Title: Converting Technology to Wealth Workshop
1- Converting Technology to Wealth Workshop
- Module 2
- Market Research
2Define the Opportunity
- You dont know your customer as well as you think
you do - Ready, fire, aim is a sure way to find surprises,
usually not good surprises - Market validation is a continuous process based
in direct connections to your customers and
partners
3Validate the Marketplace
- Market validation
- Know your customer
- Know what is important to the customer
- Explore the pain
- Envision the solution
- Find the quality influencers, get the product
right - Establish credibility
4Research Stages
- Project definition
- Project execution
- Project analysis
- Project results dissemination
5Project Definition
- Understand the internal dynamics of the
stakeholders - Understand the goal of the research
- Understand what decision is being made
- Understand the strengths and weaknesses of the
company - Understand the commercialization options
6Project Definition Exercise (30 minutes)
- Define the goals of the research
- List key questions to be answered or key
information that needs to be gathered - Try to guess who will know or where you will be
able to find the information sought
7 From Lab To Business
Market Research Methods
8Gathering Information
- Primary Research
- Internal Primary Research
- External Primary Research
- Secondary Data Collection
- Internal Sources
- External Private Sources
- External Government Sources
9Primary Market Research
- Creates data through interviews and other direct
feedback mechanisms - Addresses the specific technology and information
needs - Relies on the skill of the interviewer or
questionnaire design - Delivers real-time feedback to the researcher
10Listen to the Voice of the Customer
- Understand what is really important
- Understand customer motivations
- Understand the buying cycle and how decisions are
made - Provide a sanity check to the internal
perceptions of the technology
11Getting Feedback on Benefits
- Expected level of quality of the product
- Linear performance quality improvements may not
be enough - Exciter qualities can be the real sellers
- may not be the obvious ones to the technology
developer - may become expected qualities over time
12Internal Primary Sources
- Interview the inventor or analogue
- Brainstorm with other internal technical experts
- Brainstorm with the sales staff that have direct
interaction with customers - Beta test the technology with internal customers
13Internal Primary Research
- Benefits
- Interviewees have a keen understanding of the
technology and its possibilities - Research is fast and inexpensive
- Researcher gains an understanding of how the
technology fits into the internal goals and
product mix - Drawbacks
- Can be myopic and rely on unfounded market
assumptions
14External Primary Sources
- Collecting data directly from the marketplace
through - Phone Surveys
- Mail Surveys
- E-mail and Newsgroups
- Focus Groups
- In-depth Customer Interviews
15In-Depth Interview Advantages
- Provides background data on the marketplace
- Answers specific questions
- Ensures the right experts are contacted
- Examines corporate buying behavior
- Identifies industry trends
16In-Depth Interview Advantages
- Follows a theme with one respondent from
beginning to end - Has a flexible structure that can be modified as
learning occurs - Topics can be expanded upon
- Identifies other industry players to contact
17Goals of In-Depth Interviewing
- Use open ended questions and conversations to
uncover - perceptions, opinions, beliefs and attitudes
- Understand the motivating buying factors
- Qualitative data that informs the quantitative
research
18Interviewer Qualities
- Good interviewing skills
- good listening, clear communication
- An eye for detail without getting lost in the
trees - Ability to appear genuinely interested
- Interest in the subject and the interview results
19Learn the Customers Language
- Never assume you know what they are talking about
- Question every nebulous term
- Dont be afraid of asking the obvious
- They are the experts, acknowledge that and use it
to your advantage
20Types of Responders
- Yeasayers - only tell you the good
- Ask them to pin down why it is good
- What would a benefit mean to them?
- Naysayers - only tell you the bad
- Ask why a benefit or feature is not important
- Ask for suggestions on how to make it better
- Use them to identify barriers and improvements to
the technology
21Telephone Interviewing
- It can be the right tool when
- interviewing busy executives
- your interview population is geographically
dispersed - interviewing people for their knowledge
- speed is important
- You hear the voice of the customer
22Primary Market Research Tips
- Techniques to get responses
- Emphasize benefit to responders of their input
- Know who you want to talk to
- Offer pre-market use of the technology
- Offer beneficial items for responding
- Allow time for the research to be done
- Conversations are good
23 Elevator Pitches for Market Research
24The Introduction and Call to Action
- Who are you
- Where are you from, what are you doing
- What are you talking about
- SHORT technology description
- Why do they want to talk to you
- Benefit to the interviewee
- Why do you want to talk to the interviewee
- What expertise did you seek out
- Call to action
- Opening question
25Good Example End User
- My name is Brett Cornwell and I have been working
with the State of Texas Bioenergy initiatives.
