The document discusses lessons learned from failed product launches. It begins by defining new product development and explaining why companies engage in it. It then outlines the typical NPD process, including idea generation, screening, concept development, marketing strategy development, product development, market testing, and commercialization. Several examples of failed products are provided, such as the Pepsi Atom, Colgate Entrees brand extension, Apple Newton, Crystal Pepsi, Tata Nano, and Windows Vista. Key lessons from failures include specializing in a target group rather than everyone, dominating a niche rather than a small part of a large market, testing assumptions, having an adaptable product, and establishing a solid business model from the
2. NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
‘New Product Development’ (N.P.D.) is the
development of original products, product
improvements, product modifications, and new
brands through the firm’s own R & D efforts.
Why New Product Development (N.P.D.) ?
To maintain and build sales through replacement products
To shape the company’s future
To fulfil the ever changing customer preferences
4. When N.P.D.?
Once a company has
Segmented market carefully.
Chosen its target customer group.
Identified their needs / preferences /
requirements.
Determined the appropriate mix of 4P’s for that
market.
Then, it is ready to develop / launch suitable
new product.
Marketing actively interacts with other
5. Idea Generation
New idea generation is the systematic search for
new product ideas
Sources of new-product ideas
• Internal
• External
Idea Screening
Idea screening refers to reviewing new-product
ideas in order to drop poor ones as soon as
possible
6. Concept Development and Testing
Product idea is an idea for a possible product that the
company can see itself offering to the market
Product concept is a detailed version of the idea stated
in meaningful consumer terms
Product image is the way consumers perceive an actual
or potential product
Marketing Strategy Development
Marketing strategy development refers to the initial
marketing strategy for introducing the product to the
market
7. Marketing Strategy Development
• Part 1:
• Description of the target market
• Product positioning, sales, market share, and profit goals
• Part 2:
• Price, distribution, and budget
• Part 3:
• Long-term sales, profit goals, and marketing mix strategy
Business Analysis
After management develops the product concept and marketing
strategy,
the company will not evaluate the proposal’s business attractiveness. This
is known as ‘Business Analysis’.
8. Product development
product development is an innovative development approach that
collects, reviews, evaluates, and manages new-product ideas
• Creates an innovation-oriented culture
• Yields a large number of new-product ideas
Market testing
Objectives of market testing could be:
a) Test product in actual market setting.
b) Learn about actual market size.
c) Learn about how consumers/dealers handle, use, repurchase new
product.
9. •Commercialization
After successful market testing, new product comes to
commercialisation stage. During this stage, production of new
product on a commercial basis is rapidly built up. For new food
products, marketing expenditures typically represent 57 percent of
first-year sales.
25. NOT COMPATIBLE WITH OLD
HARDWARE
• Needed to upgrade computers to run Vista
• People paid to downgrade to Windows XP
• Dell started offering Windows Xp instead of Vista
26.
27. LESSON FROM FAILED PRODUCT
• 1st Lesson:- SPECIALIZE IN A SPECIFIC TARGET GROUP, NOT JUST
“EVERYBODY"
The more specific you are about your users, the more likely you will
meet people who will actually become your users!
• 2nd Lesson:-IT’S BETTER TO RULE 50% OF A SMALL MARKET THAN
0.5% OF A HUGE MARKET
It is not about how big your market is today, but how big it can grow.
28. • 3rd Lesson:-NEVER JUST ASSUME ANYTHING
When you come with a hypothesis, you need to
it,and prove that it’s right
• 4th Lesson :-REFRAIN FROM HAVING A STATIC
PRODUCT
Have a team that is technically capable, dynamic, and
remove features as you need them fairly quickly.
29. • 5th Lesson:-HAVE A SOLID BUSINESS MODEL FROM
DAY 1
You’re not doing this for fun, or for prestige, you’re
looking to make a return.
30. Reasons for new product failure
• Overestimation of market size
• Poor design
• Incorrect positioning
• Wrong timing
• Priced too high
• Ineffective promotion
• Management influence
• High development costs
• Competition