Product in product management refers to something tangible or intangible that offers or fulfills value to users by solving a specific problem. It encompasses not only physical goods but also digital products, services, and experiences.
- A product is defined not just by its features but by the problems it solves, the values it creates, and the experience it provides to the users.
- Product has a lifecycle (Introduction-Growth-Maturity-Decline)
- It exists within a market context, meaning it must fit customer needs, business goals, and competitive positioning.
Definition of a Product
A product can be defined as anything that delivers value to customers by solving a problem or fulfilling a need. It can take various forms depending on its nature and how value is delivered.
Types of Products include:
- Tangible Goods: Physical items that customers can see, touch, or use, such as smartphones, clothing, household appliances, or automobiles.
- Services: Services or solutions provided to customers to address their needs or requirements, such as consulting services, software as a service (SaaS), healthcare services, or financial services.
- Digital Products: Software applications, mobile apps, websites, or digital platforms that deliver value to users through digital interactions, such as productivity tools, social media platforms, e-commerce websites, or entertainment streaming services.
- Experiences: Experiential offerings that provide memorable or transformative experiences to customers, such as theme park attractions, live events, guided tours, or educational workshops.
Types of Products
There are multiple ways to categories products, but mostly product categories into three types.
1. Consumer Products
Consumer products are goods or services made for personal use by individuals. They are bought for daily needs, comfort, or lifestyle and not for resale or business purposes. Examples include food, clothing, electronics, and personal care items.
- Convenience: Low-cost, frequent buys needing little effort (snacks, newspapers).
- Shopping: Higher-value items needing planning and comparison (electronics, furniture).
- Specialty: Unique or luxury goods with strong brand loyalty (designer products, premium gadgets).
- Unsought: Not actively sought until needed (insurance, emergency services).
2. Industrial Products
Industrial products are goods or services that are used by businesses or organizations rather than by individual consumers. These products often play a crucial role in the operations or production processes of other companies.
- Raw Materials: Basic natural resources used in production (e.g., iron ore, crude oil, cotton).
- Components & Parts: Pre-manufactured items used in final products (e.g., microchips, batteries, engine parts).
- Capital Goods: Long-term assets used in production (e.g., machinery, manufacturing equipment, servers).
- Business Services: Support services that help businesses operate efficiently (e.g., IT services, consulting, logistics, maintenance).
3. Service Products
Service products are intangible offerings provided by businesses to meet the needs or solve the problems of their customers. Unlike tangible goods, services are not physical objects that can be stored or owned but rather activities or processes performed by individuals or organizations.
SaaS Tools:
- Zoom
- Salesforce
- Google Workspace