It is basically all about finding the right job for your product!
Clay Christensen, the eminent Harvard professor and author of one of the most important books on management, The Innovator’s Dilemma suggests that when customers need to get a job done, they “hire” products and services to do that job. Rather than match consumer demographics to product features, product marketers need to understand the jobs that arise in customers’ lives, for which their products might be “hired”.
The way a company views its markets determines what it decides to produce, how it will take those products to market, who it believes its competitors to be, and how large it believes its market opportunities to be.
Most companies segment along lines defined by the characteristics of their products (category or price) or customers (age, gender, marital status and income level) because that is the most easily accessible type of data, but product and customer characteristics are poor indicators of customer behavior because that is not how markets are structured from the customer’s perspective.
Customers simply need to get things done, whether that be fixing their car, staving off boredom, or finding something fun to do with their kids. These situational needs for which customers are looking to “hire” products or services go unnoticed during traditional market research and segmentation.
As a result, the true breadth of competition often goes unnoticed too. When companies understand what they are up against in the mind of the customer, they can piece together the real size of the market in which they compete.
Using examples from the fast food industry, furniture retailing, the automobile industry and health care, and citing a wide variety of companies and brands, including FedEx, Starbucks, Google, Blackberry, TurboTax and OnStar, this article describes the benefits that executives can reap when they segment their markets by job (the risk and cost of innovation is minimized), the methods that those involved in marketing and new-product development can use to identify the job-based structure of a market (interviews, surveys, observation, empathic and co-evolution techniques), and how the details of business plans can be made more coherent and focused when innovators understand the job to be done.
To buy the full-article, visit MIT Sloan Management Review website.















2 responses so far ↓
Matej // Aug 23, 2007 at 8:53 pm
Matt Web delivered an inspiring closing address at Reboot 09 titled “Products are people too”. Taking a similarly humanized perspective (but perhaps from a slightly different angle) to the product design, its main point was that it can be “easier when we acknowledge that products share our homes and malls, and have wants and lives of their own.”
The slides and accompanying commentary can be found here:
http://schulzeandwebb.com/2007/people/slides/?p=1
mitjamavsar // Aug 26, 2007 at 2:03 am
Exactly! The old “pre-kotler” theory says that marketing process starts long before the product / service development process! And If behavioral research is done early enough and as good as it should be done then just the right job position gets filled.
I feel there has never been a greater need for professionally conducted and objectives based qualitative research!
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