By Stephan Liozu, Ph.D
Putting customer value at the heart of your organization DNA requires tremendous discipline. You cannot simply adopt a value approach. You design it, you implement it, and you make sure it is assimilated and internalized at the organizational level. That includes integrating value at all phases of your go-to-market process.
A holistic and integrated value approach starts with a value-based innovation process that anchors all process, product, and service developments on creating value for customers and business partners. In that case, value means economic and financial value, i.e., cost savings and revenue generation for example! Every single dollar that is invested in the innovation process is done so to create economic value and a strong positive return for the organization. Innovation opportunities are screened on the basis on how much value they create and how much differentiation they bring to the business.
True value creation in the innovation process includes game-changing discoveries, uncovering of customers’ unmet needs through customer research, and solving customer pains through the creation of unique products, services, or software. This is not an easy proposition. Innovators must adopt and deploy the best-in-class voice-of-customer research methods such as value-in-use analysis, ethnographic research, and user-based design methods.
Creating a value discipline in the innovation process makes the rest of the value management process somewhat easier. Differentiated and value-based innovations can be marketed based on how much economic value they create for a specific customer of entire market segments. Marketers oversee documenting value and creating the value toolbox, which might include value propositions, value stories, value calculators, and a value playbook. Pricing teams support the customer value deployment by enabling value-based pricing strategies and calculating the differential economic value in dollars and cents that can be shared with and captured from customers. Then, sales teams are trained on value-based selling methods using all the value tools available in the toolbox and delivering impactful value messages. At the very end of the customer value approach, value-based negotiations increase the rate of value capture and value realization levels over time.
The alignment of all go-to-market functions is essential in successful customer value management (CVM) programs. But this is not all. In addition to the functional buckets of the go-to-market, there are three steps in the CVM process that overlap with the go-to-market functions as shown below:
First, customer value is created through innovation and marketing activities. Then, customer value is quantified using various methods such as total cost of ownership (TCO), ROI calculators, and economic value estimation models (EVE®). And finally, customer value is captured by suppliers and shared with partners and customers through pricing strategies and tactics. The simple graph above depicts the complex role of a Chief Value Officer or any customer value executive. That person is the guardian of the customer value galaxy, crisscrossing the organizational universe to make sure the customer value discipline is alive and well.
Specifically, there are five things that are critical for customer value journeys:
The customer value revolution is real, and it’s here. More software companies are investing in value management and customer success teams. More product companies are adopting and embracing value-based strategies and concepts. Make sure that customer value management is managed holistically in your organization and that the process is managed efficiently and successfully!
Bio
Stephan Liozu (www.stephanliozu.com) is the Founder of Value Innoruption Advisors (www.valueinnoruption.com), a consulting boutique specializing in industrial pricing, digital business, and value models, and value-based pricing. Stephan has 30 years of experience in the industrial and manufacturing sectors with companies like Owens Corning, Saint-Gobain, Freudenberg, and Thales. He holds a Ph.D. In Management from Case Western Reserve University, and has written several books, including “Dollarizing Differentiation Value” (2016) and “Value Mindset” (2017).