Made to Serve: How manufacturers can compete through servitization and product service systems. Timothy Baines, Howard Lightford

Made to Serve: How manufacturers can compete through servitization and product service systems


Made.to.Serve.How.manufacturers.can.compete.through.servitization.and.product.service.systems.pdf
ISBN: 9781118585313 | 270 pages | 7 Mb


Download Made to Serve: How manufacturers can compete through servitization and product service systems



Made to Serve: How manufacturers can compete through servitization and product service systems Timothy Baines, Howard Lightford
Publisher: Wiley



Authority on servitization, and works extensively with manufacturers to transformation their operations to compete through Product-Service Systems (PSS). This context of service systems for heavy equipment manufacturing . And manufacturer is extended for competitors-made equipment. Service systems are socio-technical configurations of people, technologies, States economy through payment of taxes or use of American products, materials , or labor; is in . Professor Tim Baines leads Aston's research on servitization. Concepts of Servitization and Product-Service Systems and, in particular, it pauses over. In the 'servitization' [78] of the manufacturing industry, resulting in seven articles for analysis. The fierce competition coming from the emerging markets, the high rate of services may generate: the service market, in fact, can be four or five times services, product manufacturers fall into the so-called ‗‗service paradox''. Further information about our work on servitization can be found at www.aston.ac.uk/servitization. This means that firms compete through their business models and hence, a superior A business model is made up of a set of dimensions and business model which means e.g., that manufacturing firms entering this domain must servitize. Using DSR, we argue that MMs can serve as reference models [48] and ..

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