Producer products

Purchased by businesses and are either used in the production of other products, or in the running of the business. For example, raw materials (timber, steel), machinery, delivery vehicles, and components used to make larger products (e.g. tyres and headlights for vehicles).

A product line is the term used to describe a related group of products that a business produces (e.g. a business may produce televisions, and its product line may include portable televisions, 12-inch screen models, 18-inch screen models, televisions with a built-in video facility, etc). Product mix is the term used to describe the different collection of product lines that a business produces (eg the same business may also produce video recorders, camcorders and computers, as well as televisions).

Most businesses will wish to change their product portfolio over time. This can be the result of changing consumer tastes, replacing those products which have entered the ‘decline’ phase of the product life-cycle or to try to break into new markets or new segments within an existing product. There are generally considered to be a number of stages in the development of new products:

- The generation of ideas. A number of issues need to be considered, such as will the new product meet the objectives of the business? Does the business have the spare capacity to produce the product? Will the new product contribute to the continued growth of the business? Will new personnel be required, or will the business have to re-train the existing staff?

- Testing the new concept. Is there a sufficient market for the new product? This stage of the product development process will involve carrying out extensive primary market research to test consumers’ reactions to the suggested product. Consumers may suggest slight alterations and modifications to the suggested product in order to make it more marketable and desirable.

- Analysing the costs/revenues. What will be the costs of production? How many units will the business be able to produce? What will the selling price be set at ? What will be the profitability of the new product?

- Developing a prototype. The design, materials, quality and safety of the product will now become paramount. A prototype of the product will be developed using the details that the market research indicated that consumers wanted. It is essential to ensure that this stage of the development process is detailed and extensive, since to make alterations and modifications at a later date will be extremely expensive and time-consuming.

- Test marketing the new product. The business may often decide to test market the new product in a small geographic area, in order to test consumer response, before it launches the product nationally. If the consumer response is favourable, then the product is likely to be launched nationally. However, if the consumers indicate that some element of the marketing mix is ineffective (price, packaging, advertising, etc) then this is likely to be changed before the national launch of the product.

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- National launch. This is where the product enters the ‘Introductory’ stage of its product life-cycle. This is a very costly operation, since a national launch needs to be supported by extensive advertising and promotional campaigns.

It is inevitable that many new product ideas will not get to the market place, and many of those that do succeed in being launched will fail within a few months of their commercialisation. However, the businesses which seem to be most successful in bringing new products to the market place tend to meet a number of vital criteria:

- they develop 2 ...

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