What would you say is the most overlooked practice in new product development today? Understanding customers’ in-depth needs? I agree this is critical… but not all that overlooked. Most suppliers understand how important it is to understand the “voice of the customer,” and many are actively trying to get better. I’m grateful that I get to work with many B2B suppliers in many industries around the world. Based on what I’ve seen, the most overlooked practice is competitive benchmarking for B2B markets. What is benchmarking for B2B? Let’s begin at the beginning… in the “front end.”
At this point, you have not even started actual product development. In many cases, rigorous competitive benchmarking isn’t even seriously considered here, and this has large, unpleasant consequences.
How much does the “B2B” distinction matter, anyway? Click here to learn the relevant differences.
I have yet to meet a B2B supplier who is not interested in developing differentiated new products. Products that will enthuse customers… help customers make or save money… induce customers to open their wallets wider. Of course, differentiated products must be… different. But different from what? Different in what ways? Different to what extent? Seldom are these questions adequately addressed.
Most suppliers say they want to deliver value to their customers. But no customer will pay more for a product that matches existing value… only for one that exceeds it. Perhaps it would be better for suppliers to get into the habit of saying they need to deliver value beyond the customer’s next best alternative.
You’re guessing, hoping for the best, and doing this with scarce and costly resources.
So this brings us to the real problem: When developing new products, most suppliers do not quantitatively understand the customer’s next best alternative. If you’re in this position, how can you know a) your design targets, b) how you will price your new product or even c) whether your project is worth pursuing? Without this knowledge, you’re guessing, hoping for the best, and doing this with scarce and costly product development resources.
So let’s look at four practical steps when benchmarketing for B2B markets that you can build into the front end of your new product development process.
I recently attended a conference in which Alberto Savoia of Google said, “Make sure you are building the right ‘it’ before you build ‘it’ right.” In other words, make sure you first understand the “outcomes” or end results your customers care about. It doesn’t matter how fast you climb a ladder if it’s propped up against the wrong building.
It doesn’t matter how fast you climb a ladder if it’s propped up against the wrong building.
I find this to be a huge problem for most suppliers. Let’s say you’re developing a new welding machine. You like your chances of success because your new product will provide a smoother bead, is more portable, and has more power options. Terrific. What your customers really care about is faster set-up time, reduced energy consumption, and productivity data collection. You can test, improve, and brag all you want on the first three outcomes, but if you miss the latter three you’ll lose when customers “vote.”
If you’ve read any of our other materials, you know I’m passionate about using two types of interviews to understand these outcomes: qualitative Discovery interviews, followed by quantitative Preference interviews. If someone says they “know” what customers want and they don’t have hard quantitative data to support this, be very nervous. When benchmarking for B2B, it pays to insist upon good research first.
I once won our college doubles table tennis championship… only because I was “carried” by a much better player. I was feeling pretty good about this until we went to the regional tournament and set a new speed record… for being eliminated. For your target market segment, you need to understand the world-class competitors and set your sights on beating them. Smart venture capitalists won’t invest in products unless they aspire to capture at least 30 percent market share… because that’s how products make serious profits. Identify the very best so you benchmark and exceed their performance on customers’ key outcomes.
Click here to learn about the 7 steps of New Product Blueprinting
There are many ways your prospects and customers can help you identify these world-class competitors. An ideal time to have this discussion is when you’re conducting a front-end customer interview and they are already telling you what needs to be improved. Here’s a pitfall to avoid when benchmarking for B2B markets: Don’t just identify products that look like yours. Sure, make sure you understand the capabilities of other welding machines… but don’t overlook mechanical fasteners and structural adhesives, if these are viable alternatives for your customers.
Let’s say things are going well: You’ve identified the outcomes customers care about and the competing alternatives. At some level, you need to “test” these alternatives, and you need to do this in the front end to create a firm design for the development stage. What test methods will you use? We recommend asking for test methods in quantitative Preference interviews. Then consider five questions:
Don’t fall into the trap of using test methods that are convenient or comfortable for you. It’s all about the expected customer experience. How can your testing simulate the value customers seek in key outcomes?
Exercise good judgment on the level of rigor you use. In many cases, our clients do competitive benchmarking using laboratory or field conditions. In other cases, though, this could be overkill: The cost to conduct physical testing may simply be too high this early in the project. In such cases, you can use panel comparison or expert prediction as a substitute for direct measurement.
There’s still one more question that needs to be answered: “How good is good enough?” For instance, if competing welding machines take ten minutes to set up and your new product design calls for five minutes, will customers be impressed? If your setup time was one minute, would they really care if it’s lower?
At AIM, we’ve pioneered a subtle but powerful methodology within New Product Blueprinting that gives you this information from those Preference interviews. I won’t be offended if you skip the rest of this paragraph—which gets a little “thick”—but here’s a brief description of how we do this: In Preference interviews, we ask customers to rate both Importance and Satisfaction for each outcome on a scale of 1 to 10. On the satisfaction scale, 5 = “Barely Acceptable” and 10 = “Totally Satisfied.” Later in the interview, we ask for recommended test methods and ask what test result level would constitute—you guessed it— barely acceptable and totally satisfied. This allows our clients to analyze data that integrates both customer needs and competitor capabilities and lets them create truly differentiated new product designs. (Most other quantitative interview methodologies use forced rankings, blinding them to a) this competitive analysis, and b) over-served markets.)
The most dangerous stage-gate conversations are the ones that don’t take place.
So what do you do with this information? How do we move forward with a plan to “up your game” when benchmarking for your B2B markets. First, you could start by requiring a serious discussion on customers’ next best alternatives during your stage-gate reviews. What do we know about these alternatives, how do we know this to be true, what do we need to better understand, and how is our new product design stacking up? The most dangerous stage-gate conversations are the ones that don’t take place. You could miss a brilliant opportunity to modify or kill a new product project.
Second, look for ways to begin this benchmarking for B2B approach without overloading your already-overloaded staff. When we work with clients, we help them make this as easy as possible. Weave much of this work into your customer interviews. And start with lower levels of rigor at first, increasing rigor later as appropriate. For more information, check out our Blueprinting overview and take advantage of all the free resources we’ve made available. Good luck with delivering great, differentiated new value!
Finally, there truly are B2B differences that the leader and innovator must understand. Click here to learn about the relevant differences when pursuing B2B as opposed to B2C markets.
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