Microsoft Word XXXXXXXXXXQS Cannibalization Kookabura Bats Case Exercise Intro.doc ©2017 KELLOGG SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT AT NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY 1 QS CANNIBALIZATION: KOOKABURA BATS – CASE...

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1. Read the PDF2. Complete the questions in the excel file. Please show your work.Note- the questions in the excel file are the same as the assignment questions at the end of the PDF.


Microsoft Word - 0852 QS Cannibalization Kookabura Bats Case Exercise Intro.doc ©2017 KELLOGG SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT AT NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY 1 QS CANNIBALIZATION: KOOKABURA BATS – CASE INTRODUCTION MARKETING Quantitative Marketing Skill: Cannibalization Kookabura Bats Case Introduction It is a humid November morning in New Delhi, India, and you’re finishing your first week of work as the Indian cricket bat category manager for the Kookabura, a leading provider of cricket bats to professional and amateur cricket players. You’ve just joined Kookabura after spending several years as the country product manager for Adidas’s cricket equipment line in Sri Lanka. Cricket is a bat-and-ball game that was first played in England in the sixteenth century. It now enjoys popularity around the world, and some claim that cricket is the second-most popular sports game in world (next to soccer). For many years Kookabura has been successfully selling two bat products, and combined sales are nearing a million units a year. One of Kookabura’s products is a top-of-the-line model called the Kookabura Kahuna. The Kahuna is made with wood from English willow trees, which are indigenous to England, and which Kookabura has successfully transplanted to India. The Kookabura Kahuna bat is a high-performance product, and it is a “Grade 1” bat, which means it is the best looking (no blemishes in the wood). Over the years, Kookabura has been able to gain endorsements from a number of prominent cricket players, who often appear in Kookabura’s advertising. Kookabura’s second bat is a lower quality model called the Kookabura Blade. The Blade is made with wood from Kashmir willow trees, which are indigenous to India and Pakistan, and which cracks or splits more easily than English willow, especially if the bat is not oiled periodically. Kookabura Blade bats are “Grade 3,” which means they are cosmetically less attractive than the Kahuna. They are therefore priced significantly lower than the Kahuna. The Kahuna accounts for 65% of the company’s unit sales and 74% of its revenue, with the remainder coming from the Blade. The table below reports the company’s annual financials* when you joined the firm. Sales and costs have been steady for the past couple of years. Kahuna Blade Total Total unit sales (000) 603 382 985 Total revenue (Rs. 000) ₹ 1,240,928 ₹ 428,714 ₹ 1,669,642 Total cost of sales (Rs. 000) ₹ 645,210 ₹ 188,708 ₹ 833,918 Advertising / Sales (Rs. 000) ₹ 135,396 ₹ 35,583 ₹ 170,979 ©2017 KELLOGG SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT AT NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY 2 QS CANNIBALIZATION: KOOKABURA BATS – CASE INTRODUCTION Consumer promotions (Rs. 000) ₹ 88,106 ₹ 59,951 ₹ 148,057 Trade promotions (Rs. 000) ₹ 106,743 ₹ 36,877 ₹ 143,621 Other fixed costs (Rs. 000) ₹ 129,057 ₹ 36,441 ₹ 165,497 Operating profit (Rs. 000) ₹ 136,417 ₹ 71,153 ₹ 207,570 * the Indian currency is Rupees ( ) Kookabura’s senior managers are nervous because global brands like Nike and Adidas are starting to compete aggressively in the cricket equipment category. Within this increasingly competitive market, they are hoping to fortify and expand their position, in part via new product development. After cricket-bat wood is harvested for production, a manufacturer must physically press the wood to increase its strength and durability. But if the wood is pressed too much, it loses its natural spring and does not play well. As a result, the bat manufacturing process must strike a balance between strength and flexibility. On your first day of work, Kookabura’s managers revealed that they have developed a new manufacturing process, which allows them to press wood with higher pressure than before, but without sacrificing natural spring. The result is a bat that sends the ball faster, straighter and further than most or all competitor products. An unexpected additional benefit of Kookabura’s new pressing process is that the new bat does not require oiling and “knocking in.” When consumers first purchase a standard cricket bat, they usually must rub it with oil and use a mallet to round out the edges, which ensures better play accuracy and additional durability. The new Kookabura bat is ready for use upon purchase, without having to take these extra steps. Based on initial consumer testing, Kookabura’s managers learned that this benefit is not desired by many or most individual cricket players, who value the ritual of knocking in and caring for their bats. However, Kookabura’s managers also learned that this benefit would be highly valued by amateur and professional cricket clubs, who tend to purchase multiple bats at once and who would save time and money if each new bat purchased did not need to be oiled and knocked in. In fact, enthusiasm among organizational buyers was so high that, during initial tests on the bat, several of those involved with the test wanted to place immediate orders. Kookabura’s