Leaders of the Cincinnati-based consumer products company outlined their strategies Thursday at the Consumer Analyst Group of New York conference in Boca Raton, Fla.
CEO Bob McDonald said new Pampers that are thinner and keep babies dryer will land on U.S. store shelves in mid-March. For June, P&G is planning an overhaul of Pantene shampoos and marketing and a new version of its top-selling Gillette Fusion razor.
P&G cut some prices this year to lure back recession-pinched households that traded down to store brands. It's also adding cheaper versions of Tide detergent, its feminine care products and other items for key emerging markets such as India and China, he said.
But it's also introducing premium versions in markets such as
The company will sell a new premium detergent in Japan called Sarasa.
Elsewhere, P&G will sell a bargain-priced detergent called Tide Naturals in India and a midprice line of Ace detergent in Colombia.
P&G, which spends $2 billion a year on research and development, expects to gain market share by improving products -- not pursuing price wars, McDonald said.
"We're about innovation, and we're about investing behind that innovation," McDonald said. "We're not about trying to grow our business by reducing price."