Title: Session 3 Product
1Session 3 Product Brand Strategies
- Tonight Product Development Strategic role,
processes, contributors to success/failure,
Stratsim experience, examples - Tomorrow branding, customer-based brand equity,
building it,growing it, leveraging it, examples
2Product Strategies
- Supports positioning or value proposition
- Competitive focus
- Product development portfolio management
- Summary
3Agenda Product Strategy
- Product
- Value Drivers
- New Product Development Challenges Issues
- Product Life Cycle
- Product Portfolio
- Examples
- Summary Conclusions
4Growth Avenues
- Existing customers with existing products
- New customers for existing products
- New products or services
- Better delivery systems
- Geographic expansion
- Acquisition or alliances
- New competitive arenas
5Business Planning
- To evaluate new business opportunities and major
transitions in the product strategy.
New
Markets
Current
Current
New
Products
6Example Duponts Strategy
7Duponts Acquisition/Divestiture to reflect this
Strategy
8Business Segment Sales
9Keys to Sustainable Growth
- Put our science to work
- Go where the growth is
- Drive productivity
- Financial discipline
10Putting Their Science to work
11Go where the growth is globally
12Growth market segments
13Drive productivity
14Drivers of New Product Development
New ProductDevelopment
15Product Definition
- Bundle of Benefits
- Benefits vs. Attributes
- Integration with other Elements
16 Product Development Levers
Product Type
Core
Augmented
- Packaging
- Attributes and Features
- Customer-Specified Attributes and Features
- Mass-Customized Product
- Customer Service Programs
- Post-Sales Support
- Customer Care
- Customer Relationship Management
- Loyalty Programs and Privileges
- Availability of Complementary Products
- Upgrades
- Enabling Community
- Additional Functionality
- Fulfillment Capabilities
17New Product Development
- Process Competencies
- Time, Cost, Quality, Relevancy Pressures
- Gating Frameworks
- Customer voice
- Simultaneous vs. Sequential
- Breakthrough Products
18Who does this well? Why?
19Stages in the new-product process
THE NEW-PRODUCT PROCESS
20 Product Development Divergent and Convergent
Thinking
1. Brain Storming
2. Idea Screening
NumberofIdeas
ConvergentThinking
DivergentThinking
Start
Finish
Critical EvaluationNarrows the Focus Over Time
Ideas ExpandOver Time
Time
21Product Development Portfolio
- Breakthrough to Extensions
- Balance of Risk, Timing
- Strategy Link Paths to Leadership
- Alliances
- Fusion
22Product Portfolio
Low
High
Degree of Innovation
None
Breakthrough or Discontinuous
Incremental
Existing Products
New Products
Line Extensions
23The Project Map
More Product Change
Less New Core Next Generation
Additions to Derivatives Product
Product Product Family
Enhancements
More
Breakthrough Projects Platform
Projects Derivative Projects
New Core Process
Next Generation Process
Process Change
Single Dept. Upgrade
Incremental Change
Less
24Getting it Perfectly Right VersusGetting it
Almost Right Learning From it
Getting it Perfectly Right Ready
Aim Fire Getting it Almost Right and
Learning Ready Fire Aim
25From Deszca, Munro Noori, Journal of
Operations Management, Vol.17, 1999
26From Deszca, Munro Noori, Journal of
Operations Management, Vol.17, 1999
27Best-In-Class Principles
From Deszca, Munro Noori, Journal of
Operations Management, Vol.17, 1999
28Success of New Product Development Process
Issue 1 Technology Strategy
The Effectiveness Efficiency of the New Product
Development Process Depends on
Issue 2 Organizational Context
Issue 3 Teams
Issue 4 Tools
29Success of New Product Development Process (cont.)
Strategic Imperative
1. Articulate the companys strategic intent
2. Map the
companys RD portfolio
Issue 1 Technology Strategy
3. Use strategic alliances to gain rapid access
to enabling technology 4. Choose and monitor
alliance partners very carefully 5. Include
strategic implications of technology development
in the project selection and screening process 6.
Use a parallel development process 7. Use
executive champions
Issue 2 Organizational Context
30Success of New Product Development Process (cont.)
