EAGER SELLERS & STONY BUYERS: Understanding the Psychology of New-Product Adoption
Companies that introduce new innovations are the most likely to flourish, so they spend billions of dollars making better products. But studies show that new innovations fail at a staggering rate. While many blame these misses on lackluster products, the reality isn't so simple. The goods that...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Harvard business review 2006-06, Vol.84 (6), p.99 |
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Format: | Magazinearticle |
Sprache: | eng |
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Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
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Zusammenfassung: | Companies that introduce new innovations are the most likely to flourish, so they spend billions of dollars making better products. But studies show that new innovations fail at a staggering rate. While many blame these misses on lackluster products, the reality isn't so simple. The goods that consumers dismiss often do offer improvements over existing ones. New products force consumers to change their behavior, and that has a psychological cost. Many products fail because people irrationally overvalue the benefits of the goods they own over those they don't possess. Executives, meanwhile, overvalue their own innovations. This leads to a serious clash. Studies show, in fact, that there is a mismatch of nine to one between what innovators think consumers want and what consumers truly desire. |
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ISSN: | 0017-8012 |