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From Experience: Why Bad Things Happen to Good New Products
Author(s) -
Rackham Neil
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of product innovation management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 144
eISSN - 1540-5885
pISSN - 0737-6782
DOI - 10.1111/1540-5885.1530201
Subject(s) - enthusiasm , product (mathematics) , marketing , new product development , business , public relations , psychology , political science , social psychology , geometry , mathematics
The rollout of a new product can be an exhilarating time for everyone involved in the development and launch effort. Just as a construction crew may meet at a local gathering place to hail the “topping‐off” of a new home or office building, the development team—or possibly the entire company—may gather to celebrate a new product's release. Launch meetings generate enthusiasm among the salespeople, and favorable reviews lead to an influx of inquiries from prospective customers. Despite this initial wave of enthusiasm, however, customer desire for the innovative new product may soon wane. Does this mean that everyone was wrong about the new product's potential? Citing three examples of launches that followed this pattern, Neil Rackham addresses a key question for product development professionals: “Why should promising products from highly respected companies fail despite clear evidence of market need, strong marketing support, and real enthusiasm and energy from salespeople?” Based on his own experience in these three cases, as well as research investigations into elements of these and other launches, he rejects the conventional wisdom that the problem stems from resistance to change on the part of either the customers or the salespeople. He suggests that the problem rests with the way in which highly innovative products are launched to the salesforce, which in turn influences the manner in which the products are sold. He notes that the launch of an innovative product typically focuses on all the great new features the product offers. However, the new features that make the product so exciting may draw the salesperson's attention away from the most important issue in the selling process: the customer's needs. In other words, he suggests that the launch and the selling of innovative products tend to be product‐centered instead of customer‐centered, causing customer interest to fade as the selling process progresses. Rather than fill the salesforce with details about a product's “bells and whistles,” he suggests that the launch should focus on describing the product in terms of the problems it solves for the customer. Similarly, rather than bombard customers with details about product features, he suggests that the salesperson should focus on asking questions. In this customer‐centered approach, the product's features are considered only in terms of the manner in which they meet the customer's needs.

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