Literature DB >> 16579418

Manage customer-centric innovation--systematically.

Larry Selden1, Ian C MacMillan.   

Abstract

No matter how hard companies try, their approaches to innovation often don't grow the top line in the sustained, profitable way investors expect. For many companies, there's a huge difference between what's in their business plans and the market's expectations for growth (as reflected in firms' share prices, market capitalizations, and P/E ratios). This growth gap springs from the fact that companies are pouring money into their insular R&D labs instead of working to understand what the customer wants and using that understanding to drive innovation. As a result, even companies that spend the most on R&D remain starved for both customer innovation and market-capitalization growth. In this article, the authors spell out a systematic approach to innovation that continuously fuels sustained, profitable growth. They call this approach customer-centric innovation, or CCI. At the heart of CCI is a rigorous customer R&D process that helps companies to continually improve their understanding of who their customers are and what they need. By so doing, they consistently create or improve their customer value proposition. Customer R&D also focuses on better ways of communicating value propositions and delivering the complete experience to real customers. Since so much of the learning about customers and so much of the experimentation with different segmentations, value propositions, and delivery mechanisms involve the people who regularly deal with customers, it is absolutely essential for frontline employees to be at the center of the CCI process. Simply put, customer R&D propels the innovation effort away from headquarters and the traditional R&D lab out to those closest to the customer. Using the example of the luggage manufacturer Tumi, the authors provide a step-by-step approach for achieving true customer-centric innovation.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16579418

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Harv Bus Rev        ISSN: 0017-8012


  1 in total

Review 1.  Level of evidence of the value of care in federally qualified health centers for policy making.

Authors:  Kevin Frick; Leiyu Shi; Darrell J Gaskin
Journal:  Prog Community Health Partnersh       Date:  2007
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.