Showing posts with label commercialisation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commercialisation. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 May 2013

The Fruit Fly Product Lifecycle




Fruit flies live for an average of 45 days from the moment an egg is laid. It really is not very long, but here is something that in reality has an even shorter lifespan – an app.

According to a number of specialists in the area apps including Josh Clark who shows in his book Tapworthy that the life of the average app on the average user’s phone is less than 30 days. In that 30 days the user is likely to open the app up to a total of 20 times on average.

And this has what to do with the price of onions?

Well think of it this way. Most of you know about Moore’s law of computing that essentially says speed doubles every two years, well what if there was a similar one for some markets?

The app market is one, where hundreds if not thousands of hours go into developing apps before they launch. When they do launch they have a finite amount of time to make it into the charts and make it big before something better comes along. The worst part of it is that all of this is measured in days now, especially when you consider that there are now more than 19,000 new apps released in the Apple App store every month

Part of this may well be the hype around becoming rich on the back of apps, so there is a kind of ‘app rush’ as everyone tries to get their share.

However I think more fundamentally the desire for new and exciting things in the market is such that consumers in particular are happy to buy and discard purchases in a cycle shorter than the life of a fruit fly.

The point of this little article is to suggest that you might want to ask yourself a question. Do I sell products and services that are not serious investments and will this kind of fruit fly lifecycle start to affect my business?

If it will what does that mean for your products and your business?  What can you do to turn the fruit fly product lifecycle to your advantage?

Next week, I’ll be posting 3 entries on the blog to help you with some ideas about how to turn very short product lifecycles to your advantage. In the mean time I hope this helps and it would be great to hear your thoughts and ideas on the subject.

Tuesday, 26 March 2013

The Programme and how it works

A brief little slide presentation that shows you what we do and the kind of projects we have been involved in before now. Hope it helps

This is best viewed in full screen mode, which means clicking on the four arrows at the right hand side of the grey bar at the bottom of the slide show

Wednesday, 13 February 2013

Good news - more rules




One of the single biggest things many new businesses and entrepreneurs find very challenging is the way their target markets behave. Even with our knowledge and experience, there are moments when it looks like everyone in a market has given their brains the day off.

However there is good news, there are rules and all markets follow them. This makes it much easier for you to understand why your target markets are not doing what you expect them to. We call them the Market Rules and if you have read through the website, you already know rule number one. If not you can always read about it here - http://bit.ly/YmuuIr 

Here is another one for you consideration – Its not your product customers buy, it’s the outcome the product delivers they buy.

This rule is like rule one, in that it is unbreakable and if you think about it pretty obvious. The reason I want to mention it on this blog is to discuss new or disruptive products and how to use this rule to your advantage.

If you are selling a known product in a known category like a watch for example, you don’t have to describe what the product does – unless your target market is an as yet undiscovered tribe of Amazonian natives who might not know what a watch is. Why, because we all know what watches do, its just a question of positioning it in the market to attract your target market.

On the other hand if you are selling something completely new that no one has ever seen or used before then how would they know what the outcomes are?

Those situations are where going through a proper commercialization process is vital if you want to get the market and enjoy the volume of sales you are aiming for.

Think of it this way, a long, long time ago when someone invented the wheel how did they get the message out there that wheels were the best product for people wanting to move large or heavy objects any distance? The inventor would have had to explain what the product does and the outcome it delivers - faster movement with fewer people required for example.

Without that what would people think – “ooh that’s a big plate,” or “wow that would make a great coffee table when they invent coffee.” 

I am being frivolous, but I also hope the point is coming across for an entirely new product, you have to find a way to get the message across about all of it, but most importantly you have to be able to demonstrate to your target customer that your product outcomes will benefit them.

By Tim Sandford

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Day 1 and First Principles


Hi and we are on day one of getting the company I mentioned in yesterday’s blog to market and selling.  For the purposes of this very candid set of blogs, we are going to call it Triple X.

We hope this will let you see the Backwards Business process in action and how to apply it so that it could help your business achieve its sales goals.

Today as we always do when we are starting the communications stage of a programme, was spent going through all our research, the early sales and the other insight we have gathered on the market to make sure we have fully understood everything and are offering products and services the market wants and will buy.

This is first principle stuff in Backwards Business as the diagram below shows.



For the last 2 months we have been working closely with the Triple X’s market to define exactly what is required for them to move to the new way of doing business. In reality it is pretty simple and down to one word – more.

For this particular market the trigger is more:
  • More Choice for buyers from the supplier base
  • More opportunities for vendors
  • More confidence in suppliers
  • More business being done between buyers and suppliers

Now the reason this is not a particularly easy programme is that the products and services offered by triple X are disruptive and mean the market adopting new habits.

There is plenty of evidence that this is welcome, but it is a disruption and addresses some areas of operation that are historically inefficient and more expensive than they need to be.

So the point of today’s blog is this. We know there is a market and purchases are being made, but we need position the products as an additional benefit as opposed to the solution to the problem. Semantics?

We would like to suggest not and here are a couple of examples to let you see what we mean:
  • In an industry where vendors traditionally find generating demand for their products difficult, a contract with Triple X puts your products directly in front of your target buyers to generate the demand you need to win business
  • A contract with Triple X puts your products directly in front of your target buyers to generate the demand you need to win business.  

Both say exactly the same thing. However the first one is dominated by the opening statement, which highlights a problem and even with the strong positive outcome, never quite feels positive. 

The examples are pretty rough, but we hope you get the point that even when you are solving an acknowledged problem, our experience is that staying on the positive and focusing on the desired outcome is the most successful way of generating business, which is really the point of commercialising a new business.

By Tim Sandford