8. Include a diverse range of functions in
project team 9. Involve customers and suppliers
in the development process 10. Match team
structure to project type 11. Match team leader
attributes to type of team 12. Establish mission,
charter, and contract book for project team
Issue 3 Teams
Issue 2 Tools
13. Use appropriate tools to improve the efficacy
of new product development
31 Traditional Gated New Product Development Process
Idea Generation
Screening Ideas
Management Review
Product Design
Management Review
Prototype Development
Management Review
Business Analysis
Management Review
Test Market
Management Review
Commercialization
Management Review
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34Designing-in Product Quality
Designing-in Product Quality Customer
Satisfaction vs. Customer Retention
- Not knowing what customers want
Following the Quality Function Deployment
(QFD) methodology is one way in which firms can
capture the voice of the customer.
35QFDs Discrete Phases
- Hamid Noori The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
36QFD (House of Quality)
Roof Matrix
5
Product characteristics
3
Importance
2
Customer Requirements
Relationship Matrix
1
4
Customer Perceptions
Technical Assessment and Target Values
6
- Hamid Noori The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
37Design and Process
In the new era of Mass Customization, every
customer is unique (customer unique-value) and
each individual customer is a market (market of
one).
38Major Elements Contributed to the Emergence of MC
- Shorter product life cycles and increasing global
competition led to a breakdown in mass markets,
increasing operations strategic focus on
individual customers. - Customers themselves started demanding greater
level of variety and personalization in products
and services. - Flexible manufacturing and information
technologies enabled producers to deliver
customized products at low cost.
Development
Production
Marketing
Delivery
There is a growing consensus that MC strategies
are only viable in a market context where
personalization is demanded, and in an industrial
context where technology is available.
39Stages of Mass Customization
40Mass Customizing Products and Services
- Provide Point-of-Delivery Customization
Move Final Production Step
Production
Development
Production
Delivery
Marketing
Production
Key Find Inherently Individual Characteristic
Move all of Production
Production
Development
Marketing
Delivery
Key Innovation and Invention
- Hamid Noori The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
41Example Cummins in China
- Low-horsepower engine that could affordably meet
needs of all customers farmers, hospitals,
small retailers - Developed smaller, lower-powered, modularized
engines that could combine with add-ons called
gensets that could be customized for different
segments noise abatement hood for hospitals,
dust and dirt guards for farmers - Both customers distributors liked the changes
42Innovation Sweet Spot HBR March 2003
- Start with existing products
- 5 Innovation patterns
- Subtraction or reduction Philips Slimline Q
series DVD players - Multiplication double bin trash can that allows
users to sort garbage - Division unbundling, modularity, mix and match
- Task Unification bundling of tasks defrosting
element in a cars windshield radio antenna - Attribute dependency change eyeglasses that
change with sunlight - Voice of your product function follows form
- Combination of patterns
- Complementary to other NDP approaches
- Try it -
43New Products Fail Regularly
- 90 of new product ideas never get off the ground
- The overall failure rate of new products is close
to 85 - Of those new products that hit the market, close
to 50 of them fail - But they are significant drivers of future
profitability
44Your Examples of Failures/Successes????
45http//www.bestnewproducts.ca/en/winners.php
46New Product Acceptance Factors
- Relative Advantage
- Compatibility
- Complexity
- Trial ability
- Observe ability
- Infrastructure
47Reasons For New Product Failure
- Too Small a Market
- Insignificant Point of Difference
- Poor Product Quality
- No Access to Customers
- Bad Timing
- Poor Execution of Marketing Mix
48Product Life Cycle
- Conceptual Foundation Diffusion of Innovations
- Product Definition Issues
- Number of Cycle Shapes
- Descriptive vs. Predictive
- External Internal Issues
- Shorter Cycles
49Product Lifecycle
50Example RIM Launches the Blackberry
- Targeting the right customers
- Understanding adoption process for new technology
- Value proposition initial , subsequent offers
- Market exposure access
- Key relationships
- Competitive arena
- Technology market evolution
51Technology Market Model
Main Street
Tornado
Paging in 98
Wireless email in 98
Bowling Alley
Chasm
Typical Customer
Innovators
Late Majority
Laggards
Early Adopters
Early Majority
Source Geoffrey Moore, Crossing the Chasm
52Product Plan
- The communication vehicle used to convey the key
messaging of a new product to the rest of the
organization - Customer Needs Analysis
- Total Available Market
- Target Market
- Product Positioning
- Value Proposition
- Features and Benefits
- Competition
- Pricing
- Whole Product
- Channel Strategy
- Financial Targets
53Value Proposition
Identifies centerpoint of target segment
- For target customers
- Who have the following problem
- Our product is a new product category
- That provides breakthrough capability.
