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基本説明
邦訳:『ITマーケティング』(2001年・ダイヤモンド社)
Chronicles the evolution of business competition from mass markets to markets of one - in other words, from creating standardized value through mass production to creating customer-unique value through mass customization.
Full Description
What does it mean "to dell?" This newly coined business verb means to mass-customize, making products only in response to actual demand. This allows a product to "go direct" to a customer, and it's what Dell Computer does instead of forcing mass-produced computers on its customers. And Dell's not alone. As Editors Jim Gilmore and Joe Pine point out in their introduction to "Markets of One", mass customization is a trend that has caught on among consumer and business-to-business companies alike - think of Levi's jeans, Aramark's hospital services, Select Comfort mattresses, and Peapod or Streamline grocery delivery, to name a few.Companies customize their offerings to meet the unique needs of individual customers so that nearly everyone can obtain exactly what they want at a reasonable price. It's a paradigm shift away from the one-size-fits-all way managers have thought about markets over the past century- today, every individual customer is a market of one.
This collection of ten "Harvard Business Review" articles chronicles the evolution of business competition from mass markets to markets of one - in other words, from creating standardized value through mass production to creating customer-unique value through mass customization.The book examines many of the resulting changes in approach to strategy and operations - for example, moving from pushing products to fulfilling individual needs, from focusing solely on market share to measuring customer share, and from marketing to the masses to cultivating learning relationships with each customer. "Markets of One" offers the best of the leading thinkers on the topic, exploring both the promise and pitfalls of mass customization. Practical applications are presented with examples of leading companies who successfully mass customize for markets of one. This is a Harvard Business Review book.
Contents
Introduction: Customization That Counts by James H. Gilmore and B. Joseph Pine II Part I--The Demise of Mass Markets 1. The Emerging Theory of Manufacturing by Peter F. Drucker 2. Marketing in an Age of Diversity by Regis McKenna Part II--Serving Customers Uniquely 3. Managing in an Age of Modularity by Carliss Y. Baldwin and Kim B. Clark 4. Do You Want to Keep Your Customers Forever? by B. Joseph Pine II, Don Peppers, and Martha Rogers 5. Is Your Company Ready for One-to-One Marketing? by Don Peppers, Martha Rogers, and Bob Dorf Part III--The Business of Mass Customization 6. Breaking Compromises, Breakaway Growth by George Stalk, Jr., David K. Pecaut, and Benjamin Burnett 7. The Four Faces of Mass Customization by James H. Gilmore and B. Joseph Pine II 8. Versioning: The Smart Way to Sell Information by Carl Shapiro and Hal R. Varian 9. Making Mass Customization Work by B. Joseph Pine II, Bart Victor, and Andrew C. Boynton 10. Managing by Wire by Stephan H. Haeckel and Richard L. Nolan Executive Summaries About the Contributors Index