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Accelerating Product Development Through Improved Customer Intimacy José Campos
(Coauthor of Capture and Use the Voice of the Customer for Product Development)
How many hours have you spent in
contact with your customers in the last 90 days? If you are typical of the
industry, probably no more than 14 hours or 2 to 3% of your time. Most of us spend little time with our customers. Nor do we spend enough
time talking about our customers with others in our
organization in order to understand the very people who provide our
profits. Customer Intimacy is the ability to understand and then internalize customer needs in order to generate new value in the form of new products and services. "Value" is always determined by your customers, i.e. nothing is valuable until a customer says so.
Thus, customer intimacy improves
profits. Given that it takes purposeful interaction with customers to
internalize customer needs, rethinking this time allocation can contribute
significantly to creating new value — and by the way, spending only 2% of
your time doing it will not work — much more is needed. Investing the right amount of time with customers is the key to successful new product development. Measuring the outcome of the time spent is also important to track your commitment and progress. It also helps to develop baselines for planning purposes, i.e., how much time you will spend with your customers in the future.
Organizations should measure the outcome or results of interactions with customers, for example, identifying the number of new features, benefits, and key insights discovered from customer interactions. And although operational distractions, such as “fire fighting,” or the lack of clear customer-centric organizational values can keep you from it, the single most important thing you must do is develop customer intimacy to internalize current and future customer needs.
#1 Develop a customer-centric culture.
Consider the following ideas:
#2 Establish an effective
system for collecting and processing customer knowledge. Every organization needs a framework for requirements gathering, then interpreting and incorporating customer input and innovating from it (see Table 1). You must be able to understand what your customers are saying—and what they’re not saying—and interpret and internalize the messages. Then the ideas must be incorporated into your company's product development projects.
Innovating is the
ability to go beyond an intellectual understanding of customer needs to an
almost visceral belief in them. As someone said, being customer-driven is
the ability to see the world as your customers do. In this phase, the
intent is to turn your customer input, now that you understand it from the
previous phase, into innovation.
Incorporating is
accessing the skills, knowledge, and abilities needed to translate
customer needs into product design requirements. Here’s where you will convert the
innovation into documented new product definitions that drive the product design
process.
There are many proven
methodologies for product definition available, such as Quality Function
Deployment (QFD), KJ, and Hoshin. It is essential to make a long-term
commitment to the methodology your organization adopts as most appropriate
for itself. In our experience, it is best to start slow and take 2 to 3
years weaving the methodology into your organization. It is, after all, a
change in your culture. The new methodology, by definition, will force
your team to do things differently through new processes and approaches.
Reinforcing the values and desired behavior is critical to achieving true
customer centricity — no easy task, but achievable.
Table 1
#3 Ensure a common purpose by meeting face to face with your customers.
The period at the beginning of any
development project, when there are more questions than answers, often
creates considerable confusion. This “fuzzy front end” is a crucial time
to bring all team members—including your customers—into the picture
because it’s the most convenient and cost-effective time to make and get
approval for changes. Once true implementation begins, change becomes
painful and may cause severe delays in your schedule.
The Fuzzy Front End, as shown above, occurs at the beginning of every product development project when confusion, mystery, and questions abound. This natural phase is an opportunity to connect with your customers. Also shown are two other important milestones: time-to-market and time-to-profit.
For example, speed of new product development
makes it imperative that your product design team has the
opportunity to internalize customer needs by interacting directly with
them, without our customary filters. These filters, such as design
experiences or preference for a particular technology, might make us favor
one approach we’re familiar with over another that could better solve the
customer’s problem or might encourage us to ignore the wishes of the
customer.
Seeing customers in their
environment and dealing directly with their problems enhances your
engineers’ creativity and helps channel their innovation in the right
direction. In fact, your engineers will identify customer needs that marketing
can’t—no matter how good your marketing organization might be. Why?
Because engineers and other technical personnel view the customer through
a different frame of reference. And in a collaborative relationship driven
by the mission to provide unprecedented value to the customer, engineering
and marketing can create a most helpful “stereo vision” of your customer. As you involve your product design team, consider the following skills for successful customer interaction:
#5 Learn what is missing by talking to your “non-customers.”
#6 Measure the right things.
#7 Know where you are going.
To transform your organization
into a customer-centric team, an overall plan of action is essential. Your
commitment to a customer-centered approach should include a master plan,
or road map, that outlines the why, how, when, who, and how much. Smaller,
more individual action plans can guide easy actions that can be quickly
implemented. Create an approach that facilitates small improvements, while
you develop and implement your long-term plan. By making a commitment to incorporate at least one of the ideas above in the next three months, you and your organization can take a significant step towards better customer understanding and improving your ability to meet customer needs. And by focusing on immediate steps and a commitment to customer intimacy for the duration, the time and energy invested can pay off in visible results and a healthier bottom line.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
José Campos
has more than 25 years of experience in new product development,
specializing in Concurrent Engineering, Quality Function Deployment (QFD),
High Performance Organization, and Concept Engineering. José pioneered the development of practical tools to enable development teams to better obtain and process customer input. These include the Panel of Experts, a tool that enables customers to provide very actionable information for new features, and Obtaining and Using Customer Requirements, an innovative form of a handbook to help product development teams obtain, process and use customer requirements in new products.
Capture and Use the Voice of the Customer for Product Development
Your illustrated electronic guide to create winning products in fast-paced environments
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© 2008 Jose Campos. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. All rights reserved. |