Thomas, why is skepticism important for innovations?
Thomas Fick: In fact, I hold the opinion that a healthy, wait-and-see attitude is what helps a product innovation on the market more than excessive euphoria. This is plausible if you observe your personal behavior. For example, if I make you a promise "We're going away this weekend and it's going to be great," you look forward to it and an attitude of expectation grows within you. But your expectation will never be capped by reality.
The whole thing is a phenomenon that has been researched for a long time. In the field of innovation communication Roy Amara has been a pioneer and has defined a law. This says roughly summarized: All technical innovations are always overestimated by us in the short term and always underestimated in the long term.
That means it is important to manage people's expectations?
Thomas Fick: That's exactly what it's all about, and that's exactly why communication is insanely important in innovation marketing. The communication is the marketing. That is, not the phases around the outside (definition of goals, markets, target groups) or the lacing of a product portfolio, but the communication about my product innovation is crucial. After all, what's the point if you have the best product ever, but nobody knows about it and buys it?
So you're talking about radical innovation, right?
Thomas Fick: Among us marketing experts, I would rather speak of incremental innovation. Because radical innovation is more about saying "Look, this has never been done before, but this is just right for you. Why don't you try it out?" Incremental innovation is more about saying "Look, the product has a new feature and can do even more than before." In other words, with incremental innovations, you're actually hitting a barrier with your target audience and markets because the product already existed, but you now have to convince customers to develop it further. A classic example of this is cell phones.
The sticking point is - and this brings me back to the start of our conversation: How do I approach people and what expectations do I create and lead them to? You're always going to run into an attitude. Some people will say "Yeah, this has never happened before. I've waited so long for this" and others will say "One more phone camera. What nonsense." And you have to "serve" both of these target groups. And this brings me back to my initial thesis: It will be easier for you to convince the people who are skeptical about your product of the benefits of your product or your innovation than it will be for the people who initially approached your product in a completely exaggerated and euphoric manner. They will be disappointed.