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Chapter 4: Product Development A firm can obtain new products in two ways. 1. One is through acquisition; buying a whole company, a patent, or a license to produce someone else’s product. 2. The other is through new product development by the company’s own research and development (R&D) efforts. – By new products, we mean original products, product improvements, products modifications or new brands that the firm develops through its own R&D endeavors. Reasons for buying an existing business The following three reasons are the most common reasons why entrepreneurs buy an existing business instead of creating a new one. • Buying an existing business reduces the uncertainties involves in lunching an entirely new venture. • The buyers of an existing business typically acquires their personnel, inventories, physical facilities, established banking connections and ongoing relationship with trade suppliers. • Ongoing business may become available at what seems to be a low price. The process of new product development includes the following steps listed below. 1. Idea Generation There are different methods of idea generation some of them are: a. Focus Groups Method: In this method, a moderator, often called a focal person leads a group of people through an open, in-depth discussion rather than singly asking questions to solicit an individual person response. b. Brain Storming Method: C. Problem Inventory /analysis Method: Problem inventory analysis uses individuals in a manner analogous to focus groups to generate new product ideas. • However, instead of generating new ideas themselves, consumers are provided with a laundry list of problems in a general product category. • They are then asked to identify and discuss products in the category that have the particular problem. d. Reverse Brainstorming Method : Reverse brainstorming is analogous to brainstorming, except that criticism is allowed. The gist of the technique is to go for spinning out fault by asking the question, “In how many ways can this idea fail?” Since the focus is on the negative, care must be taken to maintain the group’s morale. 2. Ideas Screening: The purpose of idea generation is to create a large number of ideas. The purpose of the succeeding stages is to reduce that number. The first idea-reducing stage is idea screening. Idea screening helps spot good ideas and drop poor ones as soon as possible. 3. Concept Development and Testing • An attractive idea must be developed into a product concept. It is important to distinguish between a product idea, a product concept and a product image. • A product idea is an idea for a possible product that the company can see itself offering to the market. • A product concept is a detailed version of the idea stated in meaningful consumer terms. And a product image is the way consumers perceive an actual or potential product. • Concept testing calls for testing new product concepts with groups of target consumers. The concepts may be presented to consumers symbolically or physically. Here, concept tests, a word or picture description might be sufficient. 4. Marketing Strategy Development • After concept testing proves best, the next step is marketing strategy development, and designing an initial marketing strategy for introducing the proposed product to the market. • The marketing strategy statement consists of three parts. The first part describes the target market; the planned product positioning, the sales, market share and profit goals for the first few years. The second part of the marketing strategy statement outlines the product’s planned price, distribution, and marketing budget for the first year. The third part of the marketing strategy statement describes the planned long-run sales, profit goal and marketing mix strategy. 5. Business Analysis • Once management has decided on its product concept and marketing strategy, it can evaluate the business attractiveness of the proposal. • Business analysis is a basic assessment of a product’s compatibility in the market place and its potential profitability. • Both size of the market and competing products are often studied at this point. • The most important questions relate to market demand is: How will the product affect the firm’s sales, costs, and profits? 6. Product Development • If a product survives the first five steps, it is developed into a prototype that should reveal its intangible attributes as perceived by the consumer. • Usually, product development is often expensive, and few product ideas make it to this stage. • Here, Research and Development (R&D) or engineering develops the product concept into a physical product. 7. Test Marketing • Test marketing is a trial mini-launch of a product in limited areas that represent the potential market. • It allows a complete test of the marketing strategy in a natural environment, giving the organization an opportunity to discover weaknesses to be eliminated before the product is fully launched. 8. Commercialization • Commercialization is the full introduction of a complete marketing strategy and the launch of the product for commercial success. • During commercialization, the firm gears up for full-scale production, distribution and promotion. Product protection 1. Patents • You know already that one of the avenues to the establishment of a new business is invention. An entrepreneur who invents a new thing or improves an existing invention needs to get legal protection for the invention through a patent right. • A patent is a contract between an inventor and the government in which the government, in exchange for disclosure of the invention, grants the inventor exclusive right to enjoy the benefits resulting from the possession of the patent. …Patents Basically there are two common types of patents the difference of which the entrepreneur needs to understand and explained as follows; • Utility Patent: - This kind of patent protects any new invention or functional improvements on existing inventions. It grants the owner of the invention by anyone else. It reflects protection of new, useful and unobvious processes such as those in printers and producing chemical compounds. Design patents • The other kind of patent is design patent that protects the appearance of an object and course new, original, ornamental, and unobvious designs for articles of manufacture. • Like utility patents, design patents provide the inventor with the exclusive right to make, use and/or sell an item having the ornamental appearance protected by the patent. • This kind of patent is appropriate when the basic product already exists in the market place and is not being improved in function but only in the style. • These patents are particularly important to companies such as shoe producers and product package design firms that need to protect their ornamental designs. 2. Trademarks • Trade Marks: - A trade mark may be a word, symbol, design or some combination of such or it could be a slogan or even a particular sound which identifies the sources or sponsorship of certain goods/service. • Therefore, for the owner business man he/she needs to register such identifications because of the following benefits from registered trademarks. Registered trade mark provides notice to everyone that you have exclusive rights to use of the mark throughout the territorial limits of the country. It enables the business owner to sue in court for trade mark infringement, which can result in recovery of profits, damages, and costs. ….trade mark Registered trade mark provides also incontestable rights regarding the commercial use of the mark for the owner. It also provides right to deposit registration with customs to prevent importation of goods with similar trademarks. It enables the business owner to use the notice of the registration itself. It provides a basis for filling trade mark application of goods in foreign countries and others. 4. Copyrighting • Copyrights: - A copy right, which is a burning issue in Ethiopia these days, protects the original works of authorship. • Among the things that need to be protected through copy right are music, books, software, scripts, articles, poems, sculptures, models, maps and blue prints, songs and data. • Trade secrets: - A trade secret can be a process, a method, a device, a technique, a formula or a pattern for a machine, pricing information, customer and supplier list, a method of bookkeeping or other nonpublic information that is used in one’s business, and which gives an opportunity to obtain an advantage over competitors who do not know or use it.