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Converting Technology to Wealth Workshop

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Title: Converting Technology to Wealth Workshop


1
  • Converting Technology to Wealth Workshop
  • Module 2
  • Market Research

2
Define the Opportunity
  • You dont know your customer as well as you think
    you do
  • Ready, fire, aim is a sure way to find surprises,
    usually not good surprises
  • Market validation is a continuous process based
    in direct connections to your customers and
    partners

3
Validate the Marketplace
  • Market validation
  • Know your customer
  • Know what is important to the customer
  • Explore the pain
  • Envision the solution
  • Find the quality influencers, get the product
    right
  • Establish credibility

4
Research Stages
  • Project definition
  • Project execution
  • Project analysis
  • Project results dissemination

5
Project Definition
  • Understand the internal dynamics of the
    stakeholders
  • Understand the goal of the research
  • Understand what decision is being made
  • Understand the strengths and weaknesses of the
    company
  • Understand the commercialization options

6
Project Definition Exercise (30 minutes)
  • Define the goals of the research
  • List key questions to be answered or key
    information that needs to be gathered
  • Try to guess who will know or where you will be
    able to find the information sought

7

From Lab To Business

Market Research Methods
8
Gathering Information
  • Primary Research
  • Internal Primary Research
  • External Primary Research
  • Secondary Data Collection
  • Internal Sources
  • External Private Sources
  • External Government Sources

9
Primary Market Research
  • Creates data through interviews and other direct
    feedback mechanisms
  • Addresses the specific technology and information
    needs
  • Relies on the skill of the interviewer or
    questionnaire design
  • Delivers real-time feedback to the researcher

10
Listen to the Voice of the Customer
  • Understand what is really important
  • Understand customer motivations
  • Understand the buying cycle and how decisions are
    made
  • Provide a sanity check to the internal
    perceptions of the technology

11
Getting Feedback on Benefits
  • Expected level of quality of the product
  • Linear performance quality improvements may not
    be enough
  • Exciter qualities can be the real sellers
  • may not be the obvious ones to the technology
    developer
  • may become expected qualities over time

12
Internal Primary Sources
  • Interview the inventor or analogue
  • Brainstorm with other internal technical experts
  • Brainstorm with the sales staff that have direct
    interaction with customers
  • Beta test the technology with internal customers

13
Internal Primary Research
  • Benefits
  • Interviewees have a keen understanding of the
    technology and its possibilities
  • Research is fast and inexpensive
  • Researcher gains an understanding of how the
    technology fits into the internal goals and
    product mix
  • Drawbacks
  • Can be myopic and rely on unfounded market
    assumptions

14
External Primary Sources
  • Collecting data directly from the marketplace
    through
  • Phone Surveys
  • Mail Surveys
  • E-mail and Newsgroups
  • Focus Groups
  • In-depth Customer Interviews

15
In-Depth Interview Advantages
  • Provides background data on the marketplace
  • Answers specific questions
  • Ensures the right experts are contacted
  • Examines corporate buying behavior
  • Identifies industry trends

16
In-Depth Interview Advantages
  • Follows a theme with one respondent from
    beginning to end
  • Has a flexible structure that can be modified as
    learning occurs
  • Topics can be expanded upon
  • Identifies other industry players to contact

17
Goals of In-Depth Interviewing
  • Use open ended questions and conversations to
    uncover
  • perceptions, opinions, beliefs and attitudes
  • Understand the motivating buying factors
  • Qualitative data that informs the quantitative
    research

18
Interviewer Qualities
  • Good interviewing skills
  • good listening, clear communication
  • An eye for detail without getting lost in the
    trees
  • Ability to appear genuinely interested
  • Interest in the subject and the interview results

19
Learn the Customers Language
  • Never assume you know what they are talking about
  • Question every nebulous term
  • Dont be afraid of asking the obvious
  • They are the experts, acknowledge that and use it
    to your advantage

20
Types of Responders
  • Yeasayers - only tell you the good
  • Ask them to pin down why it is good
  • What would a benefit mean to them?
  • Naysayers - only tell you the bad
  • Ask why a benefit or feature is not important
  • Ask for suggestions on how to make it better
  • Use them to identify barriers and improvements to
    the technology

21
Telephone Interviewing
  • It can be the right tool when
  • interviewing busy executives
  • your interview population is geographically
    dispersed
  • interviewing people for their knowledge
  • speed is important
  • You hear the voice of the customer

22
Primary Market Research Tips
  • Techniques to get responses
  • Emphasize benefit to responders of their input
  • Know who you want to talk to
  • Offer pre-market use of the technology
  • Offer beneficial items for responding
  • Allow time for the research to be done
  • Conversations are good

23
Ask Open-Ended Questions
  • Encourage speaker to talk at length rather than
    enable a yes or no answer
  • Who
  • What
  • When
  • Where
  • Why
  • Decrease the probability of asking leading
    questions

24
Summarize and Paraphrase
  • Briefly rephrase the information given by the
    speaker in the listeners own words
  • Shows you are listening and that you understand
    what the speaker is saying
  • Helps you make sure you do understand
  • Allows speaker to expand, but does not suggest
    the listener agrees
  • Gives the listener time to comprehend what was
    said

25
More Clarifying Needed!
  • Comparators
  • Better/Worst
  • Under/Over
  • Slow/Fast
  • Early/Late
  • Ahead/Behind
  • Less/More
  • Example
  • Our software is better.
  • Response Better compared to what?

