Product Launch and Evaluation
Product Launch and Evaluation
7.1 Introduction
The product launch is both the end and the beginning. It is the culmination of all the
effort and thought that has gone before. It is also the start of a new product cycle if it is
an innovation, the revival of a product cycle which appears to have levelled off, or just
another product in the total product lifecycle causing a change in market share and
perhaps a faster growth pattern.
The new product affects the company's product mix. It may increase sales in one
product area and decrease sales in another, but hopefully it will increase the total sales
of all products. It can change the balance of sales in the industry and in the marketplace
and affect the consumers' behaviour and attitudes, and also influence change in the
social and economic environment. So once the product is launched, it is not just a case
of tracking the sales to see that they are reaching the target, but also of following
consequential changes in the company, the consumer and the environment.
The targets for success need to be carefully recorded and recognised by all before the
launch starts. The targets should not be moved unless they are discussed and again there
is agreement.
The success or failure of the product in the market depends largely on the skill with
which the operational plan is conducted by the production, marketing and finance
departments, but of course also on the market and the environment into which it is
launched. The plan may be good and the operation efficient, but suppose on the day the
product was launched either there was a food poisoning scare with this type of product,
or the competition started a massive price reduction campaign, or the government
announced that all benefits and pensions were to be cut, or the importing country
imposed massive import duties for this type of product. There need to be emergency
plans in place to react to such unpredicted problems - how to stop or change plans
quickly
Once the top management decision has been taken for the launch, the product has to be
launched to several groups of people, the most important being the company, the
retailers, the consumers and the general public. The product launch can be regarded as
three steps: launch to the company, launch to the market and launch to the consumers,
and these are followed by the launch evaluation.
The activities are the typical operational activities of the company in departments such
as marketing, sales, production, quality assurance, finance, but the new product causes
changes and sometimes problems. The launch to the company has as its outcome the
completed company organisation. The launch to the market involves the production and
distribution of the product combined with the marketing to the retailers and the outcome
is the complete set up ready to launch, and the final stage is the launch to the consumer.
For the industrial products, the launch can be just to the company and to the customers,
but there may also be distributors and agents in the chain.
The outcomes from the three steps are important, both in their quality and their timing.
In timing, the company organisation for the launch needs to be completed before the
launch to the market starts, or disaster can ensue; for example:
• product that has not arrived at all the retail stores,
• TV. advertising that cannot be booked for the launch date, and
• printing of in-store promotional material that is two weeks behind.
Most people in product development have met these crises, and scrambled to solve
them.
The post-launch evaluation leads into the final analysis which will decide the product's
future - to be dropped, improved, or accepted immediately into the company's product
mix. But during this time of evaluation, there is a need to continue the improvement and
the stabilisation of the product qualities, the marketing, the production and the costs.
The activities and the outcomes in the four stages of launch and the post-launch
evaluation are shown in Figure 7.1. Within these stages, the activities are organised as
suits the company and the project, but the marketing and product organisation are not
separate as shown in the Figure but are integrated and coordinated.
Figure 7.1 Activities and outcomes in the product launch and post-launch
PRODUCT LAUNCH
____________________________________________________________________
Launch to the consumers
Merchandising Improving production efficiency
Advertising Reduce product quality variation
Sales recording Checking product in distribution
Buyers' surveys Checking product in retailers
Competition study Production costing
Marketing costing Distribution costing
Financial analysis of costs, revenues
Analysis of production, distribution, marketing
Comparison of actual results with targets
The raw materials, production, distribution and quality assurance people are usually
presented, at a technical conference, with the details of the:
• product,
• raw materials,
• production method and controls involved,
• physical distribution method including predicted shelf life and storage
conditions, and
• quality, quantity and timing targets and the allowable variations.
All this information is also presented in print form and on the computer so there is ready
access to it during the initial production runs. There are usually discussions about the
problems that might occur and about any improvements on yields, quality and costs
expected during continuing production. There is also a clear responsibility for the
various tasks, the cooperation required and the actions during emergencies. It is
important that there is free discussion during these briefings so that new ideas can
develop and everyone is knowledgeable about what is to happen and feel a member of
the team.
