Title: Cooper: Chapter 4
1Cooper Chapter 4
- The Stage-Gate New Product Process
- Cooper, Robert G., Product Leadership, Perseus,
2000
2Challenges of Chapter 4
- How to translate the 13 (67) critical success
factors into an operational, effective NPD
process? - How to build in quality of execution?
- How to build in strong market orientation?
- How to build in good predevelopment homework?
- How to ensure process is implemented and
followed?
3Goals of an NPD Process
- Exemplary quality of execution
- Sharper focus, better project prioritization
- Strong market orientation
- Good up-front homework sharp, early and stable
product definition - Fast-paced parallel processing
- True cross-functional team approach
- Products with competitive advantage
- A fast-paced and flexible process
4The Stage-Gate Process
- A conceptual and operational model for moving a
new product project from idea to Launch - Breaks the process into a predetermined set of
stages - The entrance to each stage is a gate
5The Stage-Gate Process
6The Stage-Gate Process
7The Stage-Gate Process
- Stages
- Each stage consists of a set of parallel
activities undertaken by people from different
functional areas - Each stage is designed to gather information
needed to advance the project to the next gate - Each stage is cross-functional no stage owned by
a functional area - Generally, each stage costs more than the
preceding one
8The Stage-Gate Process
- Gates
- Precede each stage
- Project review and decision meetings
- Go/Kill decision points in the NPD process
- Usually manned by senior managers from different
function areas the owners of the resources
9The Stages
- (Stage 0 Ideation)
- Stage 1 Preliminary investigation
- Stage 2 Detailed investigation (build the
business case) - Stage 3 Development
- Stage 4 Testing and validation
- Stage 5 Full production and market launch
10Gates Three Main Elements
- A set of required deliverables
- Visible, standard by gate, decided at the output
of previous gate - Criteria against which the project is judged
- Must-meet and should-meet criteria
- Defined outputs
- A decision, an action plan, resources, list of
deliverables, date for next gate
11Stage 0 - Ideation
- Ideas make or break NPD
- Four components of ideation
- Establish a focal point
- Assign responsibility to stimulate, generate,
handle new product ideas - Identify the sources
- Who supplies good ideas? Who should?
- Grease the path
- Stimulate and facilitate the flow of new ideas
- Set up an idea and capture system
- Easy submission, periodic review, provide feedback
12Gate 1 Initial Screen
- A gentle screen
- A handful of key must-meet, should-meet criteria
- Strategic fit?
- Market attractiveness?
- Technical feasibility?
- Killer variables?
- The first decision to commit resources
13Stage 1 Preliminary Investigation
- Preliminary market assessment
- Quick scope of marketplace market existence,
probable market size, market acceptance - Preliminary technical assessment
- Propose a technical solution, map out route,
assess costs, risks, time - Preliminary business assessment
- Quick financial assessment estimate sales,
costs, investment, payback, risk
14Gate 2 Second Screen
- A somewhat more rigorous screen
- A repeat of Gate 1, but now with the deliverables
of Stage 1 - A checklist and scoring model facilitate decision
- If decision is Go, project moves to heavier
spending stage
15Stage 2 Detailed Investigation
- Build the business case opens the door to
product development the critical homework stage - Key actions
- User needs-and-wants studies
- Value-in-use studies
- Competitive analysis
- Concept testing
- Detailed technical assessment
- A manufacturing (or operations) assessment
- A detailed financial analysis
16Stage 2 Business Case
- What is the product and who will it be sold to?
(the product definition) - Target market
- Product concept and benefits delivered
- Positioning strategy
- Products features, attributes, requirements
- Why invest in this project?
- Thorough project justification
- How will it be undertaken, when, by whom, at what
cost? (the project plan)
17Gate 3 Decision on the Business Case
- The money gate
- The final gate prior to Development
- A Go here means go to a heavy spend
- A Go yields a sign-off on product definition
- Gate 3 gatekeepers usually the leadership team of
the business
18Stage 3 - Development
- Implementation of the Development plan and
physical development of the product - Main deliverable is a prototype product
- Development plan
- WBS, schedule, resources, milestones
- Emphasis on technical work
- Plan includes periodic project reviews
19Gate 4 Post-Development Review
- A check on the progress and continued
attractiveness of the product and project - Development work reviewed and checked
- Work completed in a quality fashion?
