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Exploring the causes of Servitization failure
Type
dissertation project
Start Date
01 April 2011
End Date
31 December 2011
Status
ongoing
Keywords
Servitization
Failure
Description
Adding services to their core product offering seems to be the panacea for manufacturing companies from developed economies to overcome the challenges of tightened margins on undifferentiated products, intensified competition and more complex costumer needs.
A long list of successful manufacturer such as Hilti, John Deere or Xerox was able to offer a higher value in use to their customers when combining products and services. Yet, despite these successful single cases, the general performance impact of service strategies seems to be uncertain. Empirical research has raised the question of a ‘service paradox', as firms not always see the predicted return on their service investments or are even more likely to declare bankruptcy. Various authors have described single barriers causing the service paradox. However, little quantitative research identifies the extent to which, and in what conditions, these barriers drive manufacturing companies to fail at servitizing.
Therefore, I attempt to fill this gap with my dissertation and the research proposal at hand by means of a quantitative analysis that investigates the characteristics of the barriers and their interrelation that cause companies to fail at servitizing. Furthermore, I will look at the path dependencies of servitization failure with a qualitative research approach to explore the phenomenon in depth. This combination gives me the possibility to analyze the research problem on a larger scale without ignoring its specific details. Overall, by revealing the causes of failure and their history I will try to help manufacturers that plan to enter the service business or struggle at servitizing to avoid or overcome these barriers and establish a flourishing service business.
A long list of successful manufacturer such as Hilti, John Deere or Xerox was able to offer a higher value in use to their customers when combining products and services. Yet, despite these successful single cases, the general performance impact of service strategies seems to be uncertain. Empirical research has raised the question of a ‘service paradox', as firms not always see the predicted return on their service investments or are even more likely to declare bankruptcy. Various authors have described single barriers causing the service paradox. However, little quantitative research identifies the extent to which, and in what conditions, these barriers drive manufacturing companies to fail at servitizing.
Therefore, I attempt to fill this gap with my dissertation and the research proposal at hand by means of a quantitative analysis that investigates the characteristics of the barriers and their interrelation that cause companies to fail at servitizing. Furthermore, I will look at the path dependencies of servitization failure with a qualitative research approach to explore the phenomenon in depth. This combination gives me the possibility to analyze the research problem on a larger scale without ignoring its specific details. Overall, by revealing the causes of failure and their history I will try to help manufacturers that plan to enter the service business or struggle at servitizing to avoid or overcome these barriers and establish a flourishing service business.
Member contributor(s)
Oschmann, Georg
Partner(s)
University of Cambridge
Funder(s)
Topic(s)
Servitization
Failure
Method(s)
Factor Analysis
Structural equation modeling
Range
HSG Internal
Range (De)
HSG Intern
Division(s)
Eprints ID
87651