Deletion
The twenty-first century marketplace is dynamic, fast-changing, and increasingly fickle. More and more businesses realize that no product lasts forever, and that sales levels can fluctuate dramatically over time. As a result, companies are under pressure to evaluate their existing product line and to make continuous decisions about adding new products or deleting existing ones. Brands must task their engineering and design teams to produce successful products that generate a consistent stream of sales for both short-term profit and long-term survival. An organization must establish a series of successful products, if that organization wants to maintain a consistent stream of sales or else grow sales over time. One reason for this pattern is the product life cycle. No product lasts forever, and sales levels can fluctuate dramatically over time.
Factors in Product Deletion
Deletion is the process of removing products that perform below market expectations or fail to meet company objectives. Deletion results in either product replacement or product elimination. Product deletion requires the company to evaluate its entire product mix and pinpoint where organizational resources can be allocated elsewhere to generate consistent revenue streams.
In addition to weak sales and profit, brands delete products that fail to align with marketing strategies, or that demonstrate an unfavorable market outlook. Market trends and consumer tastes often dictate whether products perform well in the long-term or taper off as a passing fad. However, factors including a company's business model, culture (or local tastes), government politics and/or regulations, and product malfunction can all contribute to the removal of a product.
Failure rates of products vary by industry. Despite significant investment in product development and market research, it is estimated that failure rates for new packaged goods range anywhere from 75% to rates as high as 90% (source: catalinamarketing.com). When considering "innovative" new products, Harvard Professor John T. Gourville estimates that approximately half of all such products fail.
Business Impact of Product Deletion
Once a company eliminates a product from its offering, the brand must decide whether its goal is to maintain or increase sales. To maintain revenues, the company must continue investing in its remaining products and ensure they are competitively positioned in the marketplace. However, if the company seeks to increase sales in the near future, then it must introduce a new group of successful products to generate additional revenue.
Coca-Cola Vanilla
Coca-Cola Vanilla is the limited relaunch of the formerly produced Vanilla Coke soft drink from the early 2000s to compete with Pepsi Vanilla. It was phased out in North America by the end of 2005 due to low sales.