New Product Development

Download as ppt
Download as ppt
You are on page 1of 41

New Product

Development
Strategy

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 1
You can download this brilliant presentation at:

www.studymarketing.org
Visit www.studymarketing.org for more
presentations on marketing management,
branding and business strategy

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 2
Key Steps in
New Product
Development

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 3
Key Steps in
New Product Development
Idea Generation
Product Screening
Concept Testing
Business & Financial Analysis
Product Development
Test Marketing
Commercialization
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 4
Idea Generation
Idea generation is a continuous,
systematic search for new
product opportunities. It involves
delineating sources of new ideas
and methods for generating them.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 5
Methods for Generating Ideas

Dimensional Analysis lists all of the physical


characteristics of a product type. Having obtained
such a list, creativity can be triggered by asking
questions such as: "Why is the product this
way?“, "How could the product be changed?"
or "'What would happen if one or more of the
characteristics were removed?"

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 6
Problem Analysis is a need-assessment
technique designed to develop an
inventory of consumer problems in a
particular product or service category and
to serve as a basis for new product or
service ideas.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 7
Benefit Structure Analysis determines
what specific benefits and characteristics
are desired by consumers within a
particular product or service category and
identifies perceived deficiencies in what
is currently provided.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 8
Scenario
Analysis
identifies
opportunities by
capitalizing on
projected future
environments and
associated
consumer needs.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 9
Product Screening
After the firm identifies potential
products, it must screen them. In
product screening, poor, unsuitable, or
otherwise unattractive ideas are
weeded out from further actions.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 10
• Today, many companies use a new-product
screening checklist for preliminary evaluation.
• In it, firms list the new-product attributes
considered most important and compare each
idea with those attributes.
• The checklist is standardized and allows ideas
to be compared.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 11
Concept Testing
Concept testing presents the
consumer with a proposed
product and measures
attitudes and intentions at this
early stage of development.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 12
Concept testing is a quick and
inexpensive way of measuring
consumer enthusiasm. It asks potential
consumers to react to a picture, written
statement, or oral description of a
product. This enables a firm to
determine initial attitudes prior to
expensive, time-consuming prototype
development.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 13
Business & Financial Analysis
Business and financial analysis for the
remaining product concepts is much more
detailed than product screening.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 14
•Factors considered
in business analysis
stage :
• Demand projections
• Cost projections
• Competition
• Required investment
• Profitability

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 15
Product Development
Product development converts a
product idea into a physical form and
identifies a basic marketing strategy.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 16
It involves product construction,
packaging, branding, product
positioning, and usage testing.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 17
Test Marketing
Test marketing involves
placing a product for sale in
one or more selected areas
and observing its actual
performance under the
proposed marketing plan.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 18
The purpose is to evaluate the
product and pretest marketing
efforts in a real setting prior to a full-
scale introduction.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 19
Rather than inquire about
intentions, test marketing
allows actual consumer
behavior to be observed.
The firm can also learn
about competitive reactions
and the response of channel
members.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 20
After testing is completed, the firm is ready to
introduce the product to its full target market. This
is commercialization and corresponds to the
introductory stage of the product life cycle.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 21
Commercialization
involves
implementing a
total marketing
plan and full
production.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 22
Key Success Factors
in New Product
Development

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 23
An investigation of new product
practices in 700 firms by Booz-Allen
& Hamilton identified the existence
of common characteristics in
companies that were successful at
product innovation

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 24
1. Operating Philosophy
Successful companies are more
committed to growth through new
products developed internally.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 25
They are more likely to have had a formal
new product process in place for a longer
period of time than unsuccessful companies.
They are more likely to have a strategic plan
that includes a certain portion of company
growth from new products.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 26
2. Organizational
Structure

Successful companies are more


likely to house the new product
organization in R&D or engineering
and are more likely to allow the
marketing and R&D functions to
have greater influence on the new
product process.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 27
3. The
Experience Effect
Experience in
introducing new
products enables
companies to
improve new
product
performance.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 28
New product development
costs conform to the
experience curve: The more
you do something, the more
efficient you become at
doing it. This experience
advantage stems from the
acquisition of a knowledge
of the market and of the
steps required to develop a
new product.
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 29
4. Management Style
Successful companies appear not
only to select a management
style appropriate to immediate
new product development needs
but also to revise and tailor that
approach to changing new
product opportunities

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 30
An empirical research by
Robert Cooper found three
key factors that distinguish
winning projects from the
losers

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 31
three key factors for effective
product development:
three key factors
Factor 1: A High-Quality New
Product Process
Factor 2: A Clear and Well-
Communicated New Product
Strategy for the Business
Factor 3: Adequate Resources
for New Products
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 32
Factor 1: A High-Quality New
Product Process
 Some of these success factors
that top performers build into
their new product processes
include:
 emphasizing the up-front
predevelopment homework;
 building in the voice of the
customer throughout
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 33
Factor 1: A High-Quality New
Product Process
 demanding sharp, early product
definition
 having tough Go/Kill decision
points where projects really do
get killed
 and highlighting quality of
execution throughout
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 34
Factor 2: A Clear and Well-
Communicated New Product
Strategy for the Business
 there are clear goals or objectives for the
business's total new product effort; for
example, what percentage of sales or
profits new products will contribute to the
business

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 35
 there are clearly defined arenas—
specified areas of strategic focus, such
as products, markets, or technologies
—to give direction to the business's
total new product effort

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 36
 the role of new products in achieving
the business's goals and the new
product strategy for the business are
clearly communicated to all who
need to know

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 37
Factor 3: Adequate Resources
for New Products

• In top-performing businesses,
senior management has devoted
the necessary resources—people
and money, marketing and
technical—to achieve the business's
new product objectives

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 38
• R&D budgets
are adequate—
judged to be
sufficient in
light of the
business's new
product
objectives
visit: www.studyMarketing.org 39
• the necessary people are in place and
have their time freed up for new
products.

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 40
Source of Reference:
Robert Cooper, Winning at New Products: Accelerating
the Process from Idea to Launch, Perseus Books Group.
You can obtain this excellent book at this link: http://www.amazon.com/Winning-New-Products-
Accelerating-Process/dp/0738204633/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1219804207&sr=1-1

visit: www.studyMarketing.org 41

You might also like