Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e
- Product Management
and New−Product
Development
Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002
http://www.mhhe.com/fourps
275
http://www.mhhe.com/fourps
Customers around the world
bought 13 million PDAs in five
years, and 75 percent of them
were Palms. Business cus-
tomers were not very
price-sensitive, so without
much competition Palm also
enjoyed great profit margins.
Palm’s marketing plan for
its new m500 series
(www.palm.com) was to
improve graphics and power
and add modular features like
a digital camera and digital
notepad for handwritten
e-mail. While these were not
big changes for the PDA mar-
ket, they probably looked
revolutionary to the marketing
managers for DayTimer’s pen-
and-paper organizers, Timex’s
DataLink watches, HP’s pro-
grammable calculators, IBM’s
Thinkpad laptops, and
Motorola’s digital pagers. The
marketing managers for these
products may not have seen
the changes to the new m500
or the original PDA as a com-
petitor. Yet when a firm finds a
better way to meet customer
needs, it disrupts old ways of
doing things. And PDAs were
taking business from other
categories, even digital
cameras.
But Palm wasn’t immune to
the forces of competition
either. Its profits, and the
growth of the PDA market,
attracted rivals. Casio, IBM,
Sharp, Psion, HP, and others
jumped into the fray. For
example, just as Palm was
hoping to get growth from
sales to students and other
price-sensitive consumers,
Handspring made big inroads
with colorful, low-priced
models. Similarly, Compaq’s
iPaq and other brands
chipped away at the high end
of the market with units using
Microsoft’s new Pocket PC
operating system. Many
users who wanted feature-
packed PDAs with more
power and better screens
thought the Pocket PC had
benefits that Palm’s system
missed. As a weak economy
eroded demand, price com-
petition on high-end PDAs
http://www.mhhe.com/fourps
275