CS173 : PRODUCTS AND MARKETS
THE IMPORTANCE OF PRODUCTS AND MARKETS IN A COMPANY’S STRATEGY
A good fit between its products and markets is essential for the continuing survival and success of any company.
A poor fit means loss of sales to the competition and dissatisfied customers
Over time, the quality of the fit will vary under the impact of changing competition, consumer wants, technology,…….
WHAT IS A PRODUCT?
A product is anything which is offered for sale, so it might be a physical good (e.g. a desk or a motor car) or a service (e.g. hairdressing or a seat on a train). See examples on pages 6/7
Note:
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A Good
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A Service
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Tangible: it can be touched and seen and owned
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Intangible: impossible to touch, see and own
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Generally produced and consumed at different times, with storage in between
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Produced and consumed at the same time and so cannot be stored
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Customer participation in the delivery of a service is essential
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Implications e.g. for training?
One product is differentiated from another by:
Function: does it clean your floor, make you feel good when you drink it, or keep you warm in cold weather
Design: how effectively does it carry out its function?
Price
Brand image
Quality
Availability
After sales service (if appropriate)
WHAT IS A MARKET?
Traditionally, a meeting together of people for the purchase and sale of goods and services, but of course now:
Physical meeting is unnecessary: communication can take place by other means, such as telephone, fax, ‘advertise and respond’, and the internet
There must be suppliers and potential buyers
When there is more than one supplier, we have competition
WAYS OF DEFINING MARKETS
By product, e.g. soap, bread, shirts, cars
By function performed, e.g floor coverings
By customer group, e.g. office consumables (pencils, pens, envelopes, paper clips,…..)
Market Share: a measure of an organisation’s success in winning and retaining customers in a competitive market.
It is measured either by volume:
(Units sold by the company in a given period)/(Total number of units sold into that market during that period) x 100%
or by value:
(Value of sales by the company into that market in a given period)/(total sales into that market in the same period) x 100%
MARKET SEGMENTATION
Markets are rarely homogeneous. Within markets there are groups of customers with requirements that are similar. These ‘submarkets’ are known as market segments.
Thus a manufacturer of face soap will recognise, for instance, that:
Adults
Babies
Fashion conscious teenagers
Coal miners
Eczema sufferers
will each want soaps with different properties. That manufacturer can then consider the make-up of the product, the price, packaging, promotion, likely sales, …. And then decide which of these segments offers opportunities for his business.
Segmentation is thus a powerful competitive tool.
PRODUCT POSITIONING
Product positioning is the way that a product is perceived in the marketplace in comparison with other products. Thus in an alcoholic drinks market, two important characteristics of the products in that market might be alcoholic strength (weak or strong) and taste (sweet or bitter).
The diagram shows the preferences of different groups of customers, and their perceptions of existing products in the market. Such a diagram can be a useful tool for:
Identifying any unsatisfied or poorly satisfied gaps in the market
Judging whether a company’s product is perceived as the company wishes, and whether price, promotion, packaging and distribution are all consistently pointing in the same direction
KOTLER’S FIVE LEVELS OF PRODUCT BENEFIT
Core benefit
e.g. in a car - provides transport
Basic benefit
e.g. the seats, the controls and legally required safety aspects
Expected benefit
e.g a radio, a comprehensive warranty and certain levels of performance
Augmented benefit
Goes beyond the customer's expectations to provide something extra, e.g. air conditioning
Potential benefit
All that the car might be expected to include, e.g. a renewable energy source.
In mature markets, competition is normally at the augmented product level and the basic product is taken for granted
THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE
The Five Stages:
Introduction
– considerable uncertainty, despite the careful planning
- balancing production against demand
- competitor reactions
- rapid learning opportunity
Growth
- (Support or kill decision)
- Smoother production
- More targeted marketing
- Competing products launched?
Maturity
- Product or service now widely accepted
- Competitive battles likely
- More targeted marketing
Saturation
- Consumer basic needs satisfied (e.g. refrigerators)
– now a replacement market
- Widespread competition
- possible price wars
- Attention turning to new or improved products
Decline
- As new and better products introduced
- Possible changes in fashion
- Possible changes in technology
- affecting demand or production methods
- Possible regulatory changes
- affecting demand, safety, packaging,….
Extending the Maturity Stage: possible means:
Patents
Establishing the brand and brand loyalty
Regular advertising to maintain customer awareness
Uncertainty of changing to other products
Cost to the customer of changing to other products
Changing the product, the price and the promotion to maintain a better match with customer needs than competing products
DEVELOPING PRODUCTS & SERVICES TO SATISFY CUSTOMER WANTS
Basic Development Options : The Ansoff Matrix Tool
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Products
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Existing
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New
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Markets
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Existing
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Current Business
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Product Development
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New
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Market Development
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Diversification
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PRODUCT & MARKET EXAMPLES
Products
Clothes
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Books
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Watches
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Squash racket
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Cars
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Computers
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Furniture
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Newspapers
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Food
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CDs, DVDs
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Boats
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Services
Haircut
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Holiday
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TV programme
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Fitness advice
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Lecture
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Restaurant meal
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Telephone service
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Train or bus journey
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Medical advice
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Car maintenance
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Product Market Fit Changing Over Time
The Model T Ford
Recorded music: 78 rpm; 33.3; tapes; CDs; DVDs; ….
Package Holidays (France,……………….Muscat)
Clothes – fashion
Radio, TV programmes
Products
In Decline
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Mature But Continuing
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Audio tapes?
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Persil (1919)
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Men’s Suits?
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Coca Cola
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Meat (eating)?
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Johnny Walker whisky
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Dairy Products?
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Bryant & May matches
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Cuff links?
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Esso Petrol
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