Chapter 8: New Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies
Chapter 8: New Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies
Chapter 8: New Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies
1. Because all products eventually decline, the firm must find new products to replace
aging ones. This is the problem of new product development.
2. The frim must be good at adapting its marketing strategies in the face of changing
tastes, technologies, and competition as products pass through life-cycle stages. This
becomes the problem of product-life cycle strategies.
1. One way is by acquisition where the firm buys a whole company, a patent, or license to
produce someone else’s product.
Unique superior product – one with higher quality, features and value in use
A well-defined product concept – a defined target market, product requirements, and
benefits
3. Concept Development and Testing- It involves testing the concepts with a group of target
consumers to find out if the concepts have strong consumer appeal.
5. Business Analysis - It involves a review of the sales, costs, and profit projections for a new
product to find out whether these factors satisfy the company’s objectives.
6. Product Development - It involves developing the product concept into a physical product in
order to ensure that the product idea can be turned into a workable product.
7. Test Marketing - The product and marketing program are introduced into more realistic
marketing settings.
Product development stage begins when the company finds and develops a new product idea.
During product development, sales are zero and the company’s investment costs mount. This is
a pre-stage
Introduction stage – period of slow sales growth as the product is being introduced in the
market. Profits are nonexistent in this stage because of heavy expenses of product
introduction.
Maturity Stage – period of slowdown in sales growth because the product has achieved
acceptance by most potential buyers. Profits level off or decline because of increased marketing
outlays to defend the product against competition.
The decline stage – the period when sales fall off and profits drop.
A style is a basic and distinctive mode of expressions. For example, clothing could be
formal, business, or casual. Once a style is invented, it may last for generation, coming in
and out of vogue.
Fashion is a currently accepted or popular style in a given field, for example, the
“preppie look” in clothing. Fashions tend to grow slowly, remain popular for a while and
then decline slowly.
10. A fad is a fashion that enters quickly, is adopted with fast zeal, peaks early, and
declines away fast. Fads last only for a short time and attack a limited following.