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A Global Perspective 9 New Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies Philip Kotler Gary Armstrong Swee Hoon Ang Siew Meng Leong Chin Tiong Tan Oliver Yau Hon-Ming PowerPoint slides adapted by Peggy Su 9-1 Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to: 1. Explain how companies find and develop new-product ideas 2. List and define the steps in the new-product development process and the major considerations in managing this process 3. Describe the stages of the product life cycle 4. Describe how marketing strategies change during the product’s life cycle 5. Discuss two additional product and services issues: socially responsible product decisions and international product and services marketing Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-2 Chapter Outline 1. New-Product Development Strategy 2. New-Product Development Process 3. Managing New-Product Development 4. Product Life-Cycle Strategies 5. Additional Product and Service Considerations Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-3 New-Product Development Strategy A firm can obtain new products through: • Acquisition • New-product development Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-4 New-Product Development Strategy • Acquisition refers to the buying of a whole company, a patent, or a license to produce someone else’s product. • New product development refers to original products, product improvements, product modifications, and new brands developed from the firm’s own research and development. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-5 New-Product Development Strategy Reasons for new product failure • Overestimation of market size • Poor design • Incorrect positioning • Wrong timing • Priced too high • Ineffective promotion • Management influence • High development costs • Competition Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-6 New-Product Development Process 1. Idea generation 2. Idea screening 3. Concept development and testing 4. Marketing strategy development 5. Business analysis 6. Product development 7. Test marketing 8. Commercialization Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd (Exploit for maximal profit, usually by sacrificing quality) 9-7 New-Product Development Process Idea Generation • New idea generation is the systematic search for new product ideas. • Sources of new-product ideas • Internal • External Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-8 New-Product Development Process Idea Generation • Internal sources refer to the company’s own formal research and development, management and staff, and entrepreneurial programs. • External sources refer to sources outside the company such as customers, competitors, distributors, suppliers, and outside design firms. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-9 New-Product Development Process Idea Screening • Idea screening refers to reviewing new-product ideas in order to drop poor ones as soon as possible. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-10 New-Product Development Process Concept Development and Testing • Product idea is an idea for a possible product that the company can see itself offering to the market. • Product concept is a detailed version of the idea stated in meaningful consumer terms. • It is the understanding of the dynamics of the product in order to showcase the best qualities and maximum features of the product. Marketers spend a lot of time and research in order to target their attended audience. Marketers will look into a product concept before marketing a product towards their customers. • Product image is the way consumers perceive an actual or potential product. 9-11 New-Product Development Process Concept Development and Testing • Concept testing (or market testing) is the process of using quantitative methods and qualitative methods to evaluate consumer response to a product idea prior to the introduction of a product to the market. It can also be used to generate communication designed to alter consumer attitudes toward existing products. • These methods involve the evaluation by consumers of product concepts having certain rational benefits, such as "a cleaner that removes stains but is gentle on fabrics," or non-rational benefits, such as "a shampoo that lets you be yourself." Such methods are commonly referred to as concept testing and have been performed using field surveys, personal interviews and focus groups, in combination with various quantitative methods, to generate and evaluate product concepts. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-12 New-Product Development Process Marketing Strategy Development • Marketing strategy development refers to the initial marketing strategy for introducing the product to the market. • Marketing strategy statement • Business analysis • Product development • Test marketing • Commercialization Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-13 New-Product Development Process Marketing Strategy Statement Part 1: • Description of the target market • Product positioning, sales, market share, and profit goals Part 2: • Price distribution and budget Part 3: • Long-term sales, profit goals, and marketing mix strategy Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-14 New-Product Development Process Business Analysis • Business analysis involves a review of the sales, costs, and profit forecasts to find out whether they satisfy the company’s objectives. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-15 New-Product Development Process Product Development • Product development involves the creation and testing of one or more physical versions by the R&D or engineering departments. • Requires an increase in investment Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-16 New-Product Development Process Test Marketing • When firms test market • New product with large investment • Uncertainty about product or marketing program • When firms may not test market • Simple line extension • Copy of competitor product • Low costs • Management confidence Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-17 New-Product Development Process Commercialization • Commercialization is the introduction of the new product • When to launch • Where to launch Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 9-18 Product Life-Cycle Strategies • Product life-cycle (PLC) is the course that a product’s sales and profits take over its lifetime. • Product development • Introduction • Growth • Maturity • Decline 9-19 Product Life-Cycle Strategies Sales and profits over the product’s life from inception to decline 9-20 Product Life-Cycle Strategies • Product development begins when the company finds and develops a new-product idea. • During product development, sales are zero, and the company’s investment costs mount. 9-21 Product Life-Cycle Strategies Introduction stage is when the new product is first launched. Introduction stage is a period of slow sales growth as the product is introduced in the market. Profits are nonexistent in this stage because of the heavy expenses of product introduction. Well-known products such as frozen foods and HDTVs lingered for many years before they entered a stage of more rapid growth. Promotion spending is relatively high to inform consumers of the new product and get them to try it. Because the market is not generally ready for product refinements at this stage, the company and its few competitors produce basic versions of the product. These firms focus their selling on those buyers who are the most ready to buy. • Takes time • Slow sales growth • Little or no profit • High distribution and promotion expenses. 