CUSTOMER
INNOVATION GUIDE
Customer
Co-Design: The Third Core
Competency
By Patricia B. Seybold
and Ronni T. Marshak, July
12, 2007
Have
You Mastered the Third Core Competency towards Customer-Led
Innovation?
In my book, Outside
Innovation: How Your Customers Will Co-Design Your Company’s Future,
we specify the five core competencies to master:
- Story-Telling
- Community
Building
- Customer
Co-Design
- Open
Development
- Peer
Production and Peer
Promotion
For each competency, we provide
context and a list of activities (methods/behaviors/programs)
you should be implementing to reinvent your organizational
culture around customer-led innovation. We also provide you
with space to complete your self assessment: how well is your
organization/division/department/group doing on fulfilling
these requirements? We recommend that you identify those activities
broken down into three categories (which mirror our Customer
Scenario® Mapping methodology):
- Things “We
Can”Do—you
already do this activity
well.
- Things “We
Will”Do—you
have already identified
this activity as strategic
to your organization,
and you have a plan
for implementation
in place, complete
with a budget and delivery
date.
- Things “We
Should”Do—you
aren’t currently
committed to this activity,
but you understand
that you should investigate
it and prioritize its
value to your customers
and to your organization.
Finally, we provide a place for
you to make note of your next steps for each activity. We recommend
that you include the name of a person who is to take responsibility
for the next action as well as a target deadline for completion
of that action.
COMPETENCY 3: Customer
Co-Design
Some assume that users and customers
can’t innovate. That’s simply not true. The problem
is that your business isn’t currently set up to find
lead users and customers and to engage with them and/or to
co-design new solutions with your most visionary customers.
Most of your current customers probably don’t care about
helping you invent new products. What they care about is getting
their own jobs done and their own needs filled. Unless you
discover these lead users and commercialize their inventions,
or identify them early and equip them with the tools they need
to create the solutions they need, you’ll miss the opportunity
to harness their creativity.
Remember, the lead users/lead
customers have these characteristics in common:
1. Their self-image is deeply
connected to the problem domain at hand.
2. They are passionate (positively
or negatively) about the outcomes they want and frustrated
about the issues that get in the way of achieving those outcomes.
3. They are influential in their
organizations and/or in their circle of family and friends.
4. They have thought deeply about
their problem space/domain of expertise.
5. They are insightful about their
own context, and they can easily articulate their conditions
of satisfaction (what works for them; what won’t work).
6. They are imaginative and visionary.
7. They are pragmatic and realistic
about the need for viable business models and win/win solutions.
8. If they are true “lead
users;”they have already invented their own solutions
and often are happy to share their solutions with other insightful
users.
So take advantage of these behaviors
and shift from passive market research to actively engaging
with these customers, understanding their contexts deeply,
identifying their desired outcomes and co-designing their ideal
scenarios for achieving those outcomes. Forget your own constraints;
start with your customers’goals and let them show you
how they want to reach them.
Remember too, not to limit your
customer co-design activities to the design of new product
offerings. Customers are also really valuable in co-designing
your business processes to better meet their needs (as well
as yours). Insightful lead customers are great at co-designing
business models that wouldn’t occur to you without their
prodding.
There are many people who know
how to consult with customers and to solve their problems.
There are lots of people who can market and sell to customers.
There are fewer people who know how to survey customers or
to run focus groups. But there aren’t that many people
(yet) who are experienced at co-designing with lead customers—particularly
with groups of them. We’ve been doing this work successfully
for many companies for more than a decade. We’ll be happy
to train your best people to lead customer co-design sessions.
Your co-design facilitators should be excellent listeners and
good interviewers. They should be visionary thinkers—able
to think outside the box and encourage others to do the same.
They need to be respected and influential in your organization,
otherwise the good work they do with your lead customers won’t
result in action.
2. COMPETENCE IN CUSTOMER
CO-DESIGN
You should look to your customers
to work with you in co-designing your next generation of products,
services, customer experience, and even business models. They
are the ones who know clearly what they need to be successful
in their jobs, their families, and their lives. And they can
tell you how you can provide them with what they need.
This report continues…
To read the full report: http://www.psgroup.com/detail.aspx?ID=835.