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Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations Chapter 7: Product Development and Management Issues in High-Tech Markets Chapter Overview Technology development “What to sell” Product modularity, platforms, and derivatives New product development teams “Stopping” rules in new product projects Developing services Intellectual property © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Technology Maps Define a stream of new products (breakthrough + incremental) company plans to develop over time. Used for: Commitment to new product development Allocation of resources A flexible blueprint that must be updated regularly © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Technology Map 1 Technology Identification On-going Management 4 - Modularity - Platforms and derivatives - Teams - Killing pro jects - Developing services - Intellectual property issues Decide on needed technology 2 additions - Internal deve lopment (Make) - External acquisition (Buy) - Partner to co-develop Decide on "What to Sell" 3 strategy - License vs. full commercialization © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 1. Technology Identification Inventory of firm’s valuable know-how that may be sources of revenue generation Products Processes Such as superior manufacturing skills Management practices Such as knowledge management Valuate the corporate intellectual assets & technology forecasting © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 e.g., Technology map of mobile standard evolution cdmaOne IS-95A IS-95B CDMA2000 1x IS-95C GPRS CDMA2000 1x EV DO CDMA2000 1x EV DV EDGE GSM HSCSD PDC WCDMA PDC-P PHS 2G 2.5G Key evolutionary route 3G Less important evolutionary route © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 e.g., Technology map of telecom services high Wi -Max VO IP Richness ADSL Cable modem WLAN VO IP low Fixed line PSTN low DIY Information 3G 2G 1G Mobile commerce Mobility © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 high Identify technology landscape Scanning the important technology entities Matter Energy Information Mobility/Input e.g., mega e.g., mega magnets e.g., mega magnets accelerate the trace micro magnetic friction-less particle sensitively transmission transformation e.g., mega magnets enhance plastic deformation e.g., mega magnets promote the efficiency of micromotor Storage/ output e.g., mega magnets facilitate the refrigeration e.g., mega magnets e.g., mega magnets possess energy support MO disk for durably large volume of data magnets enhance the absorbability of tiny molecule © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 e.g., mega magnets facilitate the change of electricity/ microwave into voice 2. Decide on needed additions What technologies does firm need to round out its offering? “Make vs. buy” decision Internal development External acquisition Partnering © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Adding New Technology: Focus on Development Risk Internal Development New development close to existing skills Confidentiality reasons “NIH” (not invented here): Good technology can be developed only internally. Unfamiliar & untrustworthy External Acquisition Someone else has already developed Save time and effort Let others take risks first Keep up with competitors Use existing brand name/marketing resources Leverage & co-option © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 3. Commercialization Decision: “What to sell?” Focus on Marketing Risk Continuum of options, based on the additional expenditures customers must incur beyond the cost of the purchase to derive the intended benefits of the technology e.g., Philips’ LCD technology Know-how only e.g., Nike design “Proof of concept” Components to OEM e.g., Cannon’s laser printer engine Final products to end-user e.g., Acer travel mate End-to-end solution, service bureau e.g., DoCoMo’s i-mode service © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Appropriate conditions for technology licensing Network externalities: more value as more customers use a product Quicken standardization of technological evolution discourages other’s substitute technologies Firm lacks marketing skills for end-product Major customers want a second source © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Lean Towards Selling Know-How When: Technology lacks fit with corporate mission Lack of financial resources to exploit technology Tight window of opportunity and lack of speed Market smaller than expected/business unlikely to be profitable When range of technologies in market is diverse When allowing firms access to technology is most appropriate (next slide) © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Lean Toward Selling EndProduct When: Firm’s components are incompatible with general industry standards. What if firm competes at end-product with incompatible product? Hard to get third-party developers Demanding high coordination capability and industry leadership. e.g., NTT DoCoMo on i-mode service © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Sell at Multiple Points on the “What to Sell” continuum when Offering technology to competitors may encourage industry standardization Firm may have skills in some segments but not others Major buyers require second source Limited exploitation by a single opportunity Diversify the product lines To maximize rate of return on technology investment © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 A Caveat: International Markets Sales of manufacturing technology and know-how may result in setting up a new low-cost competitor © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 4. On-going product management Modularity Platforms and derivatives Teams “Killing” projects Developing services Protecting intellectual property © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Modularity Building a complex product from smaller subsystems that can be designed independently, yet function together as a whole © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Determine Product Architecture The arrangement of functional elements into physical chunks which become the building blocks for the product or family of products. module module module module Product module module © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 module module Trailer Example: Modular Architecture box hitch protect cargo from weather connect to vehicle fairing minimize air drag bed support cargo loads springs suspend trailer structure wheels components © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 transfer loads to road functions Trailer Example: Integral Architecture upper half lower half nose piece cargo hanging straps spring slot covers wheels protect cargo from weather connect to vehicle minimize air drag support cargo loads suspend trailer structure transfer loads to road components © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 functions Which architecture of nail clippers is preferred? © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Modular Product Architectures Chunks implement one or a few functions entirely. Interactions between chunks are well defined. Modular architecture has advantages in simplicity and reusability