There’s much talk of the servitization of
manufacturing – supplementing products with services. The most recent data
suggests that some 70% of economic activity lies in the service sector. Yet
this figure ignores the significant proportion of service within the
traditional manufacturing sector. Capital intense manufacturing firms, like BAE
Systems and Rolls Royce, now generate over 50% of their revenues from service
and support. Others, such as the oil majors have vertically integrated,
offering downstream retail services, as well as upstream extraction operations.
The shift to services seems inexorable and pervades many walks of life, but is
it for you?
In answering this question there are some
basic issues to consider. The first is quite simply are you selling a product
that people want or need to own? Some products are consumed during use – think
of food or fireworks. Your customer has to take ownership of these products, as
they are used during the consumption process and have no resale value after
they have been used. Other products are aspirational – products that customers
don't need to own, but that they choose to own because of the value the product
confers. We don’t need expensive cars to take us from A to B, or expensive
watches to tell the time, but some people choose to spend their money on these
luxury purchases because of the status ownership of the product confers.
Clearly there is scope to offer services
associated with both consumed products and aspirational products. Restaurants
are service and they use food as an input. Suppliers can offer to automatically
restock restaurant supplies, an inventory management service, associated with
food stocks. Some businesses choose to rent or lease aspirational products –
luxury cars and even designer watches. In fact it is almost impossible to
define a product that cannot be accompanied by a service. The question is where
does the value lie. And can the service be delivered efficiently enough to
generate a decent return.
For more detail on the shift to services
see the Cambridge Service Alliance report – The
Servitization of Manufacturing: Further Evidence
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