Overcoming Customer Resistance to Innovation

November 16, 2010

Guest Blog by Paul Sloane

Sometimes the biggest resistance to innovation comes from the person who should benefit most from it – the customer. Customers can be very conservative. When you come along with an unorthodox new product or service they are often initially unimpressed. Why should the buyer take a risk with your unproven new gismo? He knows that new products often have bugs and he does not want to be the guinea pig on which you experiment. He is familiar with the current method – why should he change?

Who would want to be the first customer for a fax machine or indeed for a telephone? It seems ridiculous now but selling the first few telephones must have been really difficult. And how about laser eye treatment? How would you find the first person to try it when there was a safe alternative in a pair of spectacles?

This is understandable and needs careful handling. Your sales people will doubtless be adept at explaining the benefits of your new products but the customer is right to be sceptical. You need to find ways to reassure him and to mitigate his risk.

At the same time you need early adopters so that you can get some traction in the market, customer feedback and positive references for your innovation. So acknowledge the client’s concerns and put offers in place to allay them. You cannot just use your standard terms and conditions for a radical new product. You have to be innovative in your sales approach too. For example you could:

o Allow them a free trial of the new product.

o Continue to provide the old service so that they can go back to it at any time.

o Offer a money back guarantee.

o Provide a special service level that gives them immediate access to your top support experts.

o Agree joint service level agreements.

o Stress the payback and benefits they will receive and even make payment dependent on their being achieved.

o Promise to arrange a positive PR result for them in the trade press if the trial succeeds.

Above all you must choose the right early customers. Some people love new technology and others hate it. Select the best early adopters from among your top clients. Appeal to their sense of pioneering adventure. Stress the prestige that goes with early success – for both of you. Make sure that they share in the recognition of a successful launch. If all goes well then ask them for a testimonial. You can help them be seen as an industry leader in trade journal stories and at conferences. You are in it together and it must be a win/win for both parties.

About the Author

Paul Sloane graduated from Cambridge University with a first in Engineering. He was 11 years with IBM where he came top of Sales School and was part of the team that launched the IBM PC in the UK. He became MD of Ashton-Tate, VP International of Mathsoft Inc and CEO of Monactive Ltd. He is the author of 18 books on Innovation, Leadership and Lateral Thinking. Paul is the founder of Destination Innovation (http://www.destination-innovation.com). He writes and speaks on lateral thinking and innovation.
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1 Comment Leave a Comment

  • 1. Tweets that mention Overc&hellip  |  November 17, 2010 at 12:54 am

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Tony Mack, cynthia kocialski. cynthia kocialski said: Overcome customer resistance to innovation, customers want it, they need it, yet they hestitate to buy or use it. http://bit.ly/9kcKlo [...]

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