Transcript Document

Diffusion of Innovation
New products in the market
Every year around 5000 new products
appear in the market. However, most
fail and only a few remain ( around
20%). Products which are innovative.
Why does this happen?
Macromarketing issues
• Valuable resources are wasted which might have
been deployed towards more productive uses
• Products that might have helped people do things
more productively or attain higher levels in their
quality of life, fail to be used
• Successful products are those that become
culturally anchored.
Micromarketing issues
• Succesful new product development is an
important element in achieving long term
competitive superiority and profitability,especially
in low growth markets
• New product development plays an important role
in market leadership and profitability. Market
leaders normally have three times higher returns
than firms with lower market shares
• A successful new product can be the beginning of
a whole new company
The value chain
Contemporary firms are being attacked by
competitively on every dimension and
from every direction. The only way to
survive this onslaught is to create a ‘value
chain’ to serve the customer, which will
serve to differentiate the successful firm
from its competitors and will provide
competitive superiority on the critical
attributes of importance to the consumer
What is an innovation?
It is any idea or product perceived by
the potential adopter to be new. New
products are ideas, behaviour or
things that are qualitatively different
from existing forms
Diffusion of innovation
• A process by through which a new product
moves from initial introduction to regular
purchase and use
• A process by which an innovation (idea) is
communicated through certain channels
over time among the members of a social
system – Everett Rogers
Diffusion variables
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Innovation
Communication
Time
Social system
Types of Innovations
• Continuous – modification or improvement of an
existing product
• Dynamically continuous – may involve the
creation of either a new product or the alteration of an
existing one ,but does not generally alter established
patterns of customer buying and product use
• Discontinuous – production of an entirely new
product that causes customers to alter their behaviour
patterns significantly
Innovations include both a hardware
and a software component
The hardware are the physical and
tangible aspects of a product. The
software is the understanding
consumers’ values and lifestyles
Likelihood of innovation success
• Relative advantage – new products that are most likely to
succeed are those that appeal to strongly felt needs
• Compatibility –
degree to which the product is consistent with
existing values and past experience of the adopters
• Complexity – degree to which an innovation is
perceived as difficult to understand and use
• Trialability – the ability to make trials easy for new
products without economic risk to the consumer
• Observability – reflects the degree to which results from
using a new product are visible to friends and neighbours
Types of Innovators
• Cognitive – problem solving, cerebral, new mental
experience
• Sensory – fantasy, day dreaming, hedonistic, thrill
seeking
• Monomorphic - consumers who are innovators for one
type of product
• Polymorphic – consumers who are innovators for
more than one type of product
Characteristics that encourage rejection
• Value barrier
• Usage barrier
• Risk barrier
Speed of diffusion
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Competitive intensity
Reputation of the supplier
Standardised technology
Vertical coordination
Resource commitments
Communication of new products
• Mass media
• WOM
• Homophily – degree to which pairs of individuals who
interact are similar in beliefs, education and social status
• Heterophily – inconsistent with own beliefs and views
The Adoption – Decision Process
Everett Rogers
Knowledge
Persuasion
Decision
Implementation
Confirmation
Adopter classes
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Innovators - 2.5%
Early adopters – 13.5%
Early majority – 34%
Late majority – 34%
Laggards – 16%
Innovativeness
This is the degree to which an individual
adopts an innovation relatively earlier than
others
• Based on time of adoption
• Based on number of new product adoption
Parameters for innovativeness
• Socio-economic variables
• Personality and attitude
• Communication variables
Socio – economic variables
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Education
Literacy
Higher social status
Upward social mobility
Larger-sized units
Commercial orientation
Favourable attitude towards credit
Specialized operations
Personality and attitude
• Empathy
• Ability to deal in
abstraction
• Rationality
• Intelligence
• Favourable attitude
towards change
• Ability to cope with
uncertainty
• Favourable attitude
towards education
• Favourable attitude
towards science
• High aspirations
Communication variables
• Social participation
• Interconnectedness with
the social system
• Cosmopoliteness
• Change agent contact
• Mass media exposure
• Exposure to interpersonal
communication channels
• Knowledge of innovations
• Opinion leadership
• Belonging to highly
interconnected systems
Polymorphism
The degree to which innovators and early
adopters for one product are likely to be
innovators for other products. Consumers
who are innovators for one product are
monomorphic. Consumers who are
innovators for more than one product are
polymorphic.