Derbyshire_Giovannetti_2017.pdf (384.66 kB)
Understanding the failure to understand New Product Development failures: Mitigating the uncertainty associated with innovating new products by combining scenario planning and forecasting
journal contribution
posted on 2023-07-26, 14:05 authored by James Derbyshire, Emanuele GiovannettiIn this paper we show that New Product Development (NPD) is subject to fundamental uncertainty that is both
epistemic and ontic in nature. We argue that this uncertainty cannot be mitigated using forecasting techniques
exclusively, because these are most useful in circumstances characteristic of probabilistic risk, as distinct from
non-probabilistic uncertainty. We show that the mitigation of uncertainty in relation to NPD requires techniques
able to take account of the socio-economic factors that can combine to cause present assumptions about future
demand conditions to be incorrect. This can be achieved through an Intuitive Logics (IL) scenario planning
process designed specifically to mitigate uncertainty associated with NPD by incorporating insights from both
quantitative modelling alongside consideration of political, social, technological and legal factors, as-well-as
stakeholder motivations that are central to successful NPD. In this paper we therefore achieve three objectives:
1) identify the aspects of the current IL process salient to mitigating the uncertainty of NPD; 2) show how
advances in diffusion modelling can be used to identify the social-network and contagion effects that lead to a
product's full diffusion; and 3) show how the IL process can be further enhanced to facilitate detailed consideration
of the factors enabling and inhibiting initial market-acceptance, and then the forecasted full diffusion of a considered
new product. We provide a step-by-step guide to the implementation of this adapted IL scenario planning process
designed specifically to mitigate uncertainty in relation to NPD
History
Refereed
- Yes
Volume
125Page range
334-344Publication title
Technological Forecasting and Social ChangeISSN
0040-1625External DOI
Publisher
ElsevierFile version
- Published version
Language
- eng