As a product Manager, my most innovative practices are as follows
1) Every feature should have unique Benefit for the user
2) Interface should be User friendly ( User Interface if it is a technology product or Ambiance if it is a restaurant Or packaging if it is a retail product)
3) last but not the least Product should be Fun to work on ( Does not mean you have to include cartoons but navigation should be quite easy for technological products, Pathways should be lightened or filled with music for a super market or Opening a package box should give the customer a surprise for a retail commodity product)
Here's a few ideas:
1) Talk with not just current customers/ users - but with others, outside of this group;
2) Build relationships not just with your org's R&D and engineering groups, but with sales, and customer service, about the usability and day-to-day issues that customers relate/ experience - and use these perspectives to develop an understanding of the customers' business issues;
3) Look at products/ services/ technologies OUTSIDE of your business-product space, to see what customer-engagement strategies and combinations of technologies other firms are employing. There are likely to be some good ideas for you to consider;
4) Use a "board of advisors" (internal to your company, and external (where IP-confidentiality and trust exist)) with whom you can brainstorm, with whom you can bounce around ideas and test your thinking/ analyses.
The Usage Of Algae as an Energy source.
Given the increased demand for bio-diesel, coupled with the lower
production costs using algae and its many exclusive powerful bio-tech
properties, growing, processing, optimizing, extracting, filtering, micro-stirring and
sterilizing, M2 Bio-Fuels
Answers | 3 Total
March 25, 2008 at 3:48am by Pavan Valluri
As a product Manager, my most innovative practices are as follows
1) Every feature should have unique Benefit for the user
2) Interface should be User friendly ( User Interface if it is a technology product or Ambiance if it is a restaurant Or packaging if it is a retail product)
3) last but not the least Product should be Fun to work on ( Does not mean you have to include cartoons but navigation should be quite easy for technological products, Pathways should be lightened or filled with music for a super market or Opening a package box should give the customer a surprise for a retail commodity product)
thanks
April 3, 2008 at 10:05am by Charles Evan Smith
Here's a few ideas:
1) Talk with not just current customers/ users - but with others, outside of this group;
2) Build relationships not just with your org's R&D and engineering groups, but with sales, and customer service, about the usability and day-to-day issues that customers relate/ experience - and use these perspectives to develop an understanding of the customers' business issues;
3) Look at products/ services/ technologies OUTSIDE of your business-product space, to see what customer-engagement strategies and combinations of technologies other firms are employing. There are likely to be some good ideas for you to consider;
4) Use a "board of advisors" (internal to your company, and external (where IP-confidentiality and trust exist)) with whom you can brainstorm, with whom you can bounce around ideas and test your thinking/ analyses.
May 14, 2008 at 1:11pm by Anthony Heard
The Usage Of Algae as an Energy source.
Given the increased demand for bio-diesel, coupled with the lower
production costs using algae and its many exclusive powerful bio-tech
properties, growing, processing, optimizing, extracting, filtering, micro-stirring and
sterilizing, M2 Bio-Fuels
Just a Thought