Dr. M. Gunawan Alif Program Pascasarjana Manajemen FEUI & MMUI

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing-information management to understand its nature and scope Marketing Indicator 1.05.
Advertisements

Chapter 17 promotional concepts and strategies Section 17.1
Chapter 28 Promotion and Place Name 12 SAM.
Marketing 1.05 MIM.
Chapter 5 Research Design.
INTRODUCTION TO RETAIL PRODUCT MANAGEMENT: SCOPE AND CONCEPTS
New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies 9 Principles of Marketing.
Dr. Michael R. Hyman, NMSU Syndicated Data Sources.
Open Floor Please Hand In Midterm II
FST 253 Research & Development of Food Products Launching New Product Phase Evaluating The Result.
Research Design.
CHAPTER NINETEEN Market Testing November 9, 2004.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
CHAPTER TWENTY Market Testing: Controlled Sale & Full Sale March 22, 2007.
Market Testing I: Pseudo-Sales Methods
MARKET TESTING: PSEUDO SALE METHODS (Uji Pasar)
Chapter 5 Research Design.
Principles of Marketing
Principles of Marketing
PERTEMUAN MARKET TESTING CONTINUED: CONTROLLED SALE AND FULL SALE (Uji Pasar)
© 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 9-1 principles of MARKETING Chapter 9 New Product Development and Life Cycle Strategies.
Introducing New Market Offerings
Chapter 32 Marketing Research.
Marketing in Today’s World
Principles of Business & Finance
Marketing in Today’s World
Principles of Marketing Lecture-34. Summary of Lecture-33.
Marketing 1.05 MIM Three types of information used in marketing decision making Customer Marketing mix Business Environment.
Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing-information management to understand its nature and scope Marketing Marketing Indicator 1.05 Indicator 1.05.
Performance Indicator 1.05 Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing-information management to understand its nature and scope.
Chapter 10 10/18/ :45 PM1. Supply Chains And The Value Delivery Network Supply chain Downstream Marketing channels or distribution channels, such.
Chapter 6: Getting the Marketing Information We Need.
Standard 3 - Marketing Information Management What you’ll learn: Describe the need for Marketing Information Understand marketing-research activities Understand.
FINAL STEPS OF NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT.  Test marketing- the stage at which the product and marketing program are introduced into a more realistic marketing.
Market Research TEST MARKETING. WHAT IS TEST-MARKETING  Test Marketing combines scientific testing with controlled field experimentation. Test- market.
Product Development Process Ken YoussefiMechanical Engineering Department1.
Dira Ernawati, ST. MT - P32 What Is and Is Not Market Testing? Market testing is not concept testing, prototype testing, product use testing--or test.
Marketing Research Aaker, Kumar, Day and Leone Ninth Edition
NEW PRODUCTS MANAGEMENT Merle Crawford Anthony Di Benedetto 10 th Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
Marketing Research Approaches. Research Approaches Observational Research Ethnographic Research Survey Research Experimental Research.
Functions of Marketing
Read to Learn Define marketing. Identify the functions of marketing. List the elements of the marketing mix.
Chapter 21 Nature & Scope of Marketing
Channels of Distribution Lec: 1. Marketing Channels Structure and Functions.
Chapter 13 Marketing in Today’s World pp
Chapter 9- slide 1 Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Chapter Seven New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.
Research Design 4. Ch 52 Research Design Research design is a set of advanced decisions that make up the master plan specifying the methods and procedures.
MGT301 Principles of Marketing Lecture-34. Summary of Lecture-33.
Section 28.1 Marketing Information Chapter 28 marketing research Section 28.2 Issues in Marketing Research.
CHAPTER 13 MARKETING in TODAY’S WORLD The Basics of Marketing Market A market is a group of customers who share common wants and needs, and who have.
Objectives  Identify the four stages of the product life cycle  Describe product positioning techniques.
MANAGING THE MARKETING MIX: PRODUCT, PRICE, PLACE, AND PROMOTION Bus101.
Employ marketing-information to develop a marketing plan.
Marketing September 16, Notes - Marketing Mix Marketing Mix Activity.
Marketing Foundations What is Marketing? What is the goal of Marketing?
Group Members  Senthil Kumar 13  Shivani Mittal 14  Pritam Sawant 24  Amol Naik 26  Parvez Modi 53  Tintu Rajan 70  Shoaib Alim 76  Akash Patil.
Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing-information management to understand its nature and scope Marketing Indicator 1.05.
Marketing 1.05 MIM Three types of information used in marketing decision making Customer Marketing mix Business Environment.
Marketing 1.05 MIM Acquire foundational knowledge of MIM to understand it’s nature and scope.
Market Testing & Launch Management
Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing-information management to understand its nature and scope Marketing Indicators 1.03 & 1.05.
Market testing & launch management
Principles of Marketing
Performance Indicator 1.05
Marketing 1.05 MIM Three types of information used in marketing decision making Customer Marketing mix Business Environment.
Marketing 1.05 MIM Three types of information used in marketing decision making Customer Marketing mix Business Environment.
Acquire foundational knowledge of marketing-information management to understand its nature and scope Marketing Indicator 1.05.
Marketing 1.05 MIM Three types of information used in marketing decision making Customer Marketing mix Business Environment.
Presentation transcript:

