|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
From drones to wearable technology to Hyperloop pods that can
potentially travel more than seven hundred miles per hour, we're
fascinated with new products and technologies that seem to come
straight out of science fiction. But, innovations are not only
fascinating, they're polarizing, as, all too quickly, skepticism
regarding their commercial viability starts to creep in. And while
fortunes depend on people's ability to properly assess their
prospects for success, no one can really agree on how to do it,
especially for truly radical new products and services. In
Innovation Equity, Elie Ofek, Eitan Muller, and Barak Libai analyze
how a vast array of past innovations performed in the marketplace
from their launch to the moment they became everyday products to
the phase where consumers moved on to the "next big thing." They
identify key patterns in how consumers adopt innovations and
integrate these with marketing scholarship on how companies manage
their customer base by attracting new customers, keeping current
customers satisfied, and preventing customers from switching to
competitors' products and services. In doing so, the authors
produce concrete models that powerfully predict how the marketplace
will respond to innovations, providing a much more authoritative
way to estimate their potential monetary value, as well as a
framework for making it possible to achieve that value.
It would be difficult to find a CEO today that would not rank
"innovation" as one of the top means by which a firm can sustain
growth and survive a harsh competitive environment. However, it is
unlikely that many CEOs would place "Marketing" as one of the top
functions in charge of formulating innovation strategy or ensuring
the success of an innovation initiative. Marketing and Innovation
Management discusses why marketing has been perceived as being less
relevant for innovation strategy and explains how this can be
remedied. Recent work by marketing scholars holds the promise of an
increased marketing impact on innovation decision-making. Marketing
and Innovation Management reviews the role marketing plays at the
early phases of innovation management when decisions are being made
on new products and services. Marketing's role in innovation
management can be reinforced by shifting marketing input to
innovation and by moving the focus away from quantifying consumer
input through surveys and toward uncovering qualitative insights by
engaging and observing consumers. This monograph addresses the
topic of understanding customer adoption and the diffusion of
innovations. The authors review recent developments and demonstrate
how marketing concepts and frameworks fit with and enrich those
proposed in other disciplines. Finally, Marketing and Innovation
Management examines the launch of innovation into the marketplace
and how recent trends are changing how marketers approach this
critical task. Marketing and Innovation Management provides an
understanding of what marketing can bring to the table when it
comes to setting innovation strategy and proposes a way to approach
research in this domain so that it has the intended effect of
helping firms integrate the customer perspective.
|
You may like...
Widows
Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, …
Blu-ray disc
R22
R19
Discovery Miles 190
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.