1 / 36

Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations

Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations. Understanding High-Tech Customers. Critical Issues in Understanding High-Tech Customers. Chapter Outline. Determine Desirable Customers: Choose a Target Market Market Segmentation Process Target Market and Positioning

Pat_Xavi
Download Presentation

Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations Understanding High-Tech Customers

  2. Critical Issues in Understanding High-Tech Customers

  3. Chapter Outline • Determine Desirable Customers: Choose a Target Market • Market Segmentation Process • Target Market and Positioning • Purchase Decisions: Depend on Adopter Category • Factors Affecting Technology Adoption • Categories of Adopters • The Chasm • Timing of Purchase: Depend on Adopter Category and Customer Strategies to Avoid Obsolescence • Migration/Upgrade Decisions

  4. Step 1 in Market Segmentation • Divide market into groups based on different needs across groups and common characteristics within groups • Demographics • Geographics • Psychographics (Values and lifestyles) • Behavioral Variables • Useage Volume • Benefits Sought • Useage Occasion

  5. Step 2 in Market Segmentation • Profile (describe) customers in each segment by specifying a typical customer in the segment.

  6. Examples of Tech Customer Segments: “Technographics”

  7. Examples of Tech Customer Segments: “Technographics” SIDELINED CITIZENS: Not interested in technology

  8. Examples of Tech Customer Segments: “Technographics” HAND-SHAKERS: Older consumers – typically managers – who don't touch their computers at work. They leave that to younger assistants. TRADITIONALISTS: Willing to use technology but slow to upgrade. Not convinced upgrades and other add-ons are worth paying for. MEDIA JUNKIES: Seek entertainment and can't find much of it online. Prefer TV and older media.

  9. Examples of Tech Customer Segments: “Technographics” TECHNO-STRIVERS: Use technology from cell phones and pagers to online services primarily to gain career edge. DIGITAL HOPEFULS: Families with a limited budget but still interested in new technology. Good candidates for the under-$1000 PC GADGET-GRABBERS: They also favor online entertainment but have less cash to spend on it.

  10. Examples of Tech Customer Segments: “Technographics” FAST FORWARDS: These customers are the biggest spenders, and they're early adopters of new technology for individual use. NEW AGE NURTURERS: Also big spenders, but focused on technology for home users such as family PC. MOUSE POTATOES: They like the online world for entertainment and are willing to spend for the latest technotainment.

  11. Step 2 in Market Segmentation • Profile (describe) customers in each segment • EX: Couple A: Age: 44 and 46 Job: Secretary/Maintenance Supervisor Children: 2 (11 and 12 years old) PC: 1 (3 years old) Other: - no internet connections - considering upgrades for speedier games Couple B: Age: 46 and 53 Job: Manager/CPA Children: 3 (7-15 years old) PC: 3 Other: - 2 pagers - go on-line for work

  12. Steps in Market Segmentation • Evaluate and select a target market: • SWOT analysis for the firm and competitors • How many competitors/which competitors to be analyzed? • Size of segment in terms of sales volume • Growth rate of the segment • Competition within the segment • Ability of firm to effectively meet the needs of the segment

  13. Beachhead • Must identify the best “beachhead” • A single target market from which to pursue the mainstream market (starting from the adjacent segments) • Focus on early market or mainstream? • Cannot afford to pursue many segments at once

  14. Step 4 of Segmentation Process • Position the product within the segment • Positioning: the act of designing the company’s offering and image to occupy a distinctive place in the mind of the target market. • Consider customer perceptions (perceived benefit (value)/cost) • Position relative to perceived competition (a distinctive place) • Position on important, compelling attributes/benefits • Would the cost of creating such a product be much higher? • Would customers buy this product by paying a lot? • What is the solution in the trade-off of high quality vs. cost? • Strengthening/Grab unoccupied position/De-position and re-position/Exclusive Club

  15. Factors Affecting Purchase Decision • Customer FUD: uncertain about the benefits and cost • Relative Advantage • Perceived benefit vs. cost • Compatibility • The extent to which adopting and using the innovation is based on existing ways of doing things • Complexity • The easier, the better/ interface (ex: on-line button, stat sw) • Ability to communicate product benefits (HDTV, CPU) • Observability • How easily the benefits be observed by current customers/other customers

  16. Factors Affecting Purchase Decision • An example of Web TV: importance of communicating all unique benefits of a new product • Web TV: a web surfing device (a small box) for TVs • In 1996, internet was exploding/TV is everywhere • Traditional marketing: heavy advertising & dealer training • Problem: target customers didn’t understand the device • Solution: in 1997, an education initiative was launched; customers were explained the benefits of Internet and WebTV • Result: Sales increase 7 times

  17. Final Thoughts on Adoption • These factors are crucial hurdles to overcome in effective marketing. • Marketers must provide compelling reasons for adoption, and overcome customers’ fear, uncertainty, and doubt. • Traditional marketing methods (which assumes customers understand the usefulness of the products and know how to evaluate them) are often insufficient. • Often, must focus more on educating potential users about benefits and how to use new product

