We will now look at the marketing challenges arising at each of the eight stages
of the development process: idea generation, idea screening, concept development
and testing, marketing strategy development, business analysis, product development,
market testing, and commercialization. A preview of the various steps and decisions
in the process is presented in Figure 2-1.
ANAGING THE DEVELOPMENT
PROCESS: IDEAS
IDEA GENERATION
The new-product development process starts with the search for ideas. Top managers
should define the product and market scope and the new product’s objectives. They
should state how much effort should be devoted to developing breakthrough prod-
ucts, modifying existing products, and copying competitors’ products. New-product
ideas can come from many sources: customers, scientists, competitors, employees,
channel members, and top management.
The marketing concept holds that customer needs and wantsare the logical place
to start the search for ideas. Hippel has shown that the highest percentage of ideas
for new industrial products originate with customers.^11 Technical companies can learn
a great deal by studying their lead users,those customers who make the most advanced
use of the company’s products and who recognize the need for improvements before
other customers do. Many of the best ideas come from asking customers to describe
their problems with current products. For instance, in an attempt to grab a foothold
in steel wool soap pads a niche dominated by SOS and Brillo, 3M arranged eight
focus groups with consumers around the country. 3M asked what problems consumers
found with traditional soap pads, and found the most frequent complaint was
that the pads scratched expensive cookware. This finding produced the idea for the
chapter 11
Developing
New Market
Offerings^335
- Idea
generation
Is the
particular
idea worth
considering?
Should we send the
idea back for product
development?
- Market
testing
No
- Product
development
Have we
developed a
technically and
commercially
sound product?
No
- Business analysis
Will this product
meet our profit
goal?
No
- Marketing
strategy
development
No No
- Idea
generation
Is the
idea worth
considering?
No
No
No No
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes Yes
Would it help to
modify the product or
marketing program?
- Idea screening
Is the product
idea compatible
with company
objectives,
strategies, and
resources?
No
Lay
future
plans
DROP
- Commercialization
Are product sales
meeting
expectations? - Concept
development
and testing
Can we find a good
concept for the
product that
consumers say they
would try?
Can we find a
cost-effective,
affordable
marketing
strategy?
Have product
sales met
expectations?
FIGURE 2-1
The New-Product-Development
Decision Process
M