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DEVELOPING NEW PRODUCTS AND SERVICES. Layers of the Product Concept. The Core Product. Consists of all the benefits the product will provide for consumers or business customers A customer purchases a 1/2” drill bit. What does s/he want? A 1/2” hole!
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The Core Product • Consists of all the benefits the product will provide for consumers or business customers • A customer purchases a 1/2” drill bit. What does s/he want? • A 1/2” hole! • Marketing is about supplying benefits - not products.
The Actual Product • Consists of the physical good or delivered service that supplies the desired benefit • Example: • A washing machine’s core product is the ability to get clothes clean, but the actual product is a large, square, metal apparatus • Actual product also includes appearance, styling, packaging, and the brand
The Augmented Product • Consists of the actual product plus other supporting features such as warranty, credit, delivery, installation, and repair service after the sale
Shopping Products • Good or service for which consumers will spend time and effort gathering information on price, product attributes, and product quality • Consumers will tend to compare alternatives before making a purchase • Types of shopping products • attribute-based shopping products • price-based shopping products
Specialty Products • Goods or services bought with much consumer effort in an extended problem- solving situation • Consumers insist upon a particular item and will not accept substitutes • Example: • Sony’s AIBO Robot Dog
Unsought Products • Goods or services for which a consumer has little awareness or interest until a need arises • Require a good deal of advertising or personal selling to interest people
Business Products Equipment: Installations & Accessories Specialized Services Processed Materials Business Product Classes MRO Supplies Raw Materials Component Parts and Materials
Life-Changing Innovations • CD • Photocopier • Fax • Cell phone • Post-it Notes • Air conditioner • Microwave What is your favorite life-changing innovation?
Types of Innovations • Innovations differ in their degree of newness and this helps to determine how quickly products will be adopted by a target market • The more novel the innovation, the slower the diffusion process • Innovation continuum is based on the amount of disruption or change
Innovation Continuum Continuous Dynamically Discontinuous Continuous Little to no change Extreme changes
“New” Products • What is a New Product? • Newness Compared with Existing Products • Newness in Legal Terms • Newness from the Company’s Perspective • Newness from the Consumer’s Perspective
Marketing Reasons for New Product Failures • Insignificant “point of difference” • Incomplete market and product definition • Too little market attractiveness • Poor execution of the marketing mix • Poor product quality or sensitivity • Bad timing • No economical access to buyers
Marketing Strategy Development • Develop a marketing strategy that can be used to introduce the product to the marketplace • Identify the target market • Estimate its size • Determine how the product can be positioned • Plan pricing, distribution, and promotion expenditures necessary for roll-out
Idea Generation • Sources of new ideas • customers • salespeople • research and development breakthroughs • competitive products • anyone with direct customer contact
Product Concept Development and Screening • Expand ideas into more complete product concepts • Describe what features the product should have and benefits those features will provide for consumers • Evaluate the chance for technical and commercial success – internal and external
Business Analysis • Assess how the new product will fit into the firm’s total product mix • Evaluate whether the product can be a profitable contribution for organization’s product mix • Only after approval at this stage does significant development $$ expenditure begin
Technical Development • Work with engineers to refine the design and production process • Develop one or more prototypes • Evaluate prototypes with prospective customers • If applicable, apply for a patent
Market Testing • Try out the complete marketing plan - product, price, place, and promotion - in a small geographic area that is similar to larger target market • Traditional test marketing is expensive and gives competition a chance to evaluate the new product • Simulated test markets eliminate competitive viewing and cost less
Commercialization • Launch the product! • Full scale production • Distribution • Advertising • Sales promotion • and more
Adoption and Diffusion Processes • Adoption is the process by which a consumer or business customer begins to buy and use a new good, service, or idea • Diffusion describes how the use of a product spreads throughout a population
Six Stages of Adoption Confirmation Adoption Trial Evaluation Interest Awareness
Diffusion Process • Concerned with the broader issue of how an innovation is communicated and adopted throughout the marketplace • The process of spreading out - PLC • Adopter categories • Five different type of consumers • Normal distribution
Adopter Categories Mean Time of Adoption Innovators (2.5%) Early Adopters (13.5%) Early Majority (34%) Late Majority (34%) Laggards (16%)
Innovators • 2.5%, the first to accept a new idea or product • Venturesome and willing to take risks • Cosmopolites: willing to seek social relationships outside of their local peer group • Rely heavily on impersonal information sources
Early Adopters • 13.5%, the second to adopt an innovation • Heavy media users • Tend to be concerned with social acceptance • Opinion leaders primarily come from the early adopter group
Early Majority • 34% adopt the product prior to the mean time of adoption • Deliberate and cautious • Spend more time in the innovation decision process • Slightly above average in education and social status
Late Majority • 34% follow the average adoption time • Older, more conservative • Peers are the primary source of new ideas • Below average in education, income and social status • Wait to purchase until product has become a necessity and/or peers pressure to adopt
Laggards • 16% - last to adopt an innovation • Lower in social class than other categories • Bound by tradition • Product may have already been replaced by another innovation
Marketing information and methods used in the new-product process