9-22 Product Life-Cycle Strategies Growth stage is when the new product satisfies the market. Growth is a period of rapid market acceptance and increasing profits. • Sales increase • New competitors enter the market • Price stability or decline to increase volume • Consumer education • Product quality increases • New features • New market segments and distribution channels are entered • Profits increase • Promotion and manufacturing costs gain economies of scale 9-23 Growth Stage If the new product satisfies the market, it will enter a growth stage, in which sales will start climbing quickly. The early adopters will continue to buy, and later buyers will start following their lead, especially if they hear favorable word of mouth. New competitors will enter the market. They will introduce new product features, and the market will expand. The increase in competitors leads to an increase in the number of distribution outlets. Prices remain where they are or decrease only slightly. Companies keep their promotion spending at the same or a slightly higher level. Educating the market remains a goal, but now the company must also meet the competition. 9-24 Growth Stage Profits increase during the growth stage as promotion costs are spread over a large volume and as unit manufacturing costs decrease. The firm uses several strategies to sustain rapid market growth as long as possible. It improves product quality and adds new product features and models. The enterprise enters new market segments and new distribution channels. The company shifts some advertising from building product awareness to building product persuasion and purchase. The organization lowers prices at the right time to attract more buyers. The firm faces a trade-off ( compromise) between high market share and high current profit. By spending a lot of money on product improvement, promotion, and distribution, the company can capture a dominant position. 9-25 Product Life-Cycle Strategies • Maturity stage is a long-lasting stage of a product that has gained consumer acceptance. Maturity is a period of slowdown in sales growth because the product has achieved acceptance by most potential buyers. Profits stabilize or decline because of increased marketing outlays to defend the product against competition. • Slowdown in sales • Many suppliers • Substitute products • Overcapacity leads to competition • Increased promotion and R&D to support sales and profits. 9-26 Maturity Stage This maturity stage normally lasts longer than the previous stages, and it poses strong challenges to marketing management. Most products are in the maturity stage of the life cycle, and therefore most of marketing management deals with the mature product. The slowdown in sales growth results in many producers with many products to sell. In turn, this overcapacity leads to greater competition. Competitors begin marking down prices, increasing their advertising and sales promotions, and upping their product development budgets to find better versions of the product. These steps lead to a drop in profit. Weaker competitors start dropping out, and the industry eventually contains only well-established competitors. Many products in the mature stage appear to remain unchanged for long periods. Most successful products are actually evolving to meet changing consumer needs. Product managers should do more than simply ride along with or defend their mature Products. They should consider modifying the market, product, and marketing mix. In modifying the market, the company tries to increase consumption by finding new users and new market segments for its brands. 9-27 Product Life-Cycle Strategies Decline stage is when sales decline or level off for an extended time, creating a weak product. Decline is the period when sales fall off and profits drop. The sales of most product forms and brands eventually dip. The decline may be slow, as in the cases of stamps or rapid, as in the cases of cassette and VHS tapes. Sales may plunge to zero, or they may drop to a low level where they continue for many years Sales decline for many reasons, including technological advances, shifts in consumer tastes, and increased competition. 9-28 Decline Stage As sales and profits decline, some firms withdraw from the market. Those remaining may cut back their product offerings. Companies may drop smaller market segments and minimal trade channels, or they may cut the promotion budget and reduce their prices further. Carrying a weak product can be very costly to a firm, and not just in profit terms. There are many hidden costs. A weak product may take up too much of management’s time. It often requires frequent price and inventory adjustments. It requires advertising and sales- force attention that might be better used to make “healthy” products more profitable. A product’s failing reputation can cause customer concerns about the company and its other products. The biggest cost may well lie in the future. Keeping weak products delays the search for replacements, creates a uneven product mix, hurts current profits, and weakens the company’s position on the future. 9-29 Decline Stage companies need to pay more attention to their aging products. A firm’s first task is to identify those products in the decline stage by regularly reviewing sales, market shares, costs, and profit trends. Management must decide whether to maintain, harvest, or drop each of these declining products. Management may decide to maintain its brand, repositioning or reinvigorating it in hopes of moving it back into the growth stage of the PLC. Management may decide to harvest the product, which means reducing various costs (plant and equipment, maintenance, R&D, advertising, sales force), hoping that sales hold up. If successful, harvesting will increase the company’s profits in the short run. Management may decide to drop the product from its line. It can sell it to another firm or simply liquidate it. 9-30 Not all products follow all five stages of the PLC. Some products are introduced and die quickly; others stay in the mature stage for a long, long time. Some enter the decline stage product performance or developing marketing strategies presents some practical problems. For example, in practice, it is difficult to forecast the sales level at each PLC stage, the length of each stage, and the shape of the PLC curve. 9-31 Marketers should not blindly push products through the traditional PLC stages. Instead, marketers often defy the “rules” of the life cycle and position or reposition their products in unexpected ways. By doing this, they can rescue mature or declining products and return them to the growth phase of the life cycle. Or they can overcome obstacles to slow consumer acceptance and push new products forward into the growth phase. The moral of the product life cycle is that companies must continually innovate or else they risk extinction. No matter how successful its current product lineup, a company must skillfully manage the life cycles of existing products for future success. And to grow, it must develop a steady stream of new products that bring new value to customers. 9-32