Dr. M. Gunawan Alif Program Pascasarjana Manajemen FEUI & MMUI Market Testing Dr. M. Gunawan Alif Program Pascasarjana Manajemen FEUI & MMUI

Market Test Testing

What Is Market Testing? Market testing is not test marketing! Test marketing is one of many forms of market testing -- others include simulated test market, informal sale, minimarket, rollout. Test marketing is also a much less common form now due to cost and time commitments and other drawbacks.

Where We Are Today in Market Testing Scanner systems allow for immediate collection of product sales data. Mathematical sales forecasting models are readily available that can run on a relatively limited amount of data. We are “building quality in,” testing the marketing components of the product at early stages (ads, selling visuals, service contracts, package designs, etc.) rather than testing the whole product at the end. Increased competition puts greater pressure on managers to accelerate product cycle time. Market testing is a team issue, not solely in the province of the market research department.

Test Marketing Test marketing is the phrase commonly used to indicate an experiment, study, or test that is conducted in a field setting. Two broad classes: To test the sales potential for a new product or service To test variations in the marketing mix for a product or service

Types of Test Markets Standard test market: one in which the firm tests the product and/or marketing mix variables through the companies normal distribution channels Controlled test markets: ones that are conducted by outside research firms that guarantee distribution of the product through prespecified types and numbers of distributors

Types of Test Markets…cont. Electronic test markets: those in which a panel of consumers has agreed to carry identification cards that each consumer presents when buying goods and services Simulated test markets: those in which a limited amount of data on consumer response to a new product is fed into a model containing certain assumptions regarding planned marketing programs, which generates likely sales volume

Test Markets Test marketing is used in both consumer markets and industrial or B2B markets as well. Lead country test market: test marketing conducted in specific foreign countries that seem good predictors for an entire continent

Criteria for Selecting Test Market Cities Representativeness: Do demographics match the total market? Degree of isolation: Palangka Raya and Palu are isolated markets; Surabaya is not isolated. Ability to control distribution and promotion: Are there preexisting arrangements to distribute the new product in selected channels of distribution? Are local media designed to test variations in promotional messages?

Decision Matrix on When to Market Test Figure 18.1 High Low Cost and Time Savings Scope of Learning and Accuracy High Low Stages of the product development cycle

How Market Testing Relates to the Other Testing Steps Figure 18.2

Market Test Alternatives

BB Vs iPod Vs Toyota

Two Key Values Obtained from Market Testing Solid forecasts of dollar and unit sales volume. Diagnostic information to allow for revising and refining any aspect of the launch.

Deciding Whether to Market Test Any special twists on the launch? (limited time or budget, need to make high volume quickly) What information is needed? (expected sales volumes, unknowns in manufacturing process, etc.) Costs (direct cost of test, cost of launch, lost revenue that an immediate national launch would have brought) Nature of marketplace (competitive retaliation, customer demand) Capability of testing methodologies (do they fit the managerial situation at hand)

Types of Information That May Be Lacking Manufacturing process: can we ramp-up from pilot production to full scale easily? Vendors and resellers: will they do as they have promised in supporting the launch? Servicing infrastructure: adequate? Customers: will they buy and use the product as expected? Cannibalization: what will be the extent?

Methods of Market Testing, and Where Used Figure 18.3

Speculative Sale Often used in business-to-business and consumer durables, similar to concept and product use tests. Give full pitch on product, answer questions, discuss pricing, and ask: “If we make this product available as I have described it, would you buy it?” Often conducted by regular salespeople calling on real target customers.

Conditions for Speculative Sale Where industrial firms have very close downstream relationships with key buyers. Where new product work is technical, entrenched within a firm's expertise, and only little reaction is needed from the marketplace. Where the adventure has very little risk, and thus a costlier method is not defendable. Where the item is new (say, a new material or a completely new product type) and key diagnostics are needed. For example, what set of alternatives does the potential buyer see, or what possible applications come to mind first.

