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Published byHarvey Craig Modified over 9 years ago
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Lecture 3
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It is a book on marketing It lays out a strategy for dealing with the “commoditization” phenomenon (All products are being pushed toward commoditization) It talks about establishing a new market position It talks about controlling customer perception It is a “how-to” book on modern marketing
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Why do professional IT people need to spend time with this book? (Shouldn’t we be passing this off to our co-workers in the marketing department?) What is IT Alignment all about? What is IT Governance all about?
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IT Alignment is the responsibility and process for creating maximum business value using IT resources. ◦ Can’t be done without knowing a lot about the business processes in the company ◦ Can’t be done without knowing a lot about the market position and marketing strategies of the company ◦ Can’t be done without understanding how to decrease customer sacrifice ◦ Usually, when IT adds significant value to the company, it is done by finding meaningful ways that IT services can reduce customer sacrifice.
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IT Governance is the process by which the other CXOs in the company take ownership of IT initiatives Can’t be done without a focus on using IT to add value to the company Can’t be done without understanding the market position and marketing strategy of the company Can’t be done without understanding where the customers are sacrificing and how to work with others in the company to reduce that sacrifice
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IT professionals must understand marketing to be able to deliver the best IT value to the company The book helps us discover how to use IT systems to reduce customer sacrifice The book helps us discover how to use IT to add value to the company (how to increase company profit margins)
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Discover how to reduce the amount of customer sacrifice This is a great way to approach the discovery of how to develop meaningful experiences for your customer in a B2C business It may be the ONLY WAY to approach the discovery and development of meaningful experiences for your customer in a B2B business
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Searching for Uniqueness ◦ Examining your research studies anew and search for uniqueness (customization opportunities) (p. 82) ◦ Cyberspace provides a great new place for understanding sacrifice (p. 83)
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Cultivating learning relationships ◦ As the number of customer interactions increases (and are analyzed), customer sacrifice is decreased (p. 84-85) Collaborative Customization ◦ Collaborative customizers to determine what they need and then produce it for them (p. 88) ◦ Adaptive customizers offer one product designed to let users alter it themselves (p. 89)
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Cosmetic Customization: customizing packaging or presentation ◦ Cosmetic customizers present a standard good or service differently to different customers (p. 90-91) ◦ Example: T-Shirt logo/picture customization Transparent Customization ◦ Transparent customers provide a tailored offering without customers knowing that is is customized for them (p. 93) ◦ Examples: Ritz-Carlton and Amazon.com
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To truly differentiate themselves, businesses must focus ◦ First on increasing customer satisfaction ◦ Then on eliminating customer sacrifice ◦ And finally on creating customer surprise. ◦ (And then stage customer suspense) (p. 99)
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That’s where theater staging comes in ◦ Improv ◦ Platform ◦ Matching ◦ Street (Chapt 7) But first there is “Acting” …
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Business performances must rival those featured on Broadway and in ballparks (p. 103) Theater is not a metaphor, but a model (p. 104) Whenever employees work in front of customers, an act of theater occurs (recent visit to Best Buy)
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Where does work begin, climax, and have its denouement? (p. 105) With theater as the model, even mundane tasks engage customers in memorable ways (p. 106) Any work a customer observes directly is an act of theater (p. 107) The act of acting differentiates memorable experiences from ordinary activity (p. 109)
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You are a performer. Your work is theater. Now act accordingly. (p. 111) Acting is taking deliberate steps to connect with the audience. (p. 112) Proper characterization turns service activities into memorable performances. (p. 113) Act with intention. (p. 117)
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