Marketing Complex InnovationSunday June 1, 2008, 8:00 am - 6:00 pm, Boston, Massachusetts Summary:This course provides innovators with a walk through the process of successfully bringing complex technologies to market. Go-to-market mechanics will be discussed in detail, and a great deal of emphasis will be placed on creating solid strategic platforms that ultimately maximize the results of tactical execution and return on marketing investments. Tactical execution will be discussed in great detail including real-world examples from the marketing trenches where a “better mousetrap” never achieves commercial success without the benefit of a robust, professional marketing program (even super-innovator Thomas Edison possessed a rich and aggressive marketing acumen that rivaled his inventive genius). Objective:The course offers participants a uniquely comprehensive toolkit for market success — a practical and fundamental how-to roadmap that can be transformative for engineers and scientists who want to maximize the potential of their innovations. With the knowledge gained in this course, attendees will leave armed with newfound insight and an ability to better manage the process of transforming technological breakthroughs into market success. Course Outline:
Who Should Attend:This course will benefit scientists, engineers, and other technical innovators who want a practical perspective on the marketing process involved with launching complex technical products. This course’s introduction to the marketing process is an excellent blend of high-level strategic fundamentals with the nuts-and-bolts of tactical execution. Instructor:
Mr. Schuster began his career designing speech recognition systems for renowned futurist Ray Kurzweil, and professional audio processing equipment for Lexicon. His first marketing role as a product manager for real-time data acquisition and signal processing products at Concurrent expanded into industry marketing for measurement, control, vibration, and signal intelligence markets. Following various technology marketing management and director-level roles he served as general manager of Data Translation's digital signal processing division. Existing PR and ad agencies, he discovered as an executive, were simply not capable of digesting and intelligently communicating technologies to technical audiences. In response, Mr. Schuster launched Rainier in early 1993 with a vision credibly providing technology companies with a professional resource for bringing “complex” technologies to market. Mr. Schuster received a BS in Electrical Engineering and an MBA, both from Northeastern University in Boston, MA. Back to Top |
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