2000
DOI: 10.1287/msom.2.4.317.12337
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The Impact of an Integrated Marketing and Manufacturing Innovation

Abstract: Suppose you are a Marketing Manager envisioning a new product, or an Operations Manager contemplating a process improvement, or a CEO who commissioned an integrated new product development team. If our assumptions hold, our model offers you a single numerical measure, called the degree of product/process innovation, to determine your initiative's impact on potential sales, prices, market segments, and profits. Our simple, single-period model is a variation of the existing vertically differentiated products mod… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(40 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(28 reference statements)
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“…Similarly, Van der Rhee, Schmidt, and Van Orden (2011) extend the high‐end encroachment work of Schmidt and Porteus (2000) by demonstrating that high‐end encroachment, which Schmidt and Druehl (2008) mapped to Christensen's sustaining technologies, could be segmented into three distinct sub‐types, the “immediate,”“new‐attribute,” and “new‐market” forms. Further delineating the high‐ and low‐end patterns into their sub‐types allows firms to be more discriminating in determining the best strategy for introduction of a new product.…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Similarly, Van der Rhee, Schmidt, and Van Orden (2011) extend the high‐end encroachment work of Schmidt and Porteus (2000) by demonstrating that high‐end encroachment, which Schmidt and Druehl (2008) mapped to Christensen's sustaining technologies, could be segmented into three distinct sub‐types, the “immediate,”“new‐attribute,” and “new‐market” forms. Further delineating the high‐ and low‐end patterns into their sub‐types allows firms to be more discriminating in determining the best strategy for introduction of a new product.…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Any customer who has non-negative utility is willing to buy the product. The uniformly distributedỹ and linear utility function uðp,qÞ lead to a linear demand function which is not only widely adopted in the extant literature but also verified by empirical evidence such as the example of bicycle pumps in Schmidt and Porteus (2000).…”
Section: Basic Model and Assumptionsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…There has been a number of articles that studied the effects of component commonality on product-line design (Bernstein, Kok, & Xie, 2009;Desai, Kekre, Radhakrishnan, & Srinivasan, 2001;Heese & Swaminathan, 2006;Kim & Chhajed, 2000. Schmidt and Porteus (2000) studied the impact of process innovation on the production quantity choices of a multiproduct monopolist and single product duopolists. Netessine and Taylor (2007) investigated the impact of inventory holding and set-up costs on the quality levels and production quantities of the products in the line.…”
Section: Operational Considerations In Product-line Designmentioning
confidence: 99%