Characteristics of Successful Product Development (RORI)

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

Characteristics of Successful Product Development (RORI)

• Product quality: How good is the product resulting from the development effort? Does it satisfy
customer needs? Is it robust and reliable? Product quality is ultimately reflected in market share and the
price that customers are willing to pay.

• Product cost: What is the manufacturing cost of the product? This cost includes spending on capital
equipment and tooling as well as the incremental cost of producing each unit of the product. Product
cost determines how much profit accrues to the firm for a particular sales volume and a particular sales
price.

• Development time: How quickly did the team complete the product development effort?
Development time determines how responsive the firm can be to competitive forces and to
technological developments, as well as how quickly the firm receives the economic returns from the
team’s efforts.

• Development cost: How much did the firm have to spend to develop the product? Development cost
is usually a significant fraction of the investment required to achieve the profits. Introduction 3

• Development capability: Are the team and the firm better able to develop future products as a result
of their experience with a product development project? Development capability is an asset the firm can
use to develop products more effectively and economically in the future

Who Designs and Develops Products (AMEL)

• Marketing: The marketing function mediates the interactions between the firm and its customers.
Marketing often facilitates the identification of product opportunities, the definition of market
segments, and the identification of customer needs. Marketing also typically arranges for
communication between the firm and its customers, sets target prices, and oversees the launch and
promotion of the product.

• Design: The design function plays the lead role in defining the physical form of the product to best
meet customer needs. In this context, the design function includes engineering design (mechanical,
electrical, software, etc.) and industrial design (aesthetics, ergonomics, user interfaces).

• Manufacturing: The manufacturing function is primarily responsible for designing, operating, and/or
coordinating the production system in order to produce the product. Broadly defined, the
manufacturing function also often includes purchasing, distribution, and installation. This collection of
activities is sometimes called the supply chain.
The Challenges of Product Development

(KAK NIRMA)

• Trade-offs: An airplane can be made lighter, but this action will probably increase manufacturing cost.
One of the most difficult aspects of product development is recognizing, understanding, and managing
such trade-offs in a way that maximizes the success of the product.

• Dynamics: Technologies improve, customer preferences evolve, competitors introduce new products,
and the macroeconomic environment shifts. Decision making in an environment of constant change is a
formidable task.

• Details: The choice between using screws or snap-fits on the enclosure of a computer can have
economic implications of millions of dollars. Developing a product of even modest complexity may
require thousands of such decisions.

• Time pressure: Any one of these difficulties would be easily manageable by itself given plenty of time,
but product development decisions must usually be made quickly and without complete information.

(YOPAN)

• Economics: Developing, producing, and marketing a new product requires a large investment. To earn
a reasonable return on this investment, the resulting product must be both appealing to customers and
relatively inexpensive to produce. For many people, product development is interesting precisely
because it is challenging. For others, several intrinsic attributes also contribute to its appeal:

• Creation: The product development process begins with an idea and ends with the production of a
physical artifact. When viewed both in its entirety and at the level of individual activities, the product
development process is intensely creative.

• Satisfaction of societal and individual needs: All products are aimed at satisfying needs of some kind.
Individuals interested in developing new products can almost always find institutional settings in which
they can develop products satisfying what they consider to be important needs.

• Team diversity: Successful development requires many different skills and talents. As a result,
development teams involve people with a wide range of different training, experience, perspectives, and
personalities.

• Team spirit: Product development teams are often highly motivated, cooperative groups. The team
members may be colocated so they can focus their collective energy on creating the product. This
situation can result in lasting camaraderie among team members.

You might also like