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Marketing Of High-Technology Products and Innovations Jakki Mohr, Ph.D. Professor of Marketing University of Montana-Missoula [email protected] May 26-27, 2004 Volterra, Italy Objectives Overview key ingredients for effective hightech marketing Provide opportunity to develop the outline of a basic marketing plan for your company Provide well-rounded foundation on marketing as a critical factor for high-tech business success Agenda Day 1 – – Foundations of high-tech marketing success Begin development of marketing tools Day 2 – – Overview critical barriers to success Continue development of marketing plans Barriers to Effective High-Tech Marketing Corporate culture that worships technical skills and de-emphasizes marketing – – – “Engineering does its thing and then marketing helps get it out the door.” “Customers don’t know what they want’ “Marketers don’t know what they’re talking about” Why is this important? Higher level of success is the result of close, formal linkages between R&D and marketing When these two functions interact sequentially, only 1 of 60 ideas is commercialized successfully. When these two functions interact in parallel cross-functional teams, 1 in 7 ideas is commercialized successfully. Critical Barriers/Sticking Points Focus on sales – “technology push” Functional silos with incompatible metrics for success A manager and an engineer… A man is flying a hot air balloon and realizes he is lost. He reduces altitude and spots a woman down below. He lowers the balloon further and shouts, "Excuse me. Can you help me? I promised a friend I would meet him half an hour ago, but I do not know where I am." The woman below says, "Yes, you are in a hot air balloon, hovering approximately 30 feet above this field. You are between 40 and 42 degrees north latitude and between 58 and 60 degrees west longitude." "You must be an engineer," calls down the balloonist. "Yes, I am," replies the woman. "How did you know?" A manager and an engineer (continued) "Well," says the balloonist, "everything you have told me is technically correct, but I have no idea what to make of your information, and the fact is, I am still lost." The woman below says, "you must be a manager." "Yes, I am," replies the balloonist, "but how did you know?" "Well," comes the answer from the engineer, "you did not know where you are, nor where you are going. You have made a promise which you have no idea how to keep, and you expect me to solve your problem. The fact is, you are in exactly the same position you were in before we met, BUT NOW IT IS SOMEHOW MY FAULT." Cross-functional integration (Interfunctional coordination) Rank your company on the following attributes (1-5) – – – – – I understand the role of marketing in the product development process Marketing is an integral part of the product development process Marketing is more than an afterthought to product innovation Marketing and engineering have a common language for talking about customer needs There is mutual respect for the knowledge my marketing/engineering counterpart brings to the table Development of Marketing Plan/Tools (Continued) – Additional Sources of Revenue – – – – – Licensing, Service Strategies Market Segmentation Pricing Distribution Marketing Communications (Advertising & Promotion) Customer Relationship Cycle Product considerations Licensing Service Strategies QFD and Kano Concept “What to Sell” Decision 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 Know-how only “Proof of concept” Components to OEM Final products to end-user End-to-end solution, service bureau Service Strategies High-Tech Product Service Low-Tech Relationship between Entries in the Market and Quality Attractive Quality Model 3 ONE-DIMENSIONAL QUALITY Model 2 Model 1 Development Overall Revenue Incr. Revenue New Models Must be quality Time QFD—Using the Kano Concept Satisfaction One-dimensional Attractive Dysfunctional Functional Must-be Know vs. Unknown Spoken vs. Unspoken Dissatisfaction Marketing is… The High-Tech Pricing Environment Rapid pace of change Short, volatile product life cycles Pressure on Price/performance ratios: Moore's Law Investments in R&D Backward compatibility, derivatives Network externalities Customer fears of obsoleting prior purchases Unit-one costs Customer's perceptions of cost/benefit of new technology The Internet Competition The 3 Cs of Pricing Competition Costs Customers Unit-One Costs When the cost of producing the first unit is very high relative to the costs of reproduction – – Due to R&D/embedded knowledge Ex: development vs. reproduction of software Additional Customer Considerations Total Cost of Ownership – Ex: Lifetime cost of owning a corporate PC is $6,400 per year (in 2002; average life of 3-5 years) Including hardware, software, installation, training, maintenance, infrastructure, and support Purchase price accounts for only 10% of total cost Implication: – Show total cost of ownership lower than competitor’s, despite higher initial outlay Customer Perceptions of Benefits/Costs Benefits: – – – – Functional Operational Financial Personal Costs: – – Monetary Nonmonetary Customer-Oriented Pricing How will the customer use the product? What are the benefits the customer will receive from using the product? Calculate customer costs and understand customer’s trade-off between costs and benefits. Analyzing customers for profitability Passive Carriage trade Bargain basement Aggressive High Net Price Paid Low Low High Cost-to-Serve Implications of Customer-Oriented Pricing Pricing decisions are part of product design decisions Different segments value the product differently Therefore, different customers yield differential profitability The 3 Cs of Pricing (Hands-on Exercise) Recall our discussions of – – – – CRM, customer value, competitive analysis, and compelling benefits that enhance customer productivity on a critical success factor. Provide some insights into your company’s price strategy. Channel Considerations in