Title: Product Planning
1Product Planning
2Product Planning
Involves making decisions about those features
that are needed to sell a businesss products,
services, or ideas.
3Product Mix
Includes all the different products that a
company makes or sells.
4Product Line
A group of closely related products manufactured
and/or sold by a business.
5Product Item
A specific model, brand, or size of a product
within a product line.
6Product Width
The number of different product lines a business
manufactures or sells.
Width of the Gillette Product Mix
Oral Care
Blades Razors
Personal Care
Batteries
Appliances
7Product Depth
The number of product items offered within each
product line.
Oral Care
Blades Razors
Personal Care
Batteries
Appliances
8Product Mix Strategies
- The plan for how the business determines which
products it will make or stock - May develop completely new products
- May expand or modify their current product lines
- May drop existing products
9Developing New Products
- Generating Ideas
- Come from a variety of sources
- Creativity is essential
- Screening Ideas
- Ideas are evaluated and matched against the
companys overall objectives.
10Developing New Products
- Developing a Business Proposal
- Consider a products potential sales, costs, and
production requirements. - Developing the Product
- The new idea takes physical shape
- Marketers develop a marketing strategy.
- Testing the Product with consumers
11Developing New Products
- Introducing the Product
- The product has been researched successfully
- This stage also is called commercialization.
- Evaluating Customer Acceptance
- Marketers track new product performance.
12Developing Existing Products
- Companies constantly review their product mix to
see if they can further expand their product
lines or modify existing products. - Two ways to do this
13Developing Existing Products
Line Extensions new product lines, items, or
services
Original Product
Newer Products
14Developing Existing Products
Product Modifications an alteration in a
companys existing product
15Deleting a Product or Product Line
- Obsolescence
- Loss of appeal
- Conflict with current company objectives
- Replacement with new products
- Lack of profit
- Conflict with other products in the line