Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAlvin Bryan Modified over 9 years ago
1
Principles of Marketing Chapter 8: Developing New Products And Managing The Product Life-Cycle
2
New Product Development Pertains to: Not only the development of original products, But also improvements, modifications, and new brands Involves great amounts of: (all data reported below pertain to the CPG market & sourced from the American Association of Advertising Agencies’ “Research Matters” report on June 6, 2007) Risk Only 10% new in ‘04 had sales of $20 million in ’05 Over 80% of new fail due to lack of differentiation As of ‘07, 49% of line extensions, and 74% of more innovative NPD resulted in failure And expense Total average marketing cost (only) for a major product launch as of ’05 was $68.3 million (includes adv.; slotting fees; in-market testing; etc.) Advertising spending alone in 2007 was over $500 million for Vista and $50 million for Cadbury Schweppes’ Accelerade sports drink Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
3
NPD’s Most Common Outcome: Failure Food Industry: Average $20-$30 billion lost annually Reasons for: Overestimation of market size. Product design problems. Incorrectly positioned, priced, or advertised. Pushed by high level executives despite poor marketing research findings. Excessive development costs. Competitive reaction. Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
4
NPD Process Steps involved: 1. Idea screening 2. Concept development and testing 3. Marketing strategy development 4. Business analysis 5. Product development 6. Test marketing 7. Commercialization Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
5
Idea Generation Ideas can come from: Internal sources: Company employees at all levels. External sources: Customers Competitors Distributors Suppliers Outsourcing (design firms, product consultancies, online collaborative communities) Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
6
Idea Screening Idea screening: Process used to spot good ideas and drop poor ones. Executives provide a description of the product along with estimates of market size, product price, development time and costs, manufacturing costs, and rate of return. Evaluated against a set of company criteria for new products. Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
7
Concept Development & Testing Concept development and testing: Product idea: Idea for a possible product that the company can see itself offering to the market. Product concept: Detailed version of the new-product idea stated in meaningful consumer terms. Concept testing: Testing new-product concepts with groups of target consumers to find out if the concepts have strong consumer appeal. Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
8
Marketing Strategy Development Marketing strategy development: Part One: Describes the target market, planned value proposition, sales, market share, and profit goals. Part Two: Outlines the product’s planned price, distribution, and marketing budget. Part Three: Describes the planned long-run sales and profit goals, marketing mix strategy. Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
9
Business Analysis Involves a review of the sales, costs, and profit projections to assess fit with company objectives. If results are positive, project moves to the product development phase. Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
10
Product Development Product development: Where a concept transforms into a physical good Requires a large jump in investment. Prototypes are made. Must have correct physical features and convey psychological characteristics. Prototypes are then subjected to physical tests. Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
11
Test Marketing Involves: The product and marketing program being introduced in a more realistic market setting. Not necessary for all products, but can decrease risk “If it plays in Peoria…” An old marketing adage about test marketing But no longer the “top dog” Top 5 cities: (Acxiom(R) Corporation’s “Mirror on America” study) 1. Albany, NY 2. Rochester, NY 3. Greensboro, NC 4. Birmingham, AL 5. Syracuse, NY Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
12
Commercialization Is a function: Timing When to introduce the product Where (to introduce) A single location, state, region, nationally, internationally Etc. Everything builds into a market rollout plan Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
13
The Product Life Cycle (PLC)* Dr. James Carver – Auburn University IntroductionGrowth Sales ($) Sales Maturity Profits Decline Time
14
Problems with the PLC When used carefully, the PLC may help develop good marketing strategies. However, in practice, it is difficult to: Forecast sales level, length of each stage, and shape of PLC. Develop marketing strategy because strategy is both a cause and result of the PLC. As a result, the PLC is more of a descriptive tool for general strategy and life of a product, but not a predictive (i.e., theoretical) tool Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
15
General Characteristics and Strategies Given Stage Intro: Characteristics: Sales are low; profits are generally negative till end; customers tend to be innovators; and competition is low Strategic Problem Faced: Get out of “Intro” as fast as you can, so Create product awareness and trial Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
16
General Characteristics and Strategies Given Stage Growth: Characteristics: Fastest rise in sales and profits; profits peak here; customers tend to be early adopters; and competition is growing because of success Strategic Problem Faced: Maximize one’s market share and monitor the entry and effects of competitors, while simultaneously ensuring product availability to hold stage as long as possible. Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
17
General Characteristics and Strategies Given Stage Maturity: Characteristics: Sales peak here; profit growth is now in decline (but still positive); customers tend to be the middle majority; and competition is stable and beginning to decline Strategic Problem Faced: Maintain market share and maximize profits available as they’re shrinking; look to begin a new PLC* As one cannot return to earlier stages* Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
18
General Characteristics and Strategies Given Stage Decline: Characteristics: Sales are declining; profits are still declining; customers tend to be laggards; and competition is declining still Strategic Problem Faced: Reduce expenditures and milk the brand Consider dropping underperforming models or entirely Dropping will affect resellers and customers May be needed by resellers to “complete” image or “drive” traffic Dr. James Carver – Auburn University
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.