Bausch & Lomb
Bausch & Lomb
Bausch & Lomb
B ausch & Lomb is a focused eye care company with approximately $1.8 billion in
annual sales. The company employs 11,600 people with approximately 600 of
those jobs in research, development, and engineering (RD&E) as a composite world-
wide resource pool. Bausch & Lomb has a presence in Australia, Brazil, Canada,
China, Finland, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, South
America, Sweden, the Netherlands, and the United States.
RD&E is located in Germany, Ireland, and France, along with multiple locations
in the United States. The company is composed of three main business units:
1. Vision care, the mainstay of the company that accounts for 50 percent of
revenue, produces contact lenses and lens care products.
2. Pharmaceutical and over-the-counter drugs (OTC), which represents another
25 percent of revenue, produces antibacterial and anti-inflammatory products.
3. Surgical, which accounts for the remaining 25 percent of revenue, encompasses
laser, lasik, cataract, and refractive product offerings.
Bausch & Lomb is a company that has reinvented itself since the latter half of
the 1990s. The company has sold business units that were unrelated to its increased
focus on eye care in a shift away from being a diversified health care company. Since
1995 Bausch & Lomb has sold Ray-Ban, Bushnell, Dalberg Miracle Ear, Stereos
Dental Products, consumer skin care organizations including Curel and SoftSense, and
Charles River Laboratory. The company has also been acquiring new business units that
are more in line with its goals. Bausch & Lomb has acquired two major surgical
business units (Chiron and Storz), as well as a number of small pharmaceutical
business units primarily based outside the United States.
With respect specifically to new product development at Bausch & Lomb, the
director of NPD reports to the senior vice president of global RD&E, a position that
is equivalent to the chief technology officer. The primary goal of the director of NPD
is to manage and maintain Bausch & Lomb’s processes, systems, and tools that enable
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RD&E employees to do their jobs. He also publishes tracking reports that go directly
to the chairman, CEO, etc. The NPD team members also function as project managers
for various new product projects, which keeps them fresh on the processes used. The
team is able to do more with fewer people because the NPD process is firmly
entrenched in the company, and it is highly Web enabled.
Web Enablement
Bausch & Lomb’s entire NPD effort is enabled by the use of the Internet and its
intranet. All project information is available online for the team to access. In 2001
the company began implementing eRoom™, a collaborative online tool that allows
for real-time sharing of project information and collaboration. Prior to the imple-
mentation of eRoom, the system was paper-based. Now, according to the director of
new product development, the auditors appreciate that this system allows for easy
document location and retrieval.
Checklist
To track progress through the course of new product projects, Bausch & Lomb uses
phase-specific checklists that are referenced back to a policy or procedure. The check-
lists are online and accessible via eRoom. Bausch & Lomb will not allow a phase to be
closed and will not conduct the review if the checklist is not complete. However, the
company does realize that not everything is applicable to every procedure, so there is
some flexibility built into the checklists.
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A contact lens project would typically take three years before the PDMP. Today we
are looking at 18 months to two years. The payback is real.
—Paul Loda, director, new product development
Bausch & Lomb limits the process to five phases because it believes that a key to
success is keeping it short and simple. Consequently, the company is able to plan by
phase, define a critical path, optimize resources, and measure performance based on
the tasks and deliverables for each phase. The five phases of Bausch & Lomb’s
process are:
1. idea generation and investigation,
2. feasibility,
3. development or scale-up,
4. design or technology transfer, and
5. production launch and follow through.
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The process begins when an employee submits an idea to the NPD steering team.
An “idea memo” details the idea, the market envisioned for the product, how the
product works, and if it would require internal and/or external resources. The steer-
ing team—composed of senior leadership representatives from marketing, strategy,
RD&E, and supply chain—screens ideas and selects the most promising.
If the steering team determines that an idea is a strategic fit, then it is passed to a
study team that investigates the market for the potential product in order to make a
recommendation to the steering team. Using an outsourced provider for much of the
market research to reduce costs, the study team determines:
• Who are the customers for the product?
• How big is the potential market?
• Are there patents that would prevent the product from entering the market?
• Is it a growing market?
• What core technologies or competencies are applicable? and
• When and where can we initiate phase one investigation?
