Voice of Customer Methods: The Link to the Best New Product Ideas

Voice of Customer Methods: Where new product ideas begin

New products drive your future. Unless you work for the Dear Leader north of the 38th parallel, you know new products determine business growth, customer reception, competitive response, and career prospects. And all products— blockbusters and duds alike—begin with an idea that comes from somewhere. Is your company looking for what customers will love in all the wrong places? Turns out the source of a new product has a big impact on its success: Voice of Customer methods.

Voice of Customer Methods – the impact

Dr. Robert Cooper, one of the leading experts in this area, published a study titled Voice of Customer Methods: What Is the Best Source of New-Product Ideas?1 It was impressive research involving 150 companies (mostly B2B), and it explored the effectiveness and popularity of 18 idea sources. Here are some of the lessons learned:

Lesson 1: We’re getting timid

For many years, Dr. Cooper has tracked the types of new products being introduced, ranging from incremental product tweaks to blockbuster innovations. While companies have been saying they want more of the latter, they have been getting more of the former. Since the mid-1990s, new-to the-world products decreased by over 40 percent, and modifications to existing products increased by nearly 90 percent.

Click here to learn more about Dr. Cooper’s contributions to the New Product Development Process

In this and other studies, Cooper found the key to success is a “proficient ideation front-end.” Of several factors studied, the most impactful way to increase sales from new products is to improve the way ideas are sourced and managed. But what would the role of voice of customer methods be?

Lesson 2: Voice of Customer methods work best

The 18 sources of new product ideas were grouped into three categories: Voice of Customer (VOC), Open Innovation, and Other. VOC methods seek to understand customers first-hand, through dialogue and observation. @aim_institute. Open Innovation occurs when a company reaches beyond its own technical resources to bring in external ideas and technologies. “Other” methods include patent mining, internal idea capture, etc.

WHO should execute the VoC process? Click here to learn more about the product manager role in B2B. 

What did the 150 firms say was the most effective? Hands down, it was VOC. The study included 8 Voice of Customer methods, and these took 8 of the top 9 spots (out of 18 total).

Two Voice of Customer methods were rated as the most effective of all: customer visit teams and ethnography. In the former case, a multi-functional supplier team of two or three individuals visits the customer and conducts a well-crafted interview. In the latter, the customer’s operation is observed, often through a tour or “camping out.”

Lesson 3: We still don’t get it

In some ways, Dr. Cooper’s work is less of a revelation than a confirmation of prior studies. Nearly 40 years ago, one study showed “inadequate market analysis” to be the leading cause of new product failures. A more recent study on global innovation showed “direct customer engagement” leads to 3X growth in profits. The drumbeat goes on.

Yet, what did this study show to be the most commonly used source of new product ideas? Was it Voice of Customer methods? Alas, no, it was Internal Idea Capture. After all these years, suppliers are still deciding what customers want by sitting around their own conference room tables. Only 13 percent of respondents were extensively using ethnography (customer observation), and only 31 percent were using customer visit teams.

The “Knowing-Doing” Gap

By the 1980s, Japanese automakers—taught by the American statistician Dr. Edwards Deming—had developed a strong competitive advantage in the area of quality. In this and other industries, many suppliers took decades to close the quality gap… even though they were clearly suffering a competitive disadvantage.

Now turn the clock forward to today: On average, over 50 percent of R&D work is devoted to unsuccessful products… so this area is even more wasteful than poor production quality ever was. We have ample research explaining what to do better, clear examples of how to do better (e.g., 3M), and plenty of incentive to do better. And it’s likely—as in the case of automotive quality—that we eventually will do better. Yet most companies will fail to give themselves this competitive advantage while it’s still an advantage, not an emergency. What’s with that? Why the slow adoption of voice of customer methods?

It’s the corporate version of a New Year’s resolution, with results just as impressive.

Consultants call this the “knowing-doing” gap. It’s the corporate version of a New Year’s resolution, with results just as impressive. I am sympathetic, because closing the knowing-doing gap means changing behavior… never easy to do. It means changing other people’s behavior… even tougher. And today, it means doing this with very busy people.

I’ll close on a more cheerful note: For over ten years, AIM has focused almost entirely on customer visit teams and customer tours… the two most highly rated Voice of Customer methods. During the first three years, we were primarily optimizing New Product Blueprinting itself…  developing the  Voice of the Customer tools (Blueprinter® software), and it is now a leading but stable methodology practiced on six continents.

For the last several years, AIM has focused mostly on changing behavior. The good news is that organizations are making great strides in this area. Some companies have dozens of interview teams out there doing great customer interviews and tours when no one is looking. I find it inspiring. If you’d like to discuss what we’ve learned about what does and doesn’t work, please contact us to let me know.

How significant is the factor of “B2B vs B2C” in Voice of the Customer Methods? Click here to learn more. 

 

 

 

1Stage-Gate Reference Paper #40 by Robert G. Cooper and Angelika Dreher. pp. 38-48.

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