Product Life Cycle

Product Life Cycle

    As consumers jump out of the old and in with the new, a product and its life cycle can

project what stage consumers are adjusting to. Typically,  norms and fads. For the most part,

Eienstein’s theory of relativity can relate to this product life cycle in the phrase “what goes up,

must come down”. It is established that all products usually decline whether it is prolonged or

not.  As we’ve seen in recent years with products like computers as they get out dated, and the

ever so famous VCR’s, many products are innovated or reinvented in order to stay part of the

struggling epidemic to milk a product for the most money it can generate. Companies also face

the threats of changing in customers tastes, advanced technologies, competition, and adaptations

to the spread of new markets.

    Marketing experts have named the life of a newly developed product a “ product life

cycle” due to its statistical views as we’ve established in life that history has a way of repeating

it’s self. Companies usually produce their own new product or, buy the rights or licensing to

produce someone else’s idea. After it is developed it is only a matter of time that another

company designs a newer improved version, or tries to come out with a product to compete with

it. The “Iphone” for example has produced an un-imaginable amount of revenue for apple, as

other cellular phone companies try to compete, along with the cell phone carriers who race for

the competitive advantage.

    It is said in studies that 70 to 90 percent of  most new products fail within the first year of

being released. ...
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