When it comes to the buying patterns of North American consumers, the market is changing. It used to be that you could make one dishwasher, one toaster, and one vacuum cleaner to attract a mass audience but that is less and less the case. Successful brands now target both the high-end as well as the low-end of the market for several reasons.
If you’re a manufacturer of consumer goods and you’re only targeting one end of the market, you’re missing out on a sizeable audience and an opportunity for growth. There are many things to consider with a high-low branding strategy, particularly when you’re migrating downwards: you don’t want to turn a business boon into a brand bust. Forbes lists five marketing strategies for introducing value-priced products into an existing premium brand that are well worth considering.
From a technical point-of-view, successfully moving a product to the lower-end of the market often means embracing the microcontroller. NXP, ST Microelectronics, and Microchip provide some of the most used silicon for downward migration since they have product families that include microprocessors and microcontrollers (and one of the reasons why we partner with all three). Your product can start its life on a microprocessor and then efficiently move to a microcontroller when the time is right.
These lightweight chips provide the cost savings that allow you to move some premium features to down-market products. Of course you’ll still need to simplify your product to meet the resource constraints of the less-capable hardware. The added benefit of this (besides a smaller bill-of-materials cost) is your new down-market product will naturally lack some of the bells and whistles of its upscale predecessor so it won’t inadvertently split your customer base.
Microcontrollers cut a product’s bill of materials by eliminating higher-powered features such as MMUs and GPUs and then using that circuit space to integrate additional components onto the chip (CPU, RAM, Flash, and peripherals). These deviations from a microprocessor architecture can impact your software design in three key areas.
All of these fat-trimming factors were key behind our creation of Storyboard Lite. If you’ve used an embedded design tool like Crank Storyboard to create your upmarket product’s graphical UI, you’ll be in really good shape. By having completely inter operable and interchangeable IDEs, libraries, graphics, and scripting between Storyboard and Storyboard Lite, a Storyboard design can take advantage of both powerful MPUs and scaled-back MCUs. That means whatever resources you’ve put into your original sophisticated GUI can be leveraged into a simplified, but no less attractive, product.
If you want to take Storyboard out for a spin, download a demo image on your favourite hardware.