Title: Lead User Lead Market Concept
1Lead User - Lead Market Concept
Case Study on Sulzer/Medical Technology Case
Study on La Roche/LCD Development
- Seminar on Strategic Management
- of Technology and Innovation
- TIM 99
2Lead User Concept
Lead users had been defined by Von Hippel as
follows
- Lead users face needs that will become general
in a market place - but faces them months or
years before the bulk of that market place
encounters them - Lead users are positioned to benefit
significantly by obtaining a solution to those
needs
Nagel, Rolf Lead User innovationen, Weisbaden
DUV, Dt. Univ.-Verl., 1993
3Lead Market Concept
According to Albach, Lead Market concept is
related to lead Consumer concept.
- Lead Consumers are individual persons or groups
who can be defined as end users of a product or
system. These end users or lead consumers of a
product or system constitute a Lead Market.
Nagel, Rolf Lead User innovationen, Weisbaden
DUV, Dt. Univ.-Verl., 1993
4Content
- Introduction
- Case Study on Sulzer/Medical Technology
- How a healthy hip works and what a THR does
- The history of hip prosthesis development
- Sulzers incursion in the Med. Tech.
- Phase 1 in Sulzer (knowledge generation)
- Phase 2 in Sulzer (new products and
diversification) - A world leading company in medical technology
5Introduction
- Multinational companies are trying to reach two
goals at the same time productivity and
diversification.
- There are autonomous and inductive processes of
diversification
6Case Study on Sulzer
- Hip Implant Systems and the Success Story of
Sulzer AG in Medical Technology
7History of the Hip Prosthesis Surgery
1890 Gluck designed the first hip
joint prosthesis
1938 Wiles implanted first metal
endo-prosthesis to replace hip joint
1958 Charnley developed first bone-cement for
anchoring of implants
Switzerland became the worldwide No.1 Lead
Market in medical implants
8The Evolution of Hip Prosthesis Development
1938 Wiles prosthesis (UK)
1956 G.Mckee - Norwich (UK)
1959 K.M. Sivash - Moscow
1964 P. Ring - Redhill (UK)
1965 G.McKee-J.Farrar (UK)
1965 A.H.Huggler-Chur (CH)
1972 B.Weber-St.Gallen (CH)
1988 B.Weber-St.Gallen (CH)
1998 Sulzer Metasul couples
9How is the Hip joint constructed?
- A metal cup is connected to the pelvic bone
- A metal ball (spherical articulation) for
rotation - The long stern is fitted snugly into the thigh
bone (femur)
10How Sulzer enters in the Med. Tech Field
Early external pushes and impulses to develop
prosthesis Key persons A.Huggler (CH), M.Müller
(CH), J.Charnley (UK ) and H.Straehl (Sulzer)
Sulzer decides to develop prosthesis
1963 Sulzer produced first 100 prosthesis
1965 Sulzer received order for 12.000 prosthesis
Transference of Technology to Switzerland
11Phase 1 SULZER Company
Increasing market of prosthesis Developing of
medical technology
Innovation in hip, knees, and elbow
prostheses New material used Ceramic (to
reduce friction)
External pressure and impulses Information
of Lead Markets
Creation of SBU with own RD Sulzer Medica Tech
Narrow interaction with material
suppliers Extremely strict control of manufacture
12Some obstacles...
- However Sulzer Medical Techniques was created as
a SBU, it was dependent of the textile machinery
department. - Due a lack of resources for RD, the implant
technology was affected in quality.
- The top management was not in favour of the
project and the SBU was put in question.
13Reorganisation of Sulzer (Phase 2)
- In 1981 the company was reorganised and a new top
management took the control of the business. - the Sulzer Medical Techniques was one of the two
BU with highest growth potential and smallest
financial resources. - To create new strategies and to provide more
resources for the Medical Techniques department,
became the most important mission of the Sulzers
concern. - The new strategy included
- Globalisation strong position on important
markets (USA) - To develop products to substitute human body
parts - Premium price and quality strategy
- Strategy of planned growth by world-wide
acquisition
14a worlds leading company in medical technology...
- Two main divisions Orthopedics and
Cardiovascular Prostheses - Supplies high technology products in more than
100 countries. - Research and production facilities in Europe and
North America. - Operating income Mio 156
- RD expenses Mio 65
15Sources of Information...
