BM - 50 Q - Final
BM - 50 Q - Final
BM - 50 Q - Final
BRAND MANAGEMENT
MULTIPLE CHOIC QUESTIONS
Name of the Faculty: ANISH.K
2. It means emphasising the distinctive characteristics that make it different from its
competitors and appealing to the public
a. Product
b. Positioning
c. Strategy
d. Strength
3. Which of the following concepts questions how time will affect the unique and
permanent quality of the sender or the brand?
a. Brand identity
b. Brand value
c. Brand communication
d. Brand message
5. It is a unique symbolic shape of a character like any animal, thing which exists in
real life.
a. Trademark
b. Symbol
c. Mascot
d. Logo
6. Exhibiting admirable human qualities is especially important for brands during
________.
a. Introduction
b. Growth
c. Crisis
d. Maturity
8. ________ is both the brand's backbone and its tangible added value.
a. Reflection
b. Culture
c. Personlality
d. Physique
9. Which of the features are NOT on the left side of the hexagonal brand identity
prism?
a. Physique
b. Personality
c. Relationship
d. Reflection
14. ________ is derived when customers are continuously satisfied over the time.
a. Interest
b. Attraction
c. Loyalty
d. Purchase
15. Who the people who produce revenue and build customer relationships for the
company?
a. Front line employees
b. Advertisement
c. Manager
d. Dealer
17. The problem with umbrella brand strategy stems from the failure to appreciate its
________.
a. Supply
b. Competition
c. Risk
d. Demand
19. As part of the strategic brand management process, each company and offering
must represent a distinctive ________ in the mind of the target market.
a. promotion
b. cell
c. big idea
d. organizational concept
20. All marketing strategy is built on STP—segmentation, targeting, and ________.
a. positioning
b. product
c. promotion
d. performance
21. ________ is the act of designing the company’s offering and image to occupy a
distinctive place in the minds of the target market.
a. Positioning
b. Product conceptualization
c. Promotion presentation
d. Performance imaging
23. The result of positioning is the successful creation of ________, a cogent reason
why the target market should buy the product.
a. an award winning promotional campaign
b. a customer-focused value proposition
c. a demand channel
d. everyday low pricing
24. A starting point in defining a competitive frame of reference for a brand positioning
is to determine ________ the products or sets of products with which a brand
competes and which function as close substitutes.
a. competitive field
b. category membership
c. value membership
d. demand field
25. Which of the following terms is most closely associated with the following
statement: “attributes or benefits consumers strongly associate with a brand,
positively evaluate, and believe that they could not find to the same extent with a
competitive brand”?
a. Brand image
b. Points-of-difference
c. Points-of-parity
d. Brand concept
26. ________ are associations that are not necessarily unique to the brand but may in
fact be shared with other brands.
a. Points-of-parity
b. Points-of-difference
c. Brand cells
d. Points of competitive field
30. There are three main ways to convey a brand’s category membership: announcing
category benefits, ________, and relying on the product descriptor.
a. overt publicity
b. buzz marketing
c. preference positions
d. comparing to exemplars
31. A brownie mix might claim to taste great and support this claim by including high-
quality ingredients or by showing users delighting in its consumption, thereby
communicating its membership of the baked desserts category through ________.
a. announcing category benefits
b. comparing to exemplars
c. relying on the product descriptor
d. communicating deliverability variables
32. Points-of-parity are driven by the needs of category membership and ________.
a. loyalty
b. guaranteed profits
c. the necessity of negating competitors’ PODs (points-of-difference)
d. the creation of PODs (points-of-difference)
33. ________ are typically the least desirable level to position a brand’s points-of-
difference, in part because competitors can easily copy them.
a. Benefits
b. Attitudes
c. Values
d. Attributes
34. Marketers must decide at which level to anchor the brand’s points-of-differences.
At the lowest level are ________. For example, Dove soap can talk about the fact
that it is one-quarter cleansing cream.
a. brand values
b. brand attributes
c. brand benefits
d. brand specifications
35. One common difficulty in creating a strong, competitive brand positioning is that
many of the attributes or benefits that make up the points-of-parity and points-of-
difference are ________.
a. negatively correlated
b. positive correlated
c. neither positive nor negatively correlated
d. inversely correlated
37. There are at least three key consumer desirability criteria for PODs (points-of-
difference): relevance, distinctiveness, and ________.
a. believability
b. presentation style
c. nontechnological
d. information content
38. Which of the following desirability criteria asks a question such as “Is the
positioning preemptive, defensible, and difficult to attack?” when determining a
POD (point-of-difference)?
a. feasibility
b. communicability
c. sustainability
d. knowledgeable
39. For a point-of-difference to possess ________, target consumers must find it unique
and superior.
a. distinctiveness
b. communicability
c. relevance
d. feasibility
40. In a positioning statement, the case for the product rests on its ________.
a. product category
b. points-of-difference
c. target consumer
d. consumer need
41. ________ is a company’s ability to perform in one or more ways that competitors
cannot or will not match.
a. Positioning
b. Competitive advantage
c. Distribution
d. Differentiation
42. The obvious means of differentiation, and often most compelling ones to
consumers, relate to aspects of the ________.
a. price
b. distribution process
c. promotions
d. product and service
43. A ________ is one that a company can use as a springboard to new advantages.
a. customer advantage
b. leverageable advantage
c. real advantage
d. distinct advantage
44. The primary explanation for Singapore Airlines’ extraordinary worldwide market
share is that Singapore Airlines’ “Singapore Girl” persona has struck a responsive
chord with much of the travelling public. This is an example of ________.
a. personnel differentiation
b. position differentiation
c. maturity differentiation
d. image differentiation
45. To say that a product has a life cycle is to assert all of the following EXCEPT
________.
a. products have a limited life
b. product sales pass through distinct stages, each posing different challenges,
opportunities, and problems to the seller
c. products all basically exhibit cycle-recycle growth patterns
d. profits rise and fall at different stages of the product life cycle
46. The four stages of the product life cycle include all of the following EXCEPT
________.
a. decline
b. learning
c. maturity
d. introduction
e. growth
47. The ________ stage of the product life cycle is a period of rapid market acceptance
and substantial profit improvement.
a. introduction
b. growth
c. maturity
d. decline
48. According to the general bell-shaped curve used to illustrate the product life cycle,
which of the following stages is generally seen when the sales curve is at its peak?
a. Introduction
b. Growth
c. Maturity
d. Decline
49. According to the illustrations describing the product life cycle, during which stage
of the cycle is there a strong likelihood that negative profits will be the norm?
a. Introduction
b. Growth
c. Maturity
d. Decline
50. _________is the value associated with the tendency to purchase a product from a
particular company in a market where all products are identical
a. Brand Value
b. Brand Equity
c. Brand Position
d. Brand Image