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Value proposition

About: Value proposition is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 3582 publications have been published within this topic receiving 88855 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an argument for developing a customer value change theory and propose a model that incorporates those events likely to trigger changes in three forms of value: values, desired value, and value judgements.

425 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The relationship between people and the organizations they work for is changing as mentioned in this paper, and a new relationship needs to be developed that rewards performance and skills in ways that contribute to organizational effectiveness.
Abstract: The relationship between people and the organizations they work for is changing. Corporations no longer can offer the job security and career paths they used to. A new relationship needs to be developed that rewards performance and skills in ways that contribute to organizational effectiveness.

413 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the concept and functioning of value propositions, seen through a service-dominant logic (S-D) lens, and argue that value propositions reveal opportunities for focal firm engagement with suppliers, customers, and other beneficiaries beyond sale/purchase transactions, as part of a platform for communicative interaction.

397 citations

Journal Article
W C Kim1, Renée Mauborgne
TL;DR: The authors have studied how innovative companies break free from the competitive pack by staking out fundamentally new market space by creating products or services for which there are no direct competitors.
Abstract: Most companies focus on matching and beating their rivals. As a result, their strategies tend to take on similar dimensions. What ensues is head-to-head competition based largely on incremental improvements in cost, quality, or both. The authors have studied how innovative companies break free from the competitive pack by staking out fundamentally new market space--that is, by creating products or services for which there are no direct competitors. This path to value innovation requires a different competitive mind-set and a systematic way of looking for opportunities. Instead of looking within the conventional boundaries that define how an industry competes, managers can look methodically across them. By so doing, they can find unoccupied territory that represents real value innovation. Rather than looking at competitors within their own industry, for example, managers can ask why customers make the trade-off between substitute products or services. Home Depot, for example, looked across the substitutes serving home improvement needs. Intuit looked across the substitutes available to individuals managing their personal finances. In both cases, powerful insights were derived from looking at familiar data from a new perspective. Similar insights can be gleaned by looking across strategic groups within an industry; across buyer groups; across complementary product and service offerings; across the functional-emotional orientation of an industry; and even across time. To help readers explore new market space systematically, the authors developed a tool, the value curve, that can be used to represent visually a range of value propositions.

384 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an eight-firm study, conducted from the service-dominant logic perspective, which makes a contribution regarding knowledge of the anatomy of value propositions and service innovation.
Abstract: This paper presents an eight-firm study, conducted from the service-dominant logic perspective, which makes a contribution regarding knowledge of the anatomy of value propositions and service innovation. The paper suggests that value propositions are configurations of several different practices and resources. The paper finds that ten common practices, organized in three main aggregates, constitute and fulfill value propositions: i.e. provision practices, representational practices, and management and organizational practices. Moreover, the paper suggests that service innovation can be equated with the creation of new value propositions by means of developing existing or creating new practices and/or resources, or by means of integrating practices and resources in new ways. It identifies four types of service innovation (adaptation, resource-based innovation, practice-based innovation, and combinative innovation) and three types of service innovation processes (practice-based, resource-based, and combinative). The key managerial insight provided by the paper is that service innovation must be conducted and value propositions must be evaluated from the perspective of the customers’ value creation, the service that the customer experiences. Successful service innovation is not only contingent on having the right resources, established methods and practices for integrating these resources into attractive value propositions are also needed.

375 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023194
2022426
2021307
2020300
2019308