Choosing between marketing and design

There’s cases where it’s easy to determine where to invest product development dollars. In a mature, commodity product we can gain sales through marketing. For a product that stands out we can invest in unique and/or better design which becomes its own marketing.

illustration of a kiss And then there’s borderline cases. Recently Hershey extended its Kisses product line to compete with M&Ms. If you’re the product manager charged with making this happen, where do you put your money? You might do ethnographic research and find a whole new way to design chocolate kisses. Or you might hire some brilliant product minds to dream up completely novel ideas. Or you might just take a technique that has worked for another product — like filling it with caramel — and invest the money in marketing. Each approach has it’s pros and cons, but the choice isn’t so clear.

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I was talking to a manager at one of the big ecommerce websites recently and she predicted that collaborative filtering is reaching the apex of usefulness. The below recommendation from Fresh Direct had me laughing at their clever suggestion. Are customer behavior and needs just as much if not more important than purchasing patterns in making recommendations?