Product innovation in industrial firms has traditionally been approached through engineering-driven frameworks that emphasize technical performance, functionality, and process efficiency. While these factors remain critical, they provide an incomplete explanation for why technically comparable products often achieve significantly different commercialization outcomes. This paper argues that innovation success in industrial contexts increasingly depends on the extent to which product innovation processes are oriented toward market realities rather than purely technical objectives. The study advances a managerial perspective on market-oriented product innovation, focusing on how industrial firms translate market knowledge into innovation and commercialization decisions. In industrial markets characterized by professional procurement, formalized purchasing criteria, and price-sensitive competition, market orientation extends beyond understanding customer needs. It requires managers to interpret procurement logic, competitive signals, and commercial constraints, and to integrate these insights into technical product design and commercialization processes. From a business management standpoint, the paper conceptualizes market-oriented product innovation as a set of managerial processes that shape how technical products are conceived, configured, and introduced to the market. These processes include the interpretation of market signals, prioritization of innovation initiatives, alignment of technical performance with value perception, and coordination across organizational functions. Rather than treating commercialization as a downstream activity, the study positions it as an integral component of innovation decision-making. The article develops a conceptual model that explains how market orientation influences technical product commercialization through managerial mechanisms and organizational alignment. The model highlights how market-oriented decision-making mediates the relationship between technical capability and commercial performance, offering an explanation for variation in innovation outcomes among industrial firms with similar engineering resources. This paper contributes to the literature on product innovation and industrial marketing by reframing innovation as a market-oriented managerial process in technical contexts. It provides theoretical insights for scholars examining innovation beyond engineering-centric models and offers practical guidance for managers seeking to improve the commercialization effectiveness of technical products. By integrating market orientation, innovation management, and commercialization, the study advances a more comprehensive understanding of how industrial firms achieve sustainable innovation success.
Market-Oriented Innovation; Technical Products; Industrial Firms; Product Commercialization; Business Management
IRE Journals:
Bayram Turkoglu "Market-Oriented Product Innovation in Indurstrial Firms: A Managerial Analysis of Technical Product Commercialization Processes" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals Volume 8 Issue 10 2025 Page 1639-1651 https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV8I10-1713917
IEEE:
Bayram Turkoglu
"Market-Oriented Product Innovation in Indurstrial Firms: A Managerial Analysis of Technical Product Commercialization Processes" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals, 8(10) https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV8I10-1713917