To answer the customer’s question, “How do I get from point A to point B at a reasonable cost?” Uber’s answer was not to launch a cheaper taxi service but to provide a marketplace to connect service providers with customers. In other words, customer-centricity is at the heart of Uber’s business model.
There was a time when delivering the best product for the best price was enough to keep any firm ahead of the competition, but with globalization pushing product prices down, and products being commoditized, companies are turning to services to gain that critical competitive advantage. A number of firms that are seeing success, have made a transition from being product-centric to solution-centric organizations.
Service monetization is a business model that provides solutions to customer needs and in turn, empowers the company with the ability to monetize its products and services. As a result, customer engagement increases as we move from product to outcome-related services. Increased customer engagement provides more opportunities for the service provider to understand customer needs and serve those needs (cross-sell and upsell) to strengthen the relationship further.
We see three types of service monetization journeys for organizations, depending on where they are in the adaption process. While several companies are already well ahead in their journey to offer their products as services, there are many others who are currently exploring ways to monetize better, and others who have few uses but are thinking of expanding. Each company has a different challenge and approach as they move further on their journey – ranging from defining the use case, to customer adaption, to continually improving the customer lifetime value (See Figure 1).
Figure 1: Journey to service monetization
The Essentials for Service Monetization
Service monetization involves significant and sensitive change management during transition from product-centric/perpetual license business to service-centric business. The change needs to be managed carefully with proactive communication on what changes are coming, what needs to be done, and how will it impact people. Firms will need to change their mindset.
Product/perpetual licensure drives capital development upfront and on time, whereas services make money over time. Firms, at times, find this difficult to reconcile and often do not see the expected profits when first deploying service monetization. In order to achieve profitability, firms need to understand the financial implications of the new business model and its effect on firm performance.
Traditional business processes and Key Performance Indicators are radically different from the capabilities required to support service monetization. Companies need to radically transform multiple aspects of their business, from defining success criteria to people to business metrics and of course, their products and overall quote-to-cash process.
Here are some key process and technology changes required to support service monetization:
Financial case management service monetization begins with uncovering the customer’s unmet needs and knowing how to provide a wonderful experience in meeting them. Service monetization is not easy and firms need strong leadership and help from experts to define the roadmap, and enable technology and change management. In the end, service monetization pays off due to value creation.
Industry :
Rahul Bansal
Director - Digital, Technology BU, Wipro Ltd
As part of his role, Rahul works with clients to solve their business problems harnessing technology. He is a tech enthusiast and loves playing chess and tennis in his free time. Rahul graduated from REC Jamshedpur.
Arun Trivedi
Digital Partner – Technology BU, Wipro Ltd
Arun specializes in defining IT-enabled business transformation roadmaps, service monetization, quote-to-cash business processes, and revenue recognition for clients. He has been involved in helping clients, from defining their business challenges to leveraging technologies to resolve business problems and enabling benefits realization.