Creating Profit Through Alliances - business models for collaboration E-book | Page 40

situation. For example, when spending the night in a hotel you do not expect anyone to enter your room unasked (privacy), that drinks in the bar are charged to your account (convenience), and that there is wake-up call service (efficiency). At higher-end hotels you will expect a laundry or dry-cleaning service (give me comprehensive solutions) and personal attention. The other aspect is the brand promise and how this is fulfilled. If you want to have a meal, that need will differ depending on whether you're alone or with your family. A company's response to this may lie in the right portfolio management of the products and services it offers. It also makes a difference whether you're in town or in an amusement park, and a company's solution here lies in its distribution management. And finally, in this particular case, you do not have this need for a meal at each and every moment. Thus, being relevant means that companies must present you with their offer at the right time. Marketing communications and personal sales are important means to achieve this. Businesses that deliberately invest in relevance also try to flesh out that brand promise: by formulating the promise, communicating the promise, and especially also by living out this promise in different ways. BMW uses the slogan “BMW makes driving great”. The company tries to sustain that promise by putting only truly well-designed products in the market. For example, when all car brands had already launched an SUV, BMW also had one in the pipeline, but it wasn't thought good enough. It wasn't until BMW had thoroughly developed the X5 that they rolled it out into the showrooms. According to a Booz Allan & Hamilton article entitled „How to brand Sand‟20, you can differentiate your offering through the product or through the service 38 that you provide as a company. These company service „promises‟ could be:    supply reliability, applications knowledge assuming responsibility, e.g. for part of their supply chain process. Christopher Lovelock, in his book „Services Marketing‟21, gives 8 ways to differentiate on service aspects:         Providing information (e.g. about the products, how to apply them) Advising customers (tailored to their specific needs) Making exceptions (handling special requests, complaints, restitution) Delivery (speed, timeframes) Fulfilment (planning, flexibility, change orders) Invoicing (EDI, clarity of the invoice) Payment and payment conditions (local bank account, payment term) Hospitality (is the client welcome, how is he treated) Both with commodity products and unique products you can apply one of these differentiators to become a relevant supplier for your customers. This can lead to differentiating brand promises such as: “We deliver on time”, “Clear contracts”, “The best advice”. Alliances can help achieve relevance for customers more quickly. The value of alliances can best be quantified by considering the costs your own company would have to make to accomplish a comparable boost in relevance. This is elaborated further for the five basic forms of alliances that aim to enhance customer relevance.