Title: Building and Managing Modern EServices
1Building and ManagingModern E-Services
- John Hamilton
- James Cook University,Australia
-
2Abstract
- The chapter address the development of recent
services models - It considers that all products involve services
and consequently maybe be considered as service
systems. - Today,the recent concept of utilizing service
value networks offers a key to future competitive
solutions. - This chapter also highlights the progression to
service value networks. -
3Definition of service (cont.)
- Economic in three sectors(Clark 1940)
- Primary(agricultural)
- Secondary(manufacturing)
- Tertiary(services)
- Service sector
- Home related service(food,house)
- Business service
- Other(recreation, health care, and education)
4Definition of service (cont.)
- Definition of service
- Activities, benefits, or satisfactions which are
offered for sale, or are provided, in connection
with the sale of goods. - Ex
- Banking,education,entermainment,finance, medical
areas - Individual services (barber shop,piano tuner)
5Definition of service (cont.)
- Broadened definition of services
- All economic activities where output was not a
physical product - Intangible value-add
- Extravel comfort
- Levitt(1972)suggestsThere are only industries
whose service components are great or less than
those of other industries.
6Definition of service
- Service industry moves toward
- Globalization
- More electronically based delivery system
- E-service operation
- E-service value chains may offer a pathway to
delivering enhanced customer value.
7Service models(Rust and Metters 1996)
Custormer Behavior Models Dynamic Models of
retention Stochastic models of behavior
External Custormer Models
Service models
Service Quality Impact Models Aggregate
models customer satifaction effects
Disaggregate Models Financial impace of a
component
internal Service Provider models
Normative Service Models Marketing
Models Complaint management Operations Models
8Service models
- Cook et al.(1999) recognized that services could
be split into marketing(product) or
operations(process) orientations. - In delivering a final customized
solution,there remained a need to integrate and
interact with both orientations.
9Integrated schematic representation of services
(cook et al., 1999)
- Marketing Orientated
- Tangibility
- Object of service
- - People
- Goods
- Type of customer
- -individual
- -institutional
For profit
Product
Interaction and integration Custonization Qualit
y
services
priviate
Operations orient- ated Customer
contact Production process
Process
public
10The service strategy triad
- Service strategy triad triad separated the what
, the how, and the who of service
encounters. - Who are the right customers?
- What is the product bundle offered?
- How will services be delivered?
- Service Encounters
- What happens when service and customer meet and
interact?
11The service strategy triad
Target Market
Service Encounter
Service Delivery System Design Choices
Service Concept
12Service delivery systems atchitecture
- Goal
- Service concept by the customer may differ from
the service offered by the service provider. - To overcome this, a feedback loop was proposed
- Execution, assessment of gap, renewal
- Investigate three dynamic comnents of service
delivery systems - Strategic service design
- Service delivery execution system
- Customer percieved value of total service concept
13Service delivery systems atchitecture
Renewal
Structural Techology and equipment Plan Service
product-process interfaces
Infrastructural People Policy Processes Performanc
e Systems
Realized Service Delivery System
Execution
Customer Perceieved Value of the total Service
concept
Integration Operation Organizations
coordination Service Supply Chains Integration
techonology
Assement of Gaps
14Supply Chain management
- Definition
- The integration of business process from end-user
through to original suppliers that provide
products,services and information and add value
for customers. - Goal
- Improve Timing
- Costs Down
15Supply Chain management (cont.)
- Lee define the stable supply process,where
manufacturing process and technology were mature
and stable, and the evolving supply process,
where manufacturing and techonology were in early
stages of development and were rapidly changing. - From the perspective the market challenge for
business was to operate a supply chain as a
responsive or agile model.
16Supply Chain management (cont.)
- Responsive supply chains
- Demand and supply communication channel
intertwine, - Deliver business-determined, information-based,cus
tomer-targeted outcomes - May be termed e-supply chain
- The agile supply chain model has typically
targeted the high-risk, customer-driven solutions
,while minimizing the downstream risks of supply
disruptions
17The Internet
- The Internet has driven new supply chain
solutions in several dimensions. - Information storage and transmission
- E-business,
- Web-based customer relationship management
- Supply chain management
18DEMAND CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- From, the late 1990s onwards, there has been a
distinct move from supply to demand chain
management. - Demand chain management aims to serve customers
individually with customized bundles of goods and
services, thereby delivering high levels of
customer satisfaction and of customer loyalty
19DEMAND CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- Beech argued for an integration of the supply and
demand chains - They needed to be capable of working
cooperatively with other organizations in the
chain. - The core processes of the supply and demand
chains, as viewed from a broad cross-enterprise
vantage point , rather than as discrete
functions.
