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Unilever in Brazil (1997-2007): Marketing Strategies for Low-Income Consumers (Spanish)

Published 28 Feb 2013
Reference 5188
Topic Marketing
Region South America
Length 23 page(s)
Language Spanish
Summary

Unilever is a solid leader in the Brazilian detergent powder market with an 81% market share. Laercio Cardoso must decide (1) whether Unilever should divert money from its premium brands to target the lower-margin segment of low-income consumers, (2) whether Unilever can reposition or extend one of its existing brands to avoid launching a new brand, and (3) what price, product, promotion, and distribution strategy would allow Unilever to deliver value to low-income consumers without cannibalizing its own premium brands too heavily.

Teaching objectives

This case deals with the question of whether marketing and branding create value for really poor consumers. It can therefore be used in an MBA, executive education or undergraduate core course on marketing management to illustrate the value of marketing and the marketing approach, or in a brand management course to explore the frontiers of branding. This case can also be used in a consumer behaviour course to examine the motivations and decision-making process of low-income consumers. Alternatively, it can be used in a global marketing or global strategy and management course to study the way multinational companies adapt their strategy to compete in emerging countries.

Keywords
  • Media support
  • Branding
  • Low-income consumers
  • Marketing
  • Poverty
  • New product introduction
  • Break-even analysis
  • Advertising
  • Pricing
  • Poor
  • Distribution
  • Promotion
  • Product
  • Powder
  • Detergent
  • Guimaraes
  • Brazil
  • Unilever