The sales people must be able to answer questions put to them by customers, be skilled
in the merchandising and in-store promotions and understand the sales targets that they
have to meet at certain times. The sales force conference is usually a lively occasion
because it is a presentation of the total product and the promotion to be used. The brand
name, product name and aesthetic packaging are all presented and the sales people are
given a final product proposition which they can use to convince the retailers about the
unique benefits of the product, and its improvements over competing products. The
final product proposition includes not only the product description, but also the
promotional programme, the list price, the retail margins and suggested retail price, and
any introductory offers, discounts and specials. The product needs to be presented with
an overwhelming image of success!
The sales communication is also presented at the sales force conference. The sales
communication is the sales person's convincing delivery of the product proposition to
the buyer. This is related to the type of product and the type of buyer, in particular the
selling of consumer products to retailers, and industrial products to food manufacturers
and food service operators. Retailers are interested in the types of consumer promotions
to be used and the budgets involved, manufacturers and food service operators in how
the product will perform in their processing and cooking, its effect on their end product
and the technical help provided.
The launch to the retailer is of course crucial. Supermarkets today have strong control
over the introduction of new products with their decisions affecting how much shelf
space will be allocated, the costs of the introduction, the length of time allowed for sales
to grow and the potential introduction of their own-brand products. Supermarket buyers
rarely use formal analysis to make their new product decisions because of the low risk
in giving shelf space to new products - a failure can soon be dropped from their shelves,
and if a rejected product is a success in other supermarkets, it can then be purchased
with confidence.
Some of the questions supermarkets ask when reviewing a new product are:
• Does the product look as if it will sell?
• Is the manufacturer going to promote the product strongly enough to produce the
sales?
• Are the 'deals' offered in line with the product type and past experience with the
manufacturer?
• Will the product increase profit because it is a superior replacement to an existing
product on the shelves?
For some products, there are advantages in launching the products only to strategic
retailers, especially if the product is particularly new in some way and requires special
cooperation from them to sell to the consumers. The product may be launched in a
'party' atmosphere with free food and drink, promotional gifts, samples presented in
attractive ways, and information presented in easy-to-read form. These parties can be
great publicity if they are covered by the media, and thus can give the company a
chance to reach the public before the actual consumer launch.
Industrial products are often launched in a similar manner at trade fairs, where they can
be presented to a large number of manufacturers at the same time. But often industrial
products are launched to a few manufacturers, or even one manufacturer with a long
association with the company so that there is the opportunity to solve that
manufacturer’s problems and gain knowledge of the effects of the product in their
processing.
Contract Launch is where the new product is contracted to a retailer under their own-
label brand or where a new ingredient is contracted to only one or two manufacturers. A
significant proportion of food manufacturers, particularly small manufacturers, are
approached by the retailers and asked to produce products to the retailers' specifications
or to agreed specifications developed by the manufacturers. These are mainly me-too
products or product improvements or line extensions. This means that the prices and
quantities are known and there are no promotional expenses, but of course there are no
guarantees for the future when the contract is finished.
A few large retailers, usually national or international supermarket chains, will
undertake the product development themselves and then contract out the production of
the new products. Other retailers look out for small innovative manufacturers and will
absorb the company or just the products into their organisation.
An industrial marketer may plant an idea for a consumer product with a manufacturer or
a large retailer and provide some “know-how”, hoping that they will sell their
ingredient(s) for the new product if it is developed.
There may be a need to launch to other people in the food system, such as primary
producers, agents and other facilitators in the market channel.
The launch to the consumer depends on the type of product, the budget and the general
policy of the company. Products can vary in the consumers’ minds in terms of newness,
the amount of 'learning' needed to adopt them and also the costs of trying them. If all
three are high, the growth of sales is likely to be slow unless there is a very high budget.
But there is also an element of risk, which could discourage the use of a high budget,
favouring instead the use of a gradual launch through the market. At the other extreme,
for example for a line-extension or an improved product, the product can be introduced
quickly to as wide an area as possible.
Several years ago, efforts to introduce the Japanese to cranberry juice fizzled. The
company shortened the name to Cranby to make it easier to say and served up a
bland version for the Japanese palate. But the sales were disappointing, and the
company pulled out quickly, though it recently introduced several cranberry drinks.
Ocean Spray's new strategy: Be patient, give away lots of samples to help people
acquire a taste, and use market research to listen to the natives.