Simulated Test Market (STM) Create a false buying situation and observe what the customer does. Follow-up with customer later to assess likely repeat sales. Often used for consumer nondurables.

Simulated Test Market Procedure Mall intercept. Self-administered questionnaire. Advertising stimuli. Mini-store shopping experience. Post-exposure questionnaire. Receive trial package. Phone followup and offer to buy more.

Possible Drawbacks to STMs Mathematical complexity False conditions Possibly faulty assumptions on data, such as number of stores that will make the product available May not be applicable to totally new-to-the-market products, since no prior data available. Does not test channel member response to the new product, only the final consumer

Controlled Sale by Informal Selling Used for business-to-business products, also consumer products sold directly to end users. Train salespeople, give them the product and the selling materials, and have them make calls (in the field, or at trade shows). Real presentations, and real sales, take place.

Controlled Sale by Direct Marketing More secrecy than by any other controlled sale method. The feedback is almost instant. Positioning and image development are easier because more information can be sent and more variations can be tested easily. It is cheaper than the other techniques. The technique matches today's growing technologies of credit card financing, telephone ordering, and database compilation.

Controlled Sale by Minimarkets Select a limited number of outlets -- each store is a minicity or “minimarket.” Do not use regular local TV or newspaper advertising, but chosen outlets can advertise it in its own flyers. Can do shelf displays, demonstrations. Use rebate, mail-in premium, or some other method to get names of purchasers for later follow-up.

Controlled Sale by Scanner Market Testing Audit sales from grocery stores with scanner systems -- over a few markets or national system. Sample uses: Can use the data as a mini-market test. Can compare cities where differing levels of sales support are provided. Can monitor a rollout from one region to the next.

Minimarkets and Scanner Testing: IRI’s BehaviorScan and InfoScan Cable TV interrupt privileges Full record of what other media (such as magazines) go into each household Family-by-family purchasing Full record of 95 percent of all store sales of tested items from the check-out scanners Immediate stocking/distribution in almost every store is assured by the research firm. Result: IRI knows almost every stimulus that hits each individual family, and it knows almost every change that takes place in each family's purchase habits.

The Test Market Several test market cities are selected. Product is sold into those cities in the regular channels and advertised at representative levels in local media. Once used to support the decision whether to launch a product, now more frequently used to determine how best to do so.

Advantages of Test Marketing Risk Reduction monetary risk channel relationships sales force morale Strategic Improvement marketing mix production facilities Allows most accurate method of forecasting future sales Allows firms the opportunity to pretest marketing mix variables

Disadvantages of Test Marketing Does not yield infallible results Are expensive Exposes the new product or service to competitors Takes time to conduct Cost ($1 mill+) Time (9-12 months+) hurt competitive advantage competitor may monitor test market competitor may go national Competitor can disrupt test market

A Risk of Test Marketing: “Showing Your Hand” Figure 18.5 Kellogg tracked the sale of General Foods' Toast-Ems while they were in test market. Noting they were becoming popular, they went national quickly with Pop-Tarts before the General Foods' test market was over. After having invented freeze-dried coffee, General Foods was test-marketing its own Maxim brand when Nestle bypassed them with Taster's Choice, which went on to be the leading brand. While Procter & Gamble were busy test-marketing their soft chocolate chip cookies, both Nabisco and Keebler rolled out similar cookies nationwide. The same thing happened with P&G’s Brigade toilet-bowl cleaner. It was in test marketing for three years, during which time both Vanish and Ty-D-Bol became established in the market. General Foods' test market results for a new frozen baby food were very encouraging, until it was learned that most of the purchases were being made by competitors Gerber, Libby, and Heinz.

The Rollout Select a limited area of the country (one or several cities or states, 25% of the market, etc.) and monitor sales of product there. Starting areas are not necessarily representative The company may be able to get the ball rolling more easily there The company may deliberately choose a hard area to sell in, to learn the pitfalls and what really drives success. Decision point: when to switch to the full national launch.

Types of Rollout By geography (including international) By application By influence By trade channel

Patterns of Information Gained During Rollout Figure 18.7

Risks of Rollout May need to invest in full-scale production facility early. Competitors may move fast enough to go national while the rollout is still underway. Problems getting into the distribution channel. Lacks national publicity that a full-scale launch may generate.

Probable Future for Market Testing Methods Test marketing (“dinosaur”) Pseudo sale (incomplete) Minimarket (flexibility & variety) Rollout (small, fast, flexible)

Ref: Crawford & Benedeto (2008) thank you