Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

RAPATAN

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 5

THE FACULTY OF THE COLLEGE OF BUSINESS EDUCATION

RAMON MAGSAYSAY MEMORIAL COLLEGES

GENERAL SANTOS CITY

IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS

IN NEW MARKET DEVELOPMENT

(MKTG 13)

PRESENTED TO

GINA RAPATAN, Ph.D

PRESENTED BY

EXIM, GERARDO JR.

BOTOGON, REZEL

BORRE, JOGN DONI


PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE OF TIDE DETERGENT POWDER

The four stages of Product life cycle are:

Introduction Stage

Tide was introduced in 1933 as " Dreft (now reformulated as a gentle detergent for

baby clothes), " in America under P&G. As it was a new to the world category it had the

first mover’s advantage.

Growth Stage

As the detergent market started growing in America many of the competitors came into

picture with better prices. Tide by P&G introduced variety of products and changed its

campaign.
Maturity Stage

Sales peak during this stage. Since a long time Tide has stayed in the maturity stage as

it has the highest market share. Many competitors introduce their products. The

company should modify and upgrade their products to stay at the peak.

Decline Stage

Sales drop down at this stage. Profit is the lowest in this period. The company changes

its focus and concentrates on loyal customers or changes the target group to

comparatively lower income groups so as to maintain sales.

PROMOTIONAL ACTIVIY OF TIDE THROUGH THE YEARS

Procter and Gamble introduced its first laundry detergent, Dreft (now reformulated as

a gentle detergent for baby clothes), in 1933. Dreft worked well for handwashing

clothes but just didn't do a great job of removing heavy soil from clothes.

So, in 1946, Tide was introduced as the first heavy-duty laundry detergent in the United

States. To promote the new product to homemakers, Tide became a prominent sponsor

of daytime and primetime serials or "soap operas".

Tide's distinctive orange and yellow bull's eye trademark was designed by Donald

Deskey, an architect, and famous industrial designer. Since Tide was the first product to

be packaged for national sales using such bright colors, the box was strikingly eye-

catching and memorable.


During the 1970s, The Clorox Co. launched the first non-chlorine, color-safe bleach,

Clorox 2. The success of a bleach that would not fade colored clothes but would still

whiten whites, brighten colors, and remove stains was extremely popular in the laundry

marketplace. Tide with Bleach was introduced in 1988 in a powdered formula.

As Americans became more conscious of the amount of waste headed to landfills, Tide

introduced concentrated Ultra Tide. Filler ingredients were removed from powdered

formulas and homemakers were re-educated about how much detergent to use to

produce a clean load of clothes. Tide was the first compact powdered detergent in the

United States.

Tide Simply Clean & Fresh was introduced by P&G in February 2014 as a lower-priced

laundry detergent to boost sagging sales during a tough economy. The lower-priced

version is aimed at the shopper who usually bypasses premium brands in favor of generic

or less pricey household products.

Tide remains a strong brand and product development continues daily at P&G Research

and Development Centers. With increased sales of high-efficiency washers Tide he

Turbo was created to produce low sudsing in machines that use less water per load.

In 2016, Tide purclean Liquid was offered to consumers as a plant-based liquid laundry

detergent that is a 65% USDA certified plant-based detergent with the cleaning power of

Tide.

Tide 10X Heavy Duty was introduced in 2018 to tackle laundry that has the tough stains

of grease, oil, blood, and smoke odors. And in 2019, Studio by Tide came on the market

as a gentle detergent to help prevent dark colors from fading and for cleaning delicate

items.
TIDE’s POSITIONING IN THE MARKET

You might also like