The answers to these questions reveal if a product idea is technically feasible and
commercially viable. At the end of their preliminary investigation, the study team
presents its investigational report, a three- to five-page summary, to the steering team.
The study team recommends either investing more time and money on the idea from
a feasibility perspective or dropping the idea.
The investigation team is pulled from a group of about 24 project managers.
Because this investigation phase is considered a minimal amount of work and is an
interim assignment, not a full-time assignment, there may only be two or four people
assigned to the project at this phase.
If the study team recommends pursuing an idea, concept definition is critical to
ensure that the design goals for the product are agreed upon initially. At this point in
phase one, the project also needs an initial budget.
The investigational report created during phase one, which should not take more
than 30 days, will be the springboard for the strategic decision package for phase two,
feasibility. The strategic decision package is updated throughout the life of the project.
As explained earlier in this case study, this document provides detailed information
about the project, the plan to complete the project, and defines deliverables and
accountabilities. It also provides an update on the financial status of the project,
market inputs, and value added.
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The feasibility phase can last two to 18 months. Therefore, the project plan must
define feasibility, so that only when certain tasks have been performed is feasibility
established; and only then this critical gate is passed.
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Effectiveness of Process
Some of the most effective elements of Bausch & Lomb’s product development
management process are its simplicity, the use of checklists, the strategic decision
package, and the way in which the company applies design control. Areas of improve-
ment include the need for better global strategy definition and collecting better
customer feedback. Customer research is a challenge because Bausch & Lomb has to
solicit feedback from multiple perspectives, including doctors, patients, and mass
distributors for its over-the-counter products. Bausch & Lomb conducts an ongoing
review of its process, mainly through training, to make improvements. Part of the
job for the director and manager of NPD is to continually revisit the process itself.
Annual new product introductions have been accelerated from eight products in
1992 to 18 to 24 products in 2002. In 1992 a large percentage of products were late
and over budget; In 2002 less than 5 percent were. Prior to the implementation of
eRoom, which also provides version control for documents, a typical strategic decision
package might take six weeks to get approved. In 2002 approval could happen within
10 days. The use of templates and existing documents has also helped hasten the
process. Final documents are controlled in Documentum®.
Changes to new product projects are made by the PDMP administration (the
NPD owners) and reviewed by RD&E, supply chain, and the CEO or COO for
approval. Because Bausch & Lomb is FDA-regulated, the strategy from regulatory
affairs often dictates a product’s speed to the market. It is not a hit-or-miss approach,
but an issue of managing the risks and approach.
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Additionally, the company gathers market intelligence on an ongoing basis from its
outsource provider, its suppliers, and its new business development groups.
Adherence to Process
Adhering to the product development management process is not an option at
Bausch & Lomb because of the need to abide by FDA or ISO regulations. The project
manager is the primary driver for compliance. Team members also include quality
and regulatory affairs, which are secondary drivers for compliance. The new eRoom
environment also enables a more visible means to track performance and compliance.
One of Bausch & Lomb’s challenges is ensuring that there are dedicated resources
early in the process, particularly from the steering team. Although there is typically no
problem securing commitment from supply chain and RD&E functions, commercial
representation and commitment is more difficult to obtain and maintain.
Measuring Success
One way that Bausch & Lomb measures the success of its new products is if they
have met their economic value added and net present value objectives. Also, the
company wants to patent technologies to prevent competitive market entry. A third
indicator is if post-launch performance shows minimal complaints or failures within
a certain acceptable range and that sales targets have been achieved.
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and internal databases. There is no absolute answer to what works best for
customer research because the organization has to manage the risks and factor
multiple elements into its decision making.
Competitive Advantage
Bausch & Lomb focuses on patenting its technology and being cost-driven as
part of its marketing strategy to find opportunities to challenge its competition.
The company also partners with insurance providers to supply approved reimburse-
ments for its products and services. Its goal is to show customers that if they use a
Bausch & Lomb product or service, in the long term it will save them money. Bausch
& Lomb tries to focus on meeting the needs of consumers without gimmicks and
relying instead on science and engineering.
The value proposition and the quality of its products and services is also something
that Bausch & Lomb examines. The word quality is an important one with potential
for misunderstanding in Bausch & Lomb’s business. Is it quality of the product that
is being measured, or is it the quality of the person who applied it or used it? When
looking at surgical procedures, for example, there is a lot of research and develop-
ment that goes into creating the equipment, and the doctor also has to undergo a lot
of training to understand how to effectively use it so as to create a predictable out-
come. Therefore, there is a lot of relevance in the word quality and whether a new
product is a quality product.
