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Submitted by:
Deeksha qanoungo
MBA sem- 2
Roll no. 18
Submitted to:
Prof. Keshav Sharma
Bibliography
 https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_product_develo
pment
 www.marketing91.com/new-product-development/
 https://www.strategy2market.com/ourapproach-
organization.html
 www.yourarticlelibrary.com/consumers/consumer-
adoption-process-5-stages/48627/
New product options
 There are a variety of new products and ways to create
them.
 A company can add new products through acquisition
or development. The company while acquiring , can
buy a license or franchise from another company.
 For example : Nestle(a swiss food giant), has increased
its presence in North america by acquiring a variety of
different brands such as Carnation, Dreyer’s ice cream,
power bar and many other products.
Types of new products
 New products range from “new to the world” items that
create an entirely new market to items that consist of
“minor improvements” of existing products.
 Usually, less than 10% of all new products are truly
innovative.
 For example: Nike, once manufacturer of running shoes,
now competes with the makers of all types of athletic
shoes, clothing & equipment.
 Radical innovations can hurt a company’s bottom line in
the short run, but if they succeed, they can improve the
corporate image, greater sustainable competitive advantage
than ordinary products and greater financial rewards.
Challenges in new product
development
A. Innovation imperative:
In an economy of rapid changes, continuous
innovation is a necessity. Companies that fail to
develop new products leave themselves vulnerable to
changing customer needs and tastes, shortened
product life cycles, increased domestic and foreign
competition and especially new technologies.
Google dropbox updates its software daily. Such highly
innovative firms repeatedly identify and quickly seize
new market oppurtunities.
B. New product success
 established companies focus on incremental
innovation, entering new markets by tweaking
products for new customers, using variations on a
core product to stay a step ahead of the market.
 usually new companies create disruptive
technologies that are cheaper and more likely to alter
the competitive space.
 Established companies are slow to react to such
changes and may fail. Thus, in order to avoid such a
situation, incumbent firms must carefully monitor
the preferences of both customers and non-
customers and uncover the evolving difficult to
articulate customer needs.
C. New product failure
 New products continue to fail at rates as high as
50%.
 Reasons being ignored-misinterpreted market size,
high development costs, poor design or ineffectual
performance, incorrect positioning, insufficient
distribution support, competitors who fight back
hard and inadequate payback
Organizational Arrangement
1. Budgeting for new product development:
 It is very difficult to use normal investment criteria
while budgeting for new product development.
 Some companies simply finance as many product
development projects as possible, hoping to achieve
a few winners.
 Others apply a conventional percentage of sales
figure or spend what the competition spends.
STAGE NO. OF
IDEAS
PASS RATIO COST PER
PRODUCT
IDEA
TOTAL COST
IDEA
SCREENING
64 1:4 1000 64000
CONCEPT
TESTING
16 1:2 20000 320000
PRODUCT
DEVELOPME
NT
8 1:2 200000 1600000
TEST
MARKETING
4 1:2 500000 2000000
NATIONAL
LAUNCH
2 1:2 5000000 10000000
Organizing the new product
A company can handle the organizational aspect of new
product development in several ways.
 Cross functional teams -:
Many companies assign new product
development to ‘venture teams’ that are cross
functional groups charged with developing a
specific product or business. These are
intrapreneurs who are relieved of other duties and
given a budget, time frame and ‘skunkworks’
setting.
Skunk works are informal workplaces, sometimes
garages, where intrapreneural teams work to
develop new products.
 Crowdsourcing -:
The internet lets companies engage external
participants in the product development process
in rich and meaningful ways. Through
crowdsourcing, these paid or unpaid outsiders can
offer needed expertise or different perspective on a
task or project that might otherwise be overlooked
 Stage gate systems -:
many top companies use the stage gate system to
divide innovation process into stages, with a gate or
checkpoint at each end of the gate.
The project leader working with a cross
functional team must bring a set of known deliverables
to each gate before the project can pass to the next
stage. To move from business plan to product
development requires convincing market research
study of consumers needs and interests.
Managing the development
process: IDEAS
A. GENERATING IDEAS -:
The new product development process starts
with the search for ideas. Some marketing
experts believe we find the greatest opportunities
and highest leverage for new products by
uncovering the best possible set of unmet
customers needs or technological innovation.