There are name problems: the brand name Ocean Spray, and the product name,
cranberry. Ocean Spray sounds like a perfume. In Taiwan, the name used for
Ocean Spray is Hoshien Pei which sounds similar but translates as healthy
refreshment. In France the closest translation for cranberry is ‘airelle de myrtille',
which sounds awkward. As a result, despite the French uproar about the invasion of
English words, the company is leaning towards using 'le cranberry'.
Britain has already provided humbling lessons. Shortly after the juice was
introduced there a decade ago Ocean Spray discovered that Britons don't like
bottles. Instead they like to use juice boxes. But progress was made in Britain after
Ocean Spray began to mix cranberry juice with blackcurrant juice, a f'ruity drink
popular with British children in the 1950s and 60s And sales shot up after extensive
publicity about a Harvard University study, sponsored by Ocean Spray, said that
cranberry juice helps to prevent and treat urinary tract infections.
Using the cranberry example, list the factors that need to be considered when
launching a product into an overseas market.
What are the differences in introducing a product to your local market and to an
overseas market with which you are familiar?
Brand and product name are always important in introducing a new product.
Discuss what should be considered when developing a brand name (1) in several
languages and (2) for one general international brand.
What do you think are the important factors in choosing a product name?
The activities in the launch are highly coordinated as in the operational plan.
Logistic aspects of distribution are of prime importance in the launch. Failure in any
part of the market channel will upset everyone from the primary producer to the
consumer and can do irreparable damage to the product image. The product must be on
the retailers' shelves when it is wanted by the consumer. There is nothing more
annoying to the consumer than seeing advertisements and then failing to find the
product on the supermarket shelves, or for a food manufacturer to get very excited at a
trade fair only to discover that the food ingredient will not be available in their area for
6-12 months.
The time schedules in the operational plan are of prime importance to ensure that
distribution takes place at the right time for production, the sales force, the supermarkets
and the consumer. The company should have the product in central storage at the plant
and in distribution centres at strategic points in or near the markets; the inventory held
in each and its transport needs to be recorded and controlled. If the stocks are not in the
retailers and the distribution centres when the product is launched, many potential sales
and profits may be lost.
Promotion and advertising needs to be coordinated in time and presentation. TV
advertising needs to be coordinated with the in-store promotion so that they are
reinforcing each other. The packaging and in-store promotions need to be telling the
same story. The TV advertising may have a simpler message than the in-store
promotions because it may be aimed at awareness and the in-store promotions at
education, but the linkage needs to be strong. Timing of the promotions needs to be
well planned and maintained, but there must be readiness to act when unexpected
happenings occur in the market.
Should the launch be a frantic rush or a well planned exercise? The latter takes longer
but entails much less risk. When the product looks a success, everyone involved is
itching to get it out on the market, and this may be intensified by rumours that
competitors are ready to flood the market with copies of the new product. What is
important is that the launch should be planned for the right time of the year for this
particular type of food, just before the beginning of the high sales period. Problems may
be caused by unusual climate changes, for example if temperatures are staying high and
winter is taking some time to come when you are launching a line of winter soups; or
vice versa, in summer, temperatures do not rise and ice-creams are not selling but you
have a new frozen novelty which will only last a season. Usually, however, the timing
of the launch can be calculated reasonably accurately, and the timing of the activities in
the launch can be controlled on a critical path network or a job progress bar chart.
The company also needs to decide, as policy, if the new product is to be the first of this
type of product on the market, or if they want to follow another company’s product as
second or even third. . The first product on the market may have a problem convincing
the consumers to buy, while the second and third product can be improved and launched
later at less expense and still take the larger market share.
The product in the project may be of course only one of the company's new products,
and its timing has to relate to the timing of any other launches.
7.8 Evaluation of the launch
It is very important to monitor not just the sales of the product, but also to check how
the product is performing in distribution, storage and the supermarket, the retailers'
attitudes to the product and their placement and promotion of it, and of course
consumers' attitudes and behaviour towards the product. How much are they buying?
Are they re-buying? What do they like/dislike in the product? Would slight
modifications improve it?
So there is a need for qualitative research on the product, production, distribution and
marketing as well as the technical research on product quality and the quantitative
research on the efficiency of the launch. Many of the studies on the efficiency of
production, distribution and marketing are carried out continuously for the company's
day-to-day activities. If there is only a small change in the new product, then this data is
sufficient. But a major change of product, production, distribution or marketing needs
more detailed evaluation of the launch. Timing is most important and there is a need to
check the timing and schedules detailed in the operational plan to see that they are being
met and nothing is falling behind – raw materials, production, distribution or marketing.
