Product and
technology life cycles
For the following analysis, it would be helpful to
consider the implications of product and technology life cycles for the exercise
of technology evaluation. The curve of product life cycle is S-shaped and shows
three phases : growth, ascent and maturity phases. By then, however, they will
reflect the growth of the industry rather than of the product.
→
How To
Discover Opportunities
Overtime, some earlier forms of a product phase out
(fade into oblivion) or shift from one industry to another. For
significant innovations like the automobile,
television and computers, for which the overall product life cycle is
comparatively long,
the subcycles constituting it may be of different lengths.
The technology life cycle has four phases:
latent development, ascent, maturity and decline. Very basic products have very long product lives, but particular
technologies involved in making or servicing these products (typically) have
shorter lives. The technology life cycle can be regarded as having
a rising potency on the ascent phase; it reaches a peak at
some point and declines until it ceases to have valid potency.
The
reconfiguration of technology
It is generally difficult to transplant technology
from one environment to another. In other words, products or processes
developed in the context of one market environment are seldom wholly suitable in
another.
This sometimes holds true even for technologies transported between
industrialized countries. For example, the composition and form of the leading
detergent products are markedly different in the United States, Western Europe
and Japan even though the principles under which detergents are formulated
remain the same. This happens because of differences in washing traditions, the fibre mix in the laundry basket, demographic factors etc. The same phenomenon
occurs in the motor car industry; even though the manufacturer and
trade marks
are the same in different countries, the car models differ significantly in such
features as seating capacity, number of doors, thrust, acceleration, fuel
consumption, suspension and comfort.
|
The technology
transfer framework
By and large, most technology originates in
industrialized countries, although the newly industrializing countries are
becoming important contributors. A technology package develops to meet an
existing or forecast market need in its country of origin and is consistent with
accessible resources. It can be said to be “appropriate” to that environment.
Although such a technology may later be modified to use different raw materials
and simpler levels of automation, it will still be recognizable as mature
technology.
A mature technology reflects the capabilities of
mass production, the market preferences of an affluent population and the
workability and efficiency of a well-developed industrial infrastructure. It
also embodies a large number of major and minor improvements made over a long
period of time. Furthermore, a mature technology reflects the strength imparted
to it by the legal framework in which it is used.
A
state-of-the-art technology, particularly one on
the ascent portion of the technology life cycle, is unlikely to be available for
licence, especially to a licensee in the relatively amorphous marketing and
legal environments of a developing country. Even if it were available, it would
most likely be inappropriate for a developing country, not only for the reason
cited above but for others as well, such as a lack of technological complexity
in the industrial structure of the host country.
→
10 Commandments of
Innovation
In industrialized countries technologies yield
products or processes with specifications different from those of the
innovative
products.
→
New Product Development:
10 Best Practices
The differences result from the processes of competition and
imitation and from the mechanisms of market segmentation, product
positioning
and niche markets, which both multiply technologies and broaden their range.
Companies often consider exporting technologies to subsidiaries, joint ventures,
or third parties for a number of reasons: to avoid home-market competition, to
enlarge international market share, to gain access to more conducive markets and
to offset development costs.
The technologies may be offered for licence
directly by the owner of the technology or through engineering companies and
licence brokers. For almost the same reasons, the technologies applied in
products and processes in the mature or declining phase of the technology life
cycle may become offered for licence and sale. >>
Next
|