managers hope the new product can be launched in a way that will protect them from impending competition, but they are unsure about how best to handle the launch. They are deciding between two strategies: Strategy Option 1: One strategy would emphasize the new bat’s superior performance. The aim would be to steal individual buyers from competitors and to create a strong defense against potential entry by other companies (like Adidas), who might also try to compete on performance. Kookabura’s managers believe that a superior performance claim would be more credible if the new bat were branded similarly to the Kookabura Kahuna—a product ©2017 KELLOGG SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT AT NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY 3 QS CANNIBALIZATION: KOOKABURA BATS – CASE INTRODUCTION already widely associated with high performance. So, they would call the new bat the Big Kahuna. The company also anticipated that the Big Kahuna would be endorsed by many of the same cricket players that currently endorse the Kahuna. Strategy Option 2: A second strategy would emphasize that the bat is ready to play (without knocking in). The aim would be to steal organizational buyers from competitors. Organizational buyers tend to purchase large quantities in a single order, and they include cricket clubs, professional cricket teams, and municipalities that support youth cricket. These buyers are price sensitive, which is why a significant percent of Kookabura’s Blade sales are to organizational buyers. This strategy proposes that the new bat would be called the Kookabura Readyplay. Although it would be significantly more expensive than the Blade, the Kookabura sales team would emphasize how much time and money organizations can save by not having to knock in and oil a set of new bats, and that purchasing these bats would therefore result in net savings to organizations that purchase them. Under either launch scenario, the introduction of the new bat would have an impact on sales of Kookabura’s existing products. Based on consumer research and laboratory testing, Kookabura expects a cannibalization rate of 17 percent if they pursue the Big Kahuna strategy and 7 percent if they pursue the Kookabura Readyplay strategy. Managers also expect that virtually all cannibalized sales for the Big Kahuna will be drawn from the Kahuna. Marketing communication for the Big Kahuna would emphasize quality and performance, which are attributes shared by the Kahuna. Both bats would also be endorsed in similar ways by athletes already associated with the Kahuna. On the other hand, managers expect that virtually all cannibalized sales for the Readyplay will be drawn from the Blade. Organizational buyers do not tend to have the budget to afford purchasing the Kahuna, but many see value in the lower-quality Blade. Because strategic cases could be made for either approach, the senior management team has asked you to look at the financial ramifications of the branding strategy choice. The initial financial inputs are detailed in the following table: Big Kahuna Readyplay Year 1 Year 2 Year 1 Year 2 Predicted unit sales (000) 175 325 850 1700 Wholesale price per unit ₹ 2,550 ₹ 2,550 ₹ 1,850 ₹ 1,850 Variable cost per unit ₹ 1,208 ₹ 1,208 ₹ 1,208 ₹ 1,208 Predicted advertising / sales costs (Rs. 000) ₹ 53,550 ₹ 99,450 ₹ 188,700 ₹ 377,400 Predicted consumer promotion costs (Rs. 000) ₹ 31,684 ₹ 58,841 ₹ 78,625 ₹ 157,250 Predicted trade promotion costs (Rs. 000) ₹ 42,840 ₹ 79,560 ₹ 78,625 ₹ 157,250 ©2017 KELLOGG SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT AT NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY 4 QS CANNIBALIZATION: KOOKABURA BATS – CASE INTRODUCTION Other fixed costs (Rs. 000) ₹ 46,410 ₹ 86,190 ₹ 133,663 ₹ 267,325 Based on the above information, please answer the following questions: Question 1. Pre-Cannibalization Profit (answers in Rs. 000, not Rs.) A. Calculate the predicted pre-cannibalization profit in years 1 and 2 for Big Kahuna. To calculate this profit, you will need to first calculate total predicted revenue, total variable costs, and total fixed costs. In your answer, please highlight the cumulative profit for each proposed new product over two years. B. Calculate the predicted pre-cannibalization profit in years 1 and 2 for Readyplay. Question 2. Unit Contribution (answers in Rs. 000, not Rs.) C. Calculate the contribution per unit for Kookabura’s existing product—the Kahuna. D. Calculate the contribution per unit for Kookabura’s existing product—the Blade. E. Now calculate the contribution per unit of the proposed new product—The Big Kahuna. Please highlight these contributions per unit in your answer. F. Calculate the contribution per unit for the proposed new product— Readyplay. a. As explained above, Kookabura expects that: (a) the Big Kahuna will primarily cannibalize sales of the Kahuna, and (b) the Readyplay will primarily cannibalize sales of the Blade. Looking only at the contribution per unit figures you calculated, please decide whether it is more financially attractive for the Big Kahuna to cannibalize sales of the Kahuna or for the Readyplay to cannibalize sales of the Blade. Once you have decided, please indicate one of the following statements beneath your unit contribution calculations: i. Answer option 1: It is more financially attractive for the Big Kahuna to cannibalize sales of the Kahuna. ii. Answer option 2: It is more financially attractive for the Readyplay to cannibalize sales of the Blade.