The evaluation after the launch needs to consider carefully the operational, marketing
and product plans detailed in Chapter 6, but some important areas to consider are
identified in Table 7.1.
Table 7.1 Important evaluation areas
Production and marketing: quality and efficiency
Product and marketing: quality and efficiency
Nutrition, health and safety
Environment: physical, social and legal
Production andCustomer response
distribution: quality and efficiency
Company-fit
Sales
Finance
Company organisation
Measurements of these factors are followed in many companies during the launch. The
raw materials and direct processing costs are continuously watched to check if they are
improving and are within or better than target. The variation in the quality of the raw
materials, the process conditions and the distribution conditions are recorded and
analysed, and most important the technical standards for the product continually
monitored. The wastes from the production and costs of their disposal also need to be
measured.
The distribution costs, delivery times and product losses are recorded so that
improvements can be made. Also retailers can be surveyed to see how they regard the
distribution. An important consideration is the return of product because it is damaged,
too near the use-by date, or not as specified. Such returns are costly in terms of both
money and company reputation, but also the acceptance of the product in the market as
summarised in Example 7.2, and the production and distribution has to be controlled to
reduce them to a minimum.
The sales analysis only provides the overall sales, and if there is a need to know who is
first-buying and who is re-buying, then information compiled from buyer diaries can be
obtained. Consumer panels record purchases, and from this data companies can
determine the re-buying pattern, the timing and the amounts for each purchase. They
can also determine from what particular other brands it is gaining customers, to what
other brands the product is losing customers, what types of customers are showing the
most interest in the new product, and which type of customer has never bought it, and
so on.
There is also need for information on consumers' behaviour and attitudes towards the
product and the marketing mix. A survey of buyers can be made either just outside the
supermarket after they have made a purchase or later after they have used it. Another
method is to attach a return card on the package, perhaps with some inducement such as
a free sample or a discount voucher. This survey will indicate how the product can be
improved and how the marketing mix can change to improve sales.
The competitors' reactions to the new product should be constantly surveyed to see what
tactics they are using either to prevent success or to attach their products to the success.
Also the reactions of the retailers should be studied - are they enthusiastic, or do they
only want to give the product a month's shelf space? How can their aspirations for the
product be fulfilled?
Today with the increase in specific health claims, particularly with functional foods and
nutriceuticals, there is a need to carefully monitor any changes that are occurring in
acceptance, both by the consumer and the society. There may arise disagreements
between individual nutritionists and health professionals on the validity of some health
claims as more research results become available. This may become serious and the
food regulators may ban a product or at least not allow claims.
Case Study 7.
Understanding the Food Market
To understand the food system in this day and age and, more importantly, to
predict future markets requires a thorough knowledge of the factors which
influence the food habits of whole populations. It is important to understand that
the modern world is a rapidly changing environment, particularly with respect to
the harmonisation of international trade boundaries. The dynamic changes which
are occurring in Europe, for example, will significantly affect the food system,
even in markets as far away as Australia.
What is changing about the food system? Issues such as urbanisation, the changes
in hours spent at work, how food is distributed within a family, family size, and
who provides the food within the family are all very important. In addition, there
has been a wide range of technological innovations which affect, for example, the
way in which food is preserved, packaged, transported and promoted. There is less
seasonal market variation because of the delocalisation and internationalisation of
the food supply. All of these factors have contributed to a possible destabilisation
of traditional food habits.
The difficulty for the producers is that they must respond to a market which is
much less stable and predictable than in the past. In a situation where the food
producers remain isolated from the consumer, they are less able to respond to a
market which is becoming more selective and segmented.
A major role for nutritionists in the food industry is therefore to establish a new
knowledge about what people are eating, and why, and to communicate this both
to the operational (sales, marketing, production, etc.) and innovative
(technological) sections of the industry. It is equally important for nutritionists to
communicate information in the other direction along the food chain, translating
new technological information into a form that is readily understood and usable by
the consumer.
(Source: Somerset, S.M. (1991) ‘Nutrition: a driving force behind food industry
innovation', British Food Journal, 93(6), 7-11.)
