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Cracking the Code of Mass Customization
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By Fabrizio Salvador, Pablo Martin de Holan and Frank T. Piller Spring 2009 Reprint 50315
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Volume 50, Number 3, pages 71-78, 8 pages Primary Topic: Marketing
Secondary Topic: Operations
SummaryExecutives tend to think of mass customization as a fascinating but impractical idea, implementedin only a small number of extreme cases, such as Dell Inc. in the PC market. But over the past decade,the authors have studied mass customization at different organizations, including a survey of morethan 200 manufacturing plants in eight countries. From that investigation, they found that mass customization is applicable to most businesses, provided that it is appropriately understood and deployed. The key is to view it fundamentally as a process for aligning an organization with its customers'needs through the development of a set of three organizational capabilities.Those three fundamental capabilities are: (1) the ability to identify the product attributes alongwhich customer needs diverge, (2) the ability to reuse or recombine existing organizational and value chain resources, and (3) the ability to help customers identify or build solutions to their own needs.Admittedly, the development of these capabilities requires organizational changes that are often difficultbecause of powerful inertial forces in a company, but many obstacles can be overcome by using avariety of tools and approaches, and even small improvements can reap substantial benefits. The trickis to remember that there is no one best way to mass customize: Managers need to tailor theirapproach in ways that make the most sense for their specific business. |
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