Georgia State University Product Innovation Paper
Description
Instructions
This week, you will start working on your Final Project – The Product Development Plan. Your plan will consist of three parts.
Part I ®bsp;Outline (Unit 5)
Outline
Part II ®bsp;Phases 1-3 (Unit 6)
Title Page
- Introduction
Reference Page
Part III ®bsp;Phases 4-5 (Unit 7)
Title Page
- Introduction
- Conclusion
- Reference Page
In this unit Part I:
Identify the product and create an outline of your document.
Referring to the “The Phases of the New Product Process” found on Page 30, Figure 2.1, identify the five (5) stages and write a plan on an innovative new product of your choice. Provide a brief description under each Phase sub-heading.
- Phase 1: Opportunity Identification and Selection
- Phase 2: Concept Generation
- Phase 3: Concept/Project Evaluation
- Phase 4: Development
Phase 5: Launch
Identify each section with the appropriate sub-heading and provide a Title page and References page.
For Part III you will add it to what was submitted in Unit 6 to provide a Final Report in Unit 7 containing all Phases, an Introduction and Conclusion, as well as the Title page and a References page.
It is fine to use a similar Introduction for Parts II and III, and the Final Report, but build on the Introduction each time so that your Introduction for the Final Report reflects the changes or additions for phases 4 and 5.
The Outline for Part I only needs to be submitted in Unit 5 and does not need to be included in your Unit 7 assignment.
Unformatted Attachment Preview
Chapter 1.
The Phases in the New Products Process
Figure 2.1 shows a more detailed version of the new products process. Letàexamine each of the phases
individually to understand the basics.
FIGURE 2.1 The Phases of the New Products Process
30
Phase 1: Opportunity Identification and Selection
The first phase is strategic in nature; successful completion of this phase yields strategic guidance to the
new products team, which guides idea generation and all remaining phases in the new products process.
At least three main streams of activity feed strategic planning for new products. They are as follows.
îgoing marketing planning. Example: The annual marketing plan for a CD-ROM line calls for a line
extension to meet encroachment of a new competitor selling primarily on price.
îgoing corporate planning. Example: Top management adopts a strategy that says either own a
market (meaning get either a first- or second-place share) or get out of it. This will require new product
activity in all desirable markets where the firm holds a minor position.
ðecial opportunity analysis. One or more persons (in the firm or a consulting firm) are assigned to take
an inventory of the firmàresources (people, facilities, reputations, whatever). Example: A firm in the
auto parts business called for an audit of its manufacturing operation. It turned out that manufacturing
process engineering had been overlooked or just not appreciated; that skill could serve as the base for a
new products program.
From these activities, the opportunities identified can be sorted into four categories. Here are
illustrations:
n underutilized resource: A bottling operation, a strong franchise with dealers, or that manufacturing
process engineering department.
`new resource: DuPontàdiscovery of Surlyn, a material with hundreds of potential uses.
n external mandate: The market may be stagnant, the competition may be threatening, or customer
needs may be evolving. Challenges like this will cause the firm to search for new opportunities, as did
the Tasty Baking Company in the case at the end of this chapter.
n internal mandate: Long-range planning often establishes a five-year-out dollar sales target, and new
products people often must fill part of the gap between current sales and that target. That assignment is
called the product innovation (and/or acquisition) gap. Other common internal mandates are simply
upper management desires, such as Steve Jobsàstated goal to ¥invent the phone7ith the iPhone
project.2
The process of creatively recognizing such opportunities is called opportunity identification. The
opportunities are carefully and thoroughly described, then analyzed to confirm that a sales potential
does, indeed, exist. Recall that one of the first things P&G Cosmetics did was recognize that the new
products process for
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