Cooper, R. G. & Edgett, S. J. (2008). Maximizing Productivity In Product Innovation. Research Technology Management, 51(2), 47-58.
Format: Peer-reviewed article
Type: Research — Randomized
Experience level of reader: Fundamental
Annotation: The authors wrote this article based on their 20 years of experience in researching new product development and what contributes to successful end products. In addition, they use data from a recent study on best practices of 105 firms and their NOD success or failure based on metrics, such as sales, profits, time to market, etc. They highlight seven core principles (or best practices) which the high producing companies of today follow. The seven principles are; customer focus, front end loaded assessments before development, spiral development, cross-functional teams, metrics, accountability and continuous improvement, effective project portfolio management and the NexGen Stage-Gate process.
Setting(s) to which the reported activities/findings are relevant: Large business, Small business (less than 500 employees)
Knowledge user(s) to whom the piece of literature may be relevant: Manufacturers
Knowledge user level addressed by the literature: Organization
This article uses the Commercial Devices and Services version of the NtK Model
Measure: Use the following metrics to measure the performance of new product development projects; earned revenue versus forecasted revenue, operating profits,customer satisfaction, and time to market.
Authors' research experience. Between 65% — 80% of companies use these metrics to measure performance.
Occurrence of finding within the model: Step 9.3
Method: Work closely with consumers to understand their needs and identify their problems.
Authors' research experience. Approximately 67% of high productivity companies followed these practices, while only 15% of low productivity companies did.
Occurrence of finding within the model: Step 4.11, Step 1.2
Tips:
Barrier: Unstable product specs and project scope creep can increase the time to market and possible product failure. (Cooper, R.G., 2001)
Occurrence of finding within the model: Stage 6, Stage 7
Tips: