Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Learning from Tata's Nano

http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/feb2008/id20080227_377233.htm
The announcement last month by Tata Motors of its newest car, the Nano, was revealing on many levels. The announcement generated extensive coverage and commentary, but just about everyone missed the Nano's real significance, which goes far beyond the car itself.
But, O.K., let's start with the car itself—particularly the price. At about $2,500 retail, the Nano is the most inexpensive car in the world. Its closest competitor, the Maruti 800, made in India by Maruti Udyog, sells for roughly twice as much. To put this in perspective, the price of the entire Nano car is roughly equivalent to the price of a DVD player option in a luxury Western car. The low price point has left other auto companies scrambling to catch up.
Thinking Outside the Patent Box
How could Tata Motors make a car so inexpensively? It started by looking at everything from scratch, applying what some analysts have described as "Gandhian engineering" principles—deep frugality with a willingness to challenge conventional wisdom. A lot of features that Western consumers take for granted—air conditioning, power brakes, radios, etc.—are missing from the entry-level model.
More fundamentally, the engineers worked to do more with less. The car is smaller in overall dimensions than the Maruti, but it offers about 20% more seating capacity as a result of design choices such as putting the wheels at the extreme edges of the car. The Nano is also much lighter than comparable models as a result of efforts to reduce the amount of steel in the car (including the use of an aluminum engine) and the use of lightweight steel where possible. The car currently meets all Indian emission, pollution, and safety standards, though it only attains a maximum speed of about 65 mph. The fuel efficiency is attractive—50 miles to the gallon.
Hearing all this, many Western executives doubt that this new car represents real innovation. Too often, when they think of innovation, they focus on product innovation using breakthrough technologies; often, specifically, on patents. Tata Motors has filed for 34 patents associated with the design of the Nano, which contrasts with the roughly 280 patents awarded to General Motors (GM) every year. Admittedly that figure tallies all of GM's research efforts, but if innovation is measured only in terms of patents, no wonder the Nano is not of much interest to Western executives. Measuring progress solely by patent creation misses a key dimension of innovation: Some of the most valuable innovations take existing, patented components and remix them in ways that more effectively serve the needs of large numbers of customers.
A Modular Design Revolution
But even this broader perspective fails to capture other significant dimensions of innovation. In fact, Tata Motors itself did not draw a lot of attention to what is perhaps the most innovative aspect of the Nano: its modular design. The Nano is constructed of components that can be built and shipped separately to be assembled in a variety of locations. In effect, the Nano is being sold in kits that are distributed, assembled, and serviced by local entrepreneurs.
As Ratan Tata, chairman of the Tata group of companies, observed in an interview with The Times of London: "A bunch of entrepreneurs could establish an assembly operation and Tata Motors would train their people, would oversee their quality assurance and they would become satellite assembly operations for us. So we would create entrepreneurs across the country that would produce the car. We would produce the mass items and ship it to them as kits. That is my idea of dispersing wealth. The service person would be like an insurance agent who would be trained, have a cell phone and scooter and would be assigned to a set of customers."
In fact, Tata envisions going even further, providing the tools for local mechanics to assemble the car in existing auto shops or even in new garages created to cater to remote rural customers. With the exception of Manjeet Kripalani, BusinessWeek's India bureau chief, few have focused on this breakthrough element of the Nano innovation (BusinessWeek.com, 1/10/08).
This is part of a broader pattern of innovation emerging in India in a variety of markets, ranging from diesel engines and agricultural products to financial services. While most of the companies pursuing this type of innovation are Indian, the U.S. engineering firm, Cummins (CMI) demonstrates that Western companies can also harness this approach and apply it effectively. In 2000 Cummins designed innovative "gensets" (generation sets) to enter the lower end of the power generator market in India. These modular sets were explicitly designed to lower distribution costs and make it easy for distributors and customers to tailor the product for highly variable customer environments. Using this approach, Cummins captured a leading position in the Indian market and now actively exports these new products to Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East.
"Open Distribution" Innovation
We have called this "open distribution" innovation because it mobilizes large numbers of third parties to reach remote rural consumers, tailor the products and services to more effectively serve their needs, and add value to the core product or service through ancillary services. Three innovations in products and processes come together to support "open distribution:"
• increased modularity (both in products and processes)
• aggressive leveraging of existing third-party, often noncommercial, institutions in rural areas to more effectively reach target customers
• creative use of information technology, carefully integrated with social institutions, to encourage use and deliver even greater value.
Modular designs combined with creative leverage of local third-party institutions help participants to get better faster. Companies such as Tata and Cummins are going far beyond "customer co-creation" in the narrow sense of soliciting isolated ideas from customers. Instead, they are building long-term personal relationships with customers, enriched by the specialized capabilities of broad networks of third parties that generate much deeper insight into customer needs and afford opportunities to tailor value.
Such innovations are quite different from those in the retail distribution systems pioneered by companies such as Dell (DELL) and the leading big-box retailers. These U.S. companies developed completely self-contained and highly standardized facilities and services for customers. But the open-architecture approach pioneered by Indian companies may offer much greater opportunity to deliver more tailored value to customers than the closed-architecture U.S. approach. The techniques initially developed to reach poor and rural customers may have even greater potential when used to reach highly demanding, affluent, urban customers in Western economies.
Welcoming Users Back into the Design Loop
The Tata Motors/Nano approach contrasts with the strategy of most other manufacturers. For more established automakers each new model represents an advance in tight integration, with more and more of the functionality deeply embedded in electronics that truly represent a "black box" to the customer. The days of customizing cars to personalize them and push their performance limits are rapidly receding into distant memory for the average customer. Yet, as Kathleen Franz, makes clear in her wonderful book, Tinkering: Consumers Reinvent the Early Automobile, it was the open design of early automobile models that blurred the lines between consumption and invention and led to a wave of innovations that were later embraced by the auto industry.
What are the broader lessons that Western executives should learn from this innovation story?
Emerging markets are a fertile ground for innovation. The challenge of reaching dispersed, low-income consumers in emerging markets often spurs significant innovation. Western executives should be careful about compartmentalizing the impact of these innovations on the edge of the global economy. As we suggested in Innovation Blowback, these innovations will become the basis for "attacker" strategies that can be used to challenge incumbents in more developed economies. What's initially on the edge soon comes to the core.
• Find ways to help customers and others on the edge to tinker with your products. Modular and open product designs help engage large numbers of motivated users in tailoring and pushing the performance boundaries of your products, leading to significant insight into unmet customer needs and creative approaches to addressing those needs.
• Pay attention to institutional innovation. Western executives often become too narrowly focused on product or process innovation. Far higher returns may come from investing in institutional innovation—redefining the roles and relationships that bring together independent entities to deliver more value to the market. Tata is innovating in all three dimensions simultaneously.
• Rethink distribution models. In our relentless quest for operating efficiency, we have gone for more standardization and fewer business partners in our efforts to reach customers. As customers gain more power, they will demand more tailoring and value-added service to meet their needs. Companies that innovate on this dimension are likely to be richly rewarded.
John Hagel and John Seely Brown are co-chairman and independent co-chairman, respectively, of the Center for Edge Innovation, a part of Deloitte & Touche USA LLP. John Hagel writes a blog at Edge Perspectives .

