High Tech Strategy II

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Transcript High Tech Strategy II

Marketing Strategy in High-Tech Markets II

The Big Group Smack Down!

Define “High-Tech” and why are hi tech markets particularly dynamic?

What do you consider the

most important barriers to adoption

of the Wearable Computer

?

Give an example of what you would consider a radical innovation (tech or no tech) and develop a short definition .

Contingent on the type of innovation, the role of marketing differs. How?

What would you call these and what do they have in common?

“Unit-one costs of HT products are often high, payback cycles of a new HT products shorter and shorter.”

  Why is this so? As a marketing consultant, what do you recommend a company do that has a breakthrough product on its hand ready to launch?

 Why are High-Tech markets particularly dynamic?

 No established rules of the game  Significant size economies  low entry barriers.

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Barriers of Adoption

 Perceived value  Institutional support  Observability  Compatibility  Ease of use  Reliability

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Continuum of Innovations

Incremental

•Extension of existing product or process •Product characteristics well-defined •Competitive advantage on low cost production •Often developed in response to specific market need •"Demand-side" market

Radical

•New technology creates new market •R&D invention in the lab •Superior functional performance over "old" technology •Specific market opportunity or need of only secondary concern •"Supply-side" market

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Contingency Theory

Marketing Strategy Type of Innovation

-Breakthrough -Incremental

New Product Success

Type of marketing strategy is contingent upon the nature of the innovation.

Examples of Implications of Contingency Theory:

Breakthrough Incremental

R&D/Marketing Interaction “ technology push” “customer pull” Type of Marketing Research Lead users; developers Surveys; focus groups Role of Advertising Primary demand; customer education Selective demand; build image May be premium More competitive Pricing

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 Muskets/then machine guns  Steam ships  Automobiles  PCs  Digital photography

What is a disruptive technology?

    Disruptive technologies typically have worse performance, at least in the near term. But: They have features that a few fringe and generally new customers value and which represent a key source of competitive value in the future. Products based on them are typically cheaper, simpler, smaller and frequently more convenient to use - often representing a new product architecture, design, and even market (category). They often bring a new and different value proposition.  See Christensen: “The Innovator's Dilemma”

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Characteristics Common to High-Tech Markets: Supply Side

  “Unit-one” costs: reproduction when the cost of producing the first unit is very high relative to the costs of  Ex: development vs. reproduction of software Demand-side increasing returns : When the value of the product increases as more people adopt it    Also called network externalities and bandwagon effects Ex: telephone, fax, MS Word Implications: may give away products for free (IM)

Characteristics Common to High-Tech Markets: Supply Side

 Tradeability problems technology arise because it is difficult to value the know-how which forms the basis of the underlying  Ex: How much to charge for licensing the rights to a waste-eating microbe?  Knowledge spillover: Another type of externality that arises from the fact that technological developments in one domain spur new developments and innovations in other areas.

 Ex: Human Genome Project

Common, Underlying Characteristics of High-Tech Markets: Demand Side Perspective

Market Uncertainty   Technological Uncertainty Competitive Volatility Market Uncertainty

Marketing of High-Technology Products & Innovations

Technological Uncertainty Competitive Volatility

Market Uncertainty:

     FUD factor Customer needs Anxiety over the lack of standards and dominant design (Laserdisc, DVD, DivX) Pace of adoption Inability to forecast market size

Technology Uncertainty:

     Will it function as promised? Timetable for new product development?

Who will fix customer problems?

What are unanticipated/unintended consequences?

(When) Will our technology be obsolete?

Competitive Uncertainty:

    Who will be future competitors?

What will be “the rules of the game” (i.e., competitive strategies and tactics)?

What will “product form” competition be like?

 competition between product classes vs. between different brands of the same product Implication: Creative destruction?

Effects of Uncertainty?

  Adoption rate!

