- Book Options and Supplements
- About the Author
- Acknowledgments
- Dedications
- Preface
- Chapter 1: The Foundations of BusinessPrint Chapter|
Chapter 1 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 1 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 1 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Section 1: Getting Down to Business
- Section 2: What Is Economics?
- Section 3: Perfect Competition and Supply and Demand
- Section 4: Monopolistic Competition, Oligopoly, and Monopoly
- Section 5: Measuring the Health of the Economy
- Section 6: Government’s Role in Managing the Economy
- Section 7: Cases and Problems
- Chapter 2: Business Ethics and Social ResponsibilityPrint Chapter|
Chapter 2 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 2 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 2 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Section 1: Misgoverning Corporations: An Overview
- Section 2: The Individual Approach to Ethics
- Section 3: Identifying Ethical Issues
- Section 4: The Organizational Approach to Ethics
- Section 5: Corporate Social Responsibility
- Section 6: Environmentalism
- Section 7: Stages of Corporate Responsibility
- Section 8: Cases and Problems
- Chapter 3: Business in a Global EnvironmentPrint Chapter|
Chapter 3 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 3 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 3 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 4: Selecting a Form of Business OwnershipPrint Chapter|
Chapter 4 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 4 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 4 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 5: The Challenges of Starting a BusinessPrint Chapter|
Chapter 5 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 5 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 5 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Section 1: What Is an Entrepreneur?
- Section 2: The Place of Small Business in the Business Landscape
- Section 3: What Industries Are Small Businesses In?
- Section 4: Advantages and Disadvantages of Business Ownership
- Section 5: Starting a Business
- Section 6: The Business Plan
- Section 7: How to Succeed in Managing a Business
- Section 8: Cases and Problems
- Chapter 6: Managing for Business SuccessPrint Chapter|
Chapter 6 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 6 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 6 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 7: Recruiting, Motivating, and Keeping Quality EmployeesPrint Chapter|
Chapter 7 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 7 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 7 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 8: Teamwork and CommunicationsPrint Chapter|
Chapter 8 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 8 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 8 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 9: Marketing: Providing Value to CustomersPrint Chapter|
Chapter 9 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 9 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 9 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 10: Product Design and DevelopmentPrint Chapter|
Chapter 10 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 10 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 10 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Section 1: What Is a Product?
- Section 2: Where Do Product Ideas Come From?
- Section 3: Identifying Business Opportunities
- Section 4: Understand Your Industry
- Section 5: Forecasting Demand
- Section 6: Breakeven Analysis
- Section 7: Product Development
- Section 8: Protecting Your Idea
- Section 9: Cases and Problems
- Chapter 11: Operations Management in Manufacturing and Service IndustriesPrint Chapter|
Chapter 11 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 11 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 11 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Section 1: Operations Management in Manufacturing
- Section 2: Facility Layouts
- Section 3: Managing the Production Process in a Manufacturing Company
- Section 4: Graphical Tools: PERT and Gantt Charts
- Section 5: The Technology of Goods Production
- Section 6: Operations Management for Service Providers
- Section 7: Producing for Quality
- Section 8: Cases and Problems
- Chapter 12: The Role of Accounting in BusinessPrint Chapter|
Chapter 12 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 12 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 12 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 13: Managing Financial ResourcesPrint Chapter|
Chapter 13 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 13 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 13 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 14: Personal FinancesPrint Chapter|
Chapter 14 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 14 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 14 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 15: Managing Information and TechnologyPrint Chapter|
Chapter 15 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 15 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 15 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
- Chapter 16: The Legal and Regulatory Environment of BusinessPrint Chapter|
Chapter 16 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
Chapter Audio|Chapter 16 Audio has been added to your cart for $2.49.
Chapter Study AidsChapter 16 Study Aid Package has been added to your cart for $2.49.
There are no key terms for this page.
Where Do Product Ideas Come From?
For some people, coming up with a great product idea is a gratifying adventure. For most, however, it’s a daunting task. The key to coming up with a product idea is identifying something that customers want—or, perhaps more important, filling an unmet customer need. In coming up with a product idea, ask not “What do I want to sell?” but rather “What does the customer want to buy?”[350] With this piece of advice in mind, let’s get back to the task of coming up with a product idea. Nobel Prize–winning chemist Linus Pauling suggested that “the best way to have a good idea is to have lots of ideas,” and though this notion might seem a little whimsical at first, it actually makes a lot of sense, especially if you’re trying to be innovative in the entrepreneurial sense. Every year, for example, companies launch about thirty thousand new food, beverage, and beauty products, and up to 90 percent fail within a year.[351] You might need ten good ideas just to have one that stands a chance.
