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MODELING LIKELY UPTAKE OF FUTURE TECHNOLOGIES

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How does the consumer' go from pre-aware' to aware' Word of mouth? Solicitation? ... Base demand for MOBI is higher than for standard PDA; but decline based on price ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MODELING LIKELY UPTAKE OF FUTURE TECHNOLOGIES


1
MODELING LIKELY UPTAKE OF FUTURE TECHNOLOGIES
  • Timothy Devinney
  • Director, Centre for Corporate Change, Australian
    Graduate School of Management
  • Jordan Louviere
  • Faculty of Business, University of Technology
    Sydney
  • Tim Coltman
  • University of Wollongong

2
Who would have guessed ..
  • That this technology
  • Would become this technology!

3
Or ..
  • That this technology
  • Would become this technology!

4
Or, that these two ideas would become one .


5
Technology assessment prediction The dilemma
  • Rewards to technology developers do not
    necessarily accrue to the best technologies but
    to companies that are best able to match
    appropriate technologies to the latent user
    needs.
  • In most cases there are major gaps between what
    firms marketing research (defined broadly) can
    tell them, and what they consider to be
    appropriate scientific developments
  • There are limits to marketing research as
    normally construed,
  • Many developers are skeptical about the ability
    of marketing research to penetrate into unknown
    futures.
  • As technologies become more radical and gaps
    between initial development and market uptake
    lengthen, likelihood of failure rises for two
    primary reasons
  • The more radical a technology, the more difficult
    it is to predict how users will react, and
  • The longer the time between initial development
    and market uptake, the more likely management
    will be involved more intensively in later stages
    of projects, when projects are least likely to be
    cancelled.

6
The opportunity
  • Firms that can forecast uptake more accurately
    should be able to improve innovation hit rates,
    and even slight improvements may position them to
    redefine industries on their own terms, and save
    Ms in sunk RD costs due to
  • More accurate design of technologies
    products,
  • Less errors in forecasting market uptake,
  • Ability to structure timing of new generations of
    technology,
  • Being able to influence uptake curve evolutions,
    and
  • Knowing when to get on and off uptake curves.

7
Limitations of marketing research methods
  • Traditional market research techniques are
    ill-suited to deal with environments in which
  • Technology users lack proper contexts with which
    to understand technology applications and their
    potential value to users.
  • e.g., 20 years ago how many computer users
    understood or could foresee that the main use for
    home PCs would be internet communication?
  • The evolution of a technology matters as much as
    the mature technology itself.
  • e.g., current use of communication technology is
    related to past technologies that were available
    to us.
  • No technology stands in isolation consumers
    typically use a specific technology in
    combination with complementary technologies.
  • e.g., the future of current 3G phones will be due
    less to phones per se and more to 3rd-party
    software that can/will drive applications.

8
A new way forward Information acceleration
  • Information acceleration (IA) was developed by a
    team of MIT marketing academics in the early
    1990s who recognised that traditional methods
    failed to forecast uptake accurately due to
  • Not providing accurate information to potential
    users about relevant aspects of new
    technologies/products
  • Not simulating learning processes associated with
    new innovations and their evolutionary paths and
  • Not recognising that individuals organisations
    make decisions choices about technolgies/product
    s, and that market outcomes depend on these
    elemental behaviours.

9
Conceptual background to IA
  • How real markets evolve

Pre-Launch
Pre-Awareness
Awareness
M A T U R I T Y ?
Interest
Post-Launch
Capability
Option Evaluation ?? Choice Set Formation
Choose Now
Delay Choice
Never Choose
A, B, , N
10
What traditional methods do
  • Traditional Marketing Research Concept Test

Pre-aware Consumers
Best 12 Guesses About Future
How Likely Are You To Do X?
11
Whats missing/needed?
  • Need to recognise that the future is a
    combinatorial problem.
  • Not 1 future many possible futures many
    possible technologies/products.
  • 12 guesses about futures is a sample of size
    12.
  • Need to understand model the impact of
    information learning technological evolutions
    on user choices.
  • Information has different sources sources have
    different credibilities impacts consumers
    choose/use sources of information differently.
  • Need to understand model (combinations of)
    possible new technologies products, not just
    12 guesses of what users might/should want.
  • Need to understand how potential users value
    different combinations of possible new
    technologies what they are willing to pay for
    them.
  • Need to identify, understand forecast how
    different types of potential users are likely to
    react to different future technologies/products.

