Categories: Uncategorized

Feature Creep

Companies that struggle with innovation often make up for it by adding features to existing products.  They succumb to “feature creep” – the gradual and continuous addition of features and functions though nothing is truly new.  While it may look improved, the added features make your product more complex, difficult to use, and more costly to produce.  Over time, your core customers abandon you.

Here is an example – the Numi toilet by Kohler.  At $6400, it is promoted as the top-of-the-line toilet with lots of high-tech bells and whistles:

  • Custom bidet: User can control pressure, temperature and angle.
  • Tankless design; dual flush
  • Motion Sensor Lid: After 90 seconds of no movement, the toilet will close.
  • Seat warmer
  • Foot warmer: A vent beneath the bowl blows hot air to warm your feet and the cold tile beneath them.
  • Automatic seat: For male users, a motion sensor is activated by foot and causes the seat to rise and then lower when you’re away.
  • LED lit back panel: Frosted glass is lit in an energy-efficient way.
  • MP3 hook-up: So you never have to be without your music.
  • Remote control: This touch-screen pad lets the user control all of these features from a wireless control.
  • A flat white surface designed for easy cleaning.

Instead of adding features, companies can become more innovative by subtracting features.  Here is an example of the Subtraction template of the S.I.T. innovation method.  Kimberly-Clarke Corporation, a global producer of paper-based products, launched their new Scott Natural Tube-Free toilet paper. Just as the name asserts, the rolls come without the cardboard tubes while still being able to fit on the average toilet paper holder.

From Foxnews.com:

“The idea has been around for quite some time,” said Doug Daniels, brand manger for Scott brand. “The tube doesn’t really serve any consumer purpose. But we’ve had a breakthrough in our technology that’s finally allowed us to do this.”  For now, the process of taking out the tube remains a mystery, as Kimberly-Clarke won’t reveal its ground-breaking technology. Daniels says they’re keeping tight-lipped, since they might use the process for future products. But more importantly, he maintains that no cardboard tube means every single piece of toilet paper will be usable, without those last few sheets getting stuck to the roll.

Kimberly-Clarke estimates that the U.S. alone disposes of 17 billion cardboard tubes from bathroom tissue, equating to 160 million pounds of waste. To put that into perspective, that’s roughly the weight of 250 Boeing 747s and enough tubes to circle the earth’s equator 40 times. Daniels says that this marriage of consumer and ecological advantages will pave the way for the success of the tubeless initiative.”

boydadmin

View Comments

Recent Posts

Innovation Behavior

Innovation is a skill, not a gift.  Top organizations drive growth by nurturing and investing…

9 months ago

Should you learn TRIZ? – Yes. ….and No.

Are you in the world of problem solving?  Is problem solving a skillset you have…

10 months ago

What Lies Ahead in 2024?

5 Data-Driven, Customer-Centric trends we’ve identified This is not just another conventional forecast. Over nearly…

10 months ago

Fork or Chopsticks – Which Innovation Tools Do You Use?

Imagine a chef, who only uses a spoon. Imagine a dentist, who only uses a…

10 months ago

The Moat Mentality: Exploring New Frontiers in Innovation Methodologies

In investing and business strategy, we often speak in terms of moats. Warren Edward Buffett…

10 months ago

Was it a Breakthrough or an Adjacency?

This year, P&G’s Febreze celebrates its silver anniversary as a brand. But not all 25…

11 months ago