- During the introduction stage, the primary goal is to establish a market and build a primary demand for the product set.
Prices are usually high, assuming a skimming pricing strategy for a high profit margin as the early adopters buy the product and the firm seeks to recoup development costs quickly. This is the case of high-technology products like VCRs, microwaves, mobile phones. Here, the price elasticity of the demand is less than 1. The consumers are willing to pay high price to buy the product having a prestige value. In this case, the demand is inelastic, but prices may fall considerably during the next stages.
In some cases, a market penetration pricing strategy is used and introductory prices are set low to gain market share rapidly. Here, demand is highly elastic. Product differentiation increases with time as a brand image is built and prices are generally raised as the demand become less elastic.
- The growth stage is a period of rapid revenue growth. Sales increase as more customers get familiar with the products and additional market segments are targeted. If demand for this product is increasing, more retailers will sell the product. Often, during the later part of the growth stage, a price competition or increased promotional costs may occur to affect consumers’ preferences and increase sales. The price could be maintained at a high level or reduced to capture additional customers. Here, the demand is starting to become elastic. A price reduction could lead