26
External Primary Market Research
  • Benefits
  • Tailored to company needs
  • Real time feedback
  • Answers specific questions
  • Feedback on specific products/services
  • Drawbacks
  • Can be expensive and time consuming
  • Strategy/product direction may be publicized

27
Secondary Market Research
  • Collects information that already exists
  • Provides comprehensive data that can be further
    analyzed
  • Provides industry quantitative data
  • Provides general industry data rather than data
    specific to the technology or business
    proposition being researched
  • Provides historical or trending data

28
Internal Secondary Sources
  • Mine past internal research reports
  • Collect secondary sources that are already
    in-house
  • purchased reports and subscription data
  • customer lists and contacts
  • collected competitor information
  • reports and directories of associations that the
    company belongs to

29
Internal Secondary Research
  • Benefits
  • Fast and inexpensive
  • Internal secondary sources could uncover good
    internal primary sources
  • Information may already be tailored to the
    company or product line
  • Drawbacks
  • Data may be out of date
  • Sole reliance on past reports may compound past
    biases

30
External Secondary Private Sources
  • Collect research reports that already exist on
    the web or in libraries
  • Purchase existing research reports from market
    research firms
  • Gather compiled company data, e.g.
    DunnBradstreet (US and Europe)
  • Gather trade group compiled data
  • Visit competitor Web sites
  • Mine university libraries for sources

31
Fee Databases
  • General sources can provide clearinghouses
  • Dialog, www.dialog.com
  • OneSource, www.onesource.com
  • Specific industry sources can provide difficult
    to find or unique information
  • www.vlsiresearch.com
  • www.imshealth.com

32
Web Surfing Shortcuts
  • Use compiled Web resource lists from universities
  • Use compiled Web resource lists from
    organizations
  • http//computer.org/internet/links.htm
  • Use private search tools
  • http//www.delphion.com

33
External Secondary Private Research
  • Benefits
  • May be inexpensive
  • Accumulates quantitative data
  • Gives a macro view of the market
  • May give insight into competitors market and
    financial positions
  • May answer specific questions about market
    share, demographics, and buying habits

34
External Secondary Private Research
  • Drawbacks
  • Data can be out of date
  • Data categories may be overly broad
  • Information usually cannot address specific
    technology questions
  • The most interesting data can be expensive

35
Surfing Tips
  • Develop a search plan
  • Who else would be interested in the information
  • If an agency regulates it, they probably collect
    information on it
  • If you think the information should exist, it
    probably does

36
Searching Tips
  • Slow down and read what you find
  • Go to the source when you find interesting
    information
  • Pick up on new buzzwords and phrases and search
    using them
  • Bookmark when you find good sources

37
External Secondary Government Sources
  • Trade bureaus for international trade assistance
  • Census Bureau for business and company
    demographic information
  • Federal agencies for data and reports on relevant
    industries
  • Patent databases for competitive technology
    information

38
Trade Bureau Secondary Data
  • US International Trade Administration
  • Excellent source of industry information from
    across the globe
  • Country and region primers on business practices
    and opportunities
  • http//www.ita.doc.gov/

39
Departments of Statistics
  • Source for demographic and business statistical
    information
  • Source for hundreds of compiled industry reports
  • Business reports are more prevalent than
    population reports
  • Most publications are free and on the Internet

40
Individual Agencies
  • More than 70 US federal agencies collect data and
    issue reports in relevant industries
  • Identify agency interest areas and search the
    agency sites
  • Use the US federal clearinghouse site of
    http//www.fedstats.gov/

41
Patent Office
  • Search for competitive technologies using
    advanced search capabilities
  • Download full text patents with pictures
  • Search the trademark database
  • Link to other nations patent sites
  • Link to international patent treaties

42
Government Secondary Data
  • Benefits
  • Data can be trusted and pedigree is clear
  • Data is usually free and Internet available
  • Data may be very detailed
  • Data can be found for most industries in most
    countries or regions
  • Drawbacks
  • Data can be out of date
  • Data categories may be overly broad

43
The Internet Factor
  • Access to secondary information has become much
    easier and cheaper with the explosion of the
    internet
  • The old paradigm was library research with paper
    reports and books
  • The new paradigm is electronic library research
  • Learn by surfing, find sites, techniques, and
    information that is critical to you

44
Examples of Local Information Sources
  • What has been useful to you?

45
From Lab To Business
46
Vijay Jollys Model of Technology
Commercialization
47
Arriving at a Techno-Market Insight
  • Parallel activities
  • Technology exploration
  • Generating new understanding
  • Arriving at a good model or proof of principle
  • Market exploration
  • Preliminary need
  • Need to be explored for commercialization

