170x Filetype PPT File size 1.03 MB Source: www.math.utah.edu
“Newness” of Products • Repositioning • Breakthroughs—Major New to Product Modifications World • Line Extensions • “Me Too” Products New to Company New Products–2 New Products as Part of Corporate Strategy Markets Existing New Existing Market Market Penetration Development Products New New Product (Diversification) Development New Products–3 The New Product Development Process Opportunity Identification Reposition Market definition Harvest Idea generation Life-Cycle Management Go No Market response analysis & fine tuning the marketing mix; Competitor monitoring & defense Innovation at maturity Design Identifying customer needs Sales forecasting Go No Product positioning Engineering Marketing mix assessment Segmentation Introduction Go No Launch planning Tracking the launch Testing Advertising & product testing Pretest & prelaunch forecasting Go No Test marketing New Products–4 Impact of Product Superiority on Product Success Mkt Share ) 53.5% %100 ( Mkt Share e 98 t a 32.4% r s 50 Mkt Share 58 s e 11.6% c c 18.4 u 0 S Minimal Moderate Maximal Product Superiority Based on a study of 203 products in B2B -- Robert G. Cooper, Winning at New Products (1993) . Success measured using four factors: (1) whether it met or exceeded management’s criteria for success, (2) the profitability level (1-10 scale), (3) market share at the end of three years, and (4) whether it met company sales and profit objectives (1-10 scale). New Products–5 Impact of Early Product Definition on Product Success ) Mkt Share % 100 37.3% ( Mkt Share e t 36.5 a 85.4 r Mkt Share s 50 22.9 64.2 s e c c 26.2 u 0 S Poor Moderate Strong Product Definition Source: Robert G. Cooper, Winning at New Products (1993) New Products–6
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