for a product family or platform. Three types of modular architectures Slot-modular Bus-modular Sectional-modular © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Swiss Army Knife Product Platforms and Derivatives Product platform is a common architecture based on a single design and underlying technology Derivative products are versions intended to fill performance gaps between platform products Proliferation of product lines © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Platform Strategy is Attractive in High-Tech Markets Unit-one cost structures Allows for rapid development of market share/revenues Speed and flexibility in going after niches: “gap filling” The product strategy of bowling alley © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Platform Architecture of the Sony Walkman © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Product Platforms and Derivatives Performance Family 3 Family 2 Family 1 Ref. Figure 7-4 Intel’s product platform and product family Time © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 The product family of Intel’s CPU i86 platform Pentium platform derivatives Platform generations 8086, 8088 80286 80386SX, 80386DX 80486SX, 80486DX, 80486DX2 differentiations Pentium Pro, Pentium MMX, Pentium II Pentium III, Celeron, Timna, Xeon Pentium IV platform (Willamette, Itanium, Centrino) © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 The Product Family for HP’s Ink Jet Printers DeskJet 500 platform DeskJet 600 platform DeskJet 500C, Deskwriter 500C(color) DeskJet 550C, Deskwriter 550C(dual pen) DeskJet 300, 340(portable) DeskJet 560C, 520C, Deskwriter 560C, 520C (lower price) Deskwriter 540C, 600C, 660C(better quality) DeskJet 800 platform DeskJet 850C, 855C(enterprise use) © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 New Platform Strategy Design for high-end of the market Incorporate as many features as needed for this segment Willingness-to-pay helps recover high fixed costs Subtraction of features is lower incremental cost than addition Consistent with both lead user and chasm concepts Keep sustainable to be the industry leader © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Six Modular Operators (lessons from IBM System 360/370) Operator Definition Splitting Separating systems into components which interact across defined interfaces Substituting Switching between components which perform the same function Excluding Removing a module to reduce the functions the system can perform Adding a module to increase the functions of a system Making an imbedded function into a stand alone module Augmenting Inverting Porting Moving a module from one system to another © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Example Interchangeable drives, keyboards, mice, monitors, and printers Replacing a dot matrix printer with a laser jet printer Removing a CD-ROM player Attaching a back-up storage device Having a network printer rather than dedicated printers Using a Mac printer on a PC network by adding a translator New Product Development Teams Comprised of individuals from different functional areas such as R&D, engineering, manufacturing, purchasing and marketing © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Performance of NPD Teams Information integration + Product quality Quality orientation + + + Product innovativeness Team identity + Encouragement for risk-taking + Customer influence + Monitoring by senior management © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Rewarding NPD Teams Reward team as a whole Seniority compensation Share reward equally among team members Share reward based on position or status Reward individual team members Process-based Outcome-based For uncertain development outcome For complex product development process Hybrid rewarding mechanism © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 When to “Kill” New Products? Escalation of commitment Product champions and technology enthusiasts are perennial optimists Personal stake in project Biases in interpreting information Recall information that confirms beliefs Ignore information that disconfirms beliefs Re-interpret neutral information as positive, and even negative information as positive! © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 More information is not the answer! Foster internal culture that encourages open questioning Remove project from core of the firm Prepare key stakeholders for impending changes “De-couple” withdrawal decision from prior investments Attend to negative feedback Re-examine, review, and redefine the problem Search the alternative course of action A team of “exit-champion” for pulling the plug Different manager making the “killing” decision Rely on benchmarks established at outset Prepare “out of play” information closely tied to those with a vested interest in the project © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Developing Services: Intersection of Technology & Service “High-Tech” The corporate produces 2 1 which complements with necessary Service Product 3 4 “Low - Tech” © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Intangibility Inseparability Cell 1: Augment Product with Service Generate service revenue after product purchase Training, repair, maintenance contract Does company have sufficient trained service personnel? Can company develop proficiency in service without losing core competence in product innovation? The vendor of service value layer embraces much more users’ added on value, and sticks to the end users. Therefore, the service complements may slow down the influence of the vendor of installed base to them. © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Cell 2: High-Tech Service Contract research, IT consulting, service provider Can technical service personnel communicate with customers in user-friendly ways? Can service reliability of underlying technology be maintained? Does company make continuous investments in upgrades? Does company invest adequately in training service personnel? © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Cell 3: Low-Tech Product Use technology Improve customer service Make supply chain more efficient The issue of corporate adoption of technologies to facilitate the operation efficiency The business transformation of purchasing corporate © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Cell 4: Low-tech Service Substitute automation for labor in improving customer service or supply chain efficiency The issue of customer facing and adoption of self-service technologies, e.g., ATMs The designing of user-friendly interface © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 External customer-facing technology solutions Are customers comfortable using the technology? Have they been adequately trained? Does technology add value or make customers resentful? Do customers miss human interaction? Do customers have access to technology? What else must the company offer to make value compelling to customer? © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Internal technology solutions Are employees willing to embrace technology? Have they been adequately trained? Have business processes been redesigned (re-engineering) to realize the potential of