  18. Categories of Adopters: Different Characteristics Early Market Chasm Mainstream • Technology-Lover • Test Product • Alternative Solution • Change Agent • Gate Keeper • Competitive Advantage • Revolutionary Product • High Risk/ High Reward • Risk Seeking • High Price • Intensive S&S • Productivity Enhancement • Evolutionary • Reliable Service • Move Together • Industry Standard • Implement Quickly • Risk Averse • Price Sensitive • Bullet-proof Solution • Adopt for Matching Competitors • Don’t Believe in Technology • Remain Status Quo • Adopt When All Other Alternatives Are Worse & Cost Justification Are Absolutely Solid 34% 16% 2.5% 13.5% 34% Time

  19. Innovators: Technology Enthusiasts • Appreciate technology for its own sake (won’t care too much on benefit/cost) • Motivated by idea of being a change agent in the reference group • Will tolerate initial glitches • Will develop make-shift (alternative) solutions • Willing to alpha/beta test and work with technical personnel • Provide early revenue for marketers—but not a large group • Importance: They are the gatekeeper to the next group of adopters

  20. Early Adopters: “Visionaries” • Focus on gaining competitive advantage • Want to revolutionize competitive rules in their industry • Attracted by high-risk/high-reward projects • Not necessarily very price sensitive • Demand customized solutions and intensive tech support • Will supply missing elements of total solution • Product Form Competition: Between categories of solutions (ex: DVD vs. VCD) • Early adopters communicate horizontally (across industry boundaries)

  21. Early Majority: “Pragmatists” • Comfortable with only evolutionary changes in business practices, in order to gain productivity enhancements • Averse to disruptions in their operations • Want proven applications, reliable service • Buy only with a reference from trusted colleague in same industry

  22. Pragmatists (Cont.) • This groups is the bulwark of the mainstream market: • They want to move together (herd mentality) • They want to pick the same technology solution (avoid risk) • Once they make a decision, they want to implement it quickly. • Requires industry standards

  23. Late Majority: “Conservatives” • Risk averse, technology shy • Very price sensitive • Require completely pre-assembled, bullet-proof solutions • Motivated only by need to keep up with competitors in their industry • Rely on single, trusted advisor

  24. Laggards: “Skeptics” • Want to maintain status quo (current condition) • Technology is a hindrance to operations • Buy only if all other alternatives worse and cost justification is absolutely solid

  25. Target Innovators or the Early Majority? • Target the majority when: • Word of mouth effects are low • Consumer products industries (vs. b-to-b) • Low ratio of innovators to majority users (a lot more in majority category) • Profit margins decline slowly with time (still profitable in majority category) • Long time period for market acceptance (longer to cross chasm)

  26. What is the “Chasm?” • Gap between early market and mainstream market— • Visionaries vs. Pragmatists • Visionary market is saturated, but mainstream not yet ready to buy. • Marketing that was successful with visionaries simply is not effective with pragmatists • Intensive services vs. reliable products • Advanced technology vs. complete product package • Customized features vs. simplifying usage

  27. Goal: Minimize time in the Chasm • Look to the new strategies necessary to reach the mainstream market • Pick a single target market with specific application • R&D must: • build interfaces to legacy systems • work with partners • ride the line between service and engineering

  28. Crossing the Chasm Summary • The whole product is the critical success factor • Until a high-tech firm has established itself in the mainstream market, it has not proven itself. • To manage the mainstream market effectively, firm must work with partners in a disciplined fashion (that prioritizes partners so as to provide a “whole” product, including hardware, software, connection, and training,..)

  29. Factors Affecting Rate of Adoption: Customer Strategies to Avoid Obsolescence • Basic Issue: Tension between adopting newest generations of technology and obsoleting investments in prior generations. • Marketing implication: Firms must manage a migration path for customers to the new generation.

  30. What Affects Customer’s Migration Decision? • Expectations about pace of improvements relative to price • A “migration path” is a series of upgrades to help transition the customer to new generations. • Expectation about magnitude of improvements relative to price ** The greater the anticipated product improvements and/or expected price declines, the greater the customer’s propensity to delay purchase. **

  31. Implication: • High-tech firms must provide upgrades that allow firms to take advantage of new technology without scrapping investments in the prior generation.

  32. Managing a Migration Path

  33. Managing A Migration Path • When customers expect a rapid pace in technology advancement: • They will be willing to wait for price declines • Migration assistance (i.e., trade-ins, etc.) mitigates against customer stalling and leapfrogging.

  34. Managing A Migration Path • When customers expect significant magnitude of improvement • They realize smooth upgrading is unlikely • Waiting for price declines may result in purchasing an obsolete product • Therefore, migration path is less crucial, as it is meaningless, to a certain extent

  35. Managing A Migration Path • When customers have uncertainty about expectations: • Migration path makes sense • Sell old and new simultaneously

  36. Cross-Selling • The strategy of pushing new products to current customers based on their past purchases. Cross-selling is designed to widen the customer's reliance on the company and decrease the likelihood of the customer switching to a competitor. • Cross-selling (selling additional products to existing customers) deepens the relationship and improves customer retention, both of which are important for market ownership. Cross-selling prevents competitors from taking customers, and is much cheaper than advertising and searching for new customers.

More Related