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New Product Development

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... purchase frequency, low involvement goods (e.g., most groceries) ... Average cost per customer. Rising profits. Early adopters are targeted. Growing competition ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Product Development


1
New Product Development
  • Marketing Management

2
Overview
  • Challenges in NPD
  • Adoption of new products
  • The NPD process
  • Product-life-cycle (PLC) strategies

3
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4
Strategic roles of most successful new products
5
Challenges in NPD
  • New products suffer high failure rates up to
    90
  • Several reasons account for failure

6
What it takes to launch one commercially
successful new product
7
Why do products fail?
  • No significant point of difference
  • Market size overestimated
  • Design flaws or poor product quality
  • Poor execution of the marketing mix
  • Overpriced
  • Bad positioning
  • Wrong target
  • Poor distribution support
  • RD costs higher than expected
  • Competition retaliates vigorously

8
Hurdles for NPD
  • Shortage of new ideas in some areas (e.g.,
    commodities)
  • Fragmented markets
  • Governmental social constraints (e.g., GM food)
  • Staggering RD costs
  • Shorter product life cycles

9
Stages in Adoption Process
  • Awareness
  • Interest
  • Seek information
  • Evaluation
  • Trial
  • Adoption

10
Buyer Decision Process for New Products
  • Stages in the Adoption Process
  • Marketers should help consumers move from
    awareness to adoption.

11
Buyer Decision Process for New Products
  • Individual Differences in Innovativeness
  • Consumers can be classified into five adopter
    categories, each of which behaves differently
    toward new products.

12
Adopter Categories Based on Relative Time of
Adoption
13
Adoption of New Products
  • Five types of adopters
  • Innovators
  • Early adopters
  • Early majority
  • Late majority
  • Laggards
  • Personal influence most important
  • in evaluation stage
  • for later adopters
  • for risky situations

14
Adoption of New Products Product Characteristics
  • Relative advantage
  • Switching cost (e.g., DVDs)
  • Complexity
  • Trialability
  • Visibility

15
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16
Idea Generation Internal Sources
  • RD (3M)
  • Salespeople
  • Customer service reps
  • Management
  • Suggestion box

17
Idea Generation External Sources
  • Channel Suggestions
  • Foreign Markets
  • Customers
  • Lead users
  • Focus group discussions
  • Customer feedback (complaints)
  • Competition
  • Inventors

18
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19
Idea Generation Managing the Creative Process
  • Openness and participation
  • Encourage many and diverse ideas
  • Build on each others ideas
  • A problem orientation
  • Use a leader to guide the discussion

20
Screening of Ideas
  • Three groups
  • Promising
  • Marginal
  • Rejects
  • Two types of errors
  • DROP-error
  • GO-error

21
A weighted point system Medtronic uses to try to
spot a winning new medical product (first part)
22
A weighted point system Medtronic uses to try to
spot a winning new medical product (final part)
23
Concept Development Testing
  • More elaborate description of a product idea
  • Who will use product?
  • Primary benefits?

24
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25
Concept Testing Development -- Purposes
  • Choose most promising from set of alternatives
  • Refine core idea
  • Find out who is most interested
  • Indicate what direction further development work
    should take

26
Concept Test Focus Group
  • Are benefits clear? Believable?
  • Need level does this product solve a need?
  • Likes and dislikes of current offerings
  • Likes and dislikes of concept (pre- and
    post-exposure)
  • Willingness to pay perceived value
  • Purchase intent
  • Target customers? Purchase/usage frequency?

27
Business Analysis
  • Preliminary marketing strategy plan
  • Estimate sales, market share
  • Estimate costs profits
  • Risk (scenario) analysis

28
Pretest Market
  • Simulated Test Markets
  • Objective to measure, in a controlled way, the
    trial and repeat intentions of target market
  • Use high purchase frequency, low involvement
    goods (e.g., most groceries)

29
Pretest Markets Steps
  • Step 1 Expose target customers to commercials
    for the new existing products
  • Step 2 Have them make a purchase from the
    product category in a simulated store those who
    select competing brand get the item free (to
    measure impact of sampling)
  • Step 3 New item is taken home and used
  • Step 4 Contact customer to measure reactions
    towards product, repurchase intent

30
Test Market Motivations
  • Predict sales, share profits
  • Practice
  • Test alternative marketing mix plans

31
Test Market Cons
  • Time-consuming
  • Costly (implementation plus opportunity costs)
  • Tip off competitors
  • Risk of competitor interference
  • Projectability of results

32
Test Market Decisions
  • How many cities?
  • Which cities?
  • How long (purchase cycle)?
  • What information
  • Actual sales
  • Surveys
  • Panels
  • What action?

