Bradford L. Goldense
President
Goldense Group Inc.
Needham, Mass.
goldensegroupinc.com
- Marketing is responsible
for defining product
requirements. But it needs a
balanced, cross-functional
team to help them.
- Resist feature creep.
- Lead User Analysis is an
excellent tool for describing
and defining products.
Edited by Stephen J. Mraz |
By Bradford L. Goldense
Companies often wonder how they can facilitate cooperation
between sales, marketing, engineering, and operations
to better understand customer needs and better
define product requirements. This issue occurs hundreds
or even thousands of time each year and may involve a
large number of people. The process is expensive, but not
when compared to the cost of doing it wrong. On a positive
note, it is not difficult to do it well, provided a short
list of values and practices are understood and agreed
upon.
For the past 15 years, the management practices of leading
companies have shown the most successful
definition-specification processes
separate the roles of sales and marketing.
Sales, which manages customer relationships
and coordinates communications
with customers, can be a great means of
identifying customer requirements. Sales
should not, however, be the final authority
on what enters the product pipeline. Marketing
has this responsibility, with plenty
of input from Sales. Management science
shows that everyone with a stake should be
brought into the mix.
Near and long-term horizons
While Marketing (product management)
receives input from Sales, it should also solicit requirements directly from customers and conduct
competitor research. Unlike Sales, Marketing has two
requirement horizons: a near-term horizon for products
about to enter the pipeline, and a long-term horizon for
platform and product-generation planning. Events for the
near-term horizon are product specific: what goes into the
product(s) that will be part of the project. These occur for
every product-definition effort. Events for the long-term
horizon are usually annual or semiannual but executed
quarterly to level the load. Establishing two distinct time
horizons enables cross-functional thinking and the application
of management science.
Marketing should assemble a team to
gather near-term product requirements.
The team should consist of marketing personnel
(40%), engineering (40%), and operations
(20%). Note that sales is not included
in this step. These are not sales calls,
and sales already has sufficient opportunity
to articulate what it identifies as requirements.
A salesperson should be involved
with setting up these meetings but, if attending,
they should act as a liaison or an
observer only.
A team made up of an equal number
of marketing and engineering personnel
should gather long-term customer requirements.
Operations is not as critical for gathering long-term requirements. As always,
Sales, or Account Management, has a primary or at
least equal hand in managing customer visits. Agendas
for discussion should be agreed upon in advance
and safeguards put in place to limit any discussion of
near-term needs. The team should consist of highlevel
managers. On the engineering side, only fellow
engineers, senior engineers, product
architects, and chief technology officers
should participate. Only strategy
managers, brand managers, portfolio
managers, and senior product planners
should make up the marketing team.
Get it right the first time
In the 1990s, Ashok Gupta published
an article in California Management Review
claiming that 71% of everything
that goes wrong in product development
can be attributed to a failure to identify requirements. Even
if we reduce that figure by half, it remains a compelling statistic.
Unless a company gets product requirements right, up front, all else will be based on flawed assumptions.
There are two categories of flaws. The most costly is
error of omission. In statistics, this is referred to as “Type
One Error.” “Type Two Error” is the implementation of
wrong or incomplete requirements. To avoid these, a crossfunctional
listening group must hear all that is said during
requirements gathering.
Before 1990, decisions about which new product ideas
to pursue involved a single-step process in which estimates
of requirements bubble up from lower functional
departments. A more senior committee would then meet
and make a go/no-go decision. Since then, a formalized
2-step process has evolved. Companies now capture
“light bulb” or new-product ideas in the initial half-step.
Then comes funding a definition activity (the first full
step) and reviewing results (the second and last step). This
formalized process ensures a focus on requirements.
Techniques for gathering requirements
Fifteen years ago, there were no “best practices” for
either near or long-term requirements gathering. Today,
there are a host of near-term techniques
for product definition, requirements
gathering, and specification writing.
The best known of these is the “Voice of
the Customer” (VOC) technique. In best
industry practice, the product-development
core team (definition team) conducts
and documents requirements.
An effective near-term VOC study
provides detailed documentation of customer
requirements as articulated by the customer, synthesis
of customer requirements to identify the “marquee”
features, a common language and set of values for the development
team going forward, primary input for selecting
appropriate design specifications for the new product,
and a springboard for product innovation.
On the long-term side, there’s the long-standing, effective
(but rarely used) “Lead User Analysis” developed by
MIT’s Eric von Hippel in the 1980s. It remains the most
poorly understood of requirements-related practices. Yet
those companies that use it find it a powerful tool.
Lead User Analysis directs companies to seek out
organizations or individuals with an immediate need
for a new product months or even years before the rest
of the marketplace. The company works with lead users
to modify existing products or create new ones. And
the lead users benefit significantly. The company then
determines how the timing of the bulk of the market differs from that of lead users.
Another aspect of the productdefinition
process is specialized training
for those involved with product
definition in the area of intellectualproperty
(IP) protection. Seeking to
impress customers, engineers can
be far too forthcoming about their
knowledge, especially in meetings
with long-term horizons. What not
to say can be as important as what to
say. This becomes more critical as the
value of IP grows.
Inner voices
Besides formal teams, a company
can glean information from any function
that has customer contact or is
part of the development and commercialization
of a product. Marketing
should tap internal departments
such as Engineering, Field Service,
and Sales Engineering for feedback.
Warranty, Repair, and Customer Service
know a product’s strengths and
weaknesses. And Marketing and Engineering
should listen to “the street”
to avoid undesirable attributes.
Functions with little direct customer
contact should also be asked
for their input. Operations, Purchasing,
Test Engineering, Production
Test, Quality, and others are experts
in performance envelopes and constraints.
The whole Design-for-Manufacture
& Assembly body of knowledge
now called Design for “X”
or “DFX” arose because requirements
were being specified by personnel
in fuzzy front-end activities.
While I’m focusing on “marketpull”
requirements gathering, “techpush”
is becoming increasingly important.
Build it and they will come.
Lead User Analysis helps build confidence
around tech pushes.
Self-inflicted injuries
Feature creep, the tendency for
product requirements to increase
during development, is a real pitfall.
Engineering, Sales and sometimes
Marketing tend to overspecify. Overspecifying
returns little to the top
line while inflating costs which, in
turn, reduces the bottom line. The
best way to avoid “creeping elegance”
is by establishing a strong front-end requirements process. When everyone
agrees upon requirements, it
is easier to resist the temptation to
overspecify.
As marketing guru Philip Kotler
said, “Proper planning prevents poor
performance.” Companies should
recall the Five Ps during the fuzzy front-end activities of market-pull
product definition. By eliminating a
succession of physical builds, companies
with strong front-end processes
can reduce project-development expenses
by 20 to 50%. All it takes is the
patience to gather requirements and
the wisdom to incorporate them.