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Institute
- Dienstleistungsmanagement (67) (remove)
Leistungssysteme
(2016)
Die Gestaltung von Leistungssystemen ist ein zentraler Prozess des Managements industrieller Dienstleistungen, da die kundengerechte Entwicklung einer aus Sachgütern und Dienstleistungen bestehenden Kombination von Leistungsbestandteilen hohe methodische Anforderungen stellt. Um die erforderliche Stimmigkeit des Leistungssystems zu erreichen, werden im folgenden Kapitel zunächst die grundlegenden Charakteristika sowie Gestaltungsprinzipien von Leistungssystemen dargestellt. Um den Erfordernissen von Kunden sowie einer internen Konsistenz des Leistungssystems gleichermaßen gerecht zu werden, sind für die Gestaltung von Leistungssystemen Methoden der Leistungsprogrammplanung, der Modularisierung sowie der Konfiguration von Leistungen erforderlich. Diese werden ebenfalls dargestellt und erläutert. Das Kapitel wird durch die Darstellung eines Dienstleistungsbaukastens ergänzt.
Ressourcen sind die Grundlage eines jeden Wertschöpfungsprozesses. Aus einer strategischen Perspektive können nur schwer imitierbare und einzigartige Kernkompetenzen die Grundlage eines langfristigen und nachhaltigen Wettbewerbsvorteils begründen. Demzufolge sind Ressourcen so auszuwählen, verfügbar zu machen sowie zu kombinieren, dass entsprechende Kompetenzen und Kernkompetenzen entwickelt werden. Dies ist die Aufgabe des strategischen Ressourcenmanagements. Allerdings unterscheiden sich die Auswahl und der Einsatz von Ressourcen zwischen Sachgütern und Dienstleistungen erheblich. Während bei Sachgütern die verwendeten Rohstoffe und Materialien oder die Produktionsbedingungen wesentliche Grundlage für die Qualität des Endprodukts sind, stehen bei Entwicklung, Vermarktung und Erbringung von Dienstleistungen die Mitarbeiter wesentlich stärker im Mittelpunkt. Daher stellt das Human-Resource-Management (HRM) den zentralen Ansatz für das Ressourcenmanagement industrieller Dienstleister dar. Aufgabe des HRMs ist es, die Mitarbeiter für die Entwicklung, Vermarktung und Erbringung von industriellen Dienstleistungen zu befähigen.
Produzierende Unternehmen in Industrienationen sehen sich einem immer stärkeren internationalen Wettbewerb ausgesetzt. Eine der entscheidenden Strategien, um diesem Wandel zu begegnen, ist die Differenzierung über industrielle Dienstleistungen.
Im folgenden Kapitel werden zunächst die Begriffe der Dienstleistungen und der industriellen Dienstleistungen inhaltlich gefasst und definiert. Danach wird die zunehmende wirtschaftliche Bedeutung industrieller Dienstleistungen für die Wirtschaft und für produzierende Unternehmen an sich aufgezeigt. Das Konzept des Leistungssystems wird vorgestellt. Abschließend werden verschiedene Perspektiven des Managements industrieller Dienstleistungen vorgestellt.
Today, machine manufacturers generate a significant share of their revenues with the provision of services. At the same time, they are confronted with the challenge of adopting of Industrie 4.0.
One of the most important Industrie 4.0 concepts is the idea of the digital shadow, which contributes to the comprehensive structuring of different kinds of data from different data sources. It can be defined as the sufficiently precise, digital representation of reality in real-time.
Thus, it also functions as a database of the considered area of a company that can be used for numerous applications. It serves as a central platform for the aggregation and distribution of data. Thereby, it helps to open isolated data silos. A system architecture that enables extraction of data from various sources and the aggregation of that data is an important prerequisite for the digital shadow.
In addition, the merger of data from different sources requires a model of the part of the company to be mapped digitally. In this paper, we focus on maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) services of machine manufacturers. The scope comprises the whole order processing of a service including the utilized resources and the obtained results.
MRO services and their single elements are mapped and structured using a case study research in a first step. Those elements provide a basis for designing the digital shadow. A second contribution of this paper is a data model for the digital shadow of MRO services that entails a comprehensive representation of that department.
The design of data-driven industrial services in the context of industry 4.0 represents a major challenge for industrial service providers and manufacturing companies for investment goods. Data-driven services require technological and strategic components that most companies have not build up yet and that differ from current configurations. That is why many companies lack a systematic approach and implementation competence for the use of data in the context of industrial services and therefore face the challenge of not being able to expand their market position in an ever-growing competition for data.
