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Ethnography Workshop Stakeholder Analysis Defining Product Attributes

Ethnography Workshop Stakeholder Analysis Defining Product Attributes. Robert Monroe Innovative Product Development February 24, 2011. By The End Of Class Today, You Should:. Be able to identify important stakeholders that you need to consider as you develop your POG into a product concept

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Ethnography Workshop Stakeholder Analysis Defining Product Attributes

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  1. Ethnography WorkshopStakeholder AnalysisDefining Product Attributes Robert Monroe Innovative Product Development February 24, 2011

  2. By The End Of Class Today, You Should: • Be able to identify important stakeholders that you need to consider as you develop your POG into a product concept • Understand how your ethnographic observations and other research can be used to identify the most important Value Opportunities and Product Attributes • Have a better understanding of how combining the artifacts from your observations and research can be used to provide a deeper understanding of the needs, wants, and desires of your target customers

  3. Phase 2 Overview: Understanding The Opportunity Gate1 Gate2 Phase 2 • Phase 1 outputs: • POG statement • JTBD’s • SET Factors • Scenario(s) • Value analysis (graphs, attributes) • Phase 2 activities: • Look, listen, learn • Stakeholder analysis • Ethnography: • - Interviews • - Field observations • Story and scenario generation • Task analysis • Detailed secondary research • Detailed data analysis • Phase 2 outputs: • Prioritized value opportunities • Detailed scenarios • Prioritized product attributes • Prioritized stakeholder list

  4. Stakeholder Analysis

  5. Stakeholder Analysis: Key Concepts • A stakeholder is a person or group of people who are purchase, use, maintain, or are in some way affected by the purchase, use, maintenance, etc. of the product or service • You will rarely delight all stakeholders with your innovative product or service. • The goal is to delight and inspire who determine to be the most important stakeholders, and to not turn off those negatively affected enough to prevent the purchase and use of your product

  6. Stakeholder Analysis: Common Stakeholder Groups • Those who make the purchase, pay the bill, or affect the purchase decision • Those who use the product or service directly • Those who need to store and maintain the product • Those who are affected by the use of the product or service • Others? • Sometimes, it depends on the product or service

  7. Stakeholder Exercise: iPhone Identify specific stakeholders: • Those who make the purchase or affect the purchase decision • Those who use the product or service directly • Those who need to store and maintain the product • Those who are affected by the use of the product or service • Others?

  8. Stakeholder Exercise: OXO Goodgrips Peeler Identify specific stakeholders: • Those who make the purchase or affect the purchase decision • Those who use the product or service directly • Those who need to store and maintain the product • Those who are affected by the use of the product or service • Others?

  9. Stakeholder Exercise: Karwa Taxi Service Identify specific stakeholders: • Those who make the purchase or affect the purchase decision • Those who use the product or service directly • Those who need to store and maintain the product • Those who are affected by the use of the product or service • Others?

  10. Stakeholder Exercise: Family Vacation Photos Identify specific stakeholders: • Those who make the purchase or affect the purchase decision • Those who use the product or service directly • Those who need to store and maintain the product • Those who are affected by the use of the product or service • Others?

  11. Selecting and Refining Product Attributes

  12. Selecting and Refining Product Attributes • Once we really understand our target customer and the challenges that they face, we then need to identify opportunities for a new product or service to provide significant value by improving the experience, the results, solving a problem, reducing costs or other undesirable outcomes, etc. • We express these as prioritized and abstract Value Opportunities (VO’s) and then turn those VO’s into specific Product Attributes that our new product or service needs to have

  13. VO’s to Product Attributes Example Value Opportunities • Low cost • Easier to carry • Reduce number of devices to carry • Improved durability Product Attributes • No more than 100 Riyals • Weight < 200 grams,Size < 6 x 6 x 1 cm. • Camera should be integrated with phone or another device customers already carry daily • Should be able to bounce around all day in handbag, occasionally be dropped on floor, and work in rainy conditions

  14. Refining A Scenario At The End Of Phase II • Phase 1 scenario: helping elderly women in the kitchen Mary is 70 years old and lives alone. She loves to bake and often entertains her family for holidays. She has developed arthritis and is no longer comfortable reaching into the oven to lift things out. Losing the ability to bake things has been very depressing for her to contemplate. Mary is hesitant to have her family over and no longer feels confident entertaining in her home. • Refined scenario at the end of phase 2: • Mary has arthritis in her lower spine and shoulders that limits her range of motion. She has also lost strength in her back and arm muscles. A device is needed that fits in the context of a standard oven that will compensate for her limited motion and reduced strength and allow her to easily put in and remove a variety of pans and baking dishes in the oven. The device will have to lift items that range in weight from ½ to 7 kilos. Source: [CV02] pages 120-125.

  15. Supplementing A Scenario With Product Attributes • Revised Product Opportunity Statement, with specific product attributes identified: The team will develop a product that will integrate with a standard oven and will be easy to install and clean. It must have a simple mechanism and must cost no more than QR 150 to buy and install. Any installation should be easy enough for a family member to do. While the primary market will be senior women with arthritis between the ages of 70 and 85, the primary purchasers will be family members Source: [CV02] page 125.

  16. Ethnography Workshop

  17. Collecting Observations Artifacts

  18. Challenge Problem 3: Due In Class on Thursday • Collect a set of artifacts that tell a story about your customers for either the JTBD and target market you have used for the previous two challenge problems, or for the vacation images example we have used in class • Come to class on Thursday prepared to put up a collage of the artifacts you have collected on the wall, or on the tables, and talk through what you have found for the class. • The goal of this exercise is to see how resourceful you can be in collecting observations about your customers and using those observations to tell a compelling story about what they are trying to do, how they currently do it, and where they have challenges doing their JTBD, and/or where the products and services that they are currently using fall short of their expectations. • Based on your research to date, who are your key stakeholders? What are the most important Value Opportunities? What are the key Product Attributes that you’ve identified (if any)?

  19. Wrap Up • Next phase: turning your observations and research into innovative products and services • Have a great break!

  20. References [CE09] Robert G. Cooper and Scott Edgett, Successful Product Innovation, Product Development Institute, 2009, ISBN: 978-1-4392-4918-5. [CV02] Jonathan Cagan and Craig M. Vogel, Creating Breakthrough Products, Prentice Hall, 2002, ISBN: 0-13-969694-6. [KL01] Tom Kelly with Jonathan Littman, The Art of Innovation, Doubleday, 2001 ISBN: 0-385-49984-1. [SSD09] David Silverstein, Philip Samuel, Neil DeCarlo, The Innovator’s Toolkit, John Wiley and Sons, 2009, ISBN: 978-0-470-34535-1.

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