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Published byDomenic O’Brien’ Modified over 9 years ago
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Product planning involves making decisions about the features and services of a product or idea that will help sell that product. The product mix includes all the different products that a company makes or sells. › For large companies, this can include hundreds of brands, such as Kraft’s brands of Kraft, Maxwell House, Nabisco, Oreo, etc.
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A product line is a group of closely related products manufactured or sold by a business. › Ex: all the car models produced by Ford A product item is a specific model, brand, or size of a product within a product line. › A Ford Focus or F-150 pick-up
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Product width refers to the number of different product lines a business manufactures or sells. › Ex: a retailer may sell 3 types of jeans: Wrangler, Levi’s, and Lee Product depth refers to the number of items offered within each product line. › Ex: number of sizes, price ranges, colors, fabric type, and styles for each brand of jeans.
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A product mix strategy is a plan for determining which products a business will manufacture or stock. Developing new products is an important business strategy for large manufacturers. › There are seven key steps to new product development.
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Step 1: Generate ideas Step 2: Screen ideas Step 3: Develop a business proposal Step 4: Develop the product › Often involves producing a prototype (model of the product)
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Step 5: Testing the product with consumers Step 6: Introducing the product (commercialization) Step 7: Evaluating customer acceptance
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Line extensions › Ex: Tylenol, Tylenol Sinus, Tylenol Cold & Flu Product modifications › An alteration in a company’s existing product May be new colors, features, or sizes Ex: new versions of iphones
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Obsolence Loss of appeal Changes in company objectives Lack of profit Replacement with new products Conflicts with other products in the line
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The product life cycle represents the stages that a product goes through during its life. › 4 stages: Introduction Growth Maturity Decline
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Company is focusing on building awareness of the product. Special promotions entice the consumer to buy. Usually the least profitable stage of the life cycle.
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Company seeks to build brand preference and increase market share. The product is experiencing success and attracting repeat customers. Advertising focuses on customer satisfaction. Company may need to be price competitive because competitors will enter the market.
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Product has more competition now Most consumers already own or know about the product Advertising continues to reinforce brand. Dollars are spent fighting off the competition.
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Sales are falling: profits may be less than expenses. Advertising is reduced. Product may be deleted from the product line. To keep the product alive, several options exist:
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› Sell or license the product. › Recommit to the product line and innovate. › Discount the product. › Regionalize the product. › Update or alter the product.
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Product positioning refers to the efforts a business makes to identify, place, and sell its product in the marketplace. To do this, businesses identify customer needs and determine how their products compare to the competition.
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Positioning by price and quality › Ford positioning Focus as economical Positioning by features and benefits › Rockport shoes positioned as comfortable, no matter the use Positioning in relation to competitors › Southwest Airlines low-fare alternative Positioning in relation to other products in the line. › Ipod nano vs touch
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Category management is a process that involves managing the product categories as individual business units. Category manager is responsible for all brands for one generic product category, such as foods, beverages, health and beauty products, etc. › Designed to put business in touch with customers’ needs/wants.
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Questions???
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