Description
This case study examines how IBM formulated and implemented a strategy for
Routes to Market that was based upon observation of clients’ buying behaviours
and aligned with their economic value as customers. The case describes how IBM
identified seven preferred RTMs and assigned them to individual transactions; and
how it developed a common terminology, sales management system and metrics
across its product range and geographical operations to put the RTM strategy into
practice. It looks at how the new strategy was introduced within IBM, and the
effect that this had in terms of redeployment of investment and resources, as well
as the result in terms of sales. Finally, the case illustrates how, in adopting its
RTM Simplification Strategy, IBM shifted from a product-centric to a more
customer-centric approach to the market.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
April 2005
IBM’s Route to Market Strategy
Alex Garrett and Professor Hugh Wilson
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
March 2005
Contents
Introduction............................................................................................. 1
Background ............................................................................................. 2
From selling to marketing ..................................................................... 3
Same firm, different modes ................................................................... 4
Seven paths .............................................................................................. 6
Esperanto in all channels ..................................................................... 10
All change............................................................................................... 11
Effects..................................................................................................... 12
Refining the model................................................................................ 13
Wider ramifications.............................................................................. 14
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
1
Introduction
This case study examines how IBM formulated and implemented a strategy for
Routes to Market that was based upon observation of clients’ buying behaviours
and aligned with their economic value as customers. The case describes how IBM
identified seven preferred RTMs and assigned them to individual transactions; and
how it developed a common terminology, sales management system and metrics
across its product range and geographical operations to put the RTM strategy into
practice. It looks at how the new strategy was introduced within IBM, and the
effect that this had in terms of redeployment of investment and resources, as well
as the result in terms of sales. Finally, the case illustrates how, in adopting its
RTM Simplification Strategy, IBM shifted from a product-centric to a more
customer-centric approach to the market.
The case study is based on the following:
• a presentation by Kevin Bishop, IBM’s UK Director of Marketing at the time,
and now VP IBM.Com for NE Europe and subsequent conversations
• a series of conceptual diagrams encapsulating the processes that drive the RTM
strategy.
• a glossary of definitions and common terms used by IBM’s marketing and sales
teams.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
2
Background
IBM’s involvement with third party distribution channels began in the 1970s,
when it started working with applications providers, accrediting them as agents
when they introduced new clients. During the 1980s the advent of personal
computing saw it work with resellers and independent software vendors (ISVs)
for the first time, and in the 1990s, it began experimenting with a wide range of
channels as the technology became simpler to use and more and more people
wanted to use it.
The 1990s was a time of booming sales for technology companies, and IBM was
no exception. At this time, it had reinvented itself as a conglomerate of many
small high-growth businesses of 50 people or so, all trying to be best in their
respective niche. Each of these product-based businesses had its own set of
competitors; and each had built its own channels to serve the specific needs of its
customers. What’s more, there was little in the way of common definition,
systems or processes to establish the cost effectiveness of individual channels; the
proliferation of routes to market was chaotic and involved significant duplication.
The dot com crash and economic slowdown in 2001 signalled a sea change in
technology-related markets. Kevin Bishop, who at the time was director of
distribution channels for IBM in the UK, Netherlands, Ireland and South Africa
puts it thus:
“The market shifted. Clients were no longer interested in
technology for technology’s sake. Instead, they asked: “where’s the
benefit?” So it was time for us to re-evaluate our entire company
structure, our whole way of working.”
New business models had changed the way that people were buying technology.
At one end of the market, companies like Dell were selling direct to customers,
competing keenly on price through its lean supply chain. But the more important
innovation was the information Dell provided its customers, enabling them to
work out their own configuration and ultimately driving customer satisfaction. At
the other end of the spectrum, consultancy firms like Accenture were effectively
seizing a slice of the high-level market through focusing on business outcome
rather than technology. These new models had influenced customers’
expectations; doing business the old way was no longer an option.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
3
From selling to marketing
IBM’s focus had hitherto been on selling, and its channels had been the vehicle
through which sales were delivered. But now it paused to consider the abrupt
change in buying behaviour and how it should respond. In 2002, three questions
were posed:
• what had happened to cause changes in buying behaviour?
• where were those changes in behaviour?
• how could a multi-channel strategy respond to that?
At the same time, the role of the Marketing function within the organisation came
under scrutiny. Three new objectives were established:
• the company should be driven by clients and markets and not by technology;
• Marketing should be judged on the success of the business, and not just be about
advertising and communications;
• Marketing should lead the transition to a more organised, client-focused and
segmented channel system.
It was also recognised that delivery channels must be inherent to the strategic
choices IBM would make about product offerings; and that the company needed
to design more than marketing campaigns: it needed programmes that were as
much about educating the sales force and deployment of channel resources as they
were about communications. The technology downturn meant that a new channel
strategy would also be expected to reduce costs.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
4
Same firm, different modes
In analysing buying behaviours, IBM made a key insight: that the same company,
even the same individual buyer, could behave in different ways when buying
different products. When buying PCs for desktops, for example, their choice
would be largely driven by product comparison; but when making a purchase that
entailed organisational change their motivation would be more around successful
outcome. What this meant was that a simple segmentation around customer size
was not sufficient to form the basis of an effective channel strategy.
