Kookaburra Cricket Bats: Dealing with Cannibalization
Publication date: 20 January 2017
Abstract
This exercise is one in a series intended to help students learn how to perform financial calculations in marketing contexts.
Kookaburra, a maker of cricket equipment popular in Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, South Africa, and India, was considering two strategies for positioning a new cricket bat in India. Both strategies would cannibalize current sales, and Lulu Popplewell, category manager responsible for the Indian market, needed to calculate the financial impact of both to determine which one she would recommend.
This exercise poses a fictional problem about branding strategy on a new product, and asks students to consider the financial impact of different branding strategies and cannibalization rates.
After completing the exercise, students should be able to:
Calculate the impact of cannibalization on units and profit for a new product launch
Determine break-even cannibalization rates
Understand how different branding decisions may impact the degree of cannibalization they should expect from a new product launch
Keywords
Citation
Hennessy, J. (2017), "Kookaburra Cricket Bats: Dealing with Cannibalization", . https://doi.org/10.1108/case.kellogg.2016.000177
Publisher
:Kellogg School of Management
Copyright © 2012, The Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University