A strong consumer-product fit, at the right price, enables a leading market share and prevents development budgets going into products the consumer isn’t even looking for. To get it right, you need to first identify your target consumer segment, i.e., who will benefit from the ideal consumer experience by buying your product. It is often helpful to create a buyer persona to give you an end-to-end understanding of the features to be considered. To understand the persona’s pain points, price expectations and preferences, it’s important to collect real data from end users, including consumer complaints and feedback at every stage of the customer experience. Besides considering your typical persona, you should determine the total addressable market (TAM), which will give you an extensive idea about what features should be included and also excluded.
There are various approaches available to measure consumer-product fit, including the after-use weighted purchase intent (WPI). Securing a leading market share comes from delivering a product portfolio with significant WPI wins compared to the next best competitor product.
2. Speed to market
To be a pioneer, by definition, you must be first. Speed is your competitive advantage, enabling you to react faster to changing consumer needs. Fast movers can position themselves as innovators in the market. Improved time to market accelerates growth from innovations, while reducing (development) time – and money – spent on projects.
A rapid ascent helps maximize returns during peak interest in your product. Shortening your innovation cycle while maintaining the net present value (NPV) per initiative means that you can generate more NPV per year for the business.
3. Resource productivity
Resource productivity is about embracing intelligent ways to reduce and avoid waste. As your product matures on the market, this helps you maintain profit levels. Improving the way you use resources translates into higher organization capacity to handle a larger or more complex initiative portfolio, which has a positive knock-on effect on your increased portfolio NPV and value creation.
Two main approaches to measure resource productivity are:
- Quantify process times in each step of your stage-gate process. We would approach this by performing a value stream map, to visualize with numbers the process steps and the total process duration time.
- Analyze current project portfolio in terms of resource allocation, average project completion time, number of times projects were extended and reasons for delays. Also consider projects completed ahead of schedule and seek to understand the contributing factors.
4. Improved in-market profitability
By implementing innovation excellence from day one, products are more competitive and promise improved in-market profitability over time.