Customer Value Models

Customer Value Models

Customer Value Models A "Customer Value Model" (CVM) is a data-driven representation of the worth, in monetary terms, of what a company is doing or could do for its customers.[1][2][self-published source?] Customer Value Models are tools used primarily in B2B markets where the choice of a given product, service, or offering is based primarily upon the amount customer value created. Customer value is defined as Value - Benefits - Price. Thus, customer benefits are quantified in a CVM - product features and capabilities are translated into dollars. Customer Value Models are different from Customer lifetime value models, which seek to quantify the value of a customer to its suppliers.

Contents

Firms Using Customer Value Models

Many firms have been reported to use Customer Value models,[3] including General Electric, Alcoa, WW Grainger, Qualcomm, Sonoco, BT Industries Group, Rockwell Automation, Akzo Nobel, and Quaker Chemical.

Uses of Customer Value Models

Customer Value Models appear to have two major uses:

  1. New Product & Service Development and Refinement. The dialog and customer immersion that is part of a CVM is used to discover and determine which potential product features and functionality would create the most value for customers. This on-site interaction can be used to frame and define those features and functionality. Often a key is to focus on product or service capabilities rather than on features. Successful CVM efforts change the basis of the customer-supplier product conversation away from features and functions and toward problems, benefits, and value.[2][4]
  2. Sales Tools. CVMs can serve as a quantified statement of value and benefits for a customer that is used by the vendor sales staff to both sell into a new account, as well as to reaffirm and validate value created for current customers as a means to retain and grow current customer.[2]

Customer Value Model Methods

There are several methods and approaches used to create Customer Value Models. All of these approaches appear to depend on substantial customer interaction and on-site interviews and observations of customers challenges related to the product or service being valued. The CVMs are of varying complexity. One consulting firm has found it useful to reverse-engineer customer P&Ls (profit and loss statements) to establish a clear connection between the product benefits and the customer bottom-line.[2]

References

  1. ^ Anderson, James C; and Narus, James A, (1998), "Business Marketing: Understanding What Customers Value", Harvard Business Review, March, p 53-65
  2. ^ a b c d Dupuie, Jeff: Using Customer Value Models to Improve B2B New Product Development, OakStone Partners
  3. ^ Anderson, James C; Narus, James A; and van Rossum, Wouter, (2006), "Customer Value Propositions in Business Markets", Harvard Business Review, March, p 91-99
  4. ^ Lindstedt, Per and Berenius, Jan, (2003), "The Value Model: How to Master Product Development and Create Unrivaled Customer Value", Nimba Publishers

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Customer lifetime value — Contents 1 Definition of Customer Lifetime Value 2 Calculation in customer retention cases 3 Uses and Advantages of CLV 4 References …   Wikipedia

  • Customer attrition — Customer attrition, also known as customer churn, customer turnover, or customer defection, is a business term used to describe loss of clients or customers. Banks, telephone service companies, Internet service providers, pay TV companies,… …   Wikipedia

  • Customer Lifetime Ansatz — Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) ist allgemein der Deckungsbeitrag, den ein Kunde während seines gesamten „Kundenlebens“ realisiert, diskontiert auf den heutigen Tag. Es ist eine Kennzahl aus der Betriebswirtschaft. Neben historischen Umsätzen wird… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Customer Lifetime Value — (CLV) ist allgemein der Deckungsbeitrag, den ein Kunde während seines gesamten „Kundenlebens“ realisiert, diskontiert auf den heutigen Tag. Es ist eine Kennzahl aus der Betriebswirtschaft. Neben historischen Umsätzen wird auch der zukünftig… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Customer Cost — refers not only to the price of a product, but also encompasses the purchase costs as well as use costs and post use costs. Purchase costs mainly consist of the cost of searching for a product, gathering information about it and obtaining it. The …   Wikipedia

  • Customer Demand Planning — (CDP) is a business planning process, that enables sales teams (and customers) to develop demand forecasts as input to service planning processes, production, inventory planning and revenue planning.[1] Contents 1 Definition of CDP 1.1… …   Wikipedia

  • Customer satisfaction — Customer satisfaction, a term frequently used in marketing, is a measure of how products and services supplied by a company meet or surpass customer expectation. Customer satisfaction is defined as the number of customers, or percentage of total… …   Wikipedia

  • Customer-Experience-Management — (CEM) bzw. Kundenerfahrungsmanagement bezeichnet die Schaffung positiver Kundenerfahrungen zum Aufbau einer emotionalen Bindung zwischen Anwender und Produkt oder Anbieter. Vorrangiges Ziel von CEM ist es, aus zufriedenen Kunden loyale Kunden und …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Customer to customer — (C2C) markets are innovative ways to allow customers to interact with each other. While traditional markets require business to customer relationships, in which a customer goes to the business in order to purchase a product or service. In… …   Wikipedia

  • Customer analytics — is a process by which data from customer behavior is used to help make key business decisions via market segmentation and predictive analytics. This information is used by businesses for direct marketing, site selection, and customer relationship …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”