Developing A Product Innovation and Technology Strategy For Your Business
Developing A Product Innovation and Technology Strategy For Your Business
                  A framework for developing a product innovation strategy includes defining innovation goals
                 and objectives, selecting strategic arenas, developing a strategic map, and allocating resources.
    OVERVIEW: Many companies lack a clearly articulated and well-communicated product innovation and technology
    strategy. Such a strategy is essential and is strongly linked to positive performance in product innovation. A framework
    for developing a product innovation strategy is presented, and the various steps of strategy development are described,
    from best-practice ways to define innovation goals and objectives through to the selection of strategic arenas and the
    development of the strategic map. Defining attack plans and entry strategies are also described. Finally, methods for
    resource allocation and deployment using strategic buckets and strategic roadmaps are outlined.
    KEY CONCEPTS: innovation strategy, product development strategy, strategic arenas, strategic buckets, roadmaps,
    entry strategies
I
      n the late 1990s, two large firms were growing by leaps               The result was a renewed innovation strategy and a
      and bounds, driven by the boom in fiber-optic                      three-pronged strategic attack that called for the company
      communications. They were Corning Glass, which                    to grow current businesses via product-line extensions,
    manufactured fiber-optic cable, and Nortel Networks,                 exploit market adjacencies, and create totally new
    which produced the boxes at each end of the cable to                opportunities. The latter two thrusts required a heavy
    convert the light signal into an electronic signal. Then            emphasis on exploratory research and new business
    came the crash of 2000; overnight, both firms’ sales                 development, and thus, in spite of financial difficulties, R&D
    plummeted, and their share prices plunged from over $100            spending was maintained at 10 percent of sales revenue. A
    to about $1. Ten years later, Corning is thriving, whereas          number of new opportunities and strategic arenas were
    Nortel is bankrupt. Why? How did two great and                      identified and assessed, and the most promising were
    innovative companies, facing the same crisis, end up so             exploited. The results were impressive: By 2008, major
    differently a short decade later? One reason for Nortel’s           innovations had been realized in each of Corning’s
    demise is that the company lacked direction and an                  businesses, including the creation of four new business
    innovation strategy after the crash; instead, it limped along       platforms and exploitation of three major market
    from one ad hoc decision to the next. By contrast, Corning’s        adjacencies. New product sales had rocketed to 70 percent
    senior management took charge, developed a strong                   of annual sales, and profits moved from minus $500 million
    product innovation and technology strategy for the firm,             to plus $2 billion after taxes.
    and provided leadership and direction to see that strategy
    through (1). Corning’s management took a hard look at the              The example of Corning offers some important strategic
                                                                        lessons for today, as we emerge from the current re-
    company’s previous 100 years of successes in innovation
                                                                        cession. As the Corning case illustrates, an innovation
    and what drove them. They concluded that the “repeatable
                                                                        strategy is an essential tool for product development and
    keys” to success—the elements in Corning’s culture and
                                                                        continued growth even in difficult times.
    history that they could draw on to face this new
    challenge—were a leadership commitment, a clear
    understanding of the company’s capabilities, a strong
    connection to the customer and a deep understanding
                                                                           An innovation strategy is an
    of major customer problems, and a willingness to take big
    but well-understood risks. Strongly committed to breaking
                                                                             essential tool for product
    out of the crisis through innovation, management                       development and continued
    assessed Corning’s core competencies, determined what
    they could leverage, and matched those strengths to                   growth, even in difficult times.
    emerging and adjacent market opportunities.
            current competitors?                                          Top-performing businesses are much more likely than poor
           Would new products meet customer needs better               performers to have an effective portfolio management
            than competitors?                                           system that helps the leadership team allocate resources to
                                                                        the right areas and to the right strategic projects. Effective
                                                                        portfolio management means that development projects
      The result is the strategic map, with each arena plotted          are aligned with business strategy, and there is the right
    (Figure 4). Arenas in the upper left quadrant—the “good             balance of projects in the portfolio; strong portfolios
    bets”—are those designated as the most promising. These             contain high-value projects with few low-value, trivial
    are where the business should focus its product                     projects. In best-performing businesses, projects are
    development resources. With strategic arenas selected,              correctly prioritized, and there is the right balance between
    idea generation becomes more directed and productive,               available resources and numbers of projects.
    specific projects within each strategic arena can be
    funded, and the entire R&D effort gains focus.                        Many best performing companies use strategic buckets
                                                                        to help in resource deployment decisions. The strategic-
    Develop Attack and Entry Strategies                                 bucket method is based on the concept that translating
    The issue of how to attack each strategic arena should also         strategy from theory to reality is about making concrete
    be part of the product innovation strategy (see Figure 2).          decisions about where resources should be spent.
