Product mix, also known as product assortment, refers to the
total number of product lines that a company offers to its customers. It may be defined more narrowly in specific
cases to mean only that set of products in a particular product line or a
particular market. It is basically the variety of products the company
has to offer.
The four dimensions to a
company's product mix include width, length, depth and consistency.
Width.
The width of a company's
product mix pertains to the number of product lines that a company sells. For
example, if a company has two product lines, its product mix width is two.
Small and upstart businesses will usually not have a wide product mix. It is
more practical to start with some basic products and build market share. Later
on, a company's technology may allow the company to diversify into other industries
and build the width of the product mix.
Length
Product mix length pertains to
the number of total products or items in a company's product mix. For example,
ABC Company may have two product lines, and five brands within each product
line. Thus, ABC's product mix length would be 10. Companies that have multiple
product lines will sometimes keep track of their average length per product
line. In the above case, the average length of an ABC Company's product line is
five.
Depth
Depth of a product mix pertains
to the total number of variations for each product. Variations can include
size, flavor and any other distinguishing characteristic. For example, if a
company sells three sizes and two flavors of toothpaste, that particular brand
of toothpaste has a depth of six. Just like length, companies sometimes report
the average depth of their product lines; or the depth of a specific product
line.
Consistency
Product mix consistency
pertains to how closely related product lines are to one another--in terms of use,
production and distribution. A company's product mix may be consistent in
distribution but vastly different in use. For example, a small company may sell
its health bars and health magazine in retail stores. However, one product is
edible and the other is not. The production consistency of these products would
vary as well.
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