New product ideas can in fact come from
interacting with various groups and using
creativity generating techniques.
B. INTERACTING WITH EMPLOYEES -:
Employees can be a source of ideas for improving
production, products or services. Top
management can be another major source of
ideas.
Some company leaders such as former CEO
Andy Grove of Intel, took personal responsibility
for technological innovation in the firm.
C. INTERACTING WITH OUTSIDERS -:
Many firms nowadays are going outside their
bounds to tap external sources of new ideas,
including customers, scientists, engineers etc.
companies are also increasingly turning towards
crowdsourcing to generate new ideas.
One form of crowdsourcing invites the
online community to help create content or
software, often with prize money or a moment of
glory as an incentive.
When Baskin-Robbins ran an online contest
to pick its next flavour, 40,000 consumers
entered. Besides providing new and better ideas,
co-creation can help customers feel closer to the
company and create a favourable word of mouth.
D. STUDYING COMPETITORS -:
Companies can find good ideas by researching the
products and services of competitors and other
companies. They can find out what customers like
and dislike about competitors products.
They can ask their own sales representatives and
intermediaries for ideas. These groups have firsthand
exposure to customers and are often the first to learn
about competitive developments.
To establish the optimal brand positioning for
the new product and the right points of parity and
points of differences, marketers need a thorough
understanding of the competition.
E. ADOPTING CREATIVITY TECHNIQUES -:
Internal brainstorming sessions can also be quite
effective – if conducted properly. Creativity is mostly
about making connections in ways that are not
obvious. A sampling of techniques for stimulating
creativity in individuals and groups are-:
 Attribute listing – list the attributes of an object ( a
screwdriver) and modify each attribute ( replacing
the wooden handle with a plastic one, or adding
different screw heads and so on)
 Forced relationship – list several ideas and consider
each in relationship to each of the others. In
designing new office furniture, for example, consider
a task, a desk, a table, book case and filling cabinet as
separate ideas.
Morphological analysis – start with a problem
such as ‘getting something from one place to
another via powered vehicle’. Now think of
dimensions such as a powered platform(cart, chair
etc), the medium(air, oils, rails) and the power
source(electric motor, CNG etc). By listing every
possible combination, you can generate many new
solutions.
Reverse assumption analysis – it involves listing all
the normal assumptions about an entity and then
reverse them.
New context – take familiar processes such aa
people helping services and put them into a new
context. Instead of sending hotel guests to the
front desk to check in, greet them at curbside and
use a wireless device to register them.
Mind mapping – start with an idea, such as a car,
then think of the next idea that comes up and link
it to the product and with all these associations,
maybe a whole new product will materialize.
USING IDEA SCREENING
 In screening ideas, the company must avoid two types
of errors. A DROP error when the company dismisses a
good idea.
 The purpose of screening is to drop poor ideas as early
as possible. The rationale is that product development
costs rise substantially at each successive development
stage.
 Most of the companies require new product ideas to be
described on a standard form for a committee’s review.
The description states the product idea, target market
and the competition and roughly estimates market
size, product size, development costs and the rate of
return.
Managing the development
process
1. Concept development
A product idea can be turned into several concepts:
 Who will use this product
 What primary benefits should this product provide
 When will people consume this product
Each concept represents a category concept
that defines the product’s competition. The next
task is to show where the product would stand in
relation to other products.
2. Concept testing
it means presenting the product concept to target
consumers, physically or symbolically and
getting their reactions. The more the tested
concepts resemble the final product or
experience, the more dependable concept testing
is.
it presents consumers with an elaborated version
of the concept. After receiving the information,
researchers measure the product dimensions by
having consumers respond to questions related
to the product.
3. Conjoint analysis
consumer preferences for alternative product concepts
can be measured with conjoint analysis, a method for
deriving the utility values that consumers attach to
varying levels of product’s attributes.
The consumer adoption process
Adoption is an individual’s decision to become
regular user of a product and is followed by the
consumer loyalty process.
Stages in the adoption process -:
1. Awareness : the consumer becomes aware of the
innovation but lacks information about it.
2. Interest : the consumer is stimulated to seek
information about the innovation
3. Evaluation : the consumer considers whether to
try the innovation
4. Trial : the consumer tries the innovation to
improve his estimate of its value
5. Adoption : the consumer decides to make full
and regular use of the innovation.