    For example, the strategy may be to be the industry                 Strategic buckets help management define where the
    innovator, the first to the market with new products, or to          development dollars should go, by project type, by market,
    be a “fast follower,” rapidly copying and improving upon            by geography, or by product area (5). Each project type or
    competitive entries. Other attack strategies might focus on         market or geographic area is represented by a bucket.
                                                                       References
                                                                       1. Kirk, B. 2009. Creating an Environment for Effective Innovation.
                                                                       Presentation given at the Stage-Gate Innovation Summit 2009,
                                                                       Clearwater Beach, FL, February.
                                                                       2. Cooper, R.G., Edgett, S.J., and Kleinschmidt, E. J. 2004.
                                                                       Benchmarking Best NPD Practices—2: Strategy, Resources and
    The pathway begins with the business’s goals and
                                                                       Portfolio     Management       Practices.      Research-Technology
    objectives and culminates with resource deployment                 Management 47(3), pp. 50–60.
    decisions using strategic buckets and strategic roadmaps           3. Parts of the remainder of this article are taken from R.G. Cooper
    to put the strategy into practice.                                 and S.J. Edgett, Product Innovation and Technology Strategy
                                                                       (Hamilton, ON: Product Development Institute, 2009).
    If you’re thinking that your business lacks such a clearly         4. For an outline of portfolio management methods, including
    articulated innovation strategy, and that maybe now is the         strategic buckets, see R.G. Cooper, S.J. Edgett, and E.J.
    time to lay the groundwork for developing such a strategy,         Kleinschmidt, Portfolio Management for New Products, 2 ed.
    you’re probably right on both counts. But a word of                (Reading, MA: Perseus Books, 2002) and R. G. Cooper, S.J. Edgett,
                                                                       and E.J. Kleinschmidt, Optimizing the Stage-Gate® Process: What
    caution: this does take considerable time and effort. Senior
                                                                       Best Practice Companies Are Doing—Part II, Research-
    management (and support staff) must be prepared to
                                                                       Technology Management 45(6), pp. 43–49.
    make the time available and commit to the hard work
                                                                       5. This section is taken from R.G. Cooper, Your NPD Portfolio May
    involved. But the reward is worth the effort, as evidenced         Be Harmful to Your Business’s Health, PDMA Visions 29(2), pp.
    by the results achieved by those businesses that have              22–26; for a more in-depth discussion on strategic buckets see
    developed a product innovation strategy.                           Portfolio Management for New Products, pp. 123–136.
                                                                       6. For more on roadmaps, see R.E. Albright and T.A. Kappel,
                                                                       Roadmapping in the Corporation, Research-Technology Management
                                                                       46(2), pp. 31-40; A. McMillan, Roadmapping—Agent of Change,
                                                                       Research-Technology Management 46(2), pp. 40–47; and M.H.
                                                                       Myer and A.P. Lehnerd, The Power of Product Platforms (New
    About the Authors                                                  York: Free Press, 1997).
                                                                       7. The term “product roadmap” has come to have many
    Scott J. Edgett is CEO and co-founder of Stage-Gate                meanings. Here we mean a strategic roadmap, which lays out the
                                                                       major initiatives and platforms the business will undertake well
    International. He is also a faculty scholar with ISBM at
                                                                       into the future, as opposed to a tactical roadmap, which lists each
    Penn State University’s Smeal College of Business
                                                                       and every product, extension, modification and version.
    Administration. A specialist in new product development
                                                                       8. The term “technology roadmap” also has several different
    and portfolio management, he received his PhD in marketing         meanings. Here we use the term to denote a plan for the
    from Bradford University. He has consulted and written             business’s expected technology developments or acquisitions; by
    extensively in the field, with over 60 published articles and      contrast, the term “technology roadmap” is sometimes used to
    seven books. His latest book (co-authored with Robert              describe an industry technological forecast laying out what new
    Cooper) is Product Innovation and Technology Strategy.             technologies are anticipated in an industry.
                       This article appeared in Research Technology Management, May-June 2010, Vol 53, pp. 33-40.
© Stage-Gate International                                www.stage-gate.com                                            +1.905.637.8797
                                                                                                                                  Page | 6