Thursday, 17 April 2014

Relationship between managerial dispositions and new product projects portfolio evaluation

Mc Nally et al. (2007) associated managers ’personality traits with projects evaluation criteria weightings.

Criteria used to evaluate the firm’s portfolio of new product projects can be split in 3 broad dimensions:
-          Value maximization (eg ROI)
-          Balance (mix of NPD is proportional across multiple concerns e.g. completion date, technical risk, ROI, innovativeness – radical v. incremental)
-          Strategic fit (project alignment with firm strategy)

Managers’ personality traits fall into the following categories (Mc Nally et al., 2007):
-          Change resistance (routine seeking, negative emotional reaction, short-term thinking, focus on immediate inconvenience, closed-mindedness)
-          Ambiguity tolerance (ability to accept the absence of information on the range and probability of outcomes)
-          Analytic cognitive style (style in problem solving / low analytic cognitive style are more holistic, high cognitive analytical style break down problems in a set of underlying causal relationships)
-          Leadership style (propension to lead democratically or autocratically)

Relationships





-          Balance dimension: there are multiple concerns to balance (e.g. time frame, technical risk, project innovativeness, resource availability, return, etc.). Analytic cognitive style plays a role because it relates to the ability to break down complex problems into components and evaluate each of the component’s impact.
-          Strategic fit dimension: Moving away from incremental innovation requires high ambiguity tolerance.  The more ambiguity tolerance, the more the strategic fit dimension involves examination of latent customer needs to develop non-incremental new products.
Evaluative dimension weighting in new product portfolio management: value maximization, balance and strategic fit are given different emphasis depending on the leadership style. Autocratic leadership limits new projects to those with high success probabilities. The more democratic the leadership style, the more likely the NPPM evaluative dimensions will exhibit equal weightings.