Microsoft Power Point - Chapt 7 Product Life Cycle Management

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PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE

MANAGEMENT

Chapter 7
Product Life Cycle
 The life cycle refers to the period from
the product’s first launch into the
market until its final withdrawal and it is
split up in phases
 Can help a company to understand
and realize when it is time to introduce
and withdraw a product from a market,
its position in the market compared to
competitors, and the product’s success
or failure
Five major steps or phases

 Product development,
 Product introduction,
 Product growth,
 Product maturity and finally
 Product decline
Product Life Cycle Graph
PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
PHASE
 Product development phase begins when
a company finds and develops a new
product idea.
 This involves translating various pieces
of information and incorporating them into
a new product.
 A product is usually undergoing several
changes involving a lot of and time during
development, before it is exposed to
target customers via test markets.
PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
PHASE

 Sales are zero and revenues are


negative. It is the time of spending with
absolute no return
INTRODUCTION PHASE

 Includes the product launch with its


requirements to getting it launch in
such a way so that it will have
maximum impact at the moment of
sale
 Large expenditure on promotion and
advertising is common, and quick but
costly service requirements are
introduced.
INTRODUCTION PHASE
 Large expenditure on promotion and
advertising is common, and quick but
costly service requirements are
introduced
 Distribution arrangements are
introduced.
 A company must be prepared to spent
a lot of money and get only a small
proportion of that back
INTRODUCTION PHASE

 Pricing is something else for a


company to consider during this phase
 The pricing policy should be more
aggressive so that the product can
become competitive
GROWTH PHASE

 The company must show all the


products offerings and try to
differentiate them from the competitors
ones
 A frequent modification process of the
product is an effective policy to
discourage competitors from gaining
market share by copying or offering
similar products
GROWTH PHASE

 The time to develop efficiencies and


improve product availability and
service.
 Cost efficiency and time-to-market
and pricing and discount policy are
major factors in gaining customer
confidence.
MATURITY PHASE

 The market becomes saturated with


variations of the basic product, and all
competitors are represented in terms
of an alternative product
 The period of the highest returns from
the product.
 New brands are introduced even when
they compete with the company’s
existing product and model changes
are more frequent
MATURITY PHASE

 Pricing and discount policies are often


changed in relation to the competition
policies
 Promotion and advertising relocates
from the scope of getting new
customers, to the scope of product
differentiation in terms of quality and
reliability.
DECLINE PHASE

 The time to start withdrawing


variations of the product from the
market that are weak in their market
position
ANALYSIS OF PRODUCT
LIFE CYCLE MODEL
 There are some major product life cycle
management techniques that can be
used to optimize a product’s revenues
in respect to its position into a market
and its life cycle.
 Are mainly marketing or management
strategies that are used by most
companies worldwide and include the
know-how of product upgrade,
replacement and termination
Criticism of product life cycle

 a. The shift changes in the demand of


a product along a period of time makes
the distinction of the product life cycle
phase very difficult, the duration of
those almost impossible to predict and
the level of sales of the product
somewhat in the realm of the
imagination.
 b. There are many products that do not
follow the usual shape of the product
life cycle
Criticism of product life cycle

 c. The product life cycle does not


entirely depend on time. It also
depends on other parameters such as
management policy, company
strategic decisions and market trends.
These parameters are difficult to be
pinpointed and so are not included in
the product life cycle
Product Life cycle analysis
methods

• Collection of information about the


product’s behavior over at least a period
of 3 – 5 years (information will include
price, units sold, profit margins, return of
investment – ROI, market share and
value).
Product Life cycle analysis
methods

 Analysis of competitor short-term


strategies (analysis of new products
emerging into the market and
competitor announced plans about
production increase, plant upgrade
and product promotion).
Product Life cycle analysis
methods

• Analysis of number of competitors in


respect of market share.
 Collection of information of the life
cycle of similar products that will help
to estimate the life cycle of a new
product.
 Estimation of sales volume for 3 – 5
years from product launch.
Product Life cycle analysis
methods

 Estimation of the total costs compared


to the total sales for 3 – 5 years after
product launch (development,
production, promotion costs). The
estimate should be in the range of 4:1
in the beginning to 7:1 at the stage
where the product reaches maturity.
PRODUCT CANNIBALISM

 Product cannibalization occurs when a


company decides to replace an
existing product and introduce a new
one in its place, regardless of its
position in the market (i.e. the
product’s life cycle phase does not
come into account)
 Due to newly introduced technologies
 The trick in cannibalization is to know
when and why to implement it, since
bad, late or early cannibalization can
lead to bad results for a company
sales
UNFAVORABLE
CANNIBALIZATION

 The new product contributes less to


profit than the old one:
 The economics of the new product
might not be favorable:
 The new product requires significant
retooling:
 The new product has greater risks:
DEFENSIVE CANNIBALIZATION
STRATEGIES

 Cannibalize before competitors do:


 Introduction of cannibalization as a
means of keeping technology edge
over competition
 Management of cannibalization rate
through pricing:
 Minimization of cannibalization by
introducing of the new product to
certain market segments
PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE IN RESPECT TO
THE TECHNOLOGY LIFE CYCLE

 As a new technology matures so is the


product or service that uses this
technology.
 The change that occurs during a
technology life cycle has a unique
reflection on the customers and so on
the product life cycle.
Change in customers as
technology matures

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