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Additional Facts About New Products . Many new products are failures, ranging from 33% to 90%, depending on the industrySales of new products potentially provide a large boost to the company's growth rateCompanies vary widely in the effectiveness of their new product programsA major obstacle to e
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2. New Product Planning and Development
3. Additional Facts About New Products Many new products are failures, ranging from 33% to 90%, depending on the industry
Sales of new products potentially provide a large boost to the company’s growth rate
Companies vary widely in the effectiveness of their new product programs
A major obstacle to effectively predicting new product demand is limited vision
Common elements appear in the management practices that distinguish the relative degree of efficiency and success between companies
4. New Product Strategies New-to-the-world products – Products that are new inventions
New category entries – Products that take the firm into a new category
Additions to product lines – Products that are line extensions to current markets
Product improvements – Current products made better
Repositioning – Products targeted for new use or application
5. Product Development - Misconceptions It worked there, it will work here – Not all products transfer easily
It worked once, it will work again – Peaks and valleys accompany every product development process
The cart can come before the horse – The product improvement process will fail if there are other systemic issues in the company
6. H. Igor Ansoff Strategy
7. Miller Brewing Co. Strategies Building its premium-brand franchises through investment spending
Develop value-added products with clear consumer benefits
Leveraging local markets to build brands
Building businesses globally
8. Elements of New Product Success New products tend to succeed with
Product superiority & high quality
Economic advantage to user
Overall company & development project fit
Technological requirements fit the company
Customers know and trust the company
Identified market need, growth and size
Competitive opportunity or niche
A well defined opportunity
A business acting on a market-driven process
Excellence in customer service
9. New Product Development Policy Top management must consider
A working definition of the profit concept applied to the product
Minimum level or floor of acceptable profits
Availability and the cost of capital to develop the new product
Specified time within which the new product must recoup costs and begin contributing to profit
10. Development Process
11. Idea Generation How do new products originate?
Every product starts as an idea
Most ideas do not become products
Idea generation, the least expensive step in new product development, requires recognizing available idea sources
New product development must focus on meeting customer needs
Top management support critical to providing an atmosphere that stimulates new product activity
12. Idea Screening Strategic risk – Does the product meet a genuine need
Market risk – Will the product meet a market need in a value-added, differentiated way
Internal risk – Can the product be developed on time and within budget
Firms should not hastily discount new products because of a lack of resources or expertise, instead they should consider strategic alliances
13. Idea Screening Benefits include
Increased access to technology, funding and information
Market expansion and deeper penetration into existing markets
De-escalated competitive rivalries
14. Development Project Planning Analyze the proposal in terms of production, marketing, financial and competitive factors
Establish a development budget with preliminary marketing and technical research
Create a “rough form” product
Create a project plan with estimated costs
Review the project plan with top management
15. Elements of New Product Success Financial Criteria
Return on investment (ROI)
Various profit margin measures
Sales and Sales growth
Various profit measures
Payback and payback period
Internal rate of return (IRR)
Return on assets (ROA)
Return on equity (ROE)
Breakeven and breakeven point
Share and market share
16. Elements of New Product Success Nonfinancial Criteria
Performance of new products
Market share achieved
Satisfaction of customer needs
Other market-related benefits
Strategic issues/fit/synergy
Technical aspects of production
Uniqueness of the new products
17. Product Development Evaluate the product from the viewpoint of engineering, manufacturing, finance and marketing
If all expectations are met, consider further research and testing
Produce a finished product and market test it
18. Product Development Prepare a development report for top management that includes
Results of the studies
Required plan design
Production facilities design
Tooling requirements
Marketing test plan
Financial program
Estimated release date
19. Test Marketing The main goal is to evaluate and adjust, if necessary, the marketing strategy to be used in the marketing mix
Developers can also use interaction with buyers as a foundation for product development
Upon completion of the test market, prepare a final marketing plan in preparation for launch
20. Commercialization The firm commits to introducing the product into the marketplace
Heavy emphasis is placed on organizational structure and management talent needed to implement the marketing strategy
Follow-up to eliminate bugs in the design, production costs, quality control, and inventory requirements
21. Time to Market Time to market - The elapsed time between product definition and marketplace product vailability
The time between research and marketplace delivery may be the most critical development process element
It is well documented that companies that reach the market first with a new product enjoy both profit and market share advantages
22. Quality Level Performance
Features
Reliability
Conformance
Serviceability
Aesthetics
Overall evaluation
23. Product Features Fact or particular specification of the product
Is determined by what is that the customer wants in the product
These wants are not created by effective marketers but rather are learned
24. Product Design Designing new products can clearly differentiate a new product from the competitors
Good design can add value to the new product
A well-designed product can please a customer without necessarily costing more
25. Product Safety Safety is both an ethical and practical issue
Ethically, customers should not be harmed by using the product as intended
When users are harmed by a product, they may stop buying it
Some products are inherently dangerous and can result in injury to users
26. Causes of Product Failure No competitive point of difference, unexpected reactions from competitors, or both
Poor positioning
Poor quality of product
Nondelivery of promised benefits of product
Too little marketing support
Poor perceived price/quality relationship
Faulty estimates of market potential and other marketing research mistakes
Improper channels of distribution selected
Rapid change in the market or economy after product introduction
27. Research Considerations What is the anticipated market demand over time
Can the item be patented
Any anti-trust issues
Can the product be sold through present channels and sales force
If not, what are the new needs
At different volume levels, what will be the unit manufacturing costs
What is the most appropriate package in terms of color, design, material and so forth
What is the estimated return on investment
What is the appropriate pricing strategy