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resources, with 600 people spread over 40 projects throughout the world. Bausch &
Lomb doesn’t only look at internal resources, though. The company has external
resources that it can call upon on a temporary basis, such as qualified outside labora-
tories that can do testing. The final decision on prioritizing NPD projects is done by
the new product strategy and steering team, as well as the global RD&E manage-
ment team. Previously, RD&E was the driver, but now there is better collaboration
between the two groups.
Bausch & Lomb believes the future has to be balanced by having short-term,
medium-term, and longer-term projects in its portfolio. It currently has about
50 projects in its portfolio, with about one-third expected to launch within the next
two years, half in the next three or four years, and the remainder farther out.
More projects aren’t better, but fewer projects that have more market impact are.
—Paul Loda, director, new product development
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managers. The two administrators are dedicated resources for PDMP projects. And in
addition to shepherding the process, they also function as project managers periodi-
cally to remain current in their skills and evaluation of PDMP principles and practices.
They also validate the data collected from all the project managers to ensure consistency
in reporting format and to ensure the data published for the team is consistent with
what is communicated to senior management. The team tries to counteract the
tendency that exists in most organizations to tell senior management the good news
while avoiding the bad news.
The role of the director of new product development is not to dictate how to do
the job, but to tell employees what the outcome needs to be. He shows them some of
the approaches that they might choose for themselves. Although he doesn’t dictate, he
has to facilitate. Then he watches the teams’ progress and provides feedback.
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• a quality representative,
• a regulatory affairs representative (if the project is global, there may be a
representative for Asia, Europe, and North America),
• a clinical affairs representative,
• a chemistry representative,
• a microbiology representative,
• a toxicology representative,
• an engineering representative (e.g., material, process, automation, and molding),
• a supply chain representative (includes procurement, planning, and plant), and
• a commercial representative (includes marketing, strategy, region, and product).
Once into the feasibility phase, the project manager should stay the same through
the post-launch activities, as opposed to idea investigation when the team may be ad
hoc. Although it is not necessary to have an expert on the team at the idea investiga-
tion phase, it is helpful to find the people who might transition into a full-time role
later. By the feasibility phase, there needs to be a full team assigned. Being on an NPD
team is approached as an assignment, and it will show up in employees’ written
objectives and annual reviews.
Accountability
Having the team, as well as senior management, sign off on the strategic decision
package that specifies the project’s goals, strategy, risks, financials, and critical path
fosters accountability for a project’s results. The company’s chairman is setting a higher
standard for accountability with a quarterly review of the entire portfolio conducted
by the chief executive officer, chief financial office, chief technology officer, portfolio
managers, and project managers.
For changes to products, Bausch & Lomb complies with design change control.
For all proposed product changes, there must be a documented report or addendum
to the strategic design package that defines the change, impact, risk, metric, and
required team and management approvals. For other changes—including financial,
timing, and resource changes—there is a portfolio-level review done on an ad hoc
basis, where the change is documented in meeting minutes, in addition to quarterly
PDMP reviews.
Overall performance reviews for NPD team members generally include
assessments of their NPD work and deliverables. In performance reviews, reports
are used that track the critical information by which employee performance is measured
(i.e., budgets, timing, performance, and patentability).
Effective Teams
To manage geographically dispersed project teams, Bausch & Lomb has project
managers report to program vice presidents, of which there is one for each major line
of business (surgical, pharmaceutical, and vision care). Team meetings are conducted
by videoconference or telephone, and eRoom Web-based collaborative tools are used
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as well. The company has also eliminated redundant roles, such as having microbiol-
ogy in different locations; now one group has an exclusive charter for a given area
and is held accountable for it. By keeping resources singular in their focus, the
company tries to prevent people and regions from feeling competitive or performing
redundant work.
To bridge cultural barriers, Bausch & Lomb has found that training alone doesn’t
get people to constructively work together. It often requires face-to-face interaction.
To make teams more effective, eRoom links all locations, and a real-time server allows
for online synchronous meetings. An external server links Bausch & Lomb with its
external RD&E partners to keep them in the loop as well. The company is spending
more on project management training, and it holds weekly project and portfolio
reviews at the staff level so everyone is informed.
