When I look at anything at all, the engineer in me always starts by trying to figure out how it is made – I make a list of parts and visualize the “Bill of Materials.” For the products I encounter in my daily life, this is a pretty straightforward process as most of these products have “mass.” But, for products with fuzzy edges – services, technology etc. - it’s an entirely different story because figuring out what is on that Bill of Materials is harder than most people think.
WHAT DOES A “BILL OF MATERIALS” FOR A SERVICE LOOK LIKE?
If you are Gillette or Toyota, selling a 3-dimensional product with hard edges then constructing a Bill of Materials is a standard part of operations. Establishing the list of parts, pricing each component, defining what equipment and labor are required in what sequence to assemble the finished product can be complex and time consuming, but not hard to understand. Now, apply that concept to products like search engines, email accounts, ATM transactions or the administration of pension benefits and it becomes much more challenging to get your head around. In order to increase margins and profitability, product teams must focus on innovating or reducing cost or streamlining manufacturing but when it’s hard to nail down the list of parts or to identify the steps in the delivery process, this is challenging. As a result, product managers for services need to be masters at dealing in the abstract and translating that thinking into concrete terms. By drawing lines around – and giving names to– each component of a service and then logically organizing them into categories, it is possible to construct a hypothetical Bill of Materials, even though there is nothing that even remotely resembles a bolt or an electronic part.
So get to work and have your product team define the list of elements in your services, bag and tag them into discrete categories and then map out the process for delivering them to customers. Making that list and checking it twice is a fundamental step in tracking your progress and your profits for all products: To skip this step for services, as well as products, would be like attempting to conduct a symphony without developing a score to follow.
This New Yorker cartoon by Arnie Levin provides an excellent example of how a harmonious delivery process can be thwarted by rogue elements.
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