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Bus 632 : The Commercialization

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Bus 632 : The Commercialization & Marketing of High Tech Products. Session 2 ... as customers wait for price declines, bug fixes or newly launched versions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bus 632 : The Commercialization


1
Bus 632 The Commercialization Marketing of
High Tech ProductsSession 2
  • Instructor Paul Weber
  • Office Schlegel Centre SBE 2218
  • Phone 571-1773
  • Email paul_at_webercommunications.com

2
Agenda for Tonight
  • Speaker Bill Scott, VP Operations, Navtech Inc.
  • Discussion of Readings
  • Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • Six Chasms In Need of Crossing

3
Speaker Bio Bill Scott
  • Current Role
  • Vice President of Operations for Navtech Systems
    Support Inc., a world leader in providing
    software solutions to the aviation industry. .
  • Bill is responsible for leading Operations
    Support, Installation Management, Technical
    Support, QA, Documentation, Training, IT System
    Admin. and Release Management
  • Prior to Navtech
  • VP Marketing, Checkfree I-Solutions
  • Director of Marketing, Electrohome Projections
    Systems
  • Product Management NCR
  • Other
  • Founding member of the High Tech Product
    Development P2P Group at Communitech
  • Education
  • Honours Business from Wilfrid Laurier University,

4
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • What factors influence a customers potential
    adoption of new technology?

5
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • Five Factors Affecting Customer Purchase
    Decisions
  • Relative advantage
  • Benefits of adoption vs.. The cost of adoption
  • Compatibility
  • The extent to which adoption is based on
    standards (how much change is necessary to
    adopt)
  • Complexity
  • How difficult is the product to use
  • Ability to communicate product benefits
  • How easy is it to communicate the benefits to
    prospective customers
  • Observability
  • How easy is it to see the benefits of use

6
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • What is the Chasm?
  • Compare and contrast the marketing strategies
    that are necessary in the early market versus the
    mainstream market?

7
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
Early Market Strategies Marketing to
Visionaries Require custom products and tech
support Pros - First customers cash flow -
Establish reputation - highly technical dont
expect or require whole product - best
product wins Cons - resources required to
support are not sustainable - takes the
company down many different paths - not
referencable for pragmatists
C H A S M
Mainstream Market Strategies Marketing to
Pragmatists Require a whole product end to end
solution Typically requires partnerships to be
able to provide
Whole Product / Solution Sale
Technology Sale
Technology Enthusiasts
Pragmatists
Conservatives
Laggards
Visionaries
8
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • What are the three phases of the pragmatist
    market (from Inside the Tornado)?

9
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • Main Street
  • Growth stabilizes. Infrastructure is in place.
    Focus on selling extensions of products to
    current customer base.
  • The Tornado
  • Period of mass market adoption driven by a
    killer app or a technology based on a universal
    infrastructure.
  • Swamps existing system of supply. Opportunity to
    develop distribution channels and requires strong
    partnerships

Alternative Customer Intimacy
Product Leadership
C H A S M
  • Bowling Alley
  • Focus on vertical niches and build niche specific
    whole product s, partner extensively and create
    de facto standard in the market

Technology Enthusiasts
Pragmatists
Conservatives
Laggards
Visionaries
10
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • What makes a good beachhead?

11
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • Things to consider when looking for a Beachhead
  • Meaningful leadership to adjacent segments
  • Leverage credibility in one segment into the next
  • Compatibility between capabilities and whole
    product requirements
  • A single, compelling reason to buy that maps
    closely to the capabilities of the firm.

12
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • How can marketers manage concerns migration paths?

13
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • How can you manage transitions between
    generations
  • Withdraw the older generations soon as the new
    one launched, with no assistance to install base.
  • Force migration
  • Withdraw the older generation when the new one is
    launched but offer migration assistance
  • Can be in the form of tech. assistance, trade
    ins, backwards compatibility. Customers can
    upgrade and maintain the old version or move to
    the new version later.
  • Sell old and new generations together for a time.
  • Customer can continue with installed version A,
    migrate to generation B or skip (Leapfrog) B and
    go directly to C.
  • Sell both generations as long as the market
    desires

14
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
  • What issues drive the decision on which migration
    path to offer?

15
Reading 1 Understanding High-Tech Customers
16
Reading 2 Six Chasms In Need of Crossing
  • What were the top things that you took away from
    this reading?

17
Reading 2 Six Chasms In Need of Crossing
  • The six chasms
  • Chasm or the Mind Chasm
  • Gulf between established constructs and
    fundamental new paradigms
  • The New Business Model Chasm
  • The rift caused by business model change
  • The Break-With-The-Past Chasm
  • Fissure between current offerings and new and
    improved offerings that are not compatible
  • The Disruptive-Technology Chasm
  • Discontinuity between a new product that may not
    initially be seen as improved
  • The Expedient-Fix / Strategic-Solution Chasm
  • The breach between products that are temporary
    fillers and ones that are long term strategic
    offerings
  • The Chasm Between Early and Mainstream Markets
  • Geoffrey Moores gap between visionaries in early
    markets and pragmatists in mainstream markets

18
Next Week
  • Session 3 January 20, 2004
  • Topic Adoption of New Technologies The
    Customers Perspective
  • Readings Royal Bank CRM Case
  • Getting IT Spending Right This Time, The
    McKinsey Quarterly, 2003 Number 2
  • Speaker Ted Brewer, Vice President, VP,
    Royal Bank (www.rbc.com)
  • Rick Makos, President, Teradata Canada
  • Petr Zima, Vice President, Teradata Canada
    (www.teradata.com)
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