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employees with money for new ideas. Depending on how far the idea made it in the
NPD process, the employee could get anywhere from $5 to $5,000. In actuality, the
program got as far as giving two $500 checks, as of 2002. Initially, there was a fairly
good number of contributed ideas. However, few of the ideas make it past the
steering team screening.
Senior Management
Bausch & Lomb looks at accountability and responsibilities at different levels.
Senior management (presidents or vice presidents) are responsible for the functions.
Along with the functions, they also help with:
• the screening and selection process for new product projects,
• project prioritization,
• phase approval,
• the strategic and operational plan,
• team and individual performance assessment (by providing status input and
creating a pattern of criteria),
• project funding (prompted by the steering team convincing senior management
to investigate during monthly reviews and fund the project.),
• test market and launch authorization (involving approval and ownership), and
• resource allocation and approval.
The current chairman has an external focus and believes in open, candid dialogue;
disciplined, data-based decision making; and personal accountability with rewards
for achievement and consequences for failures.
From the perspective of new product development staff, senior management is
now asking the right questions such as: What is the financial benefit? What is the
timing? And what is our competition? Now that senior management has been brought
into the system and sees the value of the strategic decision package, they are asking for
it by name. Because of the challenge of getting senior leadership at meetings every
month as is currently required, the company is considering moving to quarterly
meetings and streamlining the process to make it more effective.
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Lessons Learned
Bausch & Lomb had two projects that did not follow its established process and
ended shortly after launch, which resulted in a $40 million loss to the company. The
projects focused on new products that were similar to the competition’s product. In
spite of the fact that market research said the company would never achieve the sales
it wanted, one particular senior-level leader insisted on moving forward with the new
product. The product failed within six months, even though every goal that was
documented was met. The lessons learned was that having a product exactly like the
competition will not enhance revenue, and adherence to the process is vital.
One other recent misstep that resulted in a lesson learned by Bausch & Lomb
was putting together an early timeline when beginning the feasibility phase and letting
that timeline become the launch date for the new product, instead of allowing for
more flexibility and refinement along the way.
Other lessons learned follow.
• Process is everything. Use it. Follow it.
• New product development is not a set of random activities.
• Have an owner and champion for NPD at the highest level (e.g., CEO or COO).
• Learn early that one person can’t do and be everything.
• Good performance follows effective leadership.
• Every design goal must be clear and measurable before acted upon.
• Effective project management has the greatest impact and payback. Establish
responsibility and authority.
• It’s the customer, not the scientist, who determines a product’s success.
• Growth will be proportionate to the willingness to change processes, beliefs,
and attitudes.
• Seconds count when you want to be first.
• Nothing will change if you continue to do the same thing, ask the same questions,
take the same approach, and utilize the same people.
When building its product development management process, Bausch & Lomb
kept some key concepts in mind.
• The voice of the customer, not scientists or technology, must drive design goals.
There must be a market for the product. New product idea screening must be
thorough in order to avoid working on products that will never be accepted by the
customer or achieve desired results.
• Roles and responsibilities must be clearly defined. If not, there could be daily
battles among team members.
• Don’t assume that a brilliant engineer or scientist will make a brilliant project
manager.
• Good project management is vital to the success of a project. (Bausch & Lomb has
a project management organization.)
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• Cross-functional teams are imperative; one function cannot speak for another.
Each function has knowledge of that function and understands how to apply that
knowledge specifically and relevantly to each project.
• Within 30 days of a product launch, the team has to discuss how well the project
was managed and capture lessons learned during a post-launch learning and
surveillance session. After 180 days from launch, a sales and marketing review
has to look at how the product is being treated in the market place. Are sales
objectives being met? Are there performance issues in the market that need to be
addressed quickly? Are there additional issues that need to be looked at in terms
of market penetration globally?
• It is critical that all team members have all of the project information available
online all the time.
• The process must ensure design control compliance.
Because of its product development management process, Bausch & Lomb now
has a road map for projects, a common NPD vocabulary in a global organization,
and a path of accountability. The process has forced the definition of roles and
responsibilities, while also supporting FDA and ISO quality system requirements for
design control. Using the product development management process has led to
cross-functional teams and helped to identify redundant tasks.
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