Value Delivery Process-MM
Value Delivery Process-MM
Value Delivery Process-MM
In economies with many different types of people, each with individual wants,
perceptions, preferences, and buying criteria, the smart competitor must
design and deliver offerings for well- defined target markets. This realization
inspired a new view of business processes that places marketing at
the beginning of planning. Instead of emphasizing making and selling,
companies now see themselves as part of a value delivery process.
The value creation and delivery sequence consists of three phases. In the first
phase, choosing the value, marketers segment the market, select the
appropriate target, and develop the offering’s value positioning. The formula
“segmentation, targeting, positioning (STP)” is the essence of strategic
marketing. The second phase is providing the value through identifying
specific product features, prices, and distribution. The third phase
is communicating the value by utilizing the Internet, advertising, sales force,
and other communication tools to announce and promote the product. The
value delivery process begins before there is a product and continues through
development and after launch.
Harvard’s Michael Porter has proposed the value chain as a tool for identifying
ways to create more customer value. According to this model, every firm is a
synthesis of activities performed to design, produce, market, deliver, and
support its product. Nine strategically relevant activities— five primary and
four support activities—create value and cost in a specific business.
The primary activities are (1) inbound logistics, or bringing materials into
the business; (2) operations, or converting materials into final products; (3)
outbound logistics, or shipping out final products; (4) marketing, which
includes sales; and (5) service.
The firm’s task is to examine its costs and performance in each value-creating
activity, benchmarking against competitors, and look for ways to improve.
Even the best companies can benchmark, against other industries if necessary,
to improve their performance.The firm’s success depends not only on how
well each department performs its work but also on how well the company
coordinates departmental activities to conduct core business processes. These
processes include:
Strong companies are reengineering their work flows and building cross-
functional teams to be responsible for each process. Ford established a cross-
functional team to help reduce water usage per vehicle by 30 percent. A firm
also needs to look for competitive advantages beyond its own operations in
the value chains of suppliers, distributors, and customers. Many companies
have partnered with specific suppliers and distributors to create a superior
value delivery network, also called a supply chain.