Principles of Marketing BMKT300 CH9 S1
Principles of Marketing BMKT300 CH9 S1
Principles of Marketing BMKT300 CH9 S1
Page 278
Product Life-Cycle Strategies (p.289)
• After launching a new product, management wants that
product to enjoy a long and happy life.
• Although it does not expect the product to sell forever, the
company wants to earn a decent profit to cover all the
effort and risk that went into launching it.
• Management is aware that each product will have a life
cycle, although its exact shape and length is not known in
advance.
Product Life-Cycle Strategies (p.289)
1 2 3 4 5
Product Life-Cycle Strategies (p.289-291)
PLC Stages
5) Decline: is the period when sales fall off and profits drop.
Product Life-Cycle Strategies (p.291)
1- A product class
2- A product form
3- A brand
1) Product Classes: Product classes have the longest life cycles; the
sales of many product classes stay in the mature stage for a long time.
2) Product Forms: Product forms tend to have the standard PLC shape.
Product forms such as dial telephones, VHS tapes, and film cameras
passed through a regular history of introduction, rapid growth, maturity,
and decline.
Example 2: Televisions
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
Example 1: Ferrari
Example 2: Samsung
Product Life-Cycle Strategies (p.292)
The PLC concept can be also applied to describe to what are known as:
1) Style
2) Fashion
3) FADS
Product Life-Cycle Strategies (p.292)
Style Examples:
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
Fashion Examples:
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
3) Fad: a Fad is a temporary period of unusually high sales driven by
consumer enthusiasm and immediate product or brand popularity. A
fad may be part of an otherwise normal life cycle, as in the case of
recent surges in the sales of poker chips and accessories. Or the fad
may comprise a brand’s or product’s entire life cycle.
Example of Fad
An example of Fad is the fidget spinner—the
small, three pronged ball-bearing device that
you flick and spin to relieve stress or just
because it’s fun to do. Dubbed the “hula
hoop of Gen Z,” the spinners took the
preteen and teen market by storm in early
2017. By early May of that year, the gizmos
accounted for an amazing 17 percent of
daily online toy sales. However, like most
fads, sales quickly started to fizzle. By June,
then widely sold by mass merchants like
Walmart and Target, the gadgets were
becoming too common to be cool.
Notoriously fickle teens lost interest and
moved on to the next shiny new thing.
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
Fad Examples:
Product Life-Cycle Strategies
Conclusion