48
How to Arrive at the Dual Insight
  • Context of the research
  • Idea for a future new product
  • Solving a customers problem
  • Reaction to competitor moves
  • Exploring new principles to build a general
    capability
  • All paths can lead to commercially viable products

49
Build the Research Environment for Commercially
Viable Products
  • Customer driven does not mean customers are sole
    source of ideas
  • Pursue problems deeply
  • Be prepared for serendipity
  • Alternate between push and pull
  • Curiosity driven research in the right market
    context

50
Speeding Up the Dual Insight
  • Commercialization is a willful act
  • Accelerate the rate of experimentation
  • Working on known problems
  • Not just short term problem solving but problem
    solving in depth
  • Greater contacts between researchers and the
    market

51
Mobilizing Interest and Endorsement
  • Bringing a new technology to market is an
    exercise in resource assembly
  • Agree?
  • Importance of reaching out to external
    stakeholders?

52
How to Get Early Buy In
  • Dispel criticism and convince others
  • Allow others to verify the idea
  • Have a good model
  • What are the consequences of not dispelling
    criticism early?

53
Understand Support Criteria of Different
Organizations
  • Venture capital
  • Individuals and commercial potential
  • Private companies
  • Strategic fit and risk/return profile
  • Broad estimates of need
  • Government agencies
  • Sociopolitical and technical merits
  • Generic technology
  • High risk

54
Reach Out to Others for Support
  • Mobilizing interest is enabled by sharing
  • Share information with peers
  • Collaborative research
  • Wide involvement in the development process, both
    internal and external

55
Communicating the Vision
  • Create champions and remove roadblocks
  • Balance promotion and secrecy
  • Create pull without hype
  • Danger of hype?
  • Communicate broadly and individually
  • Sustain stakeholder interest with progress

56
Incubating the Technology
  • Technology must be made commercializable
  • Build expected value
  • Size of payoff
  • Probability of success
  • Moving towards commercial viability
  • Achieving technical milestones
  • Conceiving of attractive applications
  • Assembling IP

57
Adding Commercial Value
  • Achieving technical milestones
  • Cross a functional threshold
  • Rapid progress
  • Mobilize other researchers
  • Conceiving multiple applications
  • Look beyond the initial context
  • What do you want to protect?
  • Build a portfolio of applications
  • Link intellectual property to commercial strategy
  • When and how much to patent?

58
The Innovators Solution
  • Concepts

59
Types of Innovation
  • Sustaining Innovation
  • Better products
  • Sold to existing, attractive customers
  • Incumbents have the advantage
  • Disruptive Innovation
  • Simpler, more convenient product
  • Sells for less money
  • Goes after new or unattractive customers
  • New entrants have an advantage

60
Reasons Disruption Works for New Entrant
  • Target market is unattractive customers or
    non-consumption
  • Incumbents likely will not fight for the market
    share
  • Allows focus on serving a set of customers needs
  • Low end customers get good enough products at
    low cost
  • New customers get simplicity and convenience

61
Two types of Disruption
  • New-market Disruption
  • New customers enabled by simplicity, portability
    or product cost
  • After a foothold is gained, sustaining
    improvements increase market share
  • Examples pocket radio, PC, cellphone
  • Low-end Disruption
  • Addresses least profitable, over served existing
    customers
  • After a foothold is gained, go up market
  • Examples minimills, Wal-Mart, Kia

62
New Market Disruption Litmus Test
  • Large population, previously not able to purchase
    due to lack of money, equipment or skill
  • Previously, customers had to go to an
    inconvenient centralized location

63
Low-end Disruption Litmus Test
  • Are there over served customers looking for good
    enough products
  • Can the business model make profit at lower end
    discounted prices
  • Is the innovation disruptive to all significant
    incumbents

64
What Is Disruptive
  • Disruption is not just about technology
  • Business models can be disruptive with no
    significant technology advances
  • Very innovative technologies may not be
    disruptive at all
  • Disruption is ultimately about how you make money
  • Who are the customers
  • What problems are you solving

65
Using Market Research
  • Find out what jobs customers are trying to
    accomplish (leads to the selling benefits)
  • Best way to do this is to observe and ask the
    customers
  • Understanding the customer is more critical than
    quantifying and segmenting the customers and
    market

66
Sustaining the Disruption
  • How do you sustain growth with low end disruption
    from good enough products?
  • Go up market
  • How do you sustain growth with new market
    disruptions?
  • Choose the right improvements by understanding
    your customer
  • Segment to avoid one size fits all

67
Why Incumbents Segment Poorly
  • Fear of focus
  • May lead to more focused products than more
    generally capable products
  • Demand for quantification of opportunity
  • Segment based on easy information to gather
  • Structure of channels
  • Potential misfit with channel partners
  • Advertising economics
  • Focus impacts economies of scale

68
Other Takeaways from Christensen
  • To act like start-ups large companies need to
  • Do more than defend market share
  • Grow in new markets
  • Validate the market constantly and focus on the
    pain
  • Create smaller units
  • Keep RD vital
  • Harness entrepreneurial energy
  • Create autonomy and intrapreneurship
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