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Furniture of an apartment in a box- great design

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/02/casulo_an_entir.php

Kudos to the designers. Great idea. great appeal.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Custom-made mobile phones to suit your choices

NEW DELHI: This is one made-to-order device that everyone will love to have: the cellphone. If you are a music lover, why not have a phone which can hold more songs rather than heavy graphics.

Alternatively, if you want a better camera on a handset, why settle for just a 2-megapixel one? Soon, you will be able to order a mobile phone built to your specifications, much like you can assemble a computer or order a custom-made one from Dell or any other PC vendor.

It will carry a premium, but will definitely set you apart from the people who use the mass market product. A mobile phone is a combination of various parts - memory, processor, camera, MP3 music player, other applications, number of SIM card slots et al. Now, you’ll be able to dial up a vendor and buy parts off the shelf and put together your own cellphone.

This will completely overhaul the mobile phone business, which is currently dependent on selling whatever the cellphone maker wants to market rather than what you want to buy.

Also, when mobile phone makers like to call their devices as computers why can’t they custom-build them? That’s the problem the Chinese company, zzzPhone, is planning to solve. Their factory in China will custom-build a phone to your specifications - like the number of SIM card slots, applications accessibility, memory capacity etc.


Also Read
Ban on mobile phone use while driving enforced from May 8
DoT plans to hike spectrum fees
Telcos say no to integrated directory
Airtel confident of retaining the top slot: Sunil Mittal




It will look like any other regular handset. The difference will be inside: you can choose to have (or not have) GPS, 7-megapixel camera, 4GB internal memory, stereo speakers and Windows Mobile (or equivalent) operating system, processor upgrade or anything else. It even has two SIM card slots so you can keep your work and play in the same phone.
Right now, prices are variable, starting at $149 for a 3-megapixel version with Windows Mobile and a 3-inch VGA display. The company claims to deliver orders within six weeks.

Technical and marketing experts in India argue that while this is practical, the miniature mobile parts do pose a challenge in terms of how far you can go. Says Nokia India marketing director Devinder Kishore: “Custom-building can be incorporated. But Nokia already offers 40 new models each year, catering to the needs of a whole spectrum of users.”
While a range of models in the market ensures that people have a choice, it does not satiate the desires of consumers who are looking for top-end exclusivity and here’s where the custom-built phone will score.

Explains Hewlett-Packard India (personal systems group), president, Ravi Swaminathan: “Technically, it is possible. If you are willing to pay the price, anything can be custom-built, much like top-end cars. But I believe that a wide range is available in the market and meets the needs of over 90% of the market.”

The miniature mobile components pose a challenge to custom-make the gadget. But for people willing to shell out a premium, it won’t be a problem to choose between having, say, a global positioning system on the phone or a 10-megapixel camera.

ARM (a chipmaker for cell phones) managing director Anil Gupta adds: “It’s possible to get to a point where we can buy a phone with more, or less memory. Also, in future, most mobiles will have USB ports to allow connecting to a ‘sister’ device. Even the idea of a ‘single-use’ mobile phone is not far-fetched (similar to the use-and-throw cameras).

Such phones could be useful when you are travelling to a new destination: you keep your regular phone, but use the single-use unit while at the new location, throwing it away when you are ready to leave.” Whatever the technical challenges, a made-to-order phone is pretty much feasible and soon, you will be able to ask for one with your own specifications.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/News_By_Industry/Telecom/Custom-made_mobile_phones_to_suit_your_choices/rssarticleshow/2786945.cms