So where do these ideas come from? Product ideas can originate from almost anywhere. How many times have you looked at a product that just hit the market and said, “I could have thought of that”? Just about anybody can come up with a product idea; basically, you just need a little imagination. Success is more likely to result from a truly remarkable product—something that grabs the attention of consumers. Entrepreneur and marketing consultant Seth Godin refers to truly remarkable products as “purple cows.”[352] He came up with the term while driving through the countryside one day. As he drove along, his interest was attracted by the hundreds of cows dotting the countryside. After a while, however, he started to ignore the cows because looking at them had become tedious. For one thing, they were all brown, and it occurred to him that a glimpse of a purple cow would be worth writing home about. People would tend to remember a purple cow; in fact, they might even want one.
Who thinks up “purple cow” ideas? Where do the truly remarkable business ideas come from? As we pointed out in an earlier chapter, entrepreneurs and small business owners are a rich source of new product ideas (according to the Small Business Administration, 55 percent of all new product innovations come from small businesses). Take Dean Kamen, inventor of the Segway Human Transporter, a battery-operated vehicle that responds to the rider’s movements: lean forward and you can go straight ahead at 12.5 miles per hour; to stop, just tilt backward. This revolutionary product is only one of Kamen’s many remarkable business ideas. He invented his first product—a wearable infusion pump for administering chemotherapy and other drugs—while he was still a college undergraduate.[353] Jacob Dunnack is also getting an early entrepreneurial start. At age six, Jacob became frustrated one day when he took his baseball bat to his grandmother’s house but forgot to take some baseballs as well. His solution? A hollow baseball bat that holds baseballs. Dunnack’s invention, now called the JD Batball, was quickly developed and now sells in stores such as Toys “R” Us.[354]
Why do so many entrepreneurs and small businesspeople come up with so many purple cows? For one thing, entrepreneurs are often creative people; moreover, they’re often willing to take risks. This is certainly true of Bob Montgomery, inventor of the PowerSki Jetboard (which undoubtedly qualifies as a purple cow). With more than twenty years’ experience in the water-sports industry and considerable knowledge of the personal-watercraft market, Montgomery finally decided to follow his long-cherished dream of creating an entirely new and conceptually different product—one that would offer users ease of operations, high performance, speed, and quality. His creative efforts have earned him the prestigious Popular Science “Best of What’s New” award.[355]
To remain competitive, medium and large organizations alike must also identify product development opportunities. Many companies actively solicit product ideas from people inside the organization, including marketing, sales, research, and manufacturing personnel, and some even establish internal “entrepreneurial” units. Others seek product ideas from outside the organization by talking to customers and paying attention to what the competition is doing. In addition to looking out for new product ideas, most companies constantly seek out ways to make incremental improvements in existing products by adding features that will broaden their consumer appeal. As you can see from Figure 10.3, “Sales from New Products”, the market leaders in most industries are the firms that are most successful at developing new products.
Figure 10.3. Sales from New Products

A novel approach to generating new-to-the-world product ideas is hiring “creativity” consultants. One of the best is Doug Hall, who’s been called “America’s Number 1 Idea Guru.” At a Cincinnati idea factory called Eureka!Ranch, Hall and other members of his consulting firm specialize in helping corporate executives get their creative juices flowing.[356] Hall’s job is getting people to invent products that make a real difference to consumers, and his strategies are designed to help corporate clients become more innovative—to jump-start their brains. As Hall puts it, “You have to swing to hit home runs.”[357] Eureka!Ranch’s client list includes Disney, Kellogg, Johnson & Johnson, and Procter & Gamble, as well as a number of budding entrepreneurs. Hall boasts that the average home uses eighteen goods or services that the Ranch helped shape, and if he’s right, you yourself have probably benefited from one of the company’s idea-generating sessions.[358]
Key Takeaways
The majority of product ideas come from entrepreneurs and small business owners, though medium and large organizations also must identify product-development opportunities in order to remain competitive.
Firms seek product ideas from people inside the organization, including those in marketing, sales, research, and manufacturing, as well as from customers and others outside the organization.
Exercise
(AACSB) Analysis
The “Strange New Products” Web site brags that it displays the “weirdest, funniest, stupidest, and [most] ingenious new products entering the marketplace.” This seems to be an accurate statement. Visit the site (http://www.strangenewproducts.com) and do the following:
Pick your favorite new product.
