Friday, August 8, 2008

Exit Polls: Summit Delivers

As expected, the sun was shining in San Diego last week. But for 74% of delegates, the 4th Annual Smart Services Leadership Summit exceeded expectations. And I'd have to include myself in that group.

Highlights abound - many of which will be available shortly via online video clips - but here are a few that come to mind:
  • North of 230 delegates in attendance. This volume alone speaks to the rising tide of Smart Services in industries ranging from healthcare, to consumer products, to industrial equipment.

  • Spot-on reminders from Dr. Mary Jo Bitner of Arizona State's Center for Services Leadership to design service and sales processes from your customer’s point of view and to "co-create" services with your customers.

  • Spurring words from Jim Sweeney of CardioNet regarding the power of disruptive innovation to not only redefine quality standards in an industry but to give birth to wildly successful business models.

  • The rigorous customer-driven business case - as presented by ABB Power's Bart Gaskey - that's critical for OEMs to succeed at commercializing Smart Services.

Too many others to mention in detail, but contributions from John Deere, Medtronics, NACCO Materials Handling, Gardner Denver, Navistar, Peek, and the other speakers and panelists combined to delight, challenge, and energize the throng in attendance.

For those of you who couldn't make it, hope to see you next time around. For those of you who were there, post a comment and share your own Summit insights and experiences!

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Turning the Corner with Smart Service Chains

As I've mentioned in previous posts, industry discourse continues to intensify around how smart services can enable OEMs to become more predictive - and in due course, more profitable - in the way they design, sell, and service their products. For those of you interested in another installment in this ongoing discussion, make sure to mark your calendars on August 5th, 11:30 am ET (10:30 am CT).

At that time, I will be participating in a one-hour webinar - Turning the Corner with Smart Service Chains - hosted by BetterManagement.com, in association with SAS. "Join a panel of industry experts from Qualcomm, Gardner Denver and SAS to explore a major transition taking place in the post-production service chain – smart service chains. Made possible by smart services technologies, these service chains allow companies to anticipate the future actions they need to take to make sure customers are more than satisfied, they are delighted and become vigorous advocates of the products they buy."

To register for this webinar, visit BetterManagement.com.


Thursday, July 3, 2008

Nashville Round-Up

What a difference a year makes. I had the honor of chairing IQPC's Remote Monitoring conference in Nashville last week, which was a markedly different experience from last year's event in my hometown Boston.

To sum it up, the Grand Ole delegates were much more concerned with questions of "how" than were their Beantown predecessors, many of whom were struggling with questions of "why." That is, there was a collective understanding of why remote monitoring makes business sense; it’s now become a matter of how to deploy, integrate, and extract maximum value from smart service solutions. This is a great indication that remote monitoring is making its way into the fabric of our core businesses.

Also, as evidenced by Gilbarco’s “Daily Loss Advisor” fuel loss report and Avaya’s “Expert View” report, just to name a couple, OEMs are beginning to graduate from simply capturing and transmitting machine data to applying intelligent analytics and BI tools to create new value for their customers.

To sustain competitive advantage, OEMs need to stop viewing remote monitoring as a stand-alone capability. Remote monitoring ENABLES “smart services” (see inset image), and OEMs need to integrate smart services into adjacent phases of the product value chain, such as design, manufacturing, sales, service, and marketing. At the Nashville event, it was a good sign to hear some OEMs beginning to talk about leveraging smart services to strengthen service contract offerings and integrating machine data with PLM, FSA, CRM, and other enterprise systems.

To continue the conversation, join us on July 29 - 31 in San Diego for Qualcomm's 4th Annual Smart Services Leadership Summit!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

How Smart are your Smart Services?

Since the dawn of the information age, plenty of ink - and blog bytes for that matter - has been dedicated to the differentiation between "data" and "knowledge." Most companies' plates overfloweth with the former, but starve for the latter.

What separates top smart services practitioners from the also-rans has a lot to do with how the OEM, service network partner, and asset operator systematically extract actionable knowledge from heretofore inaccessable machine data.

Well-tuned analytics go beyond basic reporting and provide insights into future equipment performance patterns, operator behavior discrepancies, supply chain improvement opportunities, and unmet customer needs. Machine data trend analysis can enable OEMs to evolve from product suppliers to trusted advisors to their customers, by fueling new information-based service offerings. And herein lies the much-touted opportunity for OEMs and their channel partners to unlock new, highly-profitable revenue streams.

Consider the telephone manufacturer that can now help its business customers optimize call-center performance, or the air compressor manufacturer that can now ensure its customers' compliance with efficiency regulations, or the fuel-dispenser manufacturer that provides its customers with detailed reports on fuel loss, price elasticity, and fuel logistics optimization. In these and countless other examples, the ability to collect and report raw machine data no longer differentiates the OEM. The bar has risen, and keeps rising.

On July 16th at 1 pm ET (12 pm CT), I will be participating on a Webinar entitled Smart Business Intelligence Solutions to Optimize Your Services Operation, and I invite you to attend and ask some questions of your own.

