Have you noticed that all B2B new product innovation is not equal? Some new products deliver enormous profits for years or even decades, carrying whole businesses and careers on their sturdy shoulders. And then there are the tired, the poor, the huddled masses of wretched new products you wish were on your competitors’ teeming shores.
What separates them? Our work at AIM indicates blockbuster products must meet six conditions, not just four or five. That would be like getting four or five digits right in a six-digit lottery… after you paid a lot to play.
Click here to learn 12 Rules for High-Impact New Product Ideas
It’s rare for a product to nail all six conditions. Let’s consider four of the most common and damaging failure modes to keep our B2B new product innovation on track.
Failure #1: Don’t Bother… Please No significant need exists: Customers in the target market segment are content with what they have today. (Sure, they’d like lower prices… that never goes away.) As illustrated, the out-of-touch supplier develops a solution for an imaginary need. The spending to develop this product creates negative net present value (NPV) for the supplier.
Failure #2: Nice Shot, Wrong Target In this case, the customers have very real unmet needs. Our supplier misses these, instead developing a product based on internal, preconceived notions and a desire to push his really cool technology. If the repairman fixed your washing machine when your dryer was broken, would you pay him? Neither will these customers.
Failure #3: Right Product, Wrong Price Now our supplier is doing better: Customers are happy because he uncovered and met their important needs. Maybe too happy. He identified their needs, but didn’t understand how much value customers would reap using his product. As a result he left a lot of money on the table when he set his product pricing. The best B2B new product innovation not only creates value for customers, but it captures a share back for the business.
Failure #4: Here Today, Gone Tomorrow Solid NPV is delivered due to good market homework, good problem solving and good pricing. This has not gone unobserved by competitors. Unfortunately, our supplier has not blocked them using patents or other means… preventing a good financial story from becoming a great one.
When does the B2B vs. B2C distinction REALLY matter? Click here to learn more.
What’s holding back B2B new product innovation at your business? What if you could change the company DNA so new product teams habitually drive for all six conditions? Sound tough? It actually isn’t so complex if you notice a repeating pattern in each failure mode: It’s all about the up-front work. Put another way, the left side of each failure mode graph drives the right side:
There are actually two success modes, not one. The obvious one is Success Mode A, in which the supplier “rings the bell” on all six conditions. Deliver just a few more of these and you’ll be wildly successful.
But don’t ignore Success Mode B: You thoroughly search the market segment, but find no unmet needs. So you walk. May not sound heroic, but it’s the only way to ensure enough resources for Success Mode A. Remember: Your unwillingness to walk degrades your ability to win. So encourage teams to drop projects customers don’t care about. Celebrate these decisions and step briskly on to the next opportunity.
Click here to learn about how innovation metrics can properly orient the B2B enterprise for growth.
Today, the story of B2B new product innovation can be a story of wasted resources & opportunities. As with quality and productivity improvements in recent decades, that story will certainly change in the future. But for now, you can easily waste fewer resources & opportunities than your competitors. While that may not sound inspirational, it is a powerful competitive edge. Just tip the scale from failure modes to success modes with solid up-front work.
The AIM Institute offers a complete system for winning at this up-front work called New Product Blueprinting. It’s finely-tuned just for B2B producers and is all about implementation: combining a skills-intensive workshop, a complete toolset featuring Blueprinter® software, along with follow-up coaching and tracking. Learn more about Blueprinting here or contact us and we’d be happy to discuss it further with you.
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