Most companies today take an inherently adversarial approach to buying and selling in industrial markets, thereby missing out on opportunities for joint value creation with customers and suppliers. Sales as well as procurement are too obsessed with price and not enough with value. In this paper we present a set of principles that put joint value creation at the centre of the relationship with customers and suppliers. With respect to customers, the value quantification capability is the most important competency of the sales function, i.e. the ability to translate a firm’s competitive advantages into one quantified, monetary value reflecting both qualitative as well as quantitative customer benefits. With respect to suppliers, we call for th...
In increasingly competitive markets, price is amongst the most important aspects of a company's mark...
A typical problem with relationship management in a B2B environment is that implementing companies o...
Historically, value has been understood largely in economic terms centred on, for example, notions o...
Most companies today take an inherently adversarial approach to buying and selling in industrial mar...
Value-based pricing – pricing a product or service according to its value to the customer rather tha...
Value-based pricing-pricing a product according to its value to the customer rather than its cost-is...
AbstractIn their effort to differentiate themselves from cost-driven rivals, many industrial compani...
In their effort to differentiate themselves from cost-driven rivals, many industrial companies are b...
Customer value has become one of the most essential concepts of the past few decades, especially in ...
This article offers an overview of research on the ‘value’ that businesses and industrial marketers ...
This paper analyses how buyer companies perceive the value added to products and services offered by...
While the creation of superior customer value is regarded as fundamental to a firm's long-term survi...
Purpose - To present a literature review on value in business markets, both from the perspective of ...
The economic performance of a company does not depend on the company itself, but on its relationsh...
Value-based selling can boost margins and competitiveness, but vendors must first advance beyond the...
In increasingly competitive markets, price is amongst the most important aspects of a company's mark...
A typical problem with relationship management in a B2B environment is that implementing companies o...
Historically, value has been understood largely in economic terms centred on, for example, notions o...
Most companies today take an inherently adversarial approach to buying and selling in industrial mar...
Value-based pricing – pricing a product or service according to its value to the customer rather tha...
Value-based pricing-pricing a product according to its value to the customer rather than its cost-is...
AbstractIn their effort to differentiate themselves from cost-driven rivals, many industrial compani...
In their effort to differentiate themselves from cost-driven rivals, many industrial companies are b...
Customer value has become one of the most essential concepts of the past few decades, especially in ...
This article offers an overview of research on the ‘value’ that businesses and industrial marketers ...
This paper analyses how buyer companies perceive the value added to products and services offered by...
While the creation of superior customer value is regarded as fundamental to a firm's long-term survi...
Purpose - To present a literature review on value in business markets, both from the perspective of ...
The economic performance of a company does not depend on the company itself, but on its relationsh...
Value-based selling can boost margins and competitiveness, but vendors must first advance beyond the...
In increasingly competitive markets, price is amongst the most important aspects of a company's mark...
A typical problem with relationship management in a B2B environment is that implementing companies o...
Historically, value has been understood largely in economic terms centred on, for example, notions o...