Texas AM has developed a line of high biomass
sorghums that can produce 15 to 20 dry tons of
biomass per acre. Because Iogen is the leading
cellulosic converter in North America, I would
like to understand what Iogen looks for in a
feedstock. As part of our effort to optimize the
feedstock for the converter, would you share the
general parameters of an acceptable feedstock in
terms of moisture content and chemical
composition?
26Bad Example End User
- My name is Brett Cornwell, I am the Director of
Commercialization Services for the Texas AM
University System. One of the Texas AM
components, the Texas Agricultural Experiment
Station, has developed a line of high biomass
sorghums that produce between 15 and 20 dry tons
of biomass per acre. The sorghums are brown
mid-rib sorghums that have been bred so that they
are photoperiod sensitive, meaning that they do
not flower until the day length is shorter than
12 hours.
27Bad Example Continued
- These traits give good standability to the crop
and ensure that during the growing season the
crop puts all of its energy into producing
biomass. In addition, the high biomass sorghums
are drought tolerant so they can be grown with
25-50 of the water requirements for corn. I
believe that this will be the premiere dedicated
bioenergy crop for cellulosic ethanol and I would
like to get some information from Iogen about
your current feedstock requirements to see if
high biomass sorghum could replace those
feedstocks. What is the moisture content and
chemical composition of your current feedstock?
28Example Potential Licensee
- My name is Brett Cornwell and I work in the
Office of Technology Commercialization at Texas
AM. Texas AM has developed and patented a line
of high biomass sorghums that are available for
license. They can produce 15 to 20 dry tons of
biomass per acre. The genome is completely mapped
and a number of interesting traits such as
drought and disease resistance have been
isolated. As part of our effort to understand the
cellulosic market, I am talking to a number of
seed companies. Because Monsanto is a leading
seed company in biofuels, I would like to
understand what Monsanto sees as the need and
opportunity for cellulosic ethanol. Does Monsanto
see dedicated bioenergy crops as a growth area?
29Example Technical Expert
- My name is Brett Cornwell and I have been working
with Texas AM researchers in understanding the
logistics chain for a cellulosic ethanol
feedstock. Texas AM has developed a line of high
biomass sorghums that can produce 45 to 60 fresh
tons of biomass per acre. Our challenge is
developing a harvest and storage system to deal
with fresh biomass. I read your paper on
cellulosic logistic systems and would like to tap
into your and INLs expertise in this field.
Texas AM is designing field trials this fall for
harvest and storage of the high biomass sorghums.
How would you suggest we design the trials and
would you be willing to test some of our samples?
30Example - Supplier
- My name is Brett Cornwell and I work at Texas AM
on our bioenergy initiative. Luis Ribera, your
local extension agent, gave me your name as a
leading grower in the area. We have developed a
drought resistant high biomass sorghum that could
be used as an ethanol feedstock. Our goal is to
develop crops that make money for Texas farmers.
To that end, would you help me understand the
kind of net returns per acre that would be
enticing to you as a grower to plant a new
bioenergy crop?
31Elevator Pitches
- Short
- Targeted
- Make sure the benefit of them talking to you is
in the pitch - Have a call to action as a door opener
32Ask Open-Ended Questions
- Encourage speaker to talk at length rather than
enable a yes or no answer - Who
- What
- When
- Where
- Why
- Decrease the probability of asking leading
questions
33Summarize and Paraphrase
- Briefly rephrase the information given by the
speaker in the listeners own words - Shows you are listening and that you understand
what the speaker is saying - Helps you make sure you do understand
- Allows speaker to expand, but does not suggest
the listener agrees - Gives the listener time to comprehend what was
said
34More Clarifying Needed!
- Comparators
- Better/Worst
- Under/Over
- Slow/Fast
- Early/Late
- Ahead/Behind
- Less/More
- Example
- Our software is better.
- Response Better compared to what?
