mass customization
.
Table 3-3 lists a number of companies that have developed IT-based products
and services that other firms have found difficult to copy, or at least a long time
to copy.
Fo c u s o n M a r k e t N i c h e
Use information systems to enable a specific market focus, and serve this
narrow target market better than competitors. Information systems support
this strategy by producing and analyzing data for finely tuned sales and
marketing techniques. Information systems enable companies to analyze
customer buying patterns, tastes, and preferences closely so that they
efficiently pitch advertising and marketing campaigns to smaller and smaller
target markets.
The data come from a range of sources—credit card transactions, demo-
graphic data, purchase data from checkout counter scanners at supermarkets
and retail stores, and data collected when people access and interact with Web
sites. Sophisticated software tools find patterns in these large pools of data and
infer rules from them to guide decision making. Analysis of such data drives
one-to-one marketing that creates personal messages based on individualized
preferences. For example, Hilton Hotels’ OnQ system analyzes detailed data
collected on active guests in all of its properties to determine the preferences of
each guest and each guest’s profitability. Hilton uses this information to give its
most profitable customers additional privileges, such as late check-outs.
Contemporary customer relationship management (CRM) systems feature ana-
lytical capabilities for this type of intensive data analysis (see Chapters 2 and 9).
TABLE 3-3
IT-ENABLED NEW PRODUCTS AND SERVICES PROVIDING
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
Amazon: One-click shopping
Amazon holds a patent on one-click shopping that it licenses to other
online retailers.
Online music: Apple iPod
The iPod is an integrated handheld player backed up with an online
and iTunes
library of over 13 million songs
Golf club customization: Ping
Customers can select from more than 1 million different golf club
options; a build-to-order system ships their customized clubs within
48 hours.
Online bill payment:
Fifty-two million households pay bills online in 2010.
CheckFree.com
Online person-to-person
PayPal enables the transfer of money between individual bank
payment: PayPal.com
accounts and between bank accounts and credit card accounts.
Chapter 3
Information Systems, Organizations, and Strategy
99
The Interactive Session on Organizations describes how skillfully credit card
companies are able to use this strategy to predict their most profitable
cardholders. The companies gather vast quantities of data about consumer
purchases and other behaviors and mine these data to construct detailed
profiles that identify cardholders who might be good or bad credit risks. These
practices have enhanced credit card companies’ profitability, but are they in
consumers’ best interests?
S t r e n g t h e n C u s t o m e r a n d S u p p l i e r I n t i m a c y
Use information systems to tighten linkages with suppliers and develop
intimacy with customers. Chrysler Corporation uses information systems to
facilitate direct access by suppliers to production schedules, and even permits
suppliers to decide how and when to ship supplies to Chrysler factories. This
allows suppliers more lead time in producing goods. On the customer side,
Amazon.com keeps track of user preferences for book and CD purchases, and
can recommend titles purchased by others to its customers. Strong linkages to
customers and suppliers increase
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