Integrated strategy gives TI an edge in key selling period

Company works closely with educators to develop graphing calculators. Equal attention is paid to packaging that will close the sale.

Pw 10938 We Texasinstruments

At Texas Instruments, the Educational & Productivity Solutions (E&PS) business faces the same pressure to increase sales as any of TI’s other entities. But E&PS also operates under two special constraints:

1. A key selling season takes place during a compressed time period—the back-to-school time frame—when an especially high volume of “noise” dominates retail stores.

2. The E&PS unit needs to market multiple products through the same retailer to meet differing needs of various educational curriculums and teachers.

Dallas-based TI is using packaging to meet this challenge head-on. Packaging is the cornerstone of a strategy to communicate product differentiation to customers and help them select the best product for their needs.

The approach to TI’s graphing products demonstrates how this process works. TI’s graphing products are advanced calculators with large screens and the ability to add software and upgrade operating systems. They are developed based on educator needs.

These products stay in rotation in schools for several years—longer than the average consumer electronic item. Teachers often use a specific model—from the TI-83 family, the TI-84 family, or the TI-89 family—and ask students to purchase that specific model. The model that teachers specify on their school supply list is the model they will use when teaching in the classroom.

When students and their parents visit a store to purchase the calculator, they face row upon row of graphing calculators from competing brands. Selecting the best product to meet a student’s needs can confuse consumers, who may leave the store in frustration or purchase the wrong product.

It is at this point, TI believes, that its packaging strategy guides consumers to the right product and clinches the sale.

Challenges at retail

Beyond easing consumer confusion about different products, the right package is essential in maximizing graphing calculator sales because calculator marketers are also responding to two different sets of pressures in the store. The first challenge is a short, seasonal selling window. Most graphing calculators sell in the six-week summer back-to-school period, with a small increase in sales during the first three weeks in January, when many colleges begin a new semester.

A second challenge in stores is that retailers who do volume back-to-school sales strive to keep and sell product on peg boards efficiently. The number of pegs available in a category can sometimes dip lower than a product marketer prefers.

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