// description
The Product Life Cycle (PLC) model describes four stages that most products pass through: Introduction (low sales, high cost, building awareness), Growth (rapid sales increase, competitors enter, margins improve), Maturity (sales plateau, competition intensifies, margins tighten), and Decline (sales fall, market shrinks, exit decisions arise). Each stage calls for different strategies in pricing, promotion, distribution, and investment.
// history
Theodore Levitt, a Harvard Business School professor and editor of the Harvard Business Review, popularised the concept in his 1965 article "Exploit the Product Life Cycle." While the idea that products have lifecycles had been discussed before, Levitt formalised it as a strategic tool and argued that managers needed to plan for each stage in advance rather than managing only the current one.
// example
A KDP seller recognises that their best-selling design category (motivational quote t-shirts via POD) is in the Maturity stage: sales are stable but competition is fierce, profit margins are compressed by competitors undercutting on price. Rather than continuing to fight for share in a mature category, the seller applies PLC logic: invest modestly in the mature line (maintain listings, no new designs), redirect creative energy into a category in the Growth stage (AI-generated abstract art on premium apparel), and begin exploring an Introduction-stage category (personalised digital art prints for specific professional communities).
// katharyne's take
Use the Product Life Cycle as a diagnostic tool for your KDP and Etsy portfolio. Put each product category into a life cycle stage and let that inform how much creative energy you give it. Mature products need maintenance, not innovation. Declining products need an exit plan, not more investment. Growth products need your best attention and most of your resources. The mistake I see creators make is treating all their products the same regardless of stage — investing the same energy in a declining category as in a growing one, when the returns are completely different.
// creative uses
- Build a quarterly PLC audit into your KDP/Etsy workflow: list every active product category and assign it a stage. For anything in Decline, set a "stop investing" date rather than continuing to refresh listings that compete in a shrinking market.
- Use Growth-stage identification to time new Midjourney style trends: when a new aesthetic starts appearing in Midjourney showcase communities but hasn't hit mass adoption yet, that's Introduction-to-Growth transition — the ideal moment to build a niche product around it before competition floods in.
- Apply PLC logic to your course portfolio: a course that was high-converting two years ago may now be in Maturity or Decline as competitors have cloned the format. Use that diagnosis to decide whether to update it, reposition it, or retire it and launch something genuinely new.
// quick actions
- Pull your KDP or Etsy sales data for the last 12 months and sort your product categories by revenue trend (growing, flat, or declining). Assign each a PLC stage. Spend 10 minutes deciding which Growth-stage category deserves more resources this quarter.
- Identify one product category you're still investing time in that is clearly in Decline: sales have dropped for three or more consecutive months and competition is higher than when you entered. Make the decision to stop creating new products in that category and redirect the time.
- Search your top niche on Etsy and look at the date the best-selling listings were published. If most were published 2–3 years ago and new listings aren't ranking, that category is likely Mature or Declining. Factor this into your next product decision before you build.
// prompt ideas
Help me audit my [KDP/Etsy] product portfolio using the Product Life Cycle framework. Here are my active product categories and their 12-month sales trends: [list categories with rough revenue trend — growing/flat/declining]. Assign a PLC stage to each, explain the evidence for that classification, and recommend a specific resource allocation strategy: which categories deserve more creative investment, which should be maintained at low cost, and which I should stop adding new products to.
I'm trying to time my entry into the [niche] market. Based on the signals I'm seeing — [describe what you're observing: competitor activity, search volume trends, review dates on bestsellers, AI saturation level] — help me assess whether this niche is in Introduction, Growth, Maturity, or Decline, and what the ideal entry strategy looks like at this stage. Include specific tactics that are optimal for this stage and tactics I should avoid.
One of my previously successful product categories — [describe it] — appears to be entering Decline based on [falling sales data / increased competition / lower BSR on top sellers]. Walk me through my strategic options: Should I attempt a product life cycle extension (how?), pivot to an adjacent niche, or wind down this category and reallocate the time? Give me a decision framework with specific criteria for each choice.