aoc power leveling
May 9th, 2008As our research process unfolded, we uncovered a wide variation in revenues and profits from service offerings. One group aoc leveling of companies derived up to half of their sales from services, and margins up to eight times those on product sales. A second group reported a very different experience: Although those companies had made significant investments in the development of services, customers proved unwilling to pay, revenues were low, and the companies barely broke even. Comparing the two groups, we were able to identify clear differences in the ways they had developed their service businesses.
Like the technology company in our example age of conan gold (which has since turned itself around in this respect), companies unsuccessful at developing service businesses have tried to transform themselves too quickly. Successful firms begin slowly, identifying and charging for simple services they already perform and using those to build enthusiasm for adding more-complex ones. They then standardize their delivery processes to be as efficient as their manufacturing ones. As their services become more complex, they ensure that their sales force capabilities keep pace. Finally, management switches its focus from the company’s processes and structures to the nature of customers’ problems, the opportunities that customers’ processes age of conan power leveling afford for inserting new services, and the new capabilities needed to deliver those services. (See the exhibit “The Path to Profits in Industrial Services.”) Let’s take a closer look at those four steps.
Sidebar IconThe Path to Profits in Industrial Services
1: Recognize That You Are Already a Service Company
Many product companies are in the business of delivering services; they just haven’t realized it yet. These companies are missing age of conan gold out on the revenues they could generate simply by charging for what they already do. The first step in expanding a service capability is to make both the company’s managers and its customers aware of the value provided by existing services.
Take the pharmaceuticals giant Merck. In one of the company’s product categories, its French subsidiary had a long-standing age of conan gold tradition of including delivery in its product price for customers. Because specialty chemicals are high in value but low in volume, Merck had never questioned its responsibility to assume transportation and insurance costs, which represent a tiny fraction of the amount invoiced. And because no shipping costs were itemized, customers were unaware of the value Merck provided. A few years ago the company put this tradition to a test : aoc leveling Managers randomly selected 100 customers and changed the terms of delivery from “shipping and insurance paid” to “ex works,” though the bottom line barely changed. Ninety percent of those customers readily paid the additional charges, seemingly without noticing. Of the 10% that recognized the change, only half insisted on returning to the prior terms of payment. Merck re-established the original terms for those customers—but it had succeeded in managing aoc leveling the transition from “free to fee” for the other 95%. Once the new billing terms had been rolled out to the entire customer base in France, Merck’s profitability in this product category improved significantly, even though the cost to customers was minor