Friday, October 12, 2007

Honing the Value Proposition

In most of our strategy workshops, when we ask if businesses can be great at all of those components of value, we get a number of responses. We usually hear several answers that suggest you have to try to be great at all of them, and sometimes we hear answers that suggest lumping several of them together to focus on. The answer that we're looking for is the latter one. However, you have to be careful about which components you select to focus on. Some of the components, when you analyze them, are impossible to deliver together in a way that differentiates. In other words, it is very difficult to be great at offering a low price and delivering customization at the same time. Customization requires internal resources that cost money. This additional cost creates value for the customer that should be reflected in the price.

Of the components of value listed below, which ones might you be able to combine to offer to your customer in a differentiated way? In other words, which ones can you excel at?

Image
Time (Speed or Time Saved)
Price
Relationships
Performance
Convenience
Specific Solutions
Results
Hassle-Free Service
Ease-of-Use
Customization
Quality

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