- Unlike reference competitor,
- Our product key point of differentiation.
Focuses on segments compelling reason to buy
Sets up product leadership axis
States the product leadership benefit
Reputable product leadership alternative
States the customer intimacy commitment
Source Geoffrey Moore, Crossing the Chasm
54BlackBerry Value Proposition
- For business e-mail users who want to better
manage the increasing number of messages they
receive when out of the office, BlackBerry is a
mobile e-mail solution that provides a real-time
link to their desktop e-mail for sending,
reading, and responding to important messages.
Unlike other mobile e-mail solutions, BlackBerry
is wearable, secure and always connected.
55Whole Product
Potential Product
Products room for growth
Augmented Product
Maximum chance of purchase
Expected Product
Minimum products/services
Generic Product
Shipped in the box
Increase reliance on partners
56RIM Today
- Unbundle its expertise
- Open its platform, license its software
- Market expansion - segments, geography
- Expand functionality - value proposition
- Partner
- Acquire
57Paradoxical Effects of Technology on Customers
5810 Summary Observations on Technology Marketing
- Managers over estimate rate of market acceptance
- People issues likely to be more of a hurdle than
technology - Customers Learning - paradoxes
- Value proposition not technology merits
- Making the business case is critical to adoption
- Technology market dynamics transform business
models - Time to market time on market - pace of
business - Growth through partnerships versus integration
- Technology - Market - Organizational evolution
- Integration - Financing, strategy, technology,
people, process
59Management Implications
- Technology competency
- Market sensing ability
- Commercialization not just development
- Deal making managing
- Capital cash generation management
- Speed - decision making, organizational
flexibility responsiveness - Evolution- market organization - building
skills - Leverage help
- Network structuring management
- Human Capital Management
60Target Costing Product Development IKEAs
Approach
- Step 1 Pick a price
- Step 2 Choose a Manufacturer
- Step 3 Design a product
- Step 4 Ship it
- Step 5 Sell it
- Would this kind of approach work in your
business?
61Summary
- Product think benefits
- Product related value drivers
- Integrated with other marketing elements
- Evolution product/market/competition/strategy
- Process capabilities
- Customers Perspective
- Commercialization challenges
- Partnerships relationships
62Strategic Brand Management
63What is a Brand?
- Traditional view -
- A brand is a name, term, sign, symbol, or design
which is intended to identify the goods or
services of one seller or group of sellers and to
differentiate them from those of competitors. - More recent views
- Brand is what is experienced and valued by
customers in everyday social life. - Brand is the culture of the product shared
taken for-granted brand stories, images, and
associations - Brand is the mental and emotional file we have
for a product or service or entity.
64New Branding Challenges
- Brands are important as ever
- Consumer need for simplification
- Consumer need for risk reduction
- Brand management is as difficult as ever
- Savvy consumers
- Increased competition
- Decreased effectiveness of traditional marketing
tools and emergence of new marketing tools - Complex brand and product portfolios
65Brand Explosion
66Branding by Retailers Example Walmarts 5 Next
Victims Forbes 11/12/2004
- Consumer Electronics Best Buy 1, Walmart 2
but recently rolled out private brand ILO.,
expanded brand relationships with Sony, RCA,
Panasonic - Banking trying to get into banking but thwarted
by regulators, instead it offers check cashing,
bill payment, money orders boasts 28 Wal-Mart
Money Centres operated by Sun Trust Banks plus it
has I-store bank branches with other banks - Pharmacy currently 4th in pharmacy business,
rolling out a handful of 24hr pharmacies - Gasoline 1555 stations on Wal-Mart properties,
300 of which are operated by Sams Club, rest by
Murphy - Fashion bought 1 selling British apparel brand
George from Asda, licenses Mary-Kate Ashley
lines from the Olsen twins
67The Concept of Customer-Based Brand Equity
- Customer-based brand equity
- Differential effect
- Customer brand knowledge
- Customer response to brand marketing
68Determinants of Customer-Based Brand Equity
- Customer is aware of and familiar with the brand
- Customer holds some strong, favorable, and unique
brand associations in memory
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70Rationale of Customer-Based Brand Equity Model
- Basic premise Power of a brand resides in the
minds of customers - Challenge is to ensure customers have the right
types of experiences with products services and
their marketing programs to create the right
brand knowledge structures - Thoughts
- Feelings
- Images
- Perceptions
- Attitudes
71Salience Dimensions