Safety is of course a factor which needs to be checked very carefully. Obviously, it will
have been considered during the development, but it must be monitored in the
distribution system, in the retail outlets and in the home. If there are any doubts, then
the product has to be withdrawn. Any adverse effects of the product on the consumers'
health will 'kill' a new product, perhaps forever. In the USA, a product liability study is
especially important in new product development.
Recently, there have been two serious food safety breakdowns which have been
identified as from the raw materials used – melamine in liquid milk and food
poisoning micro-organisms in peanut butter. This emphasises the need in product
development to identify the sources of raw materials and the safety of the raw
materials at all times.
(2) How would you advise distribution and marketing staff in selling so as
to ensure safety of:
The wastes are not only the wastes from the production facilities but the waste
occurring in the distribution and also with the consumers. Packaging is a waste area
which causes controversy and there are regulations in some countries to control it.
Another type of waste today is ‘energy’ – some supermarkets may view foods which are
transported over long distances as wasteful.
‘Technology’ may cause suspicions about the product, especially if this is a new
technology which the consumers and the society do not have a great deal of knowledge.
Genetically designed products may be accepted in some countries and be banned in
others.
It is useful to know how the consumer heard about the product – advertising, in-store
tasting or from a friend - so that the communication can be improved and made more
noticeable and attractive.
7.8.6 Company-fit
Such an evaluation includes how the product is affecting the total product mix or the
category product mix, the product's relationship to the other new product introductions,
its relationship to the company image and the effect on strategic planning. Any
launching difficulties or problems should be studied and the method used to overcome
then recorded for future use.
An important consideration for the company is the future for the product - is it to
become a long-term member of the product mix? Will it be either an important member
giving a large share of the profits or only a minor product as regards sales but useful for
marketing and maybe filling production capacity?
Sales measurement involves not just making a record of what has been produced.
Shipment data from the plant initially records product made to 'fill up the distribution
line' and then to satisfy retailers' orders. But because of the inventory effects in the
system, shipments may not relate to retail sales. The most efficient method is to buy
supermarket audit data which has been recorded electronically, i.e. the quantity of the
product that has actually been sold in the supermarket. This is up-to-date actual retail
information. Commercial sales research companies will provide sales not only of the
new product but of competitive products so there is a control on analysing the sales.
This consists of two parts: first the collection and control of the costs of launching, and
second the recalculation of financial predictions to include the new information on sales
revenue and costs from the launch.
A launch is always expensive. Costs can run away as people try to solve problems in
production and marketing, while sales may grow more slowly than predicted. In small
companies with inadequate working capital, this is where the company's outgoings
exceed the limits to which the bank has agreed and the bank may place the company in
receivership. But even with larger companies it may cause the product to be withdrawn
before it has had time to develop a position in the market.
The short-run profitability can be determined, that is the payback time for the
development and launch costs. If the launch has been a success the payback time may
have been reached already, but in all cases the predicted time for payback will have
become more accurate than the pre-launch predictions. If the launch is not going as
predicted, an estimation of the additional working capital, additional capital expenditure
and additional production and marketing costs is required, together with another
calculation of the payback time to determine how much further it will be extended into
the future. Balancing the further expenditure, the payback time and the financial
condition of the company are crucial at this time. When deciding to remove the product
from the market altogether or to continue at reduced or full expenditure, up-to-date and
accurate financial information is critical to the decisions.
The long-term financial analysis, carried out in the product commercialisation stage, can
now be refined. The difference between the predicted pessimistic, most likely and
optimistic cash flows will have become closer, the costs are becoming stabilised, the
initial sales growth is history and the competitive reactions are apparent. With this
information, the costs and sales revenues in future years can be estimated with some
confidence.
Market predictions based on the earlier data and on the actual sales are made, using
techniques such as time series analysis and moving averages. There are also predictions
from the buyers' surveys, and from the company staff as a result of their experience in
the launch. Comparing all these predictions is a good basis for forecasting the
pessimistic, most likely and optimistic sales potentials for the next five years with their
associated probabilities of achievement. The net present value, or the return on
investment, can be calculated using discounted cash flows.
Very simple examples of payback time analysis and net present values are shown in
Tables 7.2 and 7.3. There are two predictions in Table 7.2, one made before the launch
and one two months after the launch, to show how predictions need to be updated when
actual sales and costs are available. The payback period is defined as the length of time
required to recover the cost of the project. This is useful to control the cash flows but it
is not helpful in choosing the project in the first place, as a project with long-term
profits could be dropped.
