The Nitty-Gritty
of Product Management
by Tim Smith, February 22, 2002
<back|
|next>
In bringing new technologies to market, the whole
team focuses on the vision. Developers are led by architects offering
visions of clean architecture and working on the next new thing.
Customers are led by sales executives offering visions of increased
business profits or better consumer lifestyles and being the innovators
among their peers. Financiers are led by CEOs offering visions of
60% ROI, market dominance in a growing field, and being able to
say they financed the latest Intel.
Unfortunately, Hi-Tech products must eventually become
more than visions. At the vision level, hi-tech products can capture
the innovator segment. Yet the real profits come from capturing
the mainstream market. To get to main-street, not only must new
hi-tech products fully deliver to the promises of the Vision in
a simple, easy manner; but they must also handle the objections
of the naysayers. Fortunately, the naysayers objections appear to
be predictable in the business market regardless of the technology
being sold.
Comparing Business Applications to Wireless Network
Servers from Cisco and Cambia Networks reveals a remarkable similarity.
It appears that there are seven common objections of naysayers that
must be addressed in capturing the main stream market. These are:
Security, Sharing, Updates, Implementation, Training, Scalability,
and Flexibility.
Security: Emperors fear of being caught with no clothes
on. Give them security. In the Business Application market, products
provide security at the table, record, and field level and grant
access to individuals, groups, or predefined roles. In the Wireless
Server market, it is about encryption, WEP, VPN, and a host of other
acronyms.
Sharing: Data is great, but only if you can get to
it. In Business Applications, it is about interfaces, middleware,
and message handling. For Cisco and Cambia, it is interoperability
, standards, and NIC cards.
Updates: Hi-tech is only Hi-Tech when it is new. Then,
it's guaranteed to be obsolete long before its useful lifetime has
expired. Provide a path to manage this change. For Business Applications,
it is about upgrade strategies, modules, releases, and service contracts.
For Cisco, its about backwards compatibility and an upgradeable
network .
Implementation: How many home-projects have you started
to find it was too complicated for you to finish? Please deliver
the whole solution either through Value Added Resellers, Consultants,
or In-house delivery arm. For business applications, it is about
conversion, interfaces, and customization. Cisco has a VAR channel
while Cambia would be glad to do it for you.
Training: Cool idea, but where does this wire go?
Business Application firms learned long ago that they had to train
end-users. Likewise, Cambia includes this in their service offering.
Scalability: We all recall the Amazon story and how
their network failed. The same is true in business applications
from call centers to billing solutions. For business applications,
it is about multi-threading, stateless objects, parallel processing,
and relational databases. For Cambia Networks, it is in their open,
modular architecture.
Flexibility: The only thing constant is change, and
even that has a fluctuating rate of change. For business applications,
it is about enabling changes in the business rules, plug-ins, templates,
and a host of other mechanisms. For Cambia Networks, it is in load
balancing.
These seven common objections can be addressed in
any reasonable product plan. It isn't as much fun as selling a vision,
but it is profitable. To the Miller Heiman sales folk the naysayers
are the Technical Buyers and while naysayers never enable the sale,
they can always block it. Here is the ammunition Sales Executives
need to close that next sale. Likewise, to the product managers
the naysayers are those who have held some customers at Main Street
while others were knocked-down at the Bowling Alley. These objections
are the bases to cover while delivering on that 40% annual growth
rate for three consecutive years. Spending time in the nitty-gritty
of Hi-Tech product marketing by handling these seven common naysayer
objections paves the way for delivering on that vision of changing
the world through technology.
---
Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach. www.wiglaf.biz.
----
The May Report, February 22, 2002
<back|
|next>
|