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Product Life Cycle Mr Ahern Lesson 2

Product life cycle

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Page 1: Product life cycle

Product Life CycleMr Ahern Lesson 2

Page 2: Product life cycle

Virgin

Individually how many products of

Virgin can you name ?

(Students who attended yesterday

should do best)

You have 3 minutes!!!!

Page 3: Product life cycle

Recap of the Boston Matrix

MarketGrowth

Market ShareHigh Low

Low

High

Page 4: Product life cycle

What is the Product Life Cycle?

Product Life Cycle – shows the stages that products go through from development to withdrawal from the market

It refers to their full life span as such. Are Sega Megadrives

still around?

Page 5: Product life cycle

Product Life Cycle Diagram

£

£

Page 6: Product life cycle

Product Life Cycle (PLC)

› Each product may have a different life cycle

› PLC determines revenue earned› Contributes to strategic marketing

planning› May help the firm to identify when

a product needs support, redesign, reinvigorating, withdrawal, etc.

› May help in new product development planning

› May help in forecasting and managing cash flow

Page 7: Product life cycle

The Stages of the Product Life Cycle› Development› Introduction/Launch› Growth› Maturity› Saturation› Decline› Withdrawal

Page 8: Product life cycle

Initial Ideas› May come from any of the following – › Market research – identifies gaps in the

market› Monitoring competitors› Planned research and development

(R&D)› Luck or intuition – stumble across ideas?› Creative thinking – inventions, hunches?› Futures thinking – what will people be

using/wanting/needing 5,10,20 years from now

Page 9: Product life cycle

Product Development

› New ideas/possible inventions› Market analysis – is it wanted? Can it be

produced at a profit? Who is it likely to be aimed at?

› Product Development and refinement› Test Marketing – possibly local/regional› Analysis of test marketing results and

amendment of product/production process

› Preparations for launch – publicity, marketing campaign

Page 10: Product life cycle

Introduction / Launch

› Advertising and promotion campaigns› Target campaign at specific audience? › Monitor initial sales› Maximise publicity› High cost/low sales› Length of time – type of product

Page 11: Product life cycle

Growth

› Increased consumer awareness› Sales rise› Revenues increase› Costs - fixed costs/variable costs, profits

may be made› Monitor market – competitors reaction?

Page 12: Product life cycle

Maturity› Sales reach peak› Cost of supporting the product declines› Ratio of revenue to cost high› Sales growth likely to be low› Market share may be high› Competition likely to be greater› Price elasticity of demand?› Monitor market –

changes/amendments/new strategies?

Page 13: Product life cycle

Saturation New entrants likely to mean market is ‘flooded’ Necessity to develop new strategies becomes

more pressing:› Searching out new markets:

Linking to changing fashions

Seeking new or exploiting market segments

Linking to joint ventures – media/music, etc.

Developing new uses

› Focus on adapting the product Re-packaging or format

Improving the standard or quality

› Developing the product range

Page 14: Product life cycle

Decline / Withdraw

› Product outlives/outgrows its usefulness/value› Fashions change› Technology changes› Sales decline› Cost of supporting starts to rise too far› Decision to withdraw may be dependent on

availability of new products and whether fashions/trends will come around again?

Page 15: Product life cycle

After Product Development

£

Page 16: Product life cycle

Product Life CycleSales

Time

Development Introduction Growth Maturity Saturation Decline

Page 17: Product life cycle

Sales

Time

Effects of ExtensionStrategies

Product Extension Strategy

Page 18: Product life cycle

Extension Strategy

Page 19: Product life cycle

Extension Strategy

Can be defined as - a medium to long-term plan for lengthening a products life cycle. It is likely to be implemented during the Maturity or early Decline.

Extension Strategies include:› Redesigning the Product – New and Improved!

› Adding an extra feature – Now with…(colour, quality, texture…)

› Changing the packaging and advertising to appeal to a NEW Market Segment.

› Providing a Unique Selling Point (USP) – Cross shaped MP3 player.

Page 20: Product life cycle

Task 1 Individually you are required to: Produce a Product Life Cycle,

illustrating at which point an Extension Strategy may be applied to a product. Remember to include the four stages!

Identify a product (not already discussed) at each individual stage of the Product Life Cycle. Most points for most original, creative.

Page 21: Product life cycle

Task 2 In GROUPS you are required to: (on A3 paper

provided)

Determine appropriate Extension Strategies to lengthen the Products Life Cycle for a product you identify as a group. Include appropriate design features that will appeal to the Target Market i.e. design, colour, durability, shape.

As a group, justify why you have chosen these Extension Strategies? It is important not to forget who your Target Market is!!!

Explain the results of your to the remainder class through a short presentation.