Industrial product commercialization has traditionally been approached through a product-centric lens that emphasizes technical specifications, functional performance, and engineering superiority. While these elements remain essential, they fail to fully explain why technically comparable products often achieve vastly different market outcomes. This study argues that successful industrial commercialization depends on a managerial shift from viewing technical offerings as discrete products to positioning them as integrated market solutions that address specific customer problems within commercial and operational constraints. The paper introduces a solution-oriented perspective on technical product commercialization, emphasizing the managerial mechanisms that enable firms to translate technical capabilities into market-relevant value propositions. Rather than treating commercialization as a downstream activity, the study conceptualizes it as a dynamic managerial process shaped by market understanding, cross-functional alignment, and decision-making at critical commercial interfaces. In industrial markets characterized by professional procurement, formalized purchasing procedures, and price-sensitive competition, this reframing becomes a decisive factor in commercialization success. Drawing on a business management perspective, the article identifies key managerial mechanisms that support the transformation of technical products into market solutions. These mechanisms include the interpretation of customer problems, the integration of commercial constraints into product design, and the coordination of organizational actors involved in commercialization. The analysis highlights how managers move beyond feature-based product definitions to develop solution narratives that align technical functionality with customer use contexts, purchasing logic, and total value considerations. The study further develops a conceptual model that explains how solution-oriented commercialization emerges through the interaction of managerial judgment, organizational alignment, and market-facing activities. By focusing on managerial mechanisms rather than technological inputs alone, the paper provides a nuanced explanation for variation in commercialization outcomes among industrial firms with similar technical capabilities. This perspective underscores the role of management in shaping how technical products are perceived, evaluated, and adopted in the market. The paper contributes to the literature on industrial marketing and product innovation by reframing technical product commercialization as a solution-driven managerial process. It offers theoretical insights into the mechanisms that enable firms to achieve commercial success in industrial markets, while providing practical guidance for managers seeking to improve commercialization performance through solution-oriented strategies. By integrating technical, commercial, and managerial dimensions, the study advances a more holistic understanding of how industrial firms can convert technical products into sustainable market solutions.
Technical Products; Industrial Product Commercialization; Market Solutions; Managerial Mechanisms; Business Management
IRE Journals:
Bayram Turkoglu "Reframing Technical Products as Market Solutions, Managerial Mechanisms Behind Successful Industrial Product Commercialization" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals Volume 8 Issue 12 2025 Page 1976-1988 https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV8I12-1713919
IEEE:
Bayram Turkoglu
"Reframing Technical Products as Market Solutions, Managerial Mechanisms Behind Successful Industrial Product Commercialization" Iconic Research And Engineering Journals, 8(12) https://doi.org/10.64388/IREV8I12-1713919