New product marketers typically
aim at early adoption and use the theory of
innovation and consumer adoption to identify
them.

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new market offerings(new product development)

  • 1. Submitted by: Deeksha qanoungo MBA sem- 2 Roll no. 18 Submitted to: Prof. Keshav Sharma
  • 2. Bibliography  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_product_develo pment  www.marketing91.com/new-product-development/  https://www.strategy2market.com/ourapproach- organization.html  www.yourarticlelibrary.com/consumers/consumer- adoption-process-5-stages/48627/
  • 3. New product options  There are a variety of new products and ways to create them.  A company can add new products through acquisition or development. The company while acquiring , can buy a license or franchise from another company.  For example : Nestle(a swiss food giant), has increased its presence in North america by acquiring a variety of different brands such as Carnation, Dreyer’s ice cream, power bar and many other products.
  • 4. Types of new products  New products range from “new to the world” items that create an entirely new market to items that consist of “minor improvements” of existing products.  Usually, less than 10% of all new products are truly innovative.  For example: Nike, once manufacturer of running shoes, now competes with the makers of all types of athletic shoes, clothing & equipment.  Radical innovations can hurt a company’s bottom line in the short run, but if they succeed, they can improve the corporate image, greater sustainable competitive advantage than ordinary products and greater financial rewards.
  • 5. Challenges in new product development A. Innovation imperative: In an economy of rapid changes, continuous innovation is a necessity. Companies that fail to develop new products leave themselves vulnerable to changing customer needs and tastes, shortened product life cycles, increased domestic and foreign competition and especially new technologies. Google dropbox updates its software daily. Such highly innovative firms repeatedly identify and quickly seize new market oppurtunities.
  • 6. B. New product success  established companies focus on incremental innovation, entering new markets by tweaking products for new customers, using variations on a core product to stay a step ahead of the market.  usually new companies create disruptive technologies that are cheaper and more likely to alter the competitive space.  Established companies are slow to react to such changes and may fail. Thus, in order to avoid such a situation, incumbent firms must carefully monitor the preferences of both customers and non- customers and uncover the evolving difficult to articulate customer needs.
  • 7. C. New product failure  New products continue to fail at rates as high as 50%.  Reasons being ignored-misinterpreted market size, high development costs, poor design or ineffectual performance, incorrect positioning, insufficient distribution support, competitors who fight back hard and inadequate payback
  • 8. Organizational Arrangement 1. Budgeting for new product development:  It is very difficult to use normal investment criteria while budgeting for new product development.  Some companies simply finance as many product development projects as possible, hoping to achieve a few winners.  Others apply a conventional percentage of sales figure or spend what the competition spends.
  • 9. STAGE NO. OF IDEAS PASS RATIO COST PER PRODUCT IDEA TOTAL COST IDEA SCREENING 64 1:4 1000 64000 CONCEPT TESTING 16 1:2 20000 320000 PRODUCT DEVELOPME NT 8 1:2 200000 1600000 TEST MARKETING 4 1:2 500000 2000000 NATIONAL LAUNCH 2 1:2 5000000 10000000
  • 10. Organizing the new product A company can handle the organizational aspect of new product development in several ways.  Cross functional teams -: Many companies assign new product development to ‘venture teams’ that are cross functional groups charged with developing a specific product or business. These are intrapreneurs who are relieved of other duties and given a budget, time frame and ‘skunkworks’ setting.
  • 11. Skunk works are informal workplaces, sometimes garages, where intrapreneural teams work to develop new products.  Crowdsourcing -: The internet lets companies engage external participants in the product development process in rich and meaningful ways. Through crowdsourcing, these paid or unpaid outsiders can offer needed expertise or different perspective on a task or project that might otherwise be overlooked
  • 12.  Stage gate systems -: many top companies use the stage gate system to divide innovation process into stages, with a gate or checkpoint at each end of the gate. The project leader working with a cross functional team must bring a set of known deliverables to each gate before the project can pass to the next stage. To move from business plan to product development requires convincing market research study of consumers needs and interests.
  • 13. Managing the development process: IDEAS A. GENERATING IDEAS -: The new product development process starts with the search for ideas. Some marketing experts believe we find the greatest opportunities and highest leverage for new products by uncovering the best possible set of unmet customers needs or technological innovation. New product ideas can in fact come from interacting with various groups and using creativity generating techniques.
