The Primary Aim of your Aftermarket Service Business
"What is the primary aim of our business?"
This is a quesition that a colleague of mine, a turnaround expert, used to ask the client management team on every new assignment. The Management team's answers were predictable ranging from make a profit, to increase sales and customer satisfaction, to maximize shareholder value. "No", my friend would tell them, "the primary aim is to survive".
As companies ride out this recession and prepare for a recovery, the focus will continue to be on survival. In survival mode we need to remember the effectiveness of basic block and tackle moves.
The "Strategic Business Model" provides such a framework. Basic tenants of the model are that the internal operating infrastructure and external sales & marketing function must work smoothly, effectively, and in tandem in order to fullfill the company's basic strategic service direction and achieve optimal levels of service performance.
This means implementation Service Marketing and Sales programs to increase density of the customer base or installed base and implementation of state of the art service management systems like Field Service Automation, Service Parts Optimization, and Dynamic Scheduling solutions to improve service quality levels. Density is the key to profits in the Aftermarket Service Industry since it results in a lot of customers with similar needs and enables a company to leverage its infrastructure to drive effecinecy and effeciency.
Just as the company needs to work diligently and effectively in building a customer base to generate revenue, it must continously find ways to drive productivity and effeciency through its service delivery infrastructure. Benchmark measurements such as Turnaround Time, FSE Utilization Rates, No Fault Found provide an assessment the productivity and effeciency of internal service management systems while Customer Satisfaction measures the external perspective on the service peformance.
These measurements should be viewed in parrallel to determine if the internal infrastructure (e.g., Reverse Logistics, Field Service, Depot Repair) is capable of fullfilling the marketing promise and vice versa to determine if the marketing promise is capable of being delivered through the internal infrastructure. The Aftermarket Serivce organizations "Strategic Service direction" is achevied to the extent these facets of the business work effectively.
In laymen's terms, operating a Aftermarket Service operation is a little like driving a car in a cross country race. While it is important to keep an eye on the road (the market), sponsors (customers), and other drivers (competitors), it is also just as important to look under the hood to make sure the engine gets us where we need to go.
The primary aim of companies in the Aftermarket Service world can be best achieved through continous measurement and calibration of the internal systems and external programs. This becomes even more important when the focus is on basic survival. This is the time when Aftermarket Service executivs and managers can not afford not to give careful attention to their company's strategic direction and business model.