Answered Same DayNov 09, 2021

Answer To: Microsoft Word XXXXXXXXXXQS Cannibalization Kookabura Bats Case Exercise Intro.doc ©2017 KELLOGG...

Riddhi answered on Nov 10 2021
129 Votes
Question 1
    Precannibalization Profit
    A. Predicted Pre-cannibalization profit for Big Kahuna    Year 1        Year 2
    Units        175        325
    Total predicted Revenue    2550    446,250    2550    828,750
    Total Variable Cost    1208    211,400    1208    392,600
    Contributi
on    1342    234,850    1342    436,150
    Predicted advertising cost        53,550        99,450
    Predicted Consumer promotion cost        31,684        58,841
    Predicted trade promotion costs        42,840        79,560
    Other Fixed cost        46,410        86,190
    Profit        146,046        271,229
    Cumulative profit        146,046        417,275
    B. Predicted Pre-cannibalization profit for Readyplay    Year 1        Year 2
    Units        850        1,700
    Total predicted Revenue    1850    1,572,500    1850    3,145,000
    Total Variable Cost    1208    1,026,800    1208    2,053,600
    Contribution    642    545,700    642    1,091,400
    Predicted advertising cost        188,700        188,700
    Predicted Consumer promotion cost        78,625        78,625
    Predicted trade promotion costs        78,625        78,625
    Other Fixed cost        133,663        133,663
    Profit        66,087        611,787
    Cumulative profit        66,087        677,874
Question 2
    C.    Contribution of Kookabura’s existing product – the Kahuna
        Particulars    Kahuna
        Revenue per unit (1240928/603)    2058
        (-) Variable cost per unit (645210/603)    1070
        Contribution per unit    988
    D.     Contribution of Kookabura’s existing product – the Blade
        Particulars    Blade
        Revenue per unit (428714/382)    1122
        (-) Variable cost per unit (188708/382)    494
        Contribution per unit    628
    E.     Contribution per unit of the proposed new product – Big kahuna
        Particulars    Big Kahuna
        Revenue per unit    2550
        Variable cost per unit    1208
        Contribution per unit    1342
    F.     Contribution per unit for the proposed new product - Readyplay
        Particulars    Readyplay
        Revenue per unit    1850
        Variable cost per unit    1208
        Contribution per unit    642
    a)     The overall contribution to the company is higher in case of option 2 wherein Readyplay cannabalizes Blade. It is financially more attractive for Readyplay to cannabalize sales of the Blade.
        Big Kahuna canabize sales of Kahuna
        Particulars    Kahuna    Blade    Big Kahuna    Total
        Units    573    382    175    1130
        Contribution per unit    988    628    1342
        Total Contributions    566080    240006    234850    1040936
        Working
        Cannabalization rate    17%
        Loss of sales of Kahuna to Big Kahuna (175 units at the rate of 17%)    30
        Unit of sales of Kahuna    603
        (-) loss of sales of kahuna    30
        Effect of canabization    573
        Big Kahuna canabize sales of...
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