High-Tech Markets Blurring of distinctive members in the supply chain Need for indirect channels to provide value to manufacturer Evolution of hightech channels Supply chain management software High-Tech Channels Gray markets Vertical hubs The Internet Black markets, piracy and export restrictions National Acct. Mgmt. Acct. Mgmt. Post Sales Service Presales Close Sales Channels Qualify Sales Task s Lead Generation Matching Tasks to Channels, By Segment Big Direct Sales Medium Telemarketing Small Direct Mail Retail Sales Distributors Dealers/ VARs Advertising and Promotion Pyramid HIGH Salesperson Cost per Contact Telemarketing Catalog Literature and Manuals Trade Shows, Seminars, Training Direct Mail Public Relations /Publicity Media Advertising LOW Narrow Broad Coverage of Target Audience (Reach) What hi-tech salespeople say and what they mean by it All new: – Field-tested: – It's different from our competitors. Breakthrough: – Manufacturer lacks test equipment. Revolutionary: – Parts not interchangeable with previous design. We finally figured out a way to sell it. Futuristic: – No other reason why it looks the way it does. What hi-tech salespeople say and what they mean by it Distinctive: – Re-designed: – Previous faults corrected, we hope. Customer service across the country: – A different shape and color than the others. You can return it from most airports. Unprecedented performance: – Nothing we ever had before worked this way. Media Considerations Wasted Coverage Message Strategy Impact and Repetition Measurement/leads/follow-up Customer Experience! – – – Moments of truth Post-sales encounters Trust and Word-of-Mouth Advertising and Promotion Pyramid (Hands-on Exercise) Identify – – – Your company’s current approach to A&P Tools that could be usefully added to the mix Additional information that would be useful Using the Internet Search engine positioning Branding in High-Tech Markets Advantages of strong brands to firms: – – Command premium prices Have credibility which can be leveraged in new markets – Can lower customer acquisition costs Reduces risks with new product introductions Advantages of strong brands to customers: – – Signal of a safe choice: trustworthy and long-lived Decision-making heuristic Branding in High-Tech Markets Short product life cycle and customer fear, uncertainty, and doubt put a premium on having strong brand names. Strategies to Develop Strong Brands Supply steady stream of innovations that deliver value Emphasize traditional media advertising and PR tools rather than sales promotion “Influence the influencers” to credibly stimulate word-of-mouth via opinion leaders Strategies to Develop Strong Brands (Cont.) Brand the company, platform, or idea (rather than the individual product) Rely on symbols and imagery to create brand personality Effectively manage all points of customer contact Work with partners in co-branding Effectively use the Internet Moments of truth… A software manager, a hardware manager, and a marketing manager are driving to a meeting when a tire blows. They get out of the car and look at the problem. The software manager says, "I can't do anything about this - it's a hardware problem." The hardware manager says, "Maybe if we turned the car off and on again, it would fix itself." The marketing manager says, "Hey, 75% of it is working - let's ship it!" Develop Brand Equity for Small High-Tech Start-Ups Conclusion and Wrap-up Exercises Exercise: Key Take-Aways – – – – – What are the three most important take-aways that you learned today? What three things will you do differently in your job tomorrow and the next day, based on these insights? What do you need to implement these ideas successfully? What will prevent you from adopting a market-orientation your company? Identify three “next steps” in development marketing. Customer Value Creation and the Role of Employees Manage through the values of the organization Customer is key All systems/structures focused on it. Marketing MUST be integrated with other business functions to share in meeting customer needs effectively. Keeping the Customer In Mind Customer Sure Marketing Engineering Would you like a rock? Find me a big, cheap, fast, dense, sharp...rock Wrong rock OK Here’s a blue rock? Do you have a red rock? What’s wrong with blue? OK, but only if its square I can make a purple one We don’t have square ones Product Technology Rock Pile The “Far Side” of Product Development Customer Value Creation Through Alliances Customer value proposition only as strong as the weakest link. Disparate firm cultures can be fatal. All partners must embrace the marketing concept and focus on creating superior customer value. Framework for High-Tech Marketing Decisions Marketing – 4Ps and the Internet } High-Tech Firm Customers Internal Considerations Core Competencies/Core Rigidities Funding Considerations Market Orientation Relationship Marketing R&D/Marketing Interactions Understanding Customers High-tech Research Forecasting Customer Decision-Making Adoption Diffusion of Innovations Target Marketing Societal, Ethical, and Regulatory Concerns Conclusion and Closing Insights Success factors – – – – – – – Marketing philosophy must pervade the entire enterprise. R&D/Marketing integration Know your customers Segment effectively Know their perceptions of value Don’t assume tactical marketing = marketing Customer relationship management for the long-term Marketing Tasks and Responsibilities Core competencies Hire an expert, – but don’t give authority Generate leads, publicity, follow up with customers, manage Website, etc. etc. Downside: – Can you afford not to devote sufficient time to marketing activities? Additional High-Tech Resources Moore, Geoffrey, Crossing the Chasm Ryan, Rob, High-Smartups (Lessons from Rob Ryan's Entrepreneur America Boot Camp for Start-Ups) Ryans, Adrian, Roger More, Donald Barclay, Terry Deutscher, Winning Market Leadership: Strategic Market Planning for TechnologyDriven Businesses Keeping in mind the reason for being in high-tech: