Title: Industrial Relations
1Industrial Relations
- Veronica Fellman
- Arcada
- 6 November 2006
2What is Industrial Relations
- Everything that has got to do with a companys
performance or working conditions. - Employees, competitors, suppliers, customers, etc.
3Relationships with customers
- The Concept of Customer Relationships
- Companies did not use to know about relationships
with customers and did not have them. But now we
know that relationships are important and that
companies should develop them. Then everything
will be fine! - 3 fallacies past, golden state, Myth of Action
- The characteristics of customer relationships
- A sale is unlikely to be a one-off, easily
identifiable event - Offerings and payments between supplier and
customer are likely to be complex (Offerings
product, service, advice, logistics, adaptation,
Payments initially, after each delivery, before
or after a particular adaptation has been made,
at fixed intervals, other measurements, eg. A
pre-determined improvement in the customers
operations) - Pattern of interaction
- The nature and importance of a companys
customers vary - Customers are involved in defining the content of
a relationship - The content of a customer relationship changes
over time - A customer relationship links a complex set of
resources and activities - A suppliers market is not defined by its
products or services
4How relationships develops
- Interaction
- Two-way communication
- Commitment
- Uncertainties
- Abilities
- gt actor bonds (reliance and trust)
- Co-ordinating activities
- Co-ordinate activities
- Nature of the relationship
- gt activity links
- Adaptations
- Adapt
- The relationship, other relationships, wider
network - Mutual dependence, opportunity costs
- gt resource ties (eg. Single software package for
real-time information)
5Involvement in a relationship 1
- Actor bonds, activity links and resource ties
define the involvement of two companies - Actor bonds support extensive interaction, mutual
knowledge and develop a high level of mutual
trust with customers - Tight activity links closely co-ordinate
different activities of the two companies - Strong resource ties dedicate different resource
elements such as offerings, operations,
facilities and organisation roles to a
counterpart. - Strategic alliance if both parties want it
- A high-involvement relationship with customers
can have the following benefits - It can facilitate effective communication and
flow of information - It can increase predictability, reduce problems
of misunderstanding and enable both companies to
cope with their uncertainties - It can enhance the efficiency of the two
companies combined operations and activities and
facilitate a division of labour between them
based on their respective abilities and resource
investment.
6Involvement in a relationship
- A high-involvement relationship with customers
can have the following drawbacks - Investment and time consuming
- Element of risk if the relationship is not
achieved - Constrained actions within the relationship
- Reduced ability to change between relationships
7Economic Value of Customer Relationships
- Past and current business is unlikely to be a
good predictor of the future of a relationship. - An assessment of the value of a relationship will
depend on accurately recording the revenues
received and the costs incurred within it.
Activity-based costing. - Many of the costs and benefits of a relationship
are intangible or difficult to locate. - The value of a relationship cannot be considered
in isolation either from the value of alternative
investments in other relationships or the aims
and strategy of the company involved, eg.
enterings.
8Managing a Relationship with a Single Customer
- To assess the relationship on a regular basis and
to use this assessment for carrying out the major
activities involved in a relationship - Assessing a relationship
- History and current stage
- Potential and investment
- Atmosphere
- Network
- Current operations
- Major activities in CRM
- Communication Roles of interpersonal
communication - Information exchange role
- Negotiation and adaptation role
- Crisis insurance role
- Social role
- Ego-enhancement role
- Defining and redefining the offering
- Fulfilling the offering
- Monitoring performance
9Monitoring performance
- Lower operational costs because the supplier or
customer has modified their offering so that it
fits more easily with that of the counterpart - Reduced development expenses for both companies
based on information from each other about the
capabilities or use of the offering - Improved material flow for both companies brought
about by reduced inventories due to changes in
delivery frequency and lot sizes - Quicker and cheaper problem-solving through
familiarity with each others ways of working and
through trust in each other - Reduced administration costs through more
integrated information systems and because of
experience of each others ways of working - Both customer and supplier may be able to apply
what they have learned in any one relationship to
other relationships - They may be able to gain access to other parts of
a network through their relationship with
particular customers and suppliers gt - Supplier must not take long-term relationships
for granted - Supplier should adjust prices
- Switching costs
10Portfolio theory
- Portfolio of customers
- long- and short-term relationships
- large/small proportion of its total sales
- high/low proportion of purchases of the customers
- High/low involvement
- New technology/other solutions
- Assets balance investments with levels of risk
and reward - CR portfolio includes also eg. Investments of
sales and management time, offering and
operations development, physical resources as
well as money. A relationship portfolio is more
perishable than a financial portfolio! - Continuing investments
- Potential returns benefits of joint offering or
operations development, transfer of technology or
business methods, access to a customers own
network or improved credibility with other
customers - Investments in a relationship portfolio are
interconnected and what happens in one can affect
what happens in others, skills and knowledge
changes in offerings, operations, contact
pattern, delivery schedule or terms of trade
offered.
11Management of a portfolio
- Structure of the customer base
- Small/big customers
- One/many customers
- Tendency of decay
- The scope of customer relationships
- Suppliers volume and characteristics
- Manufacturer of electrical components many
relationships - Relationship involvement
- Uniform treatment of customers? Different
involvements - Financial performance and profitability
- A significant proportion of the customers of
businesses will not produce acceptable profits at
the level of direct costs and even more will be
unsatisfactory or even loss-making at the level
of a more complete analysis. Drop customers?
12Contribution margin
Contribution margin (net sales to a particular
customer cost of goods sold) (gross margin
direct selling expenses of salesperson) For next
time Why is this equation insufficient for
Customer Value measurement purposes?