Customer value assessment in business markets
Keränen, Joona (2014-06-13)
Väitöskirja
Keränen, Joona
13.06.2014
Lappeenranta University of Technology
Acta Universitatis Lappeenrantaensis
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN978-952-265-606-3
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN978-952-265-606-3
Tiivistelmä
Understanding how firms create, communicate, and deliver value to customers is a key factor
when firms seek to differentiate in increasingly competitive and commoditized business
markets. As product and price have become less important differentiators in many industries,
suppliers are increasingly seeking ways to differentiate themselves based on delivered
customer value. Therefore, to gain a holistic understanding on what their offerings are worth
to the customer, suppliers need to conduct customer value assessment, which quantifies the
impact of a supplier´s offering to customers’ costs and returns. However, from a managerial
perspective, customer value assessment is the single most critical challenge for firms in
business markets. Consequently, developing holistic frameworks for customer value
assessment is seen as one of the most important research priorities for marketing research.
The purpose of this study is to explore the process of customer value assessment in business
markets. Business markets represent a context where an increasing number of industrial firms
are transitioning from basic product offerings towards service-based and solution-oriented
hybrid offerings, which emphasize value co-creation and realization in the long term, thus
making it difficult to quantify their monetary value. This study employs exploratory and
qualitative research design by applying inductive and discovery-oriented grounded theory and
multiple case research methods. The empirical data comprise interviews with 61 managers
from 12 industrial firms, including seven best practice firms in customer value assessment.
The findings of this study show that customer value assessment is essentially a crossfunctional
process, which involves several organizational functions. The process begins well
before and continues long after the actual delivery, often until the end of a supplier´s
offering’s life-cycle. Furthermore, the findings shed light on alternative strategies that firms
in business markets can adopt to implement the customer value assessment process. Overall,
the findings contribute to customer value research, the sales and organizational management
literature, the service marketing and solutions business literature, and suggest several
managerial implications on how firms in business markets can adopt a holistic approach to
assess value created for customers.
when firms seek to differentiate in increasingly competitive and commoditized business
markets. As product and price have become less important differentiators in many industries,
suppliers are increasingly seeking ways to differentiate themselves based on delivered
customer value. Therefore, to gain a holistic understanding on what their offerings are worth
to the customer, suppliers need to conduct customer value assessment, which quantifies the
impact of a supplier´s offering to customers’ costs and returns. However, from a managerial
perspective, customer value assessment is the single most critical challenge for firms in
business markets. Consequently, developing holistic frameworks for customer value
assessment is seen as one of the most important research priorities for marketing research.
The purpose of this study is to explore the process of customer value assessment in business
markets. Business markets represent a context where an increasing number of industrial firms
are transitioning from basic product offerings towards service-based and solution-oriented
hybrid offerings, which emphasize value co-creation and realization in the long term, thus
making it difficult to quantify their monetary value. This study employs exploratory and
qualitative research design by applying inductive and discovery-oriented grounded theory and
multiple case research methods. The empirical data comprise interviews with 61 managers
from 12 industrial firms, including seven best practice firms in customer value assessment.
The findings of this study show that customer value assessment is essentially a crossfunctional
process, which involves several organizational functions. The process begins well
before and continues long after the actual delivery, often until the end of a supplier´s
offering’s life-cycle. Furthermore, the findings shed light on alternative strategies that firms
in business markets can adopt to implement the customer value assessment process. Overall,
the findings contribute to customer value research, the sales and organizational management
literature, the service marketing and solutions business literature, and suggest several
managerial implications on how firms in business markets can adopt a holistic approach to
assess value created for customers.
Kokoelmat
- Väitöskirjat [1060]