Title: Consumers Rule
1Creating the Product
2Chapter Objectives
- layers of a product
- classifications of products
- importance of new products
3Chapter Objectives
- Developing new products
- product adoption
- diffusion of innovations
4The Value Proposition
- Value proposition
- benefits consumer will receive
- if she buys the product
5The Value Proposition
- Product
- Good
- Intangible products
6The Value Proposition
- Product
- tangible good, service,
- idea that satisfies customer needs
- Good
- a tangible product, something we can see, touch,
smell, hear, taste, or possess - Intangible products
- services, ideas, people, places
7Layers of the Product Concept
- Core product
- basic benefits product provides
- Actual product
- physical good or delivered service
- that supplies the benefits
- Augmented product
- actual product supporting features
- Examples
- warranty, repair, installation, customer support
8Figure 8.2 Layers of the Product
9Classifying Products
- Products are either
- B2C products or B2B products.
- Categories differ in
- how consumers business customers
- feel about products and
- how they purchase them.
10Classifying Goods Product life
- Durable goods
- provide benefits for months, years, decades
- Example automobile
- Nondurable goods
- consumed in the short term
- Example newspapers
11Classifying Goods How Do Consumers Buy the
Product?
- Convenience product
- frequently purchased
- Staples (milk)
- Impulse products (candy bar)
- Emergency products (drain opener)
12Classifying Goods How Do Consumers Buy the
Product?
- Shopping product
- purchased with considerable time effort
- Attribute based (shoes)
- Price-based (water heater)
13Classifying Goods
- Specialty products
- have unique characteristics
- important to buyers
- Rolex watch
14Classifying Goods
- Unsought products
- consumers have little interest until a need
arises - insurance
15Business-To-Business Products
- Classified by how organizational customers use
them - Equipment
- Maintenance, repair, operating (MRO) products
- Raw materials
- Processed materials special services
- Component parts
16The Process of Innovation
- The FTC says
- --A product must be entirely new
- or changed significantly
- to be called new,
- --A product may be called new
- for only 6 months.
17The Process of Innovation
- Innovation
- anything customers perceive as
- new different
18How Innovations Work
- Technology
- is advancing at a dizzying pace.
- New products
- expensive to develop
- more costly if they fail.
- New products
- can contribute to society.
19Types of Innovations
- Innovations differ in degree of newness
- --Continuous innovations
- --Dynamically continuous innovations
- --Discontinuous innovations
20Continuous Innovations
- A modification to an existing product
- --Consumer doesnt have to learn anything new.
- Knockoffs copy,
- with slight modification,
- the design of an original product.
21Dynamically Continuous Innovation
- A pronounced modification to an existing product
- --Requires a modest amount of learning or
behavior change.
22Dynamically Continuous Innovation
- Convergence
- the coming together of two or more technologies
- to create a new system with greater benefit than
its parts.
23Discontinuous Innovations
- A totally new product
- --Creates major changes
- in the way we live.
- --Consumer must engage in
- a great deal of learning.
- Examples?????
24New product development
- For next Monday
- Friday
- Bonus video
25Developing New Products
- New-product development
- create totally new products or
- make an existing product better.
26Phases in New-Product Development
- Phase 1
- Idea generation
- Brainstorm for products
- that provide customer benefits.
27Phases in New-Product Development
- Phase 2
- Product-concept development screening
- Test product ideas
- for technical and commercial success.
28Phases in New-Product Development
- Phase 3
- Marketing strategy development
- how to introduce the product to the marketplace.
29Phases in New-Product Development
- Phase 4
- Business analysis
- Assess a products commercial viability.
30Phases in New-Product Development
- Phase 5
- Technical development
- Refine and perfect new product.
- Develop prototypes or
- test versions of proposed product
- (in RD department).
31Phases in New-Product Development
- Phase 6
- Test marketing
- Test complete marketing plan
- in a small geographic area
- similar to larger market.
32Phases in New-Product Development
- Phase 7
- Commercialization
- Launch new product into the market.
- Begin full-scale production,
- distribution, advertising, sales promotion.
