Basic Marketing: A Global Managerial Approach

(Nandana) #1

Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e



  1. Developing Innovative
    Marketing Plans


Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002

Developing Innovative Marketing Plans 613

This is especially true in larger firms like Maytag—where specialists are needed—
just because the size of the whole marketing job is too big for one person. Yet the
ideas of the product manager, the advertising manager, the sales manager, the logis-
tics manager, and whoever makes pricing decisions may have to be adjusted to
improve the whole mix. It’s critical that each marketing mix decision work well
with all of the others. A breakdown in any one decision area may doom the whole
strategy to failure.

Careful consideration of where a firm’s offering fits in the product life cycle
can also be a big help in evaluating the best marketing mix. We introduced
Exhibit 21-3 in Chapter 10 to summarize how marketing mix variables typically
change over the product life cycle. Now you can see that this exhibit is a good
review of many topics we’ve discussed throughout the text. Certainly, the pio-
neering effort required for a really new product concept is different from the job
of taking market share away from an established competitor late in the market
growth stage.
Further, when you’re thinking about the product life cycle don’t forget that
markets change continually. This means you must plan strategies that can adjust
to changing conditions. The original marketing plan for a new marketing strategy

Product life cycle
guides planning

Market
introduction

Market
growth

Market
maturity

Sales
decline

Total industry
sales

Total industry
profit

Time

$ 0

+





Competitive
situation

Product

Place

Promotion

Price

Monopoly or
monopolistic
competition

One or few

Build channels
Maybe selective distribution

Build primary
demand
Pioneering-
informing
Skimming or
penetration

Monopolistic
competition or
oligopoly

Variety—try
to find best
product
Build brand
familiarity

Build selective demand

Informing/Persuading Persuading/Reminding
(frantically competitive)
Meet competition (especially in oligopoly)
or
Price dealing and price cutting

Monopolistic
competition or
oligopoly
heading toward
pure competition
All “same”
Battle of brands

Move toward more
intensive distribution

Some drop out

Exhibit 21-3
Typical Changes in
Marketing Variables over the
Product Life Cycle
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