There are five variables that have been cited as responsible for speed of technology adoption:  Relative Advantage: the degree to which an innovation is perceived as better than the idea it supersedes     Compatibility: the degree to which an innovation is perceived as consistent with existing values, technologies, past experiences, and needs of potential users Complexity: the degree to which an innovation is perceived as relatively difficult to use and understand Trialability: the degree to which an innovation may be experimented with on a limited basis

Observability: the degree to which the results of an innovation are visible to others

(Wow-factor).

 Rogers, “Diffusion of Innovation.”

Diffusion Rates

     The printing press (~1440):  400 years (1833, NY Sun).

The automobile (1885):  75 years (market saturation in US around 1960) The telephone (1876):  85 years (full saturation in the 1960s) The fax machine (1843):  140 years (late 1980s) The Internet (1968)  35 years

Value: Perceived Need-Perceived Price

 Variables essential to the successful uptake of technology: 

Providing an infrastructure

Providing a function

Providing the right price point

Providing a compelling need to buy (make it a necessity).

Telegraph! Faster than Phone…Why?

  Morse presented prototype of the electric telegraph to the US Congress in 1838 by 1873 Western Union had carried more than twelve million messages    creation of the infrastructure which supported it.

cheap and predictable rates.

a shared language (global communication).

What is a disruptive technology?

 Muskets/then machine guns  Steam ships  Automobiles  PCs  Digital photography

What is a disruptive technology?

    Disruptive technologies typically have worse performance, at least in the near term. But: They have features that a few fringe and generally new customers value and which represent a key source of competitive value in the future. Products based on them are typically cheaper, simpler, smaller and frequently more convenient to use - often representing a new product architecture, design, and even market (category). They often bring a new and different value proposition.  See Christensen: “The Innovator's Dilemma”

Continuum of Innovations

Incremental

•Extension of existing product or process •Product characteristics well-defined •Competitive advantage on low cost production •Often developed in response to specific market need •"Demand-side" market

Radical

•New technology creates new market •R&D invention in the lab •Superior functional performance over "old" technology •Specific market opportunity or need of only secondary concern •"Supply-side" market

Supplier vs. Customer Perceptions of Nature of Innovation

Breakthrough Mismatch: Delusion Incremental Mismatch: Shadow

Contingency Theory

Marketing Strategy Type of Innovation

-Breakthrough -Incremental

New Product Success

Type of marketing strategy is contingent upon the nature of the innovation.

Examples of Implications of Contingency Theory:

Breakthrough Incremental

R&D/Marketing Interaction “ technology push” “customer pull” Type of Marketing Research Lead users; developers Surveys; focus groups Role of Advertising Primary demand; customer education Selective demand; build image May be premium More competitive Pricing

Marketing Strategy in High-Tech Markets II

The Big Group Smack Down!

      Define “High-Tech”.

What do you consider the most important barriers to adoption

of the Wearable Computer

? Give an example of what you would consider a radical innovation and develop a short definition.

Contingent on the type of innovation, the role of marketing differs. How?

Give an example of what you would consider a disruptive technology and develop a short definition.

“Unit-one costs of HT products are often high, payback cycles of a new HT products shorter and shorter.”   Why is this so? As a marketing consultant, what do you recommend a company do that has a breakthrough product on its hand ready to launch?

 Why are High-Tech markets particularly dynamic?

 No established rules of the game  Significant size economies  low entry barriers.

 Continuous shortening of product life cycles, which if true leads to a serious dilemma: => High first part costs in innovation phase is associated with shorter pay-back cycles!

Concentrated vs. Differentiated

 Pros and Cons?

 Strategic Implications?

 (Segmentation, timing, participation)

S

TP

High innovation costs plus shortening PLC means strategically: 1) 2) Enter as many market segments as possible at the same time to shorten pay-back time.

Develop a broad geographical strategy as low entry barriers allow competitors to exploit uncovered territory.

S

T

P

Three Entry Options:    Pioneers Early Followers Late followers What are some pros and cons of each?

S

T P

Strategic Considerations: 1) 2) 3) Differentiation versus Standardization?

Price-Quantity (cost utility) versus preference oriented (buyer utility)?

Customer-orientation versus competitor orientation?

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