The product life cycle is linked to creativity, invention, and insight - a method, a discipline, and a formal process followed by a company from the initial conception of an idea till the market launch of the physical product.
According to Michael McGrath (in Next Generation Product Development), conscious focus on the development process began late in the 19th century, and in the 21st century, the emphasis has shifted to R&D-based development. There is a definite, recognizable, and irrefutable five-stage pattern in the life of every product, be it a successful one or not.
Let's start with a closer look at the five product lifecycle stages before discussing the framework and its applicability.
The pertinent need for accelerated feedback on the relevance of the product under development is evidenced by most products that waited to evolve (in all respect) before being introduced to the market resulting in disastrous outcomes.
The focus is on developing prototypes, a minimum viable product to test product effectiveness, and product launch strategies. There is a need for a legal team to support regulatory requirements and product liability risks early on.
Legal review, especially around IP rights, needs to be taken on earlier in the design process. Budget allocation to conduct and publish early consumer research and create the buzz around the new product is needed. The marketing goal includes reestablishing brand awareness and reputation.
The need for identifying the quality and compliance regulations set by government bodies is paramount because of its impact on product development, time-to-market, and cost implications.
Generating traceability from requirements to design to testing apart from data and reports supporting relevant trials is imperative for regulatory compliance and subsequent approval. This stage required budgets allocated toward identifying supply chains, vendors, and other relevant partners.
In this stage, the company is first able to understand how the more significant market responds to the product, its acceptance, and its success. It is prudent to get a legal clearance and confirmation that any risk associated with the launch is tolerable and memorialize why the product does not infringe any identified patents.
There is a need to ensure that IP protections are in place. There may be a need for foreign protection if the product is launched or accessed across geographies. A deliberate focus is needed to perfect trademarks, patents, trade secrets, and copyrights as appropriate.
The organization invests heavily in marketing and promotions, the scaling of supply chains, and various partners' onboarding to generate demand and get the product to every customer in the introduction stage.
With the product's popularity, the market grows, and so does the competition. Competitors start offering their equivalent solutions. The organization continues to invest heavily in advertising and promotions to outperform its competitors.
With the market growing, sales also increase, so investments to improve the supply chain and partner networks to support the growth are also high. There is a need for investment in setting up and scaling up support services too. Investments also happen to continuously update the product to improve functions and features and keep it relevant.
Generating relevant data and reports needed for continued strict compliance with the regulations laid out by the laws of the land and other government bodies remains vital even in this stage. The legal system continuously monitors and protects IP, trademark, and copyright violations with continuing competitor proliferation.
The maturity stage necessitates investments to make finer differentiation in the product and associated services to establish leadership. Legal and compliance continue to be relevant in safeguarding the interest of the product and the organization.
The organization attempts to extend the product lifecycle with newer marketing strategies, reduced pricing, adding new features to increase value proposition, or adjusting brand proposition.
The organization might look to consolidate using mergers and acquisitions of similar players or possibly give away the product to a more prominent player in the market.
There is a need for renewed investments on the legal side at this stage. These five product lifecycle stages indicate a definitive need to establish a product strategy, an economic model, and a roadmap linking strategy to execution.
Several components are involved in the success of a product, including but not limited to Enabling and nurturing innovative ideas, Creation of low-risk experiments, Making high-impact investment decisions that align strategy and execution Building the right product, the right way at the right time Putting together the right team that can adapt to change and grow Creating a solid relationship with suppliers Meaningful measures of progress
The SAFe Lean Startup Cycle and the scalable configurations with relevant competencies provide a comprehensive product lifecycle strategy based on an interdisciplinary approach. SAFe provides the requisite knowledge, skills, behavior, practices, and an array of tools through the seven-core competency model of business agility to support an organization to achieve its business objectives by creating a perfect synchronization between Strategy and Execution.