Define Setting Product Strategy
Unit III: Product Decisions
This unit explores the exciting world of products and how companies make smart choices to succeed.
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Setting Product Strategy
Product Classification
Products can be grouped in different ways to help businesses understand their market and make better decisions. Here are a few common classifications:
- Consumer Products: These are products bought by individuals for personal use. Think about your favorite snacks, clothes, or gadgets.
- Industrial Products: These are products used by businesses to make other products or run their operations. Examples include raw materials, machinery, and office supplies.
- Durability: Products can be durable (long-lasting, like a refrigerator) or non-durable (consumed quickly, like a chocolate bar).
- Tangibility: Products can be tangible (physical goods you can touch) or intangible (services like a haircut or a doctor's visit).
Product Levels
Think of a product like an onion – it has layers!
- Core Product: This is the basic benefit a customer gets. For a car, it's transportation. For a phone, it's communication.
- Actual Product: This is the physical product or service. It includes features, design, brand name, and packaging.
- Augmented Product: This includes extra benefits that make the product more attractive, like warranties, customer support, and delivery.
Product and Services Differentiation
In a crowded market, standing out is key. Companies differentiate their products and services by:
- Unique features: Offering something special that competitors don't have.
- Quality: Building a reputation for superior quality.
- Design: Creating an appealing and functional design.
- Branding: Building a strong brand identity that resonates with customers.
New Product Development
Stages of New Product Development
Bringing a new product to life is a journey with several stages:
- Idea Generation: Coming up with new product ideas from various sources (customers, employees, competitors, etc.).
- Idea Screening: Evaluating ideas and selecting the most promising ones.
- Concept Development and Testing: Creating a detailed concept and testing it with potential customers.
- Marketing Strategy Development: Developing a plan to market the new product.
- Business Analysis: Evaluating the financial viability of the new product.
- Product Development: Creating a prototype or a test version of the product.
- Market Testing: Introducing the product in a limited market to gather feedback.
- Commercialization: Launching the product to the full market.
Categories of New Products
- New-to-the-world products: Completely new inventions that create a whole new market.
- New product lines: Products that allow a company to enter an existing market for the first time.
- Additions to existing product lines: New products that supplement a company's existing product lines.
- Improvements and revisions of existing products: Making existing products better.
- Repositioned products: Existing products targeted at new markets or segments.
- Cost reductions: New products that provide similar performance at a lower price.
Reasons for Launching New Products
- Growth: Increase sales and market share.
- Changing customer needs: Meet evolving customer demands.
- Competition: Respond to competitors' actions.
- Technology: Take advantage of new technologies.
Reasons for New Product Failure
- Poor market research: Not understanding customer needs.
- Lack of differentiation: Failing to stand out from the competition.
- Poor marketing: Not effectively communicating the product's value.
- High costs: Pricing the product too high or having high development costs.
- Technical problems: Product defects or design flaws.