20DEMAND CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- The integrating processes that created the links
between the supply and demand chain. - The supporting infrastructure that made such
integration possible.
21Figure 5. Demand and supply chain processes
Demand Chain process
Value added Distribution
Category Selection and Management
Pre-sales services
selling
Trade Marketing
Store marketing
suppliers
manufacturers
End-users
services
Reseller
distributors
Store operations
procurement
Post-sales services
production
Warehousing and distribute
Buying
supply Chain process
22DEMAND CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- the demand chain was really about the informed
customer, customers dictating what they wanted,
where and why. - It moved the underdeveloped supply chain into a
complex Web of customer-driven supply chain
systems. - New demand chain capabilities emerged, and these
become coordinated across the business supply
chains.
23Demand chain management
- From a technical viewpoint, demand chain
management remained a set of applications, to
electronically automate and optimize the
business processes an enterprise performed
between its networks of customers and selling
partners. - The demand chain management applications enabled
business-customer encounters, and did so at
reduced servicing costs.
24DEMAND CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- Demand chain management consultants like
Comergent and IBM focused on the selling and
ordering processes. - Comergent simplified the external sales
processes into five key areas - Analytics and metrics
- Product information management
- Pricing, configuration, quoting
- Distributed order management
- Commerce portal
25Figure 7. the external sales process( source
Comergent, 2003)
Demand chain management
Analytics Metrics
Product Information management
Pricing, Configuration and management
Distributed Order management
Commercial portal
Direct sales
customers
partners
26DEMAND CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- IBMs i2 managed and shaped demand-based supply
positions and delivered customers the - product
- Price
- Delivery time
- IBM offered specialized business intelligence
systems like - Sale configurator
- Sale pricer
- Demand fulfillment
27THE VALUE CHAIN
- Definitions of value have varied (Zeithaml,
1988), but common themes have indicated customer
value as - Linked to the use of a product or service,
thereby removing it from personal values - Perceived by the customers, rather than
objectively determined by the seller - Often traded between what the customer wants, and
what the customer gave up to acquire, and use, a
product or service
28THE VALUE CHAIN
- Value may also be loosely defined in terms of
business or customer perspective equations - Business value(Benefits of each delivered value
chain activity minus its cost) (Benefits of
each service interface between value chain
activity minus its cost). - Customer value(Benefits of each customer service
interface interaction) (Benefits of each added
value business offering) (Benefit perceived for
the cost involved).
29THE VALUE CHAIN
- In 1985 porter promoted the notion of the value
chain as a key activity by which a business could
manage and deliver added value to the customer. - Internal value chain
- External value chain
- It was possible to add value to each customer by
reducing cost, either within each element of the
value chain or at the interface between value
chain components.
30THE VALUE CHAIN
- Rayport and Sviokla defined two value chain
- The virtual value chain
- The physical value chain
- The Internet enabled value creation by gathering,
organizing, selecting, synthesizing, and
distributing information. - The virtual value chains was information
technology based, and involved the delivering of
e-business-to-e-business, and e-business-to-custom
er solutions.
31THE VALUE CHAIN
- The value chain targeted the real-time
environment. - Online promotions by leading e- tailers could be
monitored on an hourly basis to test customer
response and to review the competitors offers.
32THE VALUE CHAIN
- Greater business-customer alignment between the
value chain activities and e-customer was
possible. - The value chain may deliver efficiencies, and
e-sales, that may be controlled from either
internal or external value chain constituents or
partners.
33THE VALUE CHAIN
- Kalakota and Robinson discussed disaggregation of
the value chain as a means to streamline
efficiencies - Timmers noted that the value chain may no longer
be viewed as a series of discrete steps, and that
technology was offering more possibilities for
integrated solutions.
34THE VALUE CHAIN
- Dell has used online customized ordering systems
to - Reduce its time to market,
- Improved customer tracking and monitoring,
- Thereby reducing its customer response and
delivery times. - It deployed considerable alliance partner
involvement, with its partners having
instantaneous data access concerning customer
purchasing and special requests.
35VALUE CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- Vermijmeren suggested that flexible, intelligent
supply chain engines could drive these dynamic
supply chains, delivering value in an efficient
manner. - Van Looy, Gemel, and Dierdonck considered the
value chain as a value constellation, and
proposed a more holistic view of the way in
which the innovation process creates value for
the final customer.
