brand-name
A white-label product is a product manufactured by one company but sold or marketed by another company under its own brand name. This allows the company selling the product to offer a product without having to invest in its own production facilities.
Reebok or under armour
unlever is brand ........brand can be anything like names symbol company so its a brand if u confuse about his product so simple is that they are also brand every product has its own image so u think uniliever is brand and his product are sub brand they are working under the umbrella of uniliever
The best and most efficient coffee makers on the market would have to be anything selling under the brand of Braun . They have a very good reputation and are very reliable . I have a product under this name and could not be happier with it .
A global product is a commercial product (e.g., Coca-Cola) that is marketed throughout the entire world under the same brand name.
Not positioning strongly enough. Under-positioning occurs when customers cannot readily identify the brand or the brand´s features. The product must stand out in the mind of the consumer.
Period Costs.
Period Costs.
Original Equipment Manufacturer which is an inaccurate name, because it generally means taking someone elses equipment and selling it under a different brand. Typical OEM deals involve including a particular brand of mouse or software with a computer. For example, Dell includes MS Office with computers, as an OEM. Microsoft makes the software, and provides it at a bulk price to Dell to sell along with its computers.
No. They are not.they are part of period costs.
The only difference is that the name brand product has been tested and development by a company specializing in that product. After a period of time, the brand name product (with the same ingredients) can be release for other companies making generic products to then make and sell the same product under a different name. In short, no there is essentially no difference.
Brand proliferation is when a firm puts out new brand names under the same product lines. For example, Huggies is a firm owned by Kimberley-Clark. Huggies is best known for producing disposable diapers, and has different product lines such as Pull-Ups and Little Swimmers.