12
How to provide whats missing/needed
  • The future is a combinatorial problem
  • Futures are defined by variables like
    technologies that may/may not exist, complements
    that may/may not be in place, economic
    conditions, etc.
  • Information sources of information about
    technologies products are combinatorial
    problems various sources of information can be
    used, information can have different levels
    (including source credibility).
  • Possible new products are a combinatorial
    problem
  • All technologies/products consist of components
    or features
  • Features of products take on various values or
    levels
  • Each combination of levels is a different
    product.
  • Combinatorial problems have experimental design
    solutions and IA allows us to make use of this
    fact to develop effective forecasting

13
A generic approach to IA structure
Entry Experiment
Context Experiment
Information Experiment
Choice Experiment
  • Entry experiment
  • How does the consumer go from pre-aware to
    aware
  • Word of mouth?
  • Solicitation?
  • Context experiment
  • Is there contextual variation in the market
  • Number of competitors?
  • Stability of dominant design?

14
A generic approach to IA structure
Entry Experiment
Context Experiment
Information Experiment
Choice Experiment
  • Information experiment
  • Full information at time t
  • Attributes?
  • Advertising?
  • Testimonials?
  • Supporting information?
  • Demonstrations/usage?
  • Choice experiment
  • Attribute trade-offs

15
First example MOBI
  • The first example of IA is a voice recognition
    WIFA PDA called MOBI
  • MOBI (also known as INCA) was developed by Claude
    Sammit and his team at Computer Science at UNSW
  • Limited functionality that includes the ability
    to match seamlessly with ones computer and the
    internet
  • Commands include the ability to get news,
    weather, currency information plus make
    appointments, notes and other typical PDA
    functions
  • First test was a simple one of the information
    and choice experiments only
  • Alternative product configurations where a
    standard PDA with a declining price profile

Information Experiment
Choice Experiment
16
Information conditions
17
Advertising conditions (lifestyle productivity)
18
Media articles (positive, negative neutral)
19
Testimonial conditions (young/old x male/female)
20
Seeing it being used (use seen varied by
condition)
21
Choice experiment structure
22
Estimates of base MOBI choices (market shares?)
23
Product Features PDA and MOBI Impact on
probability of choice
24
Price and cross-price effects
Base demand for MOBI is higher than for standard
PDA but decline based on price increase is
similar
Cross-price effects are similar
25
Role of information conditions (conditional) on
choice
26
Second example bank website
  • The second example used more advanced multimedia
    both early in the IA experiment and in the choice
    experiment and utilised the full 4 stage approach

Entry Experiment
Context Experiment
Information Experiment
Choice Experiment
  • People received information about the
    availability of the new product in three ways
  • The context allowed for security and trust in the
    site to vary
  • Information varied advertising, testimonial and
    media attention
  • There was a full scale demo of the new product
  • Choice was based on switching from existing
    product to variants of the new product

27
Discussion conclusions
  • Information acceleration allows for more robust
    and expanded evaluation of technologies, both
    existing, and more importantly imagined and
    radical
  • A lens into the mind of the future consumer
  • The logical link between choice modeling and
    information acceleration allows for specific and
    accurate forecasting
  • Good science, intuitively applied
  • The information accelerator allows for quite
    extensive testing and manipulation of the
    environmental context and technology before full
    development
  • Future scenarios can be tested
  • The information accelerator allows for the
    development of advances in our understanding of
    how to model user needs and in how we
    mathematically/statistically estimate this
  • Move beyond simple surveys
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