33Adoption diffusion
34Adoption and Diffusion
- Product adoption
- process by which a consumer or business customer
- begins to buy and use
- a new good, service, or idea
35Adoption and Diffusion
- Diffusion
- process when use of a product
- spreads throughout a population
36Stages in Consumer Adoption of a New Product
Figure 8.4
37Stages in Consumer Adoption of a New Product
- Awareness
- learning the innovation exists
38Stages in Consumer Adoption of a New Product
- Interest
- seeing how the new product might satisfy an
existing or newly realized need
39Stages in Consumer Adoption of a New Product
- Evaluation
- weighing costs/benefits
- of new product
40Stages in Consumer Adoption of a New Product
- Trial
- experiencing or using product for the first time
41Stages in Consumer Adoption of a New Product
- Adoption
- buying the good or
- agreeing with the new idea
42Stages in Consumer Adoption of a New Product
- Confirmation
- weighing expected versus actual benefits and
costs
43The Diffusion of Innovations
- Adopter categories
- Innovators
- Early adopters
- Early majority
- Late majority
- Laggards
44 Categories of Adopters
Figure 8.5
45Product Factors AffectingRate of Adoption
- Relative advantage
- Compatibility
- Complexity
- Trialability
- Observability
46How Organizational Differences Affect Adoption
- Innovators
- are new, smaller, or younger firms
- Early-adopter firms
- are market-share leaders
47How Organizational Differences Affect Adoption
- Late-majority firms
- prefer the status quo and have large investments
in existing production technology - Laggard firms
- are probably already losing money
48 49Real People, Real Choices
- Black and Decker (Eleni Rossides)
- Considering the results of a survey, Black and
Decker needed to decide what to do with its
ScumBuster - Option 1 if it aint broke, dont fix it
- Option 2 emphasize value for your money
- Option 3 ramp up the ScumBusters features
50Real People, Real Choices
- Black and Decker (Eleni Rossides)
- Eleni chose Option 3 ramp up the ScumBusters
features - The company continues to modify the basic concept
with new features and new applications to clean
up against the competition
51Marketing Plan Exercise
- Visit Procter Gambles Web site (www.pg.com)
and click on Products at the top, then Oral
Care and Crest. - Crest lists several product innovations including
Whitestrips and Night Effects. Classify each
based on the chapter discussion. Explain your
answers. - What type of innovation do you consider each of
these products to be? Why?
52Marketing in Action CaseYou Make the Call
- What is the decision facing Kodak?
- What factors are important in understanding this
decision situation? - What are the alternatives?
- What decision(s) do you recommend?
- What are some ways to implement your
recommendation?
53Keeping It Real Fast Forward to Next Class
Decision Time at Grendha
- Meet Angelo Daros, VP of Grendha Shoes, a major
Brazilian shoe manufacturer - Plan to launch the Rider brand in the U.S.
market - The decision How to position the Rider brand for
the United States
54Group Activity
- Marketers often try to communicate benefits
additional to the main benefit the product offers
consumers - Pick a tangible product you might use and
brainstorm all the possible benefits consumers
can obtain from it
55Discussion
- When marketers understand the distinctions among
the three layers of the product (the core,
actual, and augmented product), what are the
benefits to consumers? - What are the hazards of this type of thinking?
56Discussion
- Should knockoffs be illegal?
- Who is hurt by knockoffs?
- Is the marketing of knockoffs good or bad for
consumers in the short run? In the long run?
57Discussion
- What are some discontinuous innovations
introduced in the past 50 years? - Why are there so few discontinuous innovations?
- What recently introduced products do you believe
will be regarded as discontinuous innovations?
58Discussion/Group Activity
- Technology improvements let new products enter
and leave the market faster than ever. - What products might technology help develop in
the future that you would like?
59Group Activity
- Brainstorm new-product ideas for one of the
following (or another product of your choice) - An exercise machine with some desirable new
features - A combination of shampoo and body wash
- A new type of university
60Group Activity
- Your group acts as director of marketing for a
major cell phone manufacturer. - Your companys new product does everything but
tap dance. How will you convince the late
majority to adopt this new technology?
61Discussion/Group Activity
- It is not necessarily true that all new products
benefit consumers/society. - What are some new products that have made our
lives better? - What are some new products that have been harmful
to consumers/society?