Title: A Question of Value
1A Question of Value
- Mod IV, 2004
- Professor David Dilts
2The Fundamental Theory Issue
- As interaction costs decrease,
- - the value of bundling the firm decreases,
- - which increases the value of outsourcing
- - and forces a redefinition of the business.
- Transaction Cost The resources expended in the
formal exchange of goods and services between
organizations or customers - Interaction Cost Transaction costs costs for
exchanging ideas information - Resources time, money, effort, people
3Conventional Thinking About Internet Effective
Markets
Source Grover, Varun and Pradipkumar Ramanlal,
(1999) Six Myths of Information and Markets,
MIS Quarterly, 23(4) 465-495.d
- Internet reduces transaction cost
- Namely searching, seeking, shopping, negotiating
- Internet reduces perceived complexity of products
- i.e., more and easier to interpret information is
available - Internet reduces asset specificity
- Allows products to be quickly easily adapted
- Internet increase free flow of information
- E.g., cyberspace marketplaces
4Some other not-so-general tenets
- Unit IT costs will decrease but not at the same
rate for buyers sellers - IT capitalization is asymmetrical among buyers
suppliers - E.g., bigger firms can capitalize more
- An effective market is not to every players
enlightened self-interest - Information can be used to clarify and distort
perceptions - Information is valued differently by different
buyers sellers - Market structure is an evolving, not a a priori
state
5Is There A Best Way To Achieve Value?
- No, value depends upon
- What the buyers value
- And who is the buyer anyway?
- What seller sells (or does not sell)
- Pain Points
- The Value of Being First
- Micro and Macro Perspectives
- Buyers Sellers
- Market Disciplines
6Value Creation in B2CAmit Zott, 2001
New transaction structures New content New
participants, Etc.
Novelty
- Search Costs
- Selection Range
- Information Symmetry
- Simplicity
- Speed
- Scale
- Etc.
Value
- Switching Costs
- Loyalty programs
- Dominate design
- Trust
- Customization
- Positive Network Externalities
- Direct
- Indirect
Efficiency
Lock-in
Complementarities
Between products Services (i.e., vertical
or horizontal Between on-line off-line
assets Between technologies Between activities
7But what creates Value in B2B?
- First, look at the characteristics of B2B v. B2C
- Next, identify the type of organizations,
- Then, identify the pain points how to cure them
- Next, look at the value to each party
- Remembering Critical mass First mover
disadvantages -
8Characteristics of Business-to-Business Markets
- Buyers Influencers
- Fewer but larger buyers
- Professional purchasing
- Multiple Buying Influences (Kotler)
- Initiator - User - Technical Expert
- Influencer - Approver - Buyer/
Purchasing Agent - Gatekeeper
- Relationship building, not sales
- May require a long negotiation period
- In e-Procurement the need to qualify bidder
- In Supply Chain Management the need to
understand the characteristics of the supplier
9Characteristics of B2B Markets (continued)
- Direct purchasing from the manufacturer
- Reciprocity
- Ill buy yours, if youll buy mine
- Geographic Concentration
- Examples Seattle, Nashville, Route 128
- Requirements for after-sale service
- Installation, maintenance, supply inventory
- This may be of more value than the initial sale
(King Gillette Strategy)
10Characteristics of B2B Markets (continued)
- Inelastic Demand
- Less-price sensitive than consumers, on one hand
but - Will only buy from the lowest bidder on the other
- Typically, B2B is less of an impulse decision
than with consumer purchasing - Fluctuating Demand
- More volatility than consumer demand (remember
the beer game) - Derived Demand
- Demand is driven both from the ultimate consumer
and from the business intermediary.
11Market Disciplines
Source Hagel III, John and Marc Singer (1999),
Unbundling the Corporation, HBR, 77(2) 133-141
Source Treacy and Wiersema, (1993) Customer
Intimacy and Other Value Disciplines HBR, 71(1)
84-93.
