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1 visit: www.studyMarketing.org New Product Development Strategy.

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1 1 visit: www.studyMarketing.org New Product Development Strategy

2 2 visit: www.studyMarketing.org You can download this presentation at: www.studyMarketing.org Visit www.studyMarketing.org for more presentations on Marketing, Strategy, Innovation, and Branding

3 3 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Key Steps in New Product Development

4 4 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Key Steps in New Product Development Idea Generation Product Screening Concept Testing Business & Financial Analysis Product Development Test Marketing Commercialization

5 5 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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.

6 6 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Methods for Generating Ideas Dimensional Analysis "How could the product be changed?" 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?"

7 7 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Problem Analysis consumer problems 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.

8 8 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Benefit Structure Analysis identifies perceived deficiencies in what is currently provided. 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.

9 9 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Scenario Analysis Scenario Analysis identifies opportunities by capitalizing on projected future environments and associated consumer needs.

10 10 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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.

11 11 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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.

12 12 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Concept testing presents the consumer with a proposed product and measures attitudes and intentions at this early stage of development. Concept Testing

13 13 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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.

14 14 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Business and financial analysis for the remaining product concepts is much more detailed than product screening. Business & Financial Analysis

15 15 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Factors considered in business analysis stage :Factors considered in business analysis stage : Demand projections Cost projections Competition Required investment Profitability

16 16 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Product development converts a product idea into a physical form and identifies a basic marketing strategy. Product Development

17 17 visit: www.studyMarketing.org It involves product construction, packaging, branding, product positioning, and usage testing.

18 18 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Test marketing involves placing a product for sale in one or more selected areas and observing its actual performance under the proposed marketing plan. Test Marketing

19 19 visit: www.studyMarketing.org The purpose is to evaluate the product and pretest marketing efforts in a real setting prior to a full- scale introduction.

20 20 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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.

21 21 visit: www.studyMarketing.org This is commercialization 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.

22 22 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Commercialization involves implementing a total marketing plan and full production.

23 23 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Key Success Factors in New Product Development

24 24 visit: www.studyMarketing.org the existence of common characteristics 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

25 25 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Successful companies are more committed to growth through new products developed internally. 1. Operating Philosophy

26 26 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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.

27 27 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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. 2. Organizational Structure

28 28 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Experience in introducing new products enables companies to improve new product performance. 3. The Experience Effect

29 29 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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.

30 30 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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 4. Management Style

31 31 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Robert Cooper An empirical research by Robert Cooper found three key factors that distinguish winning projects from the losers

32 32 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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 three key factors three key factors for effective product development:

33 33 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Factor 1: A High-Quality New Product Process success factors 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

34 34 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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

35 35 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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 Factor 2: A Clear and Well- Communicated New Product Strategy for the Business

36 36 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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

37 37 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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

38 38 visit: www.studyMarketing.org 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 Factor 3: Adequate Resources for New Products

39 39 visit: www.studyMarketing.org R&D budgets are adequate— judged to be sufficient in light of the business's new product objectives

40 40 visit: www.studyMarketing.org the necessary people are in place and have their time freed up for new products.

41 41 visit: www.studyMarketing.org Source of Reference: Robert Cooper, Winning at New Products: Accelerating the Process from Idea to Launch, Perseus Books Group.


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