To take into account the timing of the investment, costs and profits, discounted cash
flows are used as in Table 7.3. Timing has a direct bearing on the profitability of the
project. The objective of discounted cash flows (DCF) is to relate cash flows arising
from the project to a common base year, normally the present; hence the name 'net
present value’ (NPV). For a project, the discounted investments are subtracted from the
discounted earnings to give the present value of the project as shown in Table 7.3.
Table 7.2 Predicted payback period for new product ‘A’
Prediction Actual
Before launch Two months after launch
Project cost up to launch 400,000 380,000
Launch costs 2,000,000 2,500,000
Profits 350,000 250,000
Prediction Prediction
Before launch Two months after launch
Profits per 2 month
4 months after launch 500,000 400,000
6 months after launch 600,000 500,000
8 months after launch 600,000 600,000
10 months after launch 700,000 700,000
12 months after launch 800,000 800,000
Total profit after 1 year 3,550,000 3,250,000
Table 7.3 Predicted cash flows and present value for new product ‘B’
Using the cash flow in Table 7.3, calculate the present values at different interest
rates using the following present value factors.
Year 0 1 2 3 4 5
Interest rate
7.12 Summary
The launch needs clearly set targets or objectives, skilled technical and marketing
people, good coordination and time control, fast and correct financial analysis and good
problem-solving skills. It needs to have continuously updated knowledge of consumer
needs, attitudes and behaviour; the retailer needs, attitudes and behaviour; and
competitors' skills and knowledge as well as their reactions to new products. It is an
expensive stage in the product development process and needs good financial control of
the costs and the revenues.
There is continuous evaluation, not to cause alarm and quick withdrawal of the product
but to improve performance and to lead towards the absorption of the new product into
the company's product mix and the general company organisation. The research
includes consumer, market, product, production, quality assurance and distribution
research, sales data collection and analysis, as well as research into the environmental
reactions to the product, including the physical, social, cultural and legal environments.
The financial analysis is essential because it can form a very strong basis for the
decision to either continue or stop the launch.
The type and amount of research depends on the resources available, the budget for
research, the risk-taking attitude in the company and company policy. Some companies
do little research apart from sales data, but this means working by intuition or
guesswork and having no knowledge of why these sales trends are occurring.
Hisrich, R.D. and Peters M.P. (1991) 'Managing the product in the early stages:
introduction and growth', Marketing Decisions for New and Mature Products, 2nd edn,
New York: Maxwell Macmillan International Editions, pp. 413-31.
Karagozoglu, N. and Brown, W.B. (1993) 'Time-based management of the new product
development process', Journal of Product Innovation Management, 10, 204-15.
McLaughlin, E.W and Fredericks, P.J. (1994) 'New product procurement behaviour of
US supermarkets', Agribusiness, 10(6), 483-90.
Shanklin, W.L. (1987) 'Six timeless marketing blunders', Journal of Business and
Industrial Marketing, 2 (2), 17-25.
Usunier, J.C. (1993) International Marketing: A Cultural Approach, Englewood Cliffs,
NJ.: Prentice-Hall, pp. 340-84.
In the formulation and processing studies, ground oats were mixed to a slurry and
roller dried. This coarse powder was mixed with wheat germ, dried fruit and coconut
for the final product. The roller dried oats were used as they increased milk
absorption and so improved texture and use. There is a consumer awareness of the
importance of fibre, but care needs to be exercised in infant nutrition; so some
modifications were made in relation to fibre. The fruit pieces and coconut were
reduced because of digestibility and safety concerns.
The product was accepted by the consumers - parents and children; this research
indicated that the consumers' age group was 8-18 months. The benefits they
recognised were: nutritional contribution, convenience, taste, versatility. The
production trial had no major problems, and the financial review was acceptable to
management.
The company management has now agreed to the launch of this follow-on food
product for toddlers - a Junior Muesli, which is a dried high-protein cereal food
based on rolled oats, wheat germ, fruit and coconut. There is no added sugar or nuts
and it is much finer in texture than adult muesli. It can be served with cold or hot
milk. Nutritionists have confirmed that it is nutritionally acceptable, and mothers
and children have confirmed that they find it acceptable because of the nutritional
contribution, convenience and versatility.