William L. Moore personally interviewed a number of senior managers employed in 25 large industrial marketing companies about new product development practices. These managers are familiar with all phases of the development of typical new products, from the time ideas are generated until market introduction. Most respondents were either division heads or those directly responsible for a division's new product development program. In agreement with a previous study, the use of formal new product strategies and sophisticated quantitative marketing research techniques was found to be lacking in most companies. However, many other elements of the new product development process were carried out more completely than previously reported. For example, respondents reflected sensitivity to informal understanding of new product strategies. A number of the less sophisticated, small scale qualitative research methods actually used may be more appropriate than more sophisticated methods. While several research areas are suggested, the general assessment of the new product practices of these firms is more positive than that of Feldman and Page.
[1]
F. Johne,et al.
How Experienced Product Innovators Organize
,
1984
.
[2]
R. Cooper.
New Product Strategies: What Distinguishes the Top Performers?
,
1984
.
[3]
R. Cooper,et al.
An Investigation into the New Product Process: Steps, Deficiencies, and Impact
,
1986
.
[4]
E. Mansfield,et al.
Organizational and Strategic Factors Associated with Probabilities of Success in Industrial R & D
,
1975
.
[5]
W. Rudelius,et al.
Managing innovation: lessons from the cardiac-pacing industry.
,
1985,
Sloan management review.
[6]
T Dolgoff,et al.
Why innovations fail.
,
1982,
The Psychiatric hospital.
[7]
J. B. Quinn,et al.
Managing Innovation: Controlled Chaos
,
1985
.
[8]
Robert G. Cooper,et al.
Why new industrial products fail
,
1975
.