36VALUE CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- Sampson demonstrated that service supply chains
were bi-directional, and that communication
between customers and suppliers, and vice versa,
must occur. - Sampson also indicated bi-directional supply
chains were typically short lived, but had
just-in-time implications with inherent
value-added expectations.
37VALUE CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- To measure such information, new metrics tools
have been devised. These metrics tools helped
management to - Convert and distribute information, products, and
services - Manage knowledge, quality, and connectivity
- Work with virtual partners and customers
- Deliver strategic information to management
38VALUE CHAIN MANAGEMENT
The traditional Value Chain Start with Assets,
Core Competencies
Inputs, Raw material
Product/ service offering
Assets/core competencies
channels
The Customer
The Modern Value Chain Start with Customer
Inputs, Raw material
Product/ service offering
Assets/core competencies
channels
Customer Priorities
39VALUE CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Revised value chain
environment
environment
The three support activities entrepreneurial
drivers Management capability Resource
Infrastructure
margin
The four primary activities
Operational processes
Mission Objectives
Service
Marketing
margin
environment
environment
40Inbound Logistics
Manufacturing
Product Warehousing
Strategic core VC partners
Upstream VC partners
Value Chain Integrators
Downstream VC partners
Fulfillment
suppliers
Admin eg travel
Sell Side Intermediaries
Buy side intermediaries
Value Chain Integrators
Non-Strategic service partner
Admin eg travel
Finance
Human Resources
41VALUE CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- Porter outlined how the Internet has enabled, and
driven, new business solutions, forcing lower
cost options and operational efficiencies across
the supply side to be strategically investigated. - Today, business services solutions have become
increasingly complex, and often these can no
longer be considered as simple lock-step value
chains.
42SERVICE VALUE CHAINS TO SERVICE VALUE NETWORKS(1)
- Services value chain
- Becks model (Figure 11)
43SERVICE VALUE CHAINS TO SERVICE VALUE NETWORKS(2)
- The business aggregator solution delivers the
optimized internal systems. - It optimizes the relationships between the
internal business and its external
customer-strategic partners associates.
44SERVICE VALUE CHAINS TO SERVICE VALUE NETWORKS(3)
- Service value network
- - external supply chains
- - internal value integrators
- - various strategic approaches
- Service value networks interlink the
- - businesss down stream business e-supply
- chain networks
- - its upstream customer service offerings
45THE BALANCED SCORECARDBUILDING SERVICE VALUE
CHAIN NETWORKS(1)
- Balanced scorecard model (Figure 12)
-
-
46THE BALANCED SCORECARDBUILDING SERVICE VALUE
CHAIN NETWORKS(2)
- Nine-step balanced scorecard strategy development
cycle. (Figure 13)
47THE BALANCED SCORECARDBUILDING SERVICE VALUE
CHAIN NETWORKS(3)
- Growth and learning cycle (Figure 14)
-
48THE BALANCED SCORECARDBUILDING SERVICE VALUE
CHAIN NETWORKS(4)
- The strategic components delivering the
e-services balanced scorecard outcomes (Figure
15)
49THE BALANCED SCORECARDBUILDING SERVICE VALUE
CHAIN NETWORKS(5)
- The balanced scorecard model is a highly useful
tool can assist with the focusing, targeting, and
delivery of optimized growth approaches for an
industry block. - Pharmacy network balanced scorecard model.
(Figure 16)
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51THE BALANCED SCORECARDBUILDING SERVICE VALUE
CHAIN NETWORKS(6)
- All activities may be costed, and incorporated
into one of four measurable strategic areas - - customer
- - internal business processes
- - financial area
- - innovation, learning, and growth sectors
52CONCLUSION(1)
- E-services built around 3- supply chain networks
are increasingly targeting meeting customer
needs. - Service value networks offer a comprehensive
pathway towards enhanced competitiveness. - The balanced scorecard offers a strategic
measurement agenda. - glocal (global and local) solution.
53THE FUTURE(1)
- Strategic positioning and extended customer value
may be utilized to develop measures and to frame
new business models. - Further tools
- - quality functional deployment
- - strategic e-marketing
- - 4PL logistics solutions
- - learning across e-demand chain systems
54THE FUTURE(2)
- The early stages of industry-wide service value
networks are emerging in tourism. - E-supply chain networks will continue to improve
their capabilities in this regard, and will form
an integral part of service industry business
solutions into the future. -
55 THANK YOU