. (a) Discuss the major objectives of Sales Promotion. As a marketer of a leading consumer durable company, when
do your consider it an appropriate time to organise such promotions and why ?
(b) Personal Selling and Advertising are the two major vehicles of communication for marketing industrial products.
Discuss with a suitable example of your choice.
4. Write notes on any three of the following :
(a) PLC as a tool for market development
(b) Matrix organisation
(c) Bases for Segmentation
(d) Approaches to Sales forecasting
(e) Limitatlons of Cyber marketing
SECTION B
5. Study the case given below and answer the questions given at the end.
BPL has launched the digital camera VPC-G200EX at Rs. 39,000. lt does not require conventional films as it can store
images in its memory. A niche segment of PC users, journalists, multimedia agencies, architects, doctors and
professionals are the primary segments for the product. The benefits of the product include viewing pictures on a built-in
LCD screen, and the voice memo (6 seconds) that could be added to every picture. Web page designers could have
pictures on the Internet through their personal computers. These images could also be retouched or modified using
appropriate software. Photo albums can be created on floppies. The product may compete with scanners which could
scan conventional photographs into a computer. BPL has positioned the product as 'future of photography'. The product
is available in 25 showrooms of BPL- Phillips, a competing brand, has also launched digital cameras.
Questions :
(a) Who, in your view, would be the most appropriate target consumers for the product and why ?
(b) Outline suitable promotion and positioning strategies for the product.
2005 Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) M.B.A
Business Administration MS-65: Marketing of Services
Question paper
University Question Papers
2005 Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) M.B.A Business
Administration MS-65: Marketing of Services Question paper
MANAGEMENT PROGRAMME
Term-End Examination
June, 2005
MS-65: MARKETING OF SERVICES
Time : 3 hours
Maximum Marks : 100
(Weightage 70%)
Note : This paper consists of three Sections A, B and C. Section A is to be attempted by students registered for MS-65
for July, 2004 or January, 2005 semesters. Section B is to be attempted by students registered for this course for July,
2003 or January, 2004 semesters. Section C is to be attempted by all the students. All questions carry equal marks.
SECTION A
Attempt any three questions.
1. (a) In what ways is distribution of services different from goods ? Identify a few services which can be distributed
electronically and discuss the challenges involved in it.
(b) Differentiate between core, facilitating, and supporting services, giving suitable examples.
2. (a) What are the benefits derived by a service firm in offering a service guarantee ?
(b) Discuss the characteristics of a good service guarantee. Evaluate the following service guarantee offered by a
restaurant for its home delivery services, on the basis of the characteristics discussed by you. "30 MINUTES
GUARANTEE.
10% DISCOUNT ON DELAYED DELIVERY ORDERS"
Discounts not applicable for orders over Rs. 500"
3. (a) How important is it for a hotel located at a hill station to use promotions during off season ? Also identify the
possible sales promotion schemes it caa offer.
(b) Discuss the importance of word of mouth communication for health care services.
4. Write short notes on any three of tha following :
(a) Role of service sector in Indian economy
(b) Gronroos Model of Service Quality
(c) Pricing of educational services
(d) Yield Management
(e) Role of PhYsical evidence
SECTION B
Attempt any three questions.
5. What are the various levels at which a service product has to be conceptualised ? Taking the example of a movie
theatre or a health club, explain the conceptualisation of the service product.
6. (a) What are the advantages that accrue from branding of financial services ? Illustrate with the help of examples,
some of the pitfalls associated with umbrella branding.
(b) What are the factors governing demand for the tourism product ?
7. (a) What is the significance of the place decision in marketing of social health services like family planning ? What
considerations should be kept in mind while choosing ihe location for such a service ?
(b) What are the various positioning alternatives available to advertising agencies ?
8. Distinguish between the following giving suitable examples (Attempt any four)
(i) Technical quality and Functional quality
(ii) Internal and External marketing
(iii) Service characteristics of Inseparability and Heterogeneity
(iv) Peripheral evidence and Essential evidence
(v) The cycle of success and The cycle of failure
(vi) Facilitating and Supporting services
SECTION C
9. Study the case given below and answer the questions given at the end.
Marketing of Health Services
Pulin Kayastha was simply amazed. He had seen all forms of hostility and marketing warfare in the consumer goods
industry, but to see similar warfare in the health industry fascinated him. Clearly, he told himself, doctors had found
consumers in their patients. At least, that's what the concept note sent by Dr. Ajit Varman, country manager of Recovery
Clinics & Hospitals, seemed to indicate. Varman and seven other senior doctors had left Karuna Nursing Home and
Hospital to set up Recovery, which, as the note said. ".... would be entirely devoted and dedicated to customer
responsiveness."
Pulin was a management consultant and was recommended to Recovery by the marketing director of Regrow Pharma,
a large pharmaceuticals company in Mumbai. In fact, the suggestion to set up Recovery came from a non-resident
patient, Dinesh Shah, who was undergoing treatment at Karuna's large speciality hospital in Central India. It was in the
course of his interaction with the doctors that Shah sensed their unhappiness with the system. This prompted him to
suggest the idea of Recovery. Varman had joined Karuna 10 years ago, assured of a challenging career in a hospital
that was promising to be different. But over time, disillusionment set in as Karuna's image and response to the
environment diluted its equity.
"Now that we have decided to do this, we do not want to repeat old mistakes," Varman had told Pulin duing their first
meeting. "Having worked at Karuna, we can see its weaknesses and why it's losing saliency. Ten years ago, when it
was established, we believed it was going to add value to our careers, We became a part of it because we were told
that we are specialists who would bring exclusivity to the hospital. But soon, the focus shifted to fetching business and
revenues. The management started hiring specialists and private practitioners, offering them cabins and consultancy
arrangements at Karuna. The strategy was that these doctors would bring in their patients and use the infrastructure so
that the hospital would start earning money."
The Karuna management wanted to derive shott-term benefits, than gradually build up clientele. But the strategy, it
appeared, did not pay off. As Varman said: "Because there were many doctors and the business was not large enough
in the first few months. Consequently, competition for business became cut-throat beteeen doctors."
Despite modern amenities, state-of-art systems and numerous doctors, the image of the hospital was that of being too
commercial - a fallout of the stigma of being a private hospital. It was common among doctors to slot every hospital
under either category - a place where you get neglected to death or a place where you get researched to death. Karuna
earned a new label - a place where you got cross-referred to death, for doctors at Karuna slowly took to enhancing each
others' earnings as they sent patients back and forth to doctors and specialists. At the end of his diagnoses, the patient
ended up paying a huge amount of money for this treatrnent.
According to Varman, the high-cost, high-expectation syndrome hit the hospital. The initial promise of exclusivity and
quality was lost. Karuna had the best doctors. but after-care was abysmal. With a view to keeping costs low, nurses,
house-keeping staff and even tbe front office staff were hired cheap, training was virtually absent, and no attention was
paid to end-user needs.
Kayastha could see Recovery trying to be all that Karuna was not and desiring not to be all that Karuna was. If
Kayastha thought Varman was hiring him for routine systems design and a patient management manual, he was
mistaken. For Varman said : "We want to get Recovery's positioning platform right and work on a sound marketing plan.
What we want you to do is to help us build this brand, help ordinary doctors like us understand what brand-building
entails and how it is managed in a service industy."
Questions :
(a) Suggest a positioning shategy for Recovery Clinics and Hospitals.
(b) Explain why it would be necessarg for doctors as well as nursing staff to be marketing oriented.
(c) Identify and discuss the seivice quality dimensions which Recovery Clinics and Hospitals can use for measuring its
service quality.
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