The present paper addresses this research deficit with the aim of describing strategic features and characteristics of data-driven industrial services by identifying the related crucial features and characteristics through a morphological approach. This will enable industrial service providers to improve strategic and operative management decisions in order to define a specific strategy and to configure data-driven services.
The importance of social networks and, in particular, enterprise social networks in business contexts is increasing significantly. Regarding the prerequisites for a successful implementation of an enterprise social network, exclusively providing the technical infrastructure is insufficient. A holistic view that considers and integrates different perspectives is crucial for success. This includes technological, organisational and human aspects as equally important parts of the network. This paper identifies prerequisites for a successful launch of enterprise social networks and groups them along these three dimensions.
Ziel des Beitrags ist es, aufzuzeigen, wie produzierende Unternehmen entlang der Customer-Journey systematisch kundenbezogene Daten erheben können. Nach einer Einleitung zur Motivation der Themenstellung, einer Begriffserläuterung und einer Vorstellung des Studiendesigns wird ein Referenzprozessmodell der Kundeninteraktionen produzierender Unternehmen gestaltet, darauf aufbauend ein Datenmodell des digitalen Schattens der Kundeninteraktionen abgeleitet und zuletzt ein Vorgehensmodell zur Implementierung des digitalen Schattens der Kundeninteraktionen präsentiert.
Manufacturing companies are constantly increasing their efforts in the subscription business, also known as product-as-a-service business, offering usage and outcome based solutions (value-in-use) instead of transactional services and products (value-in-exchange). Customers are becoming contractual subscribers of the solution in return for recurring, performance-related payments. To address arising, inevitable challenges like (1) reducing customer churn, (2) increasing usage intensity and outcome quality, (3) ensuring the adoption of product and software releases as well as (4) fostering customer loyalty, leading manufacturing companies are setting up a new organizational, customer-facing unit, called Customer Success Management (CSM). This unit has its origins in the software-as-a-service business, operating next to established entities like sales, key account management and customer service. Since there are currently no holistic models for an end-to-end description of CSM-tasks in the manufacturing industry, this paper contributes to a taskoriented reference model, using a grounded theory approach, examining both manufacturing and software companies. Containing a reference framework with 8 main tasks, 17 basic tasks and 76 elementary tasks, the reference model supports manufacturing companies in adapting and customizing a company-specific CSM concept.
Pricing for Smart-Product-Service-Systems in Subscription Business Models for Production Industries
(2021)
In the production industry, subscription business models have the potential to create long-term relationships where a supplier provides a continuous value-oriented service to a customer based on digitalisation. Monetising this increase in value through pricing represents a central challenge for suppliers in subscription business. Unlike the current dominant transactional business, the focus of pricing is on the value-in-use of the customer (e.g. on the increase in output for the customer). In this regard, there is so far no pricing approach for practice that allows the linking of the performance data of the customer with the periodically charged price. However, in subscription businesses, such an approach is required to create win-win situations for the customer and supplier through continuous performance improvement. Therefore, this paper develops a novel process model for pricing of smart-product-service-systems in subscription business for production industries. This process can serve as basis for suppliers of subscriptions in the production industry to align pricing with the created value-in-use. In the long term, this allows companies to systematically develop their pricing to monetise the potential of digitalisation.
Manufacturing companies (MFRs) are increasingly extending their
portfolios with services and data-driven services (DDS) to differentiate themselves from competitors, tap new revenue potential, and gain competitive advantages through digitization and the subsequently generated data. Nonetheless, DDS fail more often than traditional industrial services and products within the first year on the market. Particularly, companies are failing to sell DDS successfully and efficiently with their existing (multi-level) distribution structures. Surprisingly, there is a lack of scientific research addressing this issue. Since there are currently no holistic models for an end-to-end description of distribution-tasks for DDS in the manufacturing industry, this paper contributes to a task-oriented reference model for mapping interactions in the multi-level distribution management. Therefore, a case study research approach is used, to identify and describe the interactions in the multi-level distribution management of DDS, as well as to develop a regulatory framework for MFRs and their multi-level distribution management. This research uses the established theoretical framework of Service-Dominant-Logic to address the co-creation in multi-level distribution management of DDS. As a result, this paper identifies different interaction variants as well as the need for a new management function with 4 main and 14 basic tasks.