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1-1 Chapter 10 Product and Service Strategies 1-2 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. After studying this chapter you should be able to: • Understand the different characteristics of a product mix. • Recognize the stages and characteristics of the product life cycle. • Identify appropriate marketing strategies for products in different life cycle stages. 1-3 After studying this chapter you should be able to: • Describe the limitations of the product life cycle concept. • Discuss different product-mix and product-line strategies. 1-4 Product Mix • Product Mix: – The total assortment of products and services marketed by a firm. • Product Line: – A group of individual products that are closely related in some way. • Individual Product: – Any brand or variant of a brand in a product line. 1-5 Product Mix Characteristics • Product Mix Width: – The number of product lines in the product mix. • Product Line Length: – The number of products in a product line. • Product Mix Consistency: – The relatedness of the different product lines in a product mix. 1-6 Product and Service Strategies 1-7 Individual Product Strategies • Product Life Cycle (PLC): – Describes the advancement of products through identifiable stages of their existence. Introductory Stage Growth Stage Maturity Stage Decline Stage Total Market Sales Time 1-8 The Product Life Cycle Introductory Stage Growth Stage Maturity Stage Decline Stage Total Market Sales Time 1-9 The Product Life Cycle Concept is Based on Four Premises 1-10 Products have a limited life. Profits from a product vary at different stages in the life cycle. Product sales pass through distinct stages, each with different marketing implications. Products require different strategies at different life cycle stages. The Diffusion Process Innovators (2.5%) Early Adopters (13.5%) Early Majority (34%) Innovators Early Adopters Early Majority Late Majority Laggards (16%) "The Chasm" Technology Adoption Process 1-11 Laggards Late Majority (34%) The Diffusion Process Innovators Early Adopters Early Majority Late Majority "The Chasm" Technology Adoption Process 1-12 Laggards PLC Stages and Characteristics 1-13 PLC Length and Shape Style Sales Sales Time 1-14 Fashion Fad Sales Time Time PLC Marketing Strategies 1-15 Stage Objective Marketing Strategy Introduction Awareness & trial Communicate benefits Growth Usage of firm’s brand Specific brand communication, lower prices, expand distribution Maturity Maintain market share Sales promotion, drop price, Extend life cycle expand distribution, new uses & new versions of product Decline Decide what to do with product Maintain, harvest, or divest Limitations of the PLC 1. The life cycle concept applies best to product forms rather than to classes of products or specific brands. 2. The life cycle concept may lead marketers to think that a product has a predetermined life, which may produce problems in interpreting sales and profits. 3. It is only a descriptive way of looking at the behavior of a product and the life cycle can not predict the behavior of a product. 1-16 Product-Line Strategies • Strategic Alternatives: 1. To increase the length of a product line. 2. To decrease the length of a product line. 1-17 Increasing the Product Line • • • • Downward-stretch Strategy Upward-stretch Strategy Two-way-stretch Strategy Line-filling Strategy Cannibalization occurs when a new Product takes sales away from existing products. 1-18 Decreasing the Product Line • Product Line Contraction: – Firms must consider deleting products when: • They are not successful. • They reach the decline stage of PLC. • Long product line marketing costs are too high. 1-19 Product-Mix Strategies The Product Mix consists of all product lines and individual products marketed by the firm. 1-20 Strategic Alternatives Add New Product Lines? Delete Existing Product Lines? 1-21 Branding Strategies Individual Brand Name Strategy Product Mix Branding Strategies Family Brands or Product Types Family Brand Name Strategy 1-22 Family & Individual Brand Name Company Name Ethical Issues in Product and Service Strategies • Is the product safe when used as intended? • Is the product safe when misused in a way that is foreseeable? • Have any competitors’ patents or copyrights been violated? 1-23 Ethical Issues in Product and Service Strategies • Is the product compatible with the physical environment? • Is the product environmentally compatible when disposed of? • Do any organizational stakeholders object to the product? 1-24