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PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING CONCEPT Friday, November 19
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Overview No business’ decisions are more important than the decisions surrounding product development. Analytical tools, such as Product Mapping, Marketing Opportunity Analysis or a Benefit Analysis are essential.
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Product Mapping Companies research: What’s already on the market; What consumers like and dislike about existing products; And most importantly, what is missing. This process is called Product Mapping. Product mapping helps determine common characteristics among each product grouping.
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Product Surveys – A group of consumers comment on a collection of products and determine common factors they perceive. Product maps instruct the product development team as to what product to make and what features to include.
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Marketing Opportunity Analysis (MOA) Also known as a situational analysis because it defines the various opportunities or market situations for a specific brand. Composed of 3 distinct parts: Overall Market; Indirect Competition; Direct Competition.
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Overall Market The MOA identifies the category under investigation that defines the brand. The category is broad, ie. toothpaste. If the marketer were preparing an MOA on toothpaste, you must list all brands on the market, including those of different packaging sizes.
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Indirect Competition MOA groups the competitive brands by features and each classification can be further simplified. Indirect competition (ie. pudding competing with cake) can reveal possible marketing opportunities, but would only be pursued after exhausting all direct competition opportunities.
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Direct Competition Identifies all competitive brands that compete for a share of the same market. Products are practically identical. The researcher examines the MOA for gaps. Ie. This could mean (a) the market is not large enough for more than one brand, or (b) there is an opportunity for a competitor.
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Market Potential The MOA can also help determine the market potential of a specific type of product. This is calculated by multiplying the number of possible buyers (N) by the average selling price (P) and the average number of the item that each buyer purchases in a year (Q). MP = N x P x Q
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Benefit Analysis Any feature of a service or product should add utility and provide some benefit to the consumer. Products should: Solve consumer problems; Add value. A feature-benefit analysis connects each feature to utility and the benefit to the product. A cost-benefit analysis is a comparison of the estimated costs of an action with the estimated benefits it is intended/likely to produce.
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Questions… Complete the ICE Activities for 5.5 # 1 (a), 2 (a) & 3 (a).
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