Resources from Business Victoria's workshop giving early stage innovators information on the steps you need to take to turn your new product into a commercial reality.
2. Learning objectives of this workshop are to provide
you with the skills to:
Understand the stages of commercialisation
Assess the feasibility of your idea at each stage
Make more informed decisions to proceed or cease
activity
Better understand what is required in preparing a
focused commercialisation plan
Page 3
Introduction and Workshop Objectives
3. Are you competing with established
businesses?
Overview of the stages of commercialisation
Understanding the stages of commercialisation
Do you have what it takes?
Page 4
Where to with your big ideas?
4. Page 4 - 5
Are you competing with established businesses?
5. Show me - prove it works
Prove the market needs it
Prove it to the market
Prove it can build
a business
EMERGING GROWTH BUSINESS
IDEA
PROOF OF
CONCEPT
PROOF OF PRODUCT
/OPPORTUNITY
MARKET VALIDATION
COMMERCIALISATION
Page 5
Stages of commercialisation
7. Do you have the :
Right expertise, skills & experience
Risk profile to invest and convince others
Ability to commit the required time, and
Perseverance, passion and drive
Page 8
Do you have what it takes to make the journey?
8. What is Intellectual Property (IP)?
The most common types of IP
IP strategies & considerations
IP protection structures
Selecting an IP advisor
Page 10
Intellectual Property
9. Intellectual Property is defined as:
‘a term referring to a number of distinct types of creations of the mind
for which property rights are recognised’
Keeping the ‘secret’
Using confidentiality agreements
Page 10
What is Intellectual Property?
11. Definition :
A patent is a right granted for any device, substance, method
or process which is new, inventive and useful
To be eligible your invention must be:
Be new, ‘novel’
Involve an ‘inventive’ step
Be a ‘manner of manufacture’
Be useful (do what you say it will do)
Page 11
Patents
12. 2 types of patents :
Standard patent (20 years)
Innovative patent (8 years)
3 types of applications:
Provisional applications (sets priority date)
Complete applications (incl specifications & claims)
International applications (PCT)
Page 11
Patents (cont.)
13. Definition :
Trade mark can be a word, phrase, letter, number, sound,
smell, shape, logo, picture, aspect of packaging or a
combination. Used as a marketing tool to distinguish
goods & services from each other
Examples of things you can’t use
Importance of determining what ‘classes’ to register
Page 12 -13
Trademarks
14. Definition :
A design is the overall appearance of a product. The visual
features that form the design include the shape,
configuration, pattern, and ornamentation which when
applied to the product, give it an unique appearance.
A registrable design must be new and distinctive
Provides protection for 5 years (+ renew 5 years)
Page 12
Design
15. Definition :
Copyright protects the original expression of ideas, not the
ideas themselves - automatic
Examples: Original works of art and literature, music,
films, sound recording, broadcasts and computer programs
Can licence to others
Copyright generally lasts 70 years
Page 13
Copyright
16. A confidentiality agreement
is often used to stop parties and employees from
revealing your secret or proprietary knowledge during
and after employment / discussions
A trade secret
is both a type of IP and a strategy for protecting IP
Page 13
Confidentiality / Trade secrets
17. Patent lodgement – starts the ‘clock’ on
commercialisation timetable
Weighing up total IP protection –v- access to funding
How do you decide – which countries?
Alternative strategies for IP protection
Page 13
IP Protection strategies and considerations
18. The importance of assessing the feasibility of
your idea/product
Key criteria in assessing the feasibility of a
product
Feasibility assessment activity
Page 22
Assessing the feasibility of your idea
19. Not every good idea will lead to commercial success
Need a balance between innovative skills and your ability to assess
the ‘feasibility’ of your idea
Need to maintain focus on the ‘end goal’
Feasibility assessment will help you :
Decide if you should cease activity (before it costs you significantly)
Refocus during product development stage
Page 22
The importance of feasibility assessment
20. The 3 P’s – Product, Potential & People
Product – Innovation, product, IP novelty, ability to meet
market need, value proposition
Potential – Market size, access to market channels, target
market, competitive advantage, export potential, barriers
to entry
People – business experience, industry expertise/skills,
management mix of skills, vision, strategy, ability to
adapt, financial/business planning
Key criteria in assessing feasibility of product
21. Feasibility assessment activity includes a series of questions set out
by key areas of activity of :
Product / technology feasibility
IP feasibility
Market feasibility
Financial feasibility
Overall commercial feasibility
Page 22
Feasibility assessment activity (page 22)
22. Assess each area of activities in your commercialisation
Page 26
Feasibility assessment activity (cont.)