- Infrastructure/Operationally Excellence
(economics of scale) - Lead the industry in terms of price and
convenience - Build and manage capabilities for high-volume,
repetitive operational tasks for the lowest
possible cost products - examples Dell Computers, Cisco Systems
- Product / Technology Leadership (-- economics of
speed) - Lead or dominate the world in terms of product
leadership or technology - Force the clockspeed of the industry
- examples Microsoft, Intel
- Customer Intimacy (--economics of scope)
- Tailor and shape products and services to fit an
increasingly fine definition of the customer - Build a long-term relationship
- Never loose a customer
- examples Andersen Consulting, KPMG
12Key Success Factors for Infrastructure
(Operational Excellent) Business
- Management of customer expectations
- Because 'variety kills efficiency', provide a
limited number of product or
service options, and manage
customer expectations accordingly - Dedication to measurement systems
- Monitor measure everything to ensure rigorous
quality and cost control, dedicated to monitoring
and measuring all processes, continually
searching for ways to reduce cost, and improve
service and quality - Efficient management of people
- employees are trained in the most efficient and
lowest cost way of doing things - Management of efficient transactions
- JIT delivery, lowest possible cost of transaction
processing
13Key Success Factors for Product Innovation
(Leadership) Business
- Encouragement of innovation
- Use small ad hoc working groups, an
'experimentation is good' mind-set, and
compensation systems that reward success, - constant product innovation is encouraged
- Risk-oriented management style
- Focus on innovators, which requires a recognition
that there are risks (as well as rewards)
inherent in new ventures - Talented designers are key to current and future
success but - Project management is critical to success
delivery dates and feature-based modules are
vital - Recognition of the need to educate and lead the
market - Lead products are frequently misunderstood so
how-to-use and benefits need to be highlighted
to customers
14Key Success Factors for Customer Relationship
(Intimacy) Business
- Deep customer insight
- Understand what the customer needs now, and in
the future - Solve the customers problem, even if it costs
the firm money - Serve customers on demand with a full range of
services - Use both internal resources and an extensive use
of external experts - Use of knowledge management tools critical
- Scan for breakthrough thinking where ever it
occurs - Investigate leading-edge practice of firms
- Use environmental scanning for
leading-edge
thinking
15Developing Deep Customer Insights
Source Anderson, James and James Narus, (1998)
Business Marketing Understand what customers
value, HBR, 76(6) 53-61
- Understanding what customers value
- Build a customer value model, which are
data-driven representations of the worth of what
the supplier is doing or could do for the
customer - Expressing Value
- In monetary terms (What are utils anyway?)
- Showing net benefits
- Within some context
- Example Caterpillars Yards-of-dirt-moved
16What Are B2B Examples of Each Kind of Business ?
- Operationally Excellent
- Product Leadership/Innovation
- Customer Relationship/Intimacy
17A Formal Method of Building Value Models
Source Anderson, James and James Narus,(1998)
Business Marketing Understand what customers
value, HBR, 76(6) 53-61
- Initial field assessment
- What is possible what is not
- Select right market segment
- Identify key information needed from customers
- Generate a list of value elements
- Gather field data or use focus groups
- Cross validate with other data
- Understand the variability of results and value
drains, things that harm value - Create value-based sales tools
18Why use any B2B Hub?
19Pain Points, a different way of looking at value
- What hurts in current methods?
20Pain Points, a different way of looking at value
- What hurts in current procurement methods?
- Inefficient business process transactions
- Mainly paper-based systems
- Inefficient trading partner search processes
- Too many search channels
- Qualifying vendors and customers
- Inefficient product information search processes
- Heterogeneous RFQ information in
- Pricing / product details / availability /
delivery date methods / status information /
additional services (maintenance, etc.) - Inefficient supply chains
- Use of brokers as matchmakers
- Multiplier effect of multiple inefficiencies
- Particular problem internationally
21Value Propositions in B2B
- Buyers value benefits
- Sellers value benefits
- Intermediators value benefits (revenue streams)
22Buyers Value Benefits
I N T E R M E D I A T O R
Selling Organization
Buying Organization
- Reduced procurement process costs
- Reduced inventory costs
- Reduced rogue purchases
- More choices, bidders better pricing
- Reduced lead times
23Buy-Side Relationship
- What are my critical pain points?
- Cost is important but there may be other benefits
that are more important. - Remember Dell Webpages
- What are the down-sides of buying on cost?
-
-
-
- Does the supplier understand the needs of the
buyer? - Example GE Medical Devices
24Sellers Value Benefits
I N T E R M E D I A T O R
Selling Organization
Buying Organization
- Reduced cost associated with sales
- corollary new sales opportunities
- Reach to new customers
- Reduce processing costs of order management
- Increased standardization of terms and processing
- Better future need information
25Sell-Side Supply Chain Issues
- What is the value added by retailers
distributors? - Repackager
- Example Alliance Entertainment
- Customizer
- Intra-company postponement
- Example Harley Customizer
- What is the business of the manufacturer?
- Problem do the manufacturers know enough about
local customers? - What information should be shared when?
