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SPNpr547 April 29, 2005
Research and Development
often suffers in the pursuit of cutting costs and pushing the hottest,
high-margin sellers
Seattle, WA, USA -- (Jobwerx) -- Keeping It Fresh. The directive for
many companies is to cut costs and push the hottest, high-margin sellers.
But R&D often suffers in the pursuit of such cost-containment measures.
It used to be that you were only as good as your last project; these
days, you're only as good as your next idea.
Here's how to ensure your product pipeline is flowing with imaginative
and innovative ideas.
In 2005, the mantra inside many companies remains simple: Cut costs
and push the hottest, high-margin sellers. But there's been a quiet
casualty in the quest for cost containment and selling more, faster.
R&D is suffering. A recent International Survey Research Corp.
study on American managers found that nearly 40% thought their companies
weren't doing enough to develop new products. Compare this to
1991, when only 21% of managers felt their companies lagged in R&D.
Now, companies' views of R&D are changing. It used to be that you were
only as good as your last project; these days, you're only as good as
your next idea. Kraft Foods Inc. co-CEO Betsy Holden was demoted in
2003 surrounding talk that the company wasn't generating new products
to counter the obesity epidemic. Pharmaceutical giants such as GlaxoSmithKline
are re-energizing new product development to counter Wall Street analysts'
claims that their product pipelines are running dry. McDonald's, meanwhile,
is finding it must continually introduce new menu items to remain competitive.
What's the Big Idea?
"New products aren't an option anymore — they're an absolute requirement,"
says Craig Stokely, who worked in the specialty retailing division of
General Mills and is founder of The Stokely Partnership, a Wayne, Illinois,
marketing and research consulting firm. Instead of being a drain on
the bottom line, R&D can help small companies improve profit margins
when prices are as low as they can go. "If it's unique, you can command
a higher price for it," Stokely says.
"Entrepreneurs excel at creating new ideas, and that's a big advantage,"
says Luda Kopeikina, who worked on reducing cycle times for new products
at General Electric Co. and is now president and CEO of Equanex Corp.,
a Bedford, Massachusetts, consulting firm that advises companies on
innovation processes. "Very rarely do you see large companies good at
innovation, creating ideas and ramping them up," she says. "That, by
its nature, creates opportunity for small companies."
At Signalscape, a Cary, North Carolina, company that makes audio and
visual forensics and surveillance tools for law enforcement, "new product
ideas are generated from customer surveys," says CEO Jhan Vannatta.
But resource allocation is a big challenge for the 35-employee company;
it concentrates on just one or two new ideas a year. "If none becomes
a winner, [we] have a problem," Vannatta says. "But since we're small,
we can quickly move on." When it comes to R&D, smart companies are holding
their own feet to the fire. Gillette, for example, aims for 40% of annual
sales to be generated from products less than five years old. This system
forces the company to think about innovation instead of how to wring
more out of a cash cow. "It's a perfect way to do it," Stokely says.
"It's an attitude, a commitment, and a daily and weekly discipline."
Think about dedicating a percentage of your company's annual sales to
R&D — Signalscape dedicates about 20% annually. "Don't skimp when hiring
talented people who can generate good ideas," suggests Vannatta. And
stay focused on your main customer base, because it's easy to get sidetracked
by the needs of small clients who want features or services that can
be added later. Vanatta says, "Focus on one idea, get it done, then
move on to the next." This kind of focus netted Signalscape $5.2 million
in sales last year.
"Think long term, and forge partnerships to enhance existing designs
and scale your products," says Kopeikina. "Don't neglect inventors who
want to pitch you ideas, either. All you need are a few new ideas every
year to spur collaboration and keep your product pipeline plentiful."
Learning the right way to brainstorm makes a difference, too. "Most
company meetings consist of bringing up an idea, then shooting it down.
Instead, generate a list of ideas before analyzing each one. You'll
open the gates to thinking creatively by separating imaginative thinking
from critical thinking," says Gregg Fraley, a partner with Chicago marketing
and product development consulting firm D.S. Fraley & Associates. He
also suggests having a 15-minute meeting once-a-week where product and
service ideation is the only item on the agenda.
Having a chief innovation officer will take on new importance as globalization,
customization and technology increase the competition for a constant
stream of new products and services over the next decade. For many companies,
it might be time for a new mantra.
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From Sopheon by Chris Penttila a freelance journalist in the Chapel
Hill, North Carolina, area. For more information on this subject, go
to www.entrepreneur.com and www.sopheon.com
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