Service fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets
<strong>Purpose</strong> This paper presents thirteen propositions about how internal strategic fit (often referred to as fit) impacts the business performance of low cost and differentiated services. It then uses these relationships to develop two ‘fitness ladder’ frameworks to help pra...
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Format: | Journal article |
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Emerald
2017
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author | Hill, A Cuthbertson, R Brown, S Laker, B |
author_facet | Hill, A Cuthbertson, R Brown, S Laker, B |
author_sort | Hill, A |
collection | OXFORD |
description | <strong>Purpose</strong> This paper presents thirteen propositions about how internal strategic fit (often referred to as fit) impacts the business performance of low cost and differentiated services. It then uses these relationships to develop two ‘fitness ladder’ frameworks to help practitioners understand how to improve fit given their business strategy (low cost or differentiation) and performance objectives (operational, financial or competitiveness). <strong>Design/methodology/approach</strong> Eleven strategic business units were studied that perform differently and provide a range of low cost and differentiated services to understand how changes in internal strategic fit impacted business performance over a seven year period. <strong>Findings</strong> Our findings suggest aligning systems with market needs does not improve performance. Instead, firms serving low cost markets should first focus managers’ attention on processes and centralise resources around key processes, before reducing process flexibility and automate as many steps as possible to develop a low cost capability that is difficult to imitate. By contrast, firms serving differentiated markets should first focus managers’ attention on customers and then locate resources near them, before increasing customer contact with their processes and making them more flexible so they can develop customer knowledge, relationships and services that are difficult to imitate. <strong>Research limitations/implications</strong> Some significant factors may not have been considered as the study only looked at the impact of fourteen internal strategic fit variables on seven performance variables. Also, the performance changes may not be a direct result of the strategic fit improvements identified and may not generalise to other service organisations, settings and environments. <strong>Practical implications</strong> The strategic fit-performance relationships identified and the ‘fitness ladder’ frameworks developed can be used by organisations to make decisions about how best to improve fit given their different market needs, business strategies and performance objectives. <strong>Originality/value</strong> Our findings offer more clarity than previous research about how internal fit impacts business performance for low cost and differentiated services. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-06T18:48:49Z |
format | Journal article |
id | oxford-uuid:0f78c15f-da45-4dd1-b685-4d3945c24305 |
institution | University of Oxford |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T18:48:49Z |
publishDate | 2017 |
publisher | Emerald |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:0f78c15f-da45-4dd1-b685-4d3945c243052022-03-26T09:51:23ZService fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated marketsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0f78c15f-da45-4dd1-b685-4d3945c24305Symplectic Elements at OxfordEmerald2017Hill, ACuthbertson, RBrown, SLaker, B<strong>Purpose</strong> This paper presents thirteen propositions about how internal strategic fit (often referred to as fit) impacts the business performance of low cost and differentiated services. It then uses these relationships to develop two ‘fitness ladder’ frameworks to help practitioners understand how to improve fit given their business strategy (low cost or differentiation) and performance objectives (operational, financial or competitiveness). <strong>Design/methodology/approach</strong> Eleven strategic business units were studied that perform differently and provide a range of low cost and differentiated services to understand how changes in internal strategic fit impacted business performance over a seven year period. <strong>Findings</strong> Our findings suggest aligning systems with market needs does not improve performance. Instead, firms serving low cost markets should first focus managers’ attention on processes and centralise resources around key processes, before reducing process flexibility and automate as many steps as possible to develop a low cost capability that is difficult to imitate. By contrast, firms serving differentiated markets should first focus managers’ attention on customers and then locate resources near them, before increasing customer contact with their processes and making them more flexible so they can develop customer knowledge, relationships and services that are difficult to imitate. <strong>Research limitations/implications</strong> Some significant factors may not have been considered as the study only looked at the impact of fourteen internal strategic fit variables on seven performance variables. Also, the performance changes may not be a direct result of the strategic fit improvements identified and may not generalise to other service organisations, settings and environments. <strong>Practical implications</strong> The strategic fit-performance relationships identified and the ‘fitness ladder’ frameworks developed can be used by organisations to make decisions about how best to improve fit given their different market needs, business strategies and performance objectives. <strong>Originality/value</strong> Our findings offer more clarity than previous research about how internal fit impacts business performance for low cost and differentiated services. |
spellingShingle | Hill, A Cuthbertson, R Brown, S Laker, B Service fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets |
title | Service fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets |
title_full | Service fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets |
title_fullStr | Service fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets |
title_full_unstemmed | Service fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets |
title_short | Service fitness ladders: improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets |
title_sort | service fitness ladders improving business performance in low cost and differentiated markets |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hilla servicefitnessladdersimprovingbusinessperformanceinlowcostanddifferentiatedmarkets AT cuthbertsonr servicefitnessladdersimprovingbusinessperformanceinlowcostanddifferentiatedmarkets AT browns servicefitnessladdersimprovingbusinessperformanceinlowcostanddifferentiatedmarkets AT lakerb servicefitnessladdersimprovingbusinessperformanceinlowcostanddifferentiatedmarkets |