- Alexander Gerybadze/Frieder Meyer-Krahmer/Guido
Reger, Gobales Management von Forschung und
Innovation, Schaffer Poeschel, 1997 (chapter 3) - http//www.sulzer.ch
- http//www.sulzermedica.com
- http//www.sulzerorthopedics.com
- http//www.metasul.com
16 Development of future business in the area
optoelectronics / display
17- The early origins the Liquid Crystal Display
(LCD) development
- 1888 - Discovery of liquidcrystalline statuses of
materials - in Germany.
Liquid crystal is a material, whose state of
aggregation is neither liquid nor solid, but
somewhere between them.Liquid crystals are
produced, by mixing different materials,in order
to obtein. characteristics such as viscosity,
elasticity, reflection ability etc..
- 1963 - Williams of RCA discovered the dynamics
- Scattering - effect.
- 1968 - Heilmeier Helfrich developed a first
indicator at RCA named DSM-LCD without a real
success.
18Phase 1
- 1969 - LaRoche decided diversification to be able
to research - in new potentials areas.
- 1970 - H. Helfrich took over the direction of the
Liquid Crystal - group in LaRoche.
- 1973 - the first industry LCD - clock of the
world presented were the BBC together with
Ebauche and Faselec.
- 1974 - BBC established the first factory of the
world in Lenzburg,
19Phase 2 took not place
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
- In spite of the leading market-position by ROCHE
and BBS they were not able to transform phase 1
into a real business. - The first reason was the incapacity by ROCHE to
comprehend the dynamic of the electronic market. - The second reason was the quarrel of
patent-rights with FERGUSSON and the loss of it
(USA, Germany).
20Phase 2 took not place
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
- The third reason was mentality of the swiss
merchants Show me 100 mio turnover and you
can get 1.000 for FE. - So were the RD for LCD only represented by two
scientists, beside the normal FE by ROCHE.
21Phase 2 took not place
- On the other side the Japanese competitors went
very aggressive into the new LCD-market. - From 1972 up firms like SEIKO or HITACHI visited
European and American firms to buy the new
technology. - After a short time HITACHI was able to produce a
lot of LCD-displays. - So Japan became the first market for LCD and
ROCHE/BBC were not presented.
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
22Phase 2 took not place
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
- ROCHE/BBC leaded the LCD-market in phase 1.
- They were not able to transform this leading
position into a real business and lost their
position against Japanese competitors. - They leave the growing market up from 1990
because of bad management and the loss of
RD-advantages.
23ROLIC Research Ltd.
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
- Founded as a spin-off company of Roche 1995
- Interdisciplinary research company
- CEO Dr. Martin Schadt co-inventor of the Twisted
Nematic Liquid Crystal Display (TN-LCD) - Rolic has a team of internationally recognised
scientists - Until December 1996, Rolic was a subsidiary of F.
Hoffmann-La Roche then it was sold to a Swiss
entrepreneur
24Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
- a new licensing joint venture company formed by
the Rolic Group and BTG / march 1998 - RTL provides a portfolio of around 800 patents
and patent applications developed by Rolic's
research team - BTG has great experience in the protection,
development and marketing of intellectual
property rights (IPR) / BTG holds 25
25Evaluation and conclusions
LCD case
- Leading position in phase 1 (Innovation-breakthrou
gh in the own company and a primary market) - No phase 2 development (building up international
strategies, structures and investments) - internal decision structures
- communication and negotiation weaknesses with
national partners - more effective and target strategies of Japanese
competitors - working without LEAD USERS and LEAD MARKET
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
Reasons
26Evaluation and conclusions
LCD case
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
How to make it better?
- Bundle the power to build up own capacities in
research, production and distribution on LEAD
MARKET Japan - Strategy change of Roche or at least an earlier
spin-off of LCD technologies
27Evaluation and conclusions
Sulzer case
Phase 1 Phase 2 Today Conclusion
- You need long term breath (in this case over 30
years) - phase 1 - collect know how and take Impulses
world wide but bundle the activities and
competence in one area - phase 2
- new strategic orientation
- provision of recourses and finance
- globalisation of activities