10 Ways To Kill A Product Rollout

June 30, 2004 at 08:00 PM
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Power marketers are always coming up with Top-10 lists and bullet point plans. If we just follow those few steps, well harvest bundles, we are told.

Well, I have a Top-10 list, too. Its a compilation of practices Ive actually seen employed in the product rollout worldmore than a few times. Read them and weep.

1) Do not design the product to implement the company mission and strategic plan. After all, what does upper management know about the business, right? You and your team know, beyond all shadow of proverbial doubt, that the product will do well if it aligns with your own precious strategy and mission. So, give the boot to the corporate plan and do your thing!

2) Do not use one of those new-fangled multi-function product teams to design your product. Sure, it may be possible that legal and compliance could find a bone to pick with your ideas. But bringing in legaland systems, sales, distribution, marketing or anyone elseat the get-go is just so hard to coordinate. Besides, you and your Team from the Silo already know pretty much everything anyhow, so the others wont add much. This is one of the many benefits your firm gets from having you onboard.

3) Do not assign anyone any deadlines for implementing any part of the design or rollout. After all, youve all worked together for a while. That means you can just assume people know when their parts of the project are due and that they will deliver as you expected. This is a great rule, because it can apply to any stage of the process, from policy design to systems support to marketing, training, education, sales and service. Talk about flexibility!

4) Do not cost out what it will take to get the product to the point of rollout or to maintain it once sales begin. This way, youll ensure that management will always have surprises in store, kind of like one long birthday party. Thats important because people love surprises. Besides, without costing things out, you wont be hampered by all those constraints that management gurus always are harping about. Youll fly free as a bird.

5) Do not hold anyone accountable for any task related to creating, introducing and promoting the product. Fortunately, this will be a snap to do, if you have followed No. 2 and No. 3 above. First, you wont know who to hold accountable, because no one was assigned tasks and deadlines. Second, since there is no financial metric to meet, financial accountability is moot. Your only goal is get the product out there, to show everyone that you are doing something in that office of yours.

6) Do not listen to the field, the consumers or the industry research when you are building and executing your plan. Heavens, what could they possibly know? You and your team are the experts. In your rarefied quarters, you see clearly. If the field says customers wont buy that, or the price is too high, or competitors already have a lock on the market, not to worry. You know better. And, if you get wind of consumer polls that indicate people really need a different kind of design than you are building, just laugh it off. Consumer polls only test feelings at a moment in time. You have the long-term view right in your own headbecause you are special.

7) Do not fret too much about meeting the requirements of the various state insurance departments or other applicable regulators. They are just officials. What do they know about sales and marketing? If your product is new and innovative, be sure to let the regulators know you dont much appreciate them asking any questions about it or requiring additional information. This applies both to those filing the products and those selling them. Go ahead, be arrogant. And dont hesitate to point out that, if the laws and regulations get in your way, you can just get them changed to suit your will and your product.

8) Do not fret if your policy form and your marketing materials dont match very well. Who reads them, anyway? And, who ever said you have to have the same features identified in both document types. Isnt that redundant?

9) Do not have any team members around to talk to the field, the media or other interested outsiders during the rollout period. Your staff is tired, for goodness sake. They need a break. If someone calls to learn more about your new offering, just put them into voice mail or route the call to someone in shipping. The caller probably wont notice, and you can always get back to them when you return from Tahiti. Besides, who said the product team should have to talk to anyone at all about what youve created? This is the world of no accountability, remember.

10) Do not find out what the client who is interested in this new product wants, needs or can afford. This is the latest and greatest, after all. And thats what you do. You sell the New, to anybody who will buy. In view of that, doing all that client-centric stuff seems such a waste of time. If it later turns out the customer who bought your product didnt understand it or didnt even need it, ah, well, thats the roll of the dice. You can fix it laterperhaps.

As you can see, the strategies I have gleaned from watching product rollouts over the years are abundant. I can almost guarantee that if you implement even a few of the above steps, youll harvest bundlesof losses. So dont.


Reproduced from National Underwriter Edition, July 1, 2004. Copyright 2004 by The National Underwriter Company in the serial publication. All rights reserved.Copyright in this article as an independent work may be held by the author.


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