33
Test Markets What Action
34
Commercialization How?
  • Targets? Positioning?
  • How? Marketing Mix Launch Plan
  • Price?
  • Distribution channels?
  • Push versus pull

35
Commercialization - Timing
  • First?
  • Pioneering advantage
  • But risky (e.g., product bugs, market
    uncertainty)

36
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37
Commercialization - Timing
  • Follower - Overcome first-mover advantages (if
    any) via
  • Marketing clout
  • Product enhancement (2nd but better)
  • Lower cost (2nd but cheaper)

38
Commercialization Where?
  • Phased rollout - smart bombing
  • Nationwide rollout - carpet bombing

39
Sales and Profits Over a Products Life
40
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • The Typical Product Life Cycle (PLC) Has Five
    Stages
  • Product Development, Introduction, Growth,
    Maturity, Decline
  • Not all products follow this cycle
  • Fads
  • Styles
  • Fashions

41
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • Additional marketing investments can move a
    product back into the growth stage, as in the
    case of Cracker Jack.

42
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • The product life cycle concept can be applied to
    a
  • Product class (soft drinks)
  • Product form (diet colas)
  • Brand (Diet Dr. Pepper)
  • Using the PLC to forecast brand performance or
    to develop marketing strategies is problematic

43
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • Begins when the company develops a new-product
    idea
  • Sales are zero
  • Investment costs are high
  • Profits are negative

PLC Stages
  • Product development
  • Introduction
  • Growth
  • Maturity
  • Decline

44
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • Low sales
  • High cost per customer acquired
  • Negative profits
  • Innovators are targeted
  • Little competition

PLC Stages
  • Product development
  • Introduction
  • Growth
  • Maturity
  • Decline

45
Marketing Strategies Introduction Stage
  • Product Offer a basic product
  • Price Use cost-plus basis to set
  • Distribution Build selective distribution
  • Advertising Build awareness among early
    adopters and dealers/resellers
  • Sales Promotion Heavy expenditures to create
    trial

46
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • Rapidly rising sales
  • Average cost per customer
  • Rising profits
  • Early adopters are targeted
  • Growing competition

PLC Stages
  • Product development
  • Introduction
  • Growth
  • Maturity
  • Decline

47
Marketing Strategies Growth Stage
  • Product Offer product extensions, service,
    warranty
  • Price Penetration pricing
  • Distribution Build intensive distribution
  • Advertising Build awareness and interest in the
    mass market
  • Sales Promotion Reduce expenditures to take
    advantage of consumer demand

48
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • Sales peak
  • Low cost per customer
  • High profits
  • Middle majority are targeted
  • Competition begins to decline

PLC Stages
  • Product development
  • Introduction
  • Growth
  • Maturity
  • Decline

49
Marketing Strategies Maturity Stage
  • Product Diversify brand and models
  • Price Set to match or beat competition
  • Distribution Build more intensive distribution
  • Advertising Stress brand differences and
    benefits
  • Sales Promotion Increase to encourage brand
    switching

50
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
  • Declining sales
  • Low cost per customer
  • Declining profits
  • Laggards are targeted
  • Declining competition

PLC Stages
  • Product development
  • Introduction
  • Growth
  • Maturity
  • Decline

51
Marketing Strategies Decline Stage
  • Product Phase out weak items
  • Price Cut price
  • Distribution Use selective distribution phase
    out unprofitable outlets
  • Advertising Reduce to level needed to retain
    hard-core loyalists
  • Sales Promotion Reduce to minimal level
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