Chapter 10
Product Strategies: Basic Decisions & Product Planning
Chapter Outline
What Is a Product?  New Product Development  Market Segmentation
 
Product Adoption
Chapter Outline
Theory of International Product Life Cycle - Stages and Characteristics - Validity of the IPLC - Marketing Strategies  Product Standardization vs. Product Adaptation - Arguments for Standardization
- Arguments for Adaptation
Chapter Outline
A Move Toward World Product: International or National Product?  Marketing of Services - Importance of Services - Types of Services - The Economic and Legal Environment - Marketing Mix and Adaptation - Market Entry Strategies
Product
a
bundle of utilities or satisfaction  Bundling vs. unbundling
New Product Development
    generation of new product ideas screening of ideas business analysis product development test marketing
full-scale commercialization
Factors Influencing Product Adoption
    Relative advantage (+) Compatibility (+) Trialability/divisibility (+) Observability (+) Complexity (-)
Price (-)
Theory of International Product Life Cycle (IPLC)
    Stage 0--Local Innovation Stage 1--Overseas Innovation Stage 2--Maturity Stage 3--Worldwide Imitation Stage 4--Reversal
Product Standardization vs. Product Adaptation
Arguments for Standardization - simplicity and cost - consistent company or product image - musical recordings and works of art - industry specifications
- cultural universals
Product Standardization vs. Product Adaptation
Arguments for Adaptation - big-car syndrome
- left-hand-drive syndrome
Mandatory Product Modification
Government regulations Electrical current standards Measurement systems Operating systems
Optional Product Modification
    Physical distribution Local use conditions Climatic conditions Space constraint Consumer demographics as related to physical appearance
Optional Product Modification
    User's habits Environmental characteristics Price Limiting product movement across national borders (gray marketing)
Historical preference or local customs and culture
International Product Strategies
Standardized Product - Domestic product introduced internationally, with minor or no modification - Efficient but not effective  Localized Product - Domestic product adapted for foreign markets - Product designed specifically for foreign markets - Effective but not efficient
International Product Strategies
Global Product
- Product designed with international (not national) markets in mind - Product having universal features
-
Product being adaptation-ready, when necessary Both efficient and effective