35External Primary Market Research
- Benefits
- Tailored to company needs
- Real time feedback
- Answers specific questions
- Feedback on specific products/services
- Drawbacks
- Can be expensive and time consuming
- Strategy/product direction may be publicized
36Secondary Market Research
- Collects information that already exists
- Provides comprehensive data that can be further
analyzed - Provides industry quantitative data
- Provides general industry data rather than data
specific to the technology or business
proposition being researched - Provides historical or trending data
37Internal Secondary Sources
- Mine past internal research reports
- Collect secondary sources that are already
in-house - purchased reports and subscription data
- customer lists and contacts
- collected competitor information
- reports and directories of associations that the
company belongs to
38Internal Secondary Research
- Benefits
- Fast and inexpensive
- Internal secondary sources could uncover good
internal primary sources - Information may already be tailored to the
company or product line - Drawbacks
- Data may be out of date
- Sole reliance on past reports may compound past
biases
39External Secondary Private Sources
- Collect research reports that already exist on
the web or in libraries - Purchase existing research reports from market
research firms - Gather compiled company data, e.g.
DunnBradstreet (US and Europe) - Gather trade group compiled data
- Visit competitor Web sites
- Mine university libraries for sources
40Fee Databases
- General sources can provide clearinghouses
- Dialog, www.dialog.com
- OneSource, www.onesource.com
- Specific industry sources can provide difficult
to find or unique information - www.vlsiresearch.com
- www.imshealth.com
41Web Surfing Shortcuts
- Use compiled Web resource lists from universities
- Use compiled Web resource lists from
organizations - http//computer.org/internet/links.htm
- Use private search tools
- http//www.delphion.com
42External Secondary Private Research
- Benefits
- May be inexpensive
- Accumulates quantitative data
- Gives a macro view of the market
- May give insight into competitors market and
financial positions - May answer specific questions about market
share, demographics, and buying habits
43External Secondary Private Research
- Drawbacks
- Data can be out of date
- Data categories may be overly broad
- Information usually cannot address specific
technology questions - The most interesting data can be expensive
44Surfing Tips
- Develop a search plan
- Who else would be interested in the information
- If an agency regulates it, they probably collect
information on it - If you think the information should exist, it
probably does
45Searching Tips
- Slow down and read what you find
- Go to the source when you find interesting
information - Pick up on new buzzwords and phrases and search
using them - Bookmark when you find good sources
46External Secondary Government Sources
- Trade bureaus for international trade assistance
- Census Bureau for business and company
demographic information - Federal agencies for data and reports on relevant
industries - Patent databases for competitive technology
information
47Trade Bureau Secondary Data
- US International Trade Administration
- Excellent source of industry information from
across the globe - Country and region primers on business practices
and opportunities - http//www.ita.doc.gov/
48Departments of Statistics
- Source for demographic and business statistical
information - Source for hundreds of compiled industry reports
- Business reports are more prevalent than
population reports - Most publications are free and on the Internet
49Individual Agencies
- More than 70 US federal agencies collect data and
issue reports in relevant industries - Identify agency interest areas and search the
agency sites - Use the US federal clearinghouse site of
http//www.fedstats.gov/
50Patent Office
- Search for competitive technologies using
advanced search capabilities - Download full text patents with pictures
- Search the trademark database
- Link to other nations patent sites
- Link to international patent treaties
51Government Secondary Data
- Benefits
- Data can be trusted and pedigree is clear
- Data is usually free and Internet available
- Data may be very detailed
- Data can be found for most industries in most
countries or regions - Drawbacks
- Data can be out of date
- Data categories may be overly broad
52The Internet Factor
- Access to secondary information has become much
easier and cheaper with the explosion of the
internet - The old paradigm was library research with paper
reports and books - The new paradigm is electronic library research
- Learn by surfing, find sites, techniques, and
information that is critical to you
53Examples of Local Information Sources
- What has been useful to you?
54From Lab To Business
55Vijay Jollys Model of Technology
Commercialization
56Arriving at a Techno-Market Insight
- Parallel activities
- Technology exploration
- Generating new understanding
- Arriving at a good model or proof of principle
- Market exploration
- Preliminary need
- Need to be explored for commercialization
57How to Arrive at the Dual Insight
- Context of the research
- Idea for a future new product
- Solving a customers problem
- Reaction to competitor moves
- Exploring new principles to build a general
capability - All paths can lead to commercially viable products
58Build the Research Environment for Commercially
Viable Products
- Customer driven does not mean customers are sole
source of ideas - Pursue problems deeply
- Be prepared for serendipity
- Alternate between push and pull
- Curiosity driven research in the right market
context
59Speeding Up the Dual Insight
- Commercialization is a willful act
- Accelerate the rate of experimentation
- Working on known problems
- Not just short term problem solving but problem
solving in depth - Greater contacts between researchers and the
market
60Mobilizing Interest and Endorsement
- Bringing a new technology to market is an
exercise in resource assembly - Agree?