- Product consistent with original definition
(product design specifications)? - Plans for test and validation
- Plans reviewed for marketing/manufacturing
20Stage 4 Testing and Validation
- Tests and validates entire commercial viability
of the project - The product, the production process, customer
acceptance, the economics of the project - Type of activities
- In-house product tests
- User tests, field trials
- Pilot production
- Pretest market, test market, trial sell
- Revised financial analysis
21Gate 5 Precommercialization Business Analysis
- Opens the door to market Launch and full
production - The final point at which project can still be
killed - Scrutinizes the quality of testing and validation
results - Focus largely on expected financial return,
appropriateness of start-up plans - Operations/marketing plans reviewed for
implementation
22Stage 5 Full Production and Market Launch
- Implement production/operations plan and the
marketing Launch plan - Execute supporting plans distribution/
logistics, quality assurance, post-Launch
monitoring - Begin implementation of longer term Life Cycle
Plan (product improvements, variants, etc.)
23Post Implementation Review
- New product project terminated (6 to 18 months
after commercialization?) - Project team disbanded
- Product a regular product
- Project and products performance reviewed
- Gap/variances between actual/projected
performance identified, explored - Postaudit conducted a learning process
24New Product Metrics Post-Process
- Post-process metrics (How well are we doing in
NPD?) - Timeliness
- Cycle time, on-time launch, actual v. fastest
possible - Development and capital costs
- Financial
- Success rates
- Development projects that succeed, launched
products that succeed - sales from new products
- of growth generated by new products
25New Product Metrics In-Process
- In-process metrics (Is our process really
working?) - Quality of gate meetings
- Degree of deviation from NP process
- Proportion of projects really in NP process
- Timeliness of projects reaching gates
- On-budget performance
26Summary
27The Stage-Gate Process
28The Stage-Gate Process
29Success Factors Built-In to NPD Process
- More emphasis on homework, predevelopment
activities - Multidisciplinary and cross-functional
- Parallel processing
- Strong market orientation
- Product definition step built in
- Emphasis on superior, differentiated product
- More focus gates weed out poor projects early
- Strong focus on quality of execution throughout
- International element can be accommodated
- Process flexible, designed for speed
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31Third Generation Stage-Gate Process
- 3rd generation Stage-Gate is a natural evolution
of the process just described - After the NPD process has been established and
used, it may evolve to increase efficiency - Speed up the process
- More efficiently allocate resources
32Third Generation Stage-Gate Process The
Natural Evolution
- Fundamentals of the 3rd generation process
- Flexibility
- Fuzzy (conditional) gates
- Fluidity
- Focus (project prioritization and project
management) - Facilitation
- Forever green (regenerating, improving)
- (But dont change until current process is
working!)
33Third Generation Stage-Gate Process Flexibility
- Each project routed through the process according
to its specific risk levels and needs a risk
management process - Example categories of projects
- System change requests
- Fast-track projects
- Major projects
34Third Generation Stage-Gate Process Fuzzy Gates
- Fuzzy not just binary
- Go decisions can be conditional on some future
event occurring - Decision can be made in the absence of perfect
information, given a conditional Go - Absent information reported back to gatekeeper
when available - Project gets full Go when information satisfactory
35Third Generation Stage-Gate Process Fluidity
- Process is fluid and adaptable
- Activities not married to specific stages
- Some overlapping of stages
- Project may be in two stages at once
36Third Generation Stage-Gate Process Focus
- Maintains funnel concept
- Poor projects weeded out
- Resources allocated to best projects
- Tough Go/Kill decisions, coupled with effective
portfolio management - Gates consider more than just the merits of the
one project under review
37Third Generation Stage-Gate Process
Facilitation
- Recognizes the need of a designated process
facilitator - The gate meister
- Facilitator makes sure the process works
efficiently and effectively - Facilitator facilitates every important gate
meeting to make sure the process works - Facilitator provides for continuous improvement
of the process
38Third Generation Stage-Gate Process Forever
Green
- Need to constantly review and energize the NPD
process - Audit and overhaul
39The End