- Depth of brand awareness
- Ease of recognition recall
- Strength clarity of category membership
- Breadth of brand awareness
- Purchase consideration
- Consumption consideration
72Performance Dimensions
- Primary characteristics supplementary features
- Product reliability, durability, and
serviceability - Service effectiveness, efficiency, and empathy
- Style and design
- Price
73Imagery Dimensions
- User profiles
- Demographic psychographic characteristics
- Actual or aspirational
- Group perceptions -- popularity
- Purchase usage situations
- Type of channel, specific stores, ease of
purchase - Time (day, week, month, year, etc.), location,
and context of usage - Personality values
- Sincerity, excitement, competence,
sophistication, ruggedness - History, heritage, experiences
- Nostalgia
- Memories
74Judgment Dimensions
- Brand quality
- Value
- Satisfaction
- Brand credibility
- Expertise
- Trustworthiness
- Likability
- Brand consideration
- Relevance
- Brand superiority
- Differentiation
75Feelings Dimensions
- Warmth
- Fun
- Excitement
- Security
- Social approval
- Self-respect
76Resonance Dimensions
- Behavioral loyalty
- Frequency and amount of repeat purchases
- Attitudinal attachment
- Love brand (favorite possessions a little
pleasure) - Proud of brand
- Sense of community
- Kinship
- Affiliation
- Active engagement
- Seek information
- Join club
- Visit web site, chat rooms
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78Lovemarks Love/Respect Axis
Respect Performance, Trust, Reputation
Brands Low Love, High Respect
Lovemarks High Love, High respect
Love Mystery, Sensuality, Intimacy
Products Low Love, Low Respect
Fads High Love, Low Respect
79What makes a brand different?
- Recent study of customers, perceptions of top
brands in airlines, coffee, beer, fast food,
hotels, long distance telephone, soup in terms of
functional, economic, psychological, social,
cultural factors - Findings
- Brand type can be more important than category to
positioning of a brand - Within category hierarchy in terms of five
factors rated functional economic most
desirable but cultural, social, psychological
most closely related to choice - Functional economic cost of entry or parity
factors - Cultural, social, psychological point of
difference or differentiators
80Auto Example
81Performance Features Mckinsey Quarterly 2003,
Vol 4
82Example of Retailer
83Building Customer-Based Brand Equity
- Brand knowledge structures depend on . . .
- The initial choices for the brand elements
- The supporting marketing program and the manner
by which the brand is integrated into it - Other associations indirectly transferred to the
brand by linking it to some other entities
84Benefits of Customer-Based Brand Equity
- Enjoy greater brand loyalty, usage, and affinity
- Command larger price premiums
- Receive greater trade cooperation support
- Increase marketing communication effectiveness
- Yield licensing opportunities
- Support brand extensions.
85Brand Power Global Business Week, August 2004
86Brand Power - Canada
87Customer-Based Brand Equityas a Bridge
- Customer-based brand equity represents the added
value endowed to a product as a result of past
investments in the marketing of a brand. - Customer-based brand equity provides direction
and focus to future marketing activities
88The Key to Branding
- For branding strategies to be successful,
consumers must be convinced that there are
meaningful differences among brands in the
product or service category. - Consumer must not think that all brands in the
category are the same. - PERCEPTION VALUE
89Strategic Brand Management
- Strategic brand management involves the design
and implementation of marketing programs and
activities to build, measure, and manage brand
equity. - The strategic brand management process is defined
as involving four main steps - 1) Identifying and establishing brand
positioning and values - 2) Planning and implementing brand marketing
programs - 3) Measuring and interpreting brand performance
- 4) Growing and sustaining brand equity
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91Task/Assigment
- Pick two brands in the same product category and
compare their sources of brand equity (brand
salience, brand performance, brand imagery, brand
judgements, brand feelings, brand resonance) - Create a mental map (all the associations linked
to the brand) for each of your two brands - Use the following projective technique to create
an image for each of your brands describe your
brand in terms of an animal, music, sport, a TV
show or movie - What does your assessment suggest for the
marketers of those two brands
92Summary of Brands
- Customer-based brand equity power resides in
mind of customers - Brand drives customer behavior loyalty, WOM
- Additional leverage with trade, other partners,
future products - Brand elements marketing mix used to build
brands - Collective ownership to the brand CEO, everyone
- Brand drives profitability, shareholder
- Next session Joint one on Pricing