Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Product Planning
Product Planning
Takes place before
product development project is formally approved substantial resources are applied, and the larger development team is formed
It is an activity that considers the portfolio of projects that an organization might pursue and determines what subset of these projects will be pursued over what time period.
Product Planning
What product development projects will be undertaken? What mix of fundamentally new products, platforms, and derivative products should be pursed? How do the various projects relate to each other as a portfolio? What will be the timing and sequence of the projects?
Mission Statement
What market segments should be considered in designing the product and developing its features? What new technologies should be incorporated into the new product? What are the manufacturing and service goals and constraints? What are the financial targets for the project? What are the budget and time frame for the project?
The Process
Competitive Strategy
Defines a basic approach to markets and products with respect to competitors such as:
Technology leadership Cost leadership Customer focus Imitative
Technology leadership
The firm places great emphasis on R&D
Cost leadership
The firm competes on production efficiency, either through economies of scale, use of superior manufacturing methods, low-cost labor, or better management of the production system. Methods employed: Lean Mfg., DFM, etc.
Imitative
Closely follow trends in the market, allowing competitors to explore which new products are successful for each segment. When viable opportunities have been identified, the firm quickly launches new products to imitate the successful competitors. A fast development process is essential to effectively implement this strategy.
Market Segmentation
Customers can be usefully thought of as belonging to distinct market segments. Dividing a markets allows the firm to consider the actions of competitors and the strength of the firms existing products with respect to each welldefined group of customers.
Technological Trajectories
In technology-intensive businesses, a key product planning decision is when to adopt a new basic technology in a product line. For example, shift to digital image processing and printing from light-lens technology. Technology S-curves are conceptual tools to help think about such decisions.
Technological Trajectories
The technology S-curve displays the performance of the products in a product category over time, usually with respect to a single performance variable such as resolution, speed, or reliability. The S-curve illustrates that:
Technologies evolve from initial emergence when performance is relatively low, through rapid growth in performance, and finally approach maturity where some natural technological limit is reached and the technology may become obsolete.
Technological Trajectories
While S-curve characterize technological change remarkably well in a wide variety of industries, it is often difficult to predict the future trajectory of the performance curve (how near or far is the ultimate performance limit).
Technology Roadmaps
Mission Statement
The mission statement may include some or all of the following information:
Brief (one-sentence) description of the product Key business goals Target market(s) for the product Assumptions and constraints that guide the development effort Stakeholders
Mission Statement
Exercises
1. Conduct a search using the Internet or published corporate annual reports to identify the corporate strategy of a company in which you might be interested in investing. Learn about the firms product lines and its newest products. How do these products support the corporate strategy? What types of projects would you expect to see in the product plan?
Exercises
2. Create a product-technology roadmap illustrating the availability of technologies for a class of products you understand well, such as personal computers.