Authors
Andrew Davies, Tim Brady, Michael Hobday
Publication date
2007/2/1
Journal
Industrial marketing management
Volume
36
Issue
2
Pages
183-193
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
This paper aims to examine how firms are organizing to provide integrated solutions: a business model for the supply of capital goods based on the provision of products and services as integrated solutions to individual customer's needs. The industrial marketing literature suggests that the origins of this business model can be traced back to early 1960s when firms adopted strategies and organizations for ‘systems selling’. The marketing literature helps us to identify two contrasting types of organizations: (1) the vertically-integrated systems seller that produces all the product and service components in a system; and (2) the systems integrator that coordinates integration of components supplied by external firms. The paper uses these two ideal types to analyse the strategies and organizations of five case study firms that have recently attempted to move into the provision of integrated solutions. It argues that there is …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Davies, T Brady, M Hobday - Industrial marketing management, 2007