23. Understanding the government regulations in
your country
Understanding the regulations in different
markets
Establishing your business structure
Registering a company & business name
www.asic.gov.au
www.austrade.gov.au
Page 19
Requirements for licenses, registrations and
permits
24. How a commercialisation plan differs to a business plan
Essential ingredients in your commercialisation strategy
Product description & value proposition
Market assessment & validation of market opportunity
Identifying the business model & market entry strategy
Template of a commercialisation plan
Overview of the commercialisation strategy process
Page 40
Developing a commercialisation strategy and plan
25. A commercialisation plan often encounters :
No clear comparative model to follow
Multiple variations of ‘the product’ available
Different target markets which need the product
A number of business models options
Page 40
How a commercialisation plan differs to a
business plan
26. Funding is often the most limiting factor in the process
Requires an open mind to the possibilities & common -
sense approach to the realities
Strategies need to be well researched
How a commercialisation plan differs to a
business plan (cont.)
27. The product & value proposition to the customer
(product description, features & benefits, value proposition)
Market assessment & validation of market opportunity
(which industry, structure, who gets value, relationships & influences,
key players, selecting market validation partners)
Identifying the business model & market entry strategy
(which business activities do you want to do? market entry – product,
pricing, promotion, place)
Page 40-41
Essential ingredients in your
commercialisation strategy
28. Product 1 Product 2 Product 3
List 4 Key features
List 4 key benefits
What problem does the
product solve for customers?
How is the problem being
solved currently and by
whom?
Explain the customer value
proposition
Page 41
Product description and value proposition
29. ROUTE TO MARKET INFLUENCERS
PRODUCT
MANUFACTURER
DISTRIBUTER
RETAILER
END CONSUMER ☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺☺
MARKET / INDUSTRY STRUCTURE
Page 42
Market assessment – industry structure
30. R&D /
Technology
Distribution
/ Delivery
Sales /
Business
Development
Warranty &
Customer
Support
Manufacturing
/ Assembly
/ Services
KEY BUSINESS ACTIVITIES & COST CENTRES
Page 43
The business model description
32. PRODUCT PLACE PROMOTION PRICE
Developing the
right ‘product’ for
the target market
Getting the right’
product ‘into’ the
target market
‘Informing’ the
market about the
right product
Getting the
‘price’ right
Product features
& benefits
Identifying the
value proposition
Quality
Packaging /
product branding
Warranty
Installation
Instruction
manual
Distribution
channels
Selection &
relationships
with
intermediaries
Identifying the
influencers in
the market
Service levels
Market
exposure
Identifying sales
staff
Training /
motivation of staff
Advertising
Publicity
Developing
promotional
material –
brochures,
internet,
testimonials
Determining the
$$ value pricing
of the product for
each market
Flexibility to
meet market
demand
Discount /
rebate policy
Page 45
Key elements of marketing entry strategy
33. 1. Executive summary
2. The product & value proposition
3. IP protection
4. Market profile (industry structure, competitor products, key
industry players, critical success factors)
5. Route to market (business model, commercial partnerships,
market entry strategy)
6. Financial analysis (costing, projections, funding)
7. Team & operations
8. Action Plan
Page 45
Overview of commercialisation plan
34. R&D development finished
Invention & R&D / working prototype
Commercial design
Testing / certification, technical review
commercial product in place
Identified commercial product offering
Clear product features & benefits
Value proposition / competitive
advantage identified
market place assessment
Detailed market research undertaken -
- Clear understanding of market structure
- Evaluate competitor prods /key players
- Look at industry relationships & CSFs
IP protection &
strategy in place
Management
skills review
Determine your
vision/objectives
market validation
to be done
Plan investment
raising activity
Plan potential
legal structure
commercialisation strategy development
Determine strategic position of product / business
Identify the Business Model to commercialise the product
Commercialisation options evaluation
Market entry strategy determined
= COMMERCIALISATION STRATEGY
STRATEGY
- Comm Plan
- Ongoing bus
strategy
- Strategic
partnership
- Fund raising
strategy
- Direction
IP
- Ongoing
management
-
Confidentialit
y agreements
- Licensing
MARKET
- Target mkt
- Route to mkt
- Pricing
- Distn
channels
- Promotion
FINANCE
- Financial
projections
- Acctounting
system
- Budgets
TEAM /
OPERATIONS
- Management
team
- Recruitment
- Manufacturing
set up
- Location
PRODUCT
- Future R&D
enhancement
- New product
development
Financial
evaluation
$$$
$$$
$$$
COMMERCIALISATION
STRATEGY
35. FREE Mentoring Session
Business mentors help you to identify a clear direction for you and your
business
You are entitled to 2 free mentoring sessions in this program
Business mentors can advise you on how to:
conduct market research
cost your products or services
develop an effective commercialisation strategy & plan
use other business management tools
move forwards in commercialisation
To arrange a free mentoring session with a business mentor complete
the evaluation form and select FREE Mentoring Session on page 2. You
will then receive an email with details on claiming your free mentoring
session.
36. Questions?
Thank you for attending
Check out
business.vic.gov.au/events
for more workshop information