Customer Value Dimensions: Unit - V
Customer Value Dimensions: Unit - V
In the context of supply chain management we need to look more specifically at what we
understand by value and how the management of services can be configured to generate value to
the maximum level possible. Customer service is undoubtedly one of the major elements which
determine the value of a product. It is therefore necessary to look at the customer service
dimensions. The widely accepted trend is to view customer service in the marketing context
under three different headings
These three elements are further expanded below to identify the relevant customer service
dimensions in the context of supply chain and logistics management.
Transaction elements
Conformance to requirements.
Product selection.
Price and brand.
Value-added services.
Relationships and experiences.
Conformance to Requirements
Market Mediation:
Ability to offer what the customer wants and needs
Costs associated with the market mediation occur when there are differences between
Supply and demand.
Supply>demand => inventory costs throughout the supply chain
Demand>Supply=> lost sales and possibly market share.
Functional Items
Product demand is predictable
Market mediation not a major issue.
Fashion items or other high-variability items
Nature of demand can create large costs due to lost sales or excess inventory.
Requires responsive supply chains.
Conformance to Requirements Built on Three Principles
Market Mediation:
Ability to offer what the customer wants and needs
Costs associated with the market mediation occur when there are differences between
supply and demand.
Supply>demand => inventory costs throughout the supply chain
Demand>Supply=> lost sales and possibly market share.
Functional Items
Product demand is predictable
Market mediation not a major issue.
Fashion items or other high-variability items
Nature of demand can create large costs due to lost sales or excess inventory.
Requires responsive supply chains.
Supply chain is organized so it can track material and product in real time but also close
the information loop both for hard data and anecdotal.
Sticking to a rhythm across the supply chain
Company is willing to spend money on anything that will make its supply chain fast and
responsive.
Leveraging capital assets to increase supply chain flexibility
Company uses the investment in production and distribution facilities to make the supply
chain responsive to new and changing demand patterns.
Product Selection
Beyond relationships
Designing, promoting, and selling unique experiences to customers
Offering distinct from customer service:
An experience occurs when a company intentionally uses services as the stage, and goods
as props, to engage individual customers in a way that creates memorable events
Examples:
Airline frequent flyer programs, theme parks, Saturn owner gatherings, Lexus weekend
brunch and car wash events.
Understand how costs, competition, and customer values influence the price you choose
Determine how customer values drive segmentation decisions, which in turn affect the
benefits customers seek and the price they are willing to pay
Use tools to conduct break-even analysis, measure price elasticity, and evaluate
features/price trade-offs through relationship analysis
Identify lifecycles to establish prices for current and future market conditions
Decide when and how to raise prices
Address price erosion situations
Improving Pricing Decisions: Why You Must Relate Benefits and Customer Value to Price
Measuring customer value—tools that rely on managerial judgment and formal market
research
Distinguishing between attributes, benefits, and values for effective pricing
Segmenting based on customer dimension—the foundation for effective pricing
Increasing Prices
Smart Pricing:
Smart Pricing introduces to marketing and product executives, along with corporate
strategists, many innovative approaches to pricing, as well as the research and insights that went
into their creation. Filled with illustrative examples from the business world, readers will
discover restaurants where customers set the price
Smart Pricing goes well beyond familiar approaches like cost-plus, buyer-based pricing,
or competition-based pricing, and puts a wide variety of pricing mechanisms at your disposal.
This book helps you understand them, choose them, and use them to win.