Describe the idea.
Explain how the product works.
Indicate whether you believe the product fills an unmet need. Explain why or why not.
Rate the product’s likelihood of success on a scale from 1 (extremely unlikely) to 10 (very likely). Explain your rating.
[350] Scott Thurm and Joann S. Lublin, “Peter Drucker’s Legacy Includes Simple Advice: It’s All about the People,” Wall Street Journal (November 14, 2005, B1, http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB113192826302796041.html?mod=2_1194_3 (accessed October 15, 2008).
[351] Philip Kotler and Gary Armstrong, Principles of Marketing, 12th ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, 2008), 253.
[352] Seth Godin, Purple Cow: Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable (New York: Penguin Group, 2003).
[353] See “Discover the Segway HT Revolution,” Segway, http://www.segway.com/segway (accessed May 11, 2006); “Segway HT,” The Great Idea Finder, http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventions/story089.htm (accessed May 11, 2006).
[354] See “The JD Batball,” The Great Idea Finder, http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventions/jdbatball.htm (accessed May 11, 2006); “Molds Designer Uses SolidWorks Software to Make 8-Year-Old’s Dream a Reality,” SolidWorks Express, http://www.solidworks.com/swexpress/jan/200201_feature_04.html (accessed May 11, 2006).
[355] “Awards and Media,” PowerSki Jet boards, http://www.powerski.com (accessed May 11, 2006).
[356] See Eureka!Ranch at http://www.eurekaranch.com.
[357] “Success Calls for Creativity,” CNN Money, February 4, 1997, http://money.cnn.com/1997/02/04/busunu/intv_hall (accessed May 11, 2006).
[358] “Why Eureka,” Eureka!Ranch, http://www.eurekaranch.com/eureka/default2.asp (accessed May 11, 2006).

Citation Information
APA Format:Collins, Karen., Exploring Business. Retrieved Sep 2, 2010 from http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/27984 .
MLA Format:Collins, Karen. Exploring Business. 1969 . Flat World Knowledge. 2 Sep, 2010. <http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/27984> .
Chapter 10 Print–It–Yourself has been added to your cart for $1.99.
This book is not available for adoption
Adopt this book for your course
We are happy you want to adopt this Flat World Knowledge textbook for your course! You'll need to register as a user to get started.
Why? Registering allows you to post your course's information on our website so students can find their book, and gives you access to My(flat)World where you can keep track of all the books you adopt.
Are you a new user? Sign up here for free.
Adopt this book for your course
Thank you for your interest in adopting this book for your class. It is NOT YET PUBLISHED. When it is, you will click this button and:
Fill out a short adoption form. When you submit it, we will generate (and send to you) a URL that is unique to your class. That is where your students will go to get their free online book, or to purchase affordable alternatives.
You will also be able to print out this adoption form and bring it to the bookstore so that they can order and sell copies locally of the softcover print version.
This book is not available for customization
You must log in to customize textbooks.
New user? Sign up here for free, and give it a try.
Features:
Drag-and-drop chapters into a new table of contents that suits your syllabus. Resequence and delete down to the section level!
Even better: Annotate content at the paragraph level, giving you fine grained control over the content to suit your exact needs.
Another benefit: No more being forced to switch to new editions. Ever. You move to new editions when you have time and when you see merit. Not when we do.
We have more to do: More cool features in the works, like adding your own authored content, as well as editing existing content all the way to the sentence level. Stay tuned.
This book is not yet published. When it does, our customization features let you:
Drag-and-drop chapters into a new table of contents that suits your syllabus. Resequence and delete down to the section level!
Even better: Annotate content at the paragraph level, giving you fine grained control over the content to suit your exact needs.
Another benefit: No more being forced to switch to new editions. Ever. You move to new editions when you have time and when you see merit. Not when we do.
We have more to do: More cool features in the works, like adding your own authored content, as well as editing existing content all the way to the sentence level. Stay tuned.
Your book has already been saved for print.
You typically should not customize your book further. If your bookstore or students have already ordered the book they will not see your future changes.
If you choose to make further customizations you can do so by choosing 'customize' for this book from My Flatworld
This book does not have any Educator Supplements
Only approved educators have access to the supplements for this textbook. Please note: Educator access is manually approved within approximately 48 business hours after your registration.
If you already have an account and have been approved as an educator, then please login.
Are you a new user? Sign up for free.
You can also feel free to contact us regarding this matter.