  • 14. B. INTERACTING WITH EMPLOYEES -: Employees can be a source of ideas for improving production, products or services. Top management can be another major source of ideas. Some company leaders such as former CEO Andy Grove of Intel, took personal responsibility for technological innovation in the firm.
  • 15. C. INTERACTING WITH OUTSIDERS -: Many firms nowadays are going outside their bounds to tap external sources of new ideas, including customers, scientists, engineers etc. companies are also increasingly turning towards crowdsourcing to generate new ideas. One form of crowdsourcing invites the online community to help create content or software, often with prize money or a moment of glory as an incentive. When Baskin-Robbins ran an online contest to pick its next flavour, 40,000 consumers entered. Besides providing new and better ideas, co-creation can help customers feel closer to the company and create a favourable word of mouth.
  • 16. D. STUDYING COMPETITORS -: Companies can find good ideas by researching the products and services of competitors and other companies. They can find out what customers like and dislike about competitors products. They can ask their own sales representatives and intermediaries for ideas. These groups have firsthand exposure to customers and are often the first to learn about competitive developments. To establish the optimal brand positioning for the new product and the right points of parity and points of differences, marketers need a thorough understanding of the competition.
  • 17. E. ADOPTING CREATIVITY TECHNIQUES -: Internal brainstorming sessions can also be quite effective – if conducted properly. Creativity is mostly about making connections in ways that are not obvious. A sampling of techniques for stimulating creativity in individuals and groups are-:  Attribute listing – list the attributes of an object ( a screwdriver) and modify each attribute ( replacing the wooden handle with a plastic one, or adding different screw heads and so on)  Forced relationship – list several ideas and consider each in relationship to each of the others. In designing new office furniture, for example, consider a task, a desk, a table, book case and filling cabinet as separate ideas.
  • 18. Morphological analysis – start with a problem such as ‘getting something from one place to another via powered vehicle’. Now think of dimensions such as a powered platform(cart, chair etc), the medium(air, oils, rails) and the power source(electric motor, CNG etc). By listing every possible combination, you can generate many new solutions. Reverse assumption analysis – it involves listing all the normal assumptions about an entity and then reverse them.
  • 19. New context – take familiar processes such aa people helping services and put them into a new context. Instead of sending hotel guests to the front desk to check in, greet them at curbside and use a wireless device to register them. Mind mapping – start with an idea, such as a car, then think of the next idea that comes up and link it to the product and with all these associations, maybe a whole new product will materialize.
  • 20. USING IDEA SCREENING  In screening ideas, the company must avoid two types of errors. A DROP error when the company dismisses a good idea.  The purpose of screening is to drop poor ideas as early as possible. The rationale is that product development costs rise substantially at each successive development stage.  Most of the companies require new product ideas to be described on a standard form for a committee’s review. The description states the product idea, target market and the competition and roughly estimates market size, product size, development costs and the rate of return.
  • 21. Managing the development process 1. Concept development A product idea can be turned into several concepts:  Who will use this product  What primary benefits should this product provide  When will people consume this product Each concept represents a category concept that defines the product’s competition. The next task is to show where the product would stand in relation to other products.
  • 22. 2. Concept testing it means presenting the product concept to target consumers, physically or symbolically and getting their reactions. The more the tested concepts resemble the final product or experience, the more dependable concept testing is. it presents consumers with an elaborated version of the concept. After receiving the information, researchers measure the product dimensions by having consumers respond to questions related to the product.
  • 23. 3. Conjoint analysis consumer preferences for alternative product concepts can be measured with conjoint analysis, a method for deriving the utility values that consumers attach to varying levels of product’s attributes.
  • 24. The consumer adoption process Adoption is an individual’s decision to become regular user of a product and is followed by the consumer loyalty process. Stages in the adoption process -: 1. Awareness : the consumer becomes aware of the innovation but lacks information about it. 2. Interest : the consumer is stimulated to seek information about the innovation 3. Evaluation : the consumer considers whether to try the innovation
  • 25. 4. Trial : the consumer tries the innovation to improve his estimate of its value 5. Adoption : the consumer decides to make full and regular use of the innovation. New product marketers typically aim at early adoption and use the theory of innovation and consumer adoption to identify them.