technology? © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Intellectual Property “Original works that are creations of the mind” which the originator has the right to earn an economic return from How to protect it? Patents Copyrights Trademarks Trade Secrets © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Patents Confer owner the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling product or process for specific time period In U.S., 20 years from date of filing Three criteria invention must meet to be patentable: Useful: perform some function that benefits humanity Novel: no prior evidence of invention exists Nonobvious: no suggestion of invention exists, even when multiple writings are combined © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Two Types of Patent Applications in U.S. Provisional: $160, 1 year time frame to “hold” Allows inventor to do further research Establishes a “priority date” of invention Utility: $750 for examiner to render a decision Granted or denied; applicant can appeal or refile (another $750) © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Disadvantages in Using Patents Patents are public information Patent owner must enforce rights Eighteen months from time of filing in the US Competitors may “invent around” patent Keep watch that competitors and others are not “infringing” the patent Costly! © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 New Issues with Patent Protection Can now patent “business methods” Effective July 1998 Implications: Patents on E-commerce business models/methods Patents on medical treatment methods © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Tension in Granting Intellectual Property Rights Foster creativity and “common good” Give inventors incentives (exclusive rights to revenue from their inventions) Inhibit creativity and consumer welfare Slow spread of valuable commercial innovations Lack of competition and access © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Steps in Granting Patents Hire patent agent Assess state of prior art: Provide thorough, accurate understanding of invention Is the idea truly novel? Patentable? Draft the claims to define the boundaries of the invention (scope of patent) Draft drawings and application in easy-tounderstand terms (licensable) © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Trouble Spots in Patent Protection Inventor has previously disclosed idea prior to filing application At a conference, with investors, etc. Fatal in foreign protection US grants one year “grace period” from disclosure Even with a patent, inventor cannot practice invention if it infringes on patent rights of others (overlap on scope of patenting) © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 International Filing Under Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) File within 1 year of national application to claim priority back to original filing date PCT enables filing one application in home language which is acknowledged as a filing in all member countries that the applicant designates PCT application published 18 months after priority date At applicant’s option, PCT examiner will issue international “search” report and/or preliminary judgment of patentability © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 International Filing Under PCT PCT application enters designated countries and goes before examiners in each Translation is required, with fees Rights must be enforced in each country © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Patenting Costs U.S. PATENT COSTS Application preparation $8,000-16,000 Searching/patentability PTO fees for “late” responses Issue fee TOTAL FOREIGN PATENT COSTS $2,000-4,000 PCT filing fee Entry into national $110-1970 countries Examination in $1300 country $12,000-25,000 PER COUNTRY FEE © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 $2,000-3,000 $2,000-6,500 $1,500-8,000 $3,500-14,500 Copyrights Protect tangible form or manner in which idea is expressed, not the idea itself. Grants inventor right to reproduce and distribute copyrighted works Term is: Example: software code Life of author + 50 years -orShorter of 75 years from publication or 100 years from creation of work Easy to obtain © Register with US Copyright office in case lawsuit is filed © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Trademarks Names, symbols, devices to distinguish/ identify goods Protects firm against unscrupulous competitors who try to deceive/mislead customers © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Trade Secrets Any concrete information that: Has commercial value Secret generally unknown Not easily ascertainable useful to company Developed at some expense Provides competitive advantage © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Trade Secrets (Cont.) Financial, business, scientific, technical, information including patterns, plans, compilations, formulas, designs, methods, programs, etc. To be granted “trade secret” protection, firm must take reasonable steps to protect information © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Premises on the notion of confidential relationships Nondisclosure Agreements (NDAs) Noncompete Agreements Signer will not disclose information Signer will not establish/join a competitor’s firm within a given time frame/territory Invention assignment clauses All rights of employees’ inventions are granted to the firm/employer © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Patents or Trade Secret Protection? Patents When: Product will have long market life Protection can/will be enforced Corporate policy (the business of technology creator and licensor) Product can be reverse-engineered Trade Secrets When: Secret not eligible for patent protection Product life cycle is short Patent would be hard to enforce Secret is not detectable in the product (via reverse engineering for example) © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Effective Proprietary Information Programs Focus on employees Look to senior managers’ behavior Morale Stand behind security programs Share information on a need-to-know basis only Have minimal use of information for power/ politics © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Effective Proprietary Information Programs Have a stated policy that is enforced via monitoring Acknowledge communication based on geographical/professional/friendship ties Use caution in sharing information in partnering relationships (including nondisclosures) Have awareness of competitive intelligence tactics of other firms © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Economic Espionage Act (1996) Stealing trade secrets is a U.S. federal criminal offense Maximum punishment for U.S. citizens stealing for U.S. companies is 15 years in prison or a fine of $250,000 Maximum punishment for an agent of a foreign government or company is 25 years in prison or a fine of $250,000 © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005 Managing Intellectual Property An asset base that deserves strategic focus Licensing unfitted patents as a revenue source Patent inventions that fit business strategy Repackaging patents Donating unneeded patents to nonprofit organizations for a tax write-off © Mohr, Sengupta, Slater 2005