- Importance of reaching out to external
stakeholders?
61How to Get Early Buy In
- Dispel criticism and convince others
- Allow others to verify the idea
- Have a good model
- What are the consequences of not dispelling
criticism early?
62Understand Support Criteria of Different
Organizations
- Venture capital
- Individuals and commercial potential
- Private companies
- Strategic fit and risk/return profile
- Broad estimates of need
- Government agencies
- Sociopolitical and technical merits
- Generic technology
- High risk
63Reach Out to Others for Support
- Mobilizing interest is enabled by sharing
- Share information with peers
- Collaborative research
- Wide involvement in the development process, both
internal and external
64Communicating the Vision
- Create champions and remove roadblocks
- Balance promotion and secrecy
- Create pull without hype
- Danger of hype?
- Communicate broadly and individually
- Sustain stakeholder interest with progress
65Incubating the Technology
- Technology must be made commercializable
- Build expected value
- Size of payoff
- Probability of success
- Moving towards commercial viability
- Achieving technical milestones
- Conceiving of attractive applications
- Assembling IP
66Adding Commercial Value
- Achieving technical milestones
- Cross a functional threshold
- Rapid progress
- Mobilize other researchers
- Conceiving multiple applications
- Look beyond the initial context
- What do you want to protect?
- Build a portfolio of applications
- Link intellectual property to commercial strategy
- When and how much to patent?
67The Innovators Solution
68Types of Innovation
- Sustaining Innovation
- Better products
- Sold to existing, attractive customers
- Incumbents have the advantage
- Disruptive Innovation
- Simpler, more convenient product
- Sells for less money
- Goes after new or unattractive customers
- New entrants have an advantage
69Reasons Disruption Works for New Entrant
- Target market is unattractive customers or
non-consumption - Incumbents likely will not fight for the market
share - Allows focus on serving a set of customers needs
- Low end customers get good enough products at
low cost - New customers get simplicity and convenience
70Two types of Disruption
- New-market Disruption
- New customers enabled by simplicity, portability
or product cost - After a foothold is gained, sustaining
improvements increase market share - Examples pocket radio, PC, cellphone
- Low-end Disruption
- Addresses least profitable, over served existing
customers - After a foothold is gained, go up market
- Examples minimills, Wal-Mart, Kia
71New Market Disruption Litmus Test
- Large population, previously not able to purchase
due to lack of money, equipment or skill - Previously, customers had to go to an
inconvenient centralized location
72Low-end Disruption Litmus Test
- Are there over served customers looking for good
enough products - Can the business model make profit at lower end
discounted prices - Is the innovation disruptive to all significant
incumbents
73What Is Disruptive
- Disruption is not just about technology
- Business models can be disruptive with no
significant technology advances - Very innovative technologies may not be
disruptive at all - Disruption is ultimately about how you make money
- Who are the customers
- What problems are you solving
74Using Market Research
- Find out what jobs customers are trying to
accomplish (leads to the selling benefits) - Best way to do this is to observe and ask the
customers - Understanding the customer is more critical than
quantifying and segmenting the customers and
market
75Sustaining the Disruption
- How do you sustain growth with low end disruption
from good enough products? - Go up market
- How do you sustain growth with new market
disruptions? - Choose the right improvements by understanding
your customer - Segment to avoid one size fits all
76Why Incumbents Segment Poorly
- Fear of focus
- May lead to more focused products than more
generally capable products - Demand for quantification of opportunity
- Segment based on easy information to gather
- Structure of channels
- Potential misfit with channel partners
- Advertising economics
- Focus impacts economies of scale
77Other Takeaways from Christensen
- To act like start-ups large companies need to
- Do more than defend market share
- Grow in new markets
- Validate the market constantly and focus on the
pain - Create smaller units
- Keep RD vital
- Harness entrepreneurial energy
- Create autonomy and intrapreneurship