26Intermediators Value Benefits
I N T E R M E D I A T O R
Buying Organization
Selling Organization
- Percent of gross transaction value
- Product listing fees
- Advertising revenue
- Membership fees
- Sponsorships
- Referrals
27Common Characteristics for B2B Success
- Information intensity
- Multiple of buyers and sellers
- Highly fragmented markets
- Market inefficiencies
- High search, comparison, and workflow costs
- Low switching costs between suppliers
- Management domain expertise
- Critical mass
- First mover advantages that outweigh first mover
disadvantages
28One of the Key Issue for Open Hubs Critical Mass
- In order to be successful, any open B2B hub
needs a critical mass - In physics
- the minimum amount of fissionable material
required to sustain a chain reaction - In a software product
- a condition such that fixing one bug introduces
one plus epsilon bugs. When software achieves
critical mass, it can never be fixed it can only
be discarded and rewritten. - In business
- A size at which some fundamental change takes
place in the operations of a business. For
example, the business achieves increasing returns
to scale, with growth beginning to feed itself
(like an avalanche.) - The value of a network goes up the the square of
the number of nodes on the network
29First Mover AdvantagesCreation of Barriers to
Entry
Source Lieberman, Marvin and David Montgomery,
(1988) First-Mover Advantages, Strategic
Management Journal,
- Technology Leadership (setting the future)
- Advantages of the learning curve
- Ability to mold the cost structure of customers
- Success in patent races (preemptive patenting
Amazon.coms strategy) - Preemption of scarce resources (capturing the
resources) - Controlling input factors
- Controlling geographic and product characteristic
space - Preemptive investment in plant and equipment
- Switching costs buyer choice under uncertainty
(risk reduction) - Switching costs late entrants must offer
something extra - Buyer risk adverse once an acceptable choice
found - Positive feedback gains (bigger is better)
- Buyers want to buy from the most popular and
- Creators what to create for the most popular
30First Mover Disadvantages
Source Lieberman, Marvin and David Montgomery,
(1988) First-Mover Advantages, Strategic
Management Journal,
- Free-rider effects
- In RD, in buyer education, and infrastructure
development - The Tasters Choice Effect
- Resolution of technological or market uncertainty
- Taking advantage of first-mover mistakes
- Shifts in technology or customer needs
- Speed of change leads no one to be the first
mover - Customers expectations (needs) change too
rapidly - Focusing on the wrong customers (disruptive
technologies - Incumbent inertia
- Inability or unwillingness of incumbents to
change - Fords black Model T No one ever got fired
for buying IBM
31Stickiness
- "Stickiness refers to a companys ability to
retain users and drive them further into a site"
(Wired News, 1999) - "Stickiness The name of the game is to create
high switching costs so that customers who use
your portal as their entry to the rest of the Web
wont bother to stray." (Business 2.0, December
1998) - Stickiness a weak surrogate measure for customer
retention loyalty
Note Internet people love to create new words.
32Critical Value Ideas
- The value of e-commerce is not common sense
- Understand why customers do/want what they
do/want - Do not assume you know what a customers value
proposition is - Speed can kill
33A Final Comment
- Remember to identify the source of value for
- The buyer
- The seller
- And the B2B firm
34Extra Slides
35The Fundamental Business Issue
- The only reason youre doing e-business is to
create greater value for your customers or to
reach customers to whom you could not deliver
your products or value to before. Companies must
consider the value proposition above all else. - Does it get me to customers I couldnt reach
because of economic considerations? - One of the big traps to avoid in e-business is,
if its not adding value to the customer, if the
customer does not see an incremental improvement
every three months from your company, then you
are probably working on the wrong project. - John Roth, CEO, Nortel Networks, 2001
36Who is the customer?
- A GE Information Services Quote
- Our solutions meet application-to-application
(A2A), business-to-business (B2B) and
business-to-consumer (B2C) EAI requirements. Our
solutions connect disparate applications using
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) certification
adapters, File Transfer Protocol (FTP), and
conversational Application Program Interface
(API) as well as offer extensive electronic data
interchange (EDI) value-added network (VAN)
connectivity, EDI and extensible markup language
(XML) standards support and web access
components.
GE Information Services http//www.geis.com/geisc
om/template.jsp?page10id11
And the value is what???
37One Example Information Technology (IT)
Outsourcing
Source Butler, Steven (2003) IT outsourcing
Gains Momentum, eMarketer, http//www.emarketer.co
m/news/article.php?1002116cnewsltrnleadtad