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Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

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Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies
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Page 1: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Chapter 9

New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies

Page 2: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Today’s Objective Explain how companies find and develop

new-product ideas. List and define the steps in the new-product

development process. Describe the stages of the product life cycle. Describe how marketing strategies change

during the product’s life cycle.

Page 3: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Focus on Innovation Names its culture of

continuous innovation “renewal”

Organizes into autonomous units, which helps foster innovation

Large R&D budget of $3 billion with 40% of employees involved in R&D

Corporate Results Annual sales of $36 billion

across 130 countries Global market share of

38%, greater than that of its nearest three rivals combined

Case StudyNokia

Page 4: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

New-Product Development Strategy Strategies for obtaining new-product ideas:

Acquisition of companies, patents, licenses New product development, product improvements

and modifications

Page 5: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Nike acquired Converse in 2003 for $305 million

Page 6: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

New-Product Failures

Only 10% of new consumer products are still on the market and profitable after 3 years.

Industrial products failure rate as high as 30%. Why do products fail?

Overestimation of market size Design problems Incorrectly positioned, priced, or advertised Pushed despite poor marketing research findings Development costs Competition

Page 7: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Discussion Question

Think of products you have seen recently in stores. Can you think of any that seem doomed to fail?

Why?

Page 8: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Major Stages in New-Product Development Idea generation Idea screening Concept development and testing Marketing strategy development Business analysis Product development Test marketing Commercialization

Page 9: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Major Stages in New-Product Development Process

Page 10: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Idea Generation

Internal sources: Company employees at all levels

External sources: Customers Competitors Distributors Suppliers Outsourcing

Page 11: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

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.

Page 12: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Concept Development and Testing Product Idea:

idea for a possible product that the company can see itself offering.

Product Concept: detailed version of the idea stated in meaningful

consumer terms. Product Image:

the way consumers perceive an actual or potential product.

Page 13: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Pair up with another student and assume that you are in charge of the concept testing for the product shown at right.

What questions would you ask of consumers who are evaluating this product concept?

Let’s Talk!

Page 14: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Marketing Strategy Development Part One:

Describes the target market, planned product positions, sales, market share, and profit goals.

Part Two: Outlines the product’s planned price, distribution,

and marketing budget. Part Three:

Describes the long-run sales and profit goals, marketing mix strategy.

Page 15: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

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.

Page 16: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Product Development

Develop concept into physical product. Calls for large jump in investment. Prototypes are made. Prototype must have correct physical

features and convey psychological characteristics.

Page 17: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Test Marketing

Product and program introduced in more realistic market setting.

Not needed for all products. Can be expensive and time consuming, but

better than making major marketing mistake.

Page 18: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Commercialization

Must decide on timing (i.e., when to introduce the product).

Must decide on where to introduce the product (e.g., single location, state, region, nationally, internationally).

Must develop a market rollout plan.

Page 19: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Organizing New-Product Development Sequential Approach:

Each stage completed before moving to next phase of the project.

Simultaneous Approach: Cross-functional teams work through overlapping

steps to save time and increase effectiveness.

Page 20: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

The Product Life Cycle

Product development Introduction Growth Maturity Decline

Page 21: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Sales and Profit over the Product’s Life from Inception to Decline

Page 22: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Product Life-Cycle Applications

Product class has the longest life cycle (e.g., gas-powered cars)

Product form tends to have the standard PLC shape (e.g., dial telephone)

Brand can change quickly because of changing competitive attacks and responses (e.g., Tide, Cheer)

Style is a basic and distinctive mode of expression (e.g., formal clothing, Danish modern furniture)

Fashion is a popular style in a given field (e.g., business casual)

Fad is a fashion that enters quickly, is adopted quickly, and declines fast (e.g., pet rocks, and virtual pets)

Page 23: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Styles, Fashions, Fads

Page 24: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Practical Problems of PLC

Hard to identify which stage of the PLC the product is in.

Hard to pinpoint when the product moves to the next stage.

Hard to identify factors that affect product’s movement through stages.

Hard to forecast sales level, length of each stage, and shape of PLC.

Strategy is both a cause and result of the PLC.

Page 25: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Introduction Stage of PLC

Sales: low Costs: high cost per customer Profits: negative Marketing Objective: create product awareness and

trial Product: offer a basic product Price: use cost-plus formula Distribution: build selective distribution Promotion: heavy to entice product trial

Page 26: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Growth Stage of PLC

Sales: rapidly rising Costs: average cost per customer Profits: rising Marketing Objective: maximize market share Product: offer extension, service, warranty Price: penetration strategy Distribution: build intensive distribution Promotion: reduce to take advantage of demand

Page 27: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Maturity Stage of PLC

Sales: peak Costs: low cost per customer Profits: high Marketing Objective: maximize profits while

defending market share Product: diversify brand and models Price: match or best competitors Distribution: build more intensive distribution Promotion: increase to encourage brand switching

Page 28: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Maturity Stage of the PLC

Modifying the Market: Increase the consumption of the current product.

How? Look for new users and market segments. Reposition the brand to appeal to larger or faster-

growing segment. Look for ways to increase usage among present

customers.

Page 29: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Maturity Stage of the PLC

Modifying the Product: Changing characteristics such as quality,

features, or style to attract new users and to inspire more usage.

How? Improve durability, reliability, speed, taste. Improve styling and attractiveness. Add new features. Expand usefulness, safety, convenience.

Page 30: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Modifying the Product

Gillette’s Fusion razor combines a precision trimmer blade (on back) with a five blade shaving surface (on front). The flexible comfort guard and Enhanced Indicator Lubrastrip (containing vitamin E and aloe) enhance shaving comfort.

Marketing in Action

http://www.gillette.com/homepage.asp

Page 31: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Maturity Stage of the PLC

Modifying the Marketing Mix: Improving sales by changing one or more

marketing mix elements. How?

Cut prices. Launch a better ad campaign. Move into larger market channels.

Page 32: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Maturity Stage of PLC

Modifying the Marketing Mix: Improving sales by

changing one or more marketing mix elements.

How? One method is to launch

aggressive sales promotion programs, such as rebates.

Page 33: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Decline Stage of PLC

Sales: declining Costs: low cost per customer Profits: declining Marketing Objective: reduce expenditures and milk

the brand Product: phase out weak items Price: cut price Distribution: selective--phase out unprofitable outlets Promotion: reduce to minimal level

Page 34: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Which stage of the PLC?

How do you know?

Product development

Introduction Growth Maturity Decline

Page 35: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Which stage of the PLC?How do you

know? Product development Introduction Growth Maturity Decline

Page 36: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

Discussion

How can marketers help products bounce back from the decline stage?

Page 37: Chapter 9 New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies.

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