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Chapter 9
Developing and Managing
Products
Prepared by
Deborah Baker
Texas Christian University
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
1
Chapter 9 Objectives
1. Explain the importance of developing new
products and describe the six categories of
new products.
2. Explain the steps in the new-product
development process.
3. Explain the concept of product life cycles.
4. Explain the diffusion process through
which new products are adopted.
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
2
Categories of New Products
New-To-The-World
New Product Lines
Six
Categories
of
New
Products
Product Line Additions
Improvements/Revisions
Repositioned Products
Lower-Priced Products
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
3
The New-Product Development Process
Long-Term Commitment
New Product Strategy
Capitalize on Experience
New Product
Success
Factors
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Establish an Environment
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
4
New-Product Development Process
New-Product Strategy
Idea Generation
Idea Screening
Business Analysis
Development
Test Marketing
Commercialization
New Product
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
5
Idea Generation
Customers
Employees
Distributors
Competitors
Sources of
New-Product
Ideas
R&D
Consultants
Creative Thinking
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
6
Business Analysis
Preliminary Demand
Considerations
in
Business
Analysis Stage
Cost
Sales
Profitability
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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Development
Development
Phase
Decisions









Creation of prototype
Packaging
Branding
Labeling
Promotion strategy
Pricing
Distribution
Technical production feasibility
Final government approvals if needed
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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Test Marketing
Criteria for
Choosing a
Test Market
 Similar to planned
distribution
 Relative isolation
 Advertising availability
 Diversified cross section
 No atypical purchase habits
 Representative population
 Typical per capita income
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
 Not overly used
 Not easily “jammed”
 Year-round sales stability
 No dominant TV; multiple
media
 Available retailers
 Available research/audit
 Free of unusual influences
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
9
Four Stages of Product Life Cycle
Maturity
Stage
Decline
Stage
Dollars
Introductory Growth
Stage
Stage
Product
Category Sales
Product
Category Profits
0
Time
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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Introductory Stage







Full-Scale Launch
of New Products
High failure rates
Little competition
Frequent product modification
Limited distribution
High marketing and production costs
Negative profits
Promotion focuses on awareness and
information
 Intensive personal selling to channels
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
11
Growth Stage









Offered in more sizes,
flavors, options
Increasing rate of sales
Entrance of competitors
Market consolidation
Healthy profits
Promotion emphasizes brand ads
Goal is wider distribution
Prices normally fall
Development costs are recovered
Economies of scale
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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Maturity Stage








Many consumer
products are in Maturity
Declining sales growth
Saturated markets
Cosmetic product changes
Extending product line
Marginal competitors drop out
Heavy promotions to dealers and consumers
Prices and profits fall
Niche marketers emerge
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
13
Decline Stage
Rate of decline depends on
change in tastes or
adoption of substitute products
 Long-run drop in sales
 Competitors forced out of market
 Small specialty firms manufacture product
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
14
Implications for Marketing Management
Promote more frequent use
Find new target markets
Find new uses
Price below market
Strategies to
Prevent
Decline Phase
New distribution channels
Change ingredients
Dramatic new guarantee
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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Marketing Strategies During PLC
INTRODUCTION
Product
Strategy
Distribution
Strategy
Promotion
Strategy
Pricing
Strategy
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
Limited models
Frequent
changes
GROWTH
More models
Frequent
changes.
Limited
Expanded
Wholesale/
dealers. Longretail distributors term relations
MATURITY
Large number
Eliminate
of models.
unprofitable
models
Extensive.
Margins drop.
Shelf space
Awareness.
Aggressive ads. Advertise.
Stimulate
Stimulate Promote heavily
demand.Sampling
demand
Higher/recoup
development
costs
Fall as result of
competition &
efficient production.
DECLINE
Prices fall
(usually).
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
Phase out
unprofitable
outlets
Phase out
promotion
Prices
stabilize at
low level.
16
The Spread of New Products
Innovators
Early Adopters
Categories of
Adopters
in the
Diffusion Process
Early Majority
Late Majority
Laggards
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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Percentage of Adopters
Categories of Adopters
Early
Innovators Adopters
13.5%
2.5%
Early
Majority
34%
Late
Majority
34%
Laggards
16%
Time
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
18
Rate of Adoption
Complexity
Compatibility
Product
Characteristics
Predict Rate of
Adoption
Relative Advantage
Observability
Trialability
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©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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Product Life Cycle & Diffusion Process
Introduction
Growth
Decline
Maturity
Product
life cycle
curve
Early majority
Late majority
Early adopters
Innovators
Laggards
Diffusion
curve
Chapter 9 Ver 2e
©2000 South-Western College Publishing
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