Economics Part 2: Understanding the Product Life Cycle
Part 2 of a two-part Series on Supply and Demand
By Sean Eyring, eBay Certified Consultant
Click here to read Part 1.
Remember the example of the ball? We discovered that you can determine the
direction a ball is traveling from several single-frame photos.
Likewise, we can determine the direction of the supply and demand for a
product on eBay the same way.
But today let’s
step back and look at the picture. Let’s answer why supply and demand
fluctuates and how it affects what we call the product life cycle.
Where is Your Product in Its Life Cycle?
It’s
one thing to know the supply and demand for your product, which is what
we learned last time. However, it’s a completely different story know
where your product is in its life cycle.
You may
recall the figure I used last time to help illustrate the
cycle that each product goes through, both online and in retail
outlets:
Figure 1: The Product Life Cycle
In
order to know where you product is in the cycle, you need to understand
the cycle itself. Let’s talk about each phase in more detail.
Early Phase
In
the Early Phase, interest is just waking up, but there’s still not a
lot of supply. This means that both supply and demand increase during
this phase. You know your product is in this phase if demand is very
high, measured by Listing Success Rate, and supply is still low,
measured by Total Listings.
Figure 2: Early Phase with Rising LSR and Sales Per Seller
Figure
2 shows a product near the beginning of the Early Phase. Demand is
relatively high, nearly 63% while supply is rather low, 451 listings.
We can also see that the number of sellers is low, at 138.
Since
this is the case, we can anticipate that both supply and demand will
increase, along with the number of sales. This means that demand for
the product is rising to match market saturation.
But,
as I mentioned earlier, we can’t use a single snapshot to decide
whether the product is in early life phase. Figure 3 below, using
research from a later period of time, confirms that the product’s
success rate and revenue per seller are both on the rise.
Figure 3: Early Phase with Rising LSR and Average Revenue Per Seller
Here
is the same product again, at a later point in time. The
comparison is what tells us where the product is in its
life cycle now. Figure 3 shows that our anticipations
were correct. Our supply has increased from 451 listings to 795
listings. Our demand has increased, with LSR rising from 62.97% to
69.25%.
But along with this increase, we also
have more sellers in the market, with one 188 instead of only 138 when
we started. Figure 3 also shows that each seller is making a much
higher profit than they were before: $16.26 more, to be exact.
Competition Phase
Because
many sellers are making a nice profit with little competition in the
Early Phase, other sellers will be drawn to the market.
Although
demand is still high, the number of listings (supply) is going to
quickly catch up and balance out with demand. As the number of listings
increases, the LSR remains steady (this is the balance). Also, the
number of sellers is increasing dramatically. These are all indicators
that we are well into the Competition Phase.
Figure 4: Competition Phase with Rising Competition and Sellers with
Sale
Figure
4 illustrates the same product much later in time. We can see that the
number of listings and the number of sellers has drastically increased.
However, sales rates have remained steady
and the sales price has dropped.
We
know we’ve hit the Competition Phase when supply rises to match demand.
There is no shortage, and there seems to be little surplus. But,
because there is no shortage, the price is inevitably going to be lower
than Early Phase.
Decay Phase
During
the Decay Phase, the market is completely saturated (notice 20,000
listings in Figure 5 below). Demand is dropping off (reflected in the
LSR), and there is way too much competition for most people to make
break-even prices (more than 2,300 sellers). Compare the results in
figure 5 to those in the Early and Competition Phases.
Figure 5: Decay Phase with Maximum Competition and Plummeting
LSR
Life-Cycle Strategies are Based on Demand
Here’s
a summary of the life-cycle, and some strategies you can use, depending
where your products fit in the cycle.
- Early
Phase – Demand is high, supply is low. Product is very
expensive early on in the product cycle, but if your sources can get
you a sellable product with a window of opportunity before it is
available to the general marketplace, you can expect to make some of
the highest profits on eBay during this stage. Demand is very high and
supply is low.
- Competition
Phase – Demand is leveling off, supply is increasing.
Selling here is where most traditional businesses compete. Higher
margins come from efficiency, good supply relationships, and volume
discounts. However, sellers must constantly be aware of the upcoming
shift to the end of the product life cycle.
- Decay
Phase—Demand is dropping like a rock, supply is
completely saturated. Selling here is tricky, risky, and
timing-intensive. The goal is to buy product in volume just as it hits
liquidation channels but before demand has dried up as the result of
market saturation or the public’s anticipation of the replacement
product. There is usually a window here where sellers can make a small
profit by buying at liquidation prices and selling at near-retail
prices, but this is a usually a very small window.
Your Sales Plans Should Depend on Demand
I
can’t stress this enough. The only way to know whether demand is rising
or lowering is to compare one time-frame against another. I suggest
that you run week-over-week research for a four week period to get a
good picture of the movement of supply demand. Then you can save your
reports and start comparing month-to-month to determine where your
product is headed in its life cycle. This way, you can watch the
balance between supply and demand over time, and thus be able to enter
and exit the market at optimal times.
Imagine
how your knowledge of demand for a product is going to influence your
sales plans. With this knowledge, you will be able to:
- Decide whether to sell a specific product
- Decide whether to renew a product sourcing contract
- Decide when to enter and exit the market with specific products
- Decide whether to liquidate your inventory as it enters the decay phase
And
see, you probably thought you would never use a thing you learned in
high school economics, but here you are, using it for your everyday
eBay sales!
Make the most of your auctions with research!
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