Friday, May 16, 2008

It's Summit Season Again

This time, I have a valid excuse for the long hiatus between posts. I have been chasing down a tangle of loose ends in the wake of my relocation from Boston to Chicagoland. But here I am, blogging for the first time from the windy city, or as I like to call it, Red Sox Nation Midwest.

The Smart Services landscape continues to expand and evolve, often in ways that mystify the industry's leading pundits. The diversity of applications of this technology seems boundless, and the mandate for business leaders to embrace it is rarely questioned... at least in theory.

In response to these market dynamics, this year's Smart Services Summit has taken on a few new attributes. First, it's now called the Smart Services Leadership Summit and will explore the increasing relevance of Smart Services to C-Level executives and their strategic agendas.

Second, there will be industry-specific break-out sessions on Day 2, to allow peer groups to roll up their collective sleeves to grapple with the real-world implications of Smart Services in their unique markets. (See sneak-peak agenda synopsis below.)

And third, the event will be in San Diego - not Chicago as in prior years - and will be held at Qualcomm's headquarters. In place of the storied Cubs Rooftop experience, there will be an invitation-only reception aboard the USS Midway aircraft carrier (see inset).

Hope to see you all in sunny San Diego in July! Here's your sneak-peak Summit '08 agenda:

Day 1: General Session
Some of the most forward-thinking services leaders from a diversity of market venues will come together to continue to define the new business language of Smart Services. They will explore best practices for executing on smart services strategies, key challenges they’ve faced, and what it will take to remain smart services leaders in the future. In this cross-functional session, major corporations will mix it up with entrepreneurs, industry analysts, and academic experts through a combination of practical presentations, interactive panel discussions, and networking events.

Day 2: Breakout Session - Major Manufacturing
By 2010, almost two-thirds of product manufacturers will have embedded networking capabilities in at least half of their product lines (Harbor Research, 2007), collecting health, performance, and location data to support aftermarket service delivery, product quality improvement, and value-added asset management services. This breakout session will give like-minded manufacturing leaders the chance to collaborate with their peers on such pressing issues as commercializing smart services in product-centric environments, empowering dealers and distributors as go-to-market allies, and cultivating the end-customer value proposition to engender stronger relationships and long-term competitive advantage.

Day 2: Breakout Session - Remote Health Services
Societal, environmental, economic and other forces have given birth to the rapidly expanding world of telemedicine. For instance, as much as 40 percent of today’s American-based home health agencies employ some form of telehealth in their daily operations. This breakout session will explore the role Smart Services is playing in unique life-saving applications, as well as some of the technological challenges and business opportunities that might await product and service providers in this evolving arena.

Day 2: Breakout Session - Disruptive Innovators
In most cases, the technological backbone of a Smart Service is a machine-to-machine (M2M) managed network communications service that connects a physical device to an enterprise application. As such, today’s entrepreneurial marketplace is rife with innovative companies leveraging Smart Services to solve a vast range of business and consumer needs. This breakout session will showcase best practices employed by early- to mid-stage outfits, and will give these companies the opportunity to explore potential synergies among their unique solutions.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Braving the Wild Blue Yonder

One of these days, I'll be able to post to this blog without apologizing for the time elapsed since the last installment... But not this time.

It certainly has been a hectic start to 2008, due in large part to the hours I've already logged at 30 some-odd thousand feet. What this airborne time has afforded me though is the ability to catch up on some reading, and I recently read from cover-to-cover for the first time Blue Ocean Strategy.


As is the case with most business books I read, I discovered some solid take-aways, as well as a handful of leave-behinds. The reality is that for many product manufacturers, smart services can provide the foundation for a bona fide blue ocean strategy.

For those of you who haven't read the book, a blue ocean strategy is a way for a company to distance itself from the "red oceans" of bloody competition by increasing or decreasing its focus on certain elements of its business in order to more consistently deploy its resources towards the creation of customer value.


To test the applicability of blue ocean thinking to the world of smart services, I tried my hand at creating what the Blue Ocean authors call a "strategy canvas" for a typical product manufacturing company (see inset). This framework lays out the primary drivers of market competition (note x-axis) and plots red ocean and blue ocean strategies against each other according to how much or how little investment is made (note y-axis) in each of the competitive areas. The goal is to visually depict the separation that exists between blue ocean and red ocean practitioners.

As you can see in the inset image (click on it for larger version), smart services-enabled product manufacturers invest much more aggressively in areas like product lifecycle performance, gaining knowledge about customers' businesses, reducing customers' total cost of ownership, and introducing value-added services. Why? Because they can. Without reliable intelligence on the behavior of deployed products, red ocean manufacturers find it very difficult to build the asset knowledge base required to deliver value in these areas. Hence, we have the beginnings of a blue ocean.

Now, it's entirely possible that all this ocean talk is resonating with me because I'll be leaving the Atlantic Ocean I know and love for a new home in the Mid-West in a couple weeks. But I still think manufacturers might stand to gain some clarity around their smart services efforts if they think about them in terms of what creates and sustains value for their customers. Agreed? Or am I all wet? Post a comment and let me know.