IBM’s “nine cell blanket” (see Figure 1) codified the array of possibilities. On the
vertical axis, clients are segmented according to their value; on the horizontal,
three behavioural modes are presented: Commoditized and Simple Transactions;
Technology Platform & Related Services Decisions; and Integrated Solution
Consulting Engagements. A simple transaction could be buying additional
desktop PCs or mainframe storage: in either case the buyer is expected to be
familiar with the product. The second type of transactions are typically those
carried out by technology experts, for example network security products. And the
third category tend to be complex business changes, for example process re-
engineering or applications hosting, in which the buyer groups would include both
experts and non-experts.
Specific transactions were then mapped directly onto this chart.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
5
Commoditized & Simple
Transactions
Integrated Solution &
Consulting Engagements
Technology Platform &
Related Services Decisions
Integrated
Accounts
Aligned Accounts
and Large SMB
Accounts
Medium Business
Accounts
Retention orientation
Incl. expansion w/i current accounts
and some acquisition in SMB
Expansion and acquisition orientation
Offerings Examples
Rollout of PC Special Bids
Unix server rollouts
ELA or ESA contract extension
iSeries / zSeries / NAS
upgrades
Selling PCD and xSeries products
onto the standards list
Server platform sale for new workload
WebSphere or DB2 adopted as
system architecture
Major ESA acquisition
Managed Hosting
Linux Virtual Services
Major consulting or integration
opportunity
e-business process on demand
Application Hosting - Business
Exchange Services
Application Services - EDI
Integrated Industry Solutions
Partner Industry Offerings
Intel server rollouts and
upgrades
Midrange server and storage
rollout
Ad hoc PC purchases
Dist. software version
upgrades
Selling PCD and xSeries products
onto the standards list
Initial server/storage platform sale
Dist software platform sale
Initial maintenance agreement
e-business infrastructure hosting
Infrastructure Services with Server
mgmt
Services Anywhere
Major consulting or integration
opportunity
e-Marketplace Services for Ariba
Application Hosting for WebSphere
Application Services - EDI
Integrated Industry Solutions
Partner Industry Offerings
Dist. software version
upgrades
PC and low-end xSeries initial
and/or repeat sales
Dist. software platform sale
e-business Hosting through partners
Initial xSeries or PC sale
Facilities Services
Managed Hosting
Infrastructure Services with Server
mgmt
Partner-based solutions offerings
Application Hosting for WebSphere
Application Hosting - Business
Exchange Services
Figure1: The‘ninecell blanket’ coveringthebreadthof I BM’sportfolio
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
6
Seven paths
With so many different product and service offerings, and a long list of
distributors, internal client and support teams, telesales and web-based channels,
the potential number of combinations and permutations in which these could be
assembled for individual transactions was potentially almost limitless. What IBM
did next was to identify seven ‘preferred routes to market’ which could between
them cater for its entire range of products and transaction types; and to map these
onto the matrix of transaction types. See Figure 2.
The routes to market (RTMs) are labelled with the name of a channel, but
importantly these represent the ‘leading channel’, not the sole channel involved
in the route, as a number of internal and third party units may work together on
the customer relationship. Route 1, which addresses the most complex
engagements, is led by Global Services, now renamed Business Consulting
Services, IBM’s consulting arm which includes the former Price Waterhouse
Coopers consultants. At the other end of the spectrum, simple sales are directed to
the Direct Teleweb route to market (numbered 7), even for major accounts. IBM’s
field sales force still has a vital role for large technology projects, as shown by
route 5. The other routes are led by different categories of intermediary –
independent software vendors, systems integrators and solution providers.
Commoditized & Simple
Transactions
Integrated Solution &
Consulting Engagements
Technology Platform &
Related Services Decisions
Integrated
Accounts
Aligned Accounts
and Large SMB
Accounts
Medium Business
Accounts
Major
SIs
FTF
Specialists
Solution Providers -
Core Business
Partners
Regional SIs and ISVs
Direct TeleWeb
7
3
4
5
6
Major
ISVs
2
IGS
1
Major SIs
(HW & SW)
3
Major
ISVs
2
OI Routes: Closing done by other Routes End-to-End Routes: Include selling activity
Figure2: Theroutetomarket coveragemap
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
7
The process of mapping preferred channels onto the array of transactions involved
two main considerations. The first was to examine IBM’s client set to analyse the
profitability of each client and the cost of servicing that client. This was achieved
through a global account management project, which enabled IBM to make
decisions about allocating resources such as direct client teams or telephone
teams. In tandem with this exercise, IBM carried out benchmarking of successful
multi-channel models, both internally and externally, looking at companies such
as Dell and Hewlett-Packard.
The second consideration was to look at the capabilities of different channels, and
particularly how these were changing, and to take a judgment – with the help of
research – on which channels were likely to prove more relevant and valuable in
future. For example, the trend towards buying business solutions rather than
technology products was anticipated to create a more important role for software
integrators.
Consideration of IBM’s future positioning also played a part in this process, as
the company was moving towards revenues increasingly dominated by providing
services.
Although RTMs were assigned to individual clients as a result of this process, the
final arbiter would be the client itself. IBM recognised that these were preferred,
not prescribed channels, and that ultimately, clients must be serviced through a
channel that “works for them”. Furthermore, the RTMs do not map precisely and
neatly onto the nine cells on the customer/transaction matrix. One reason for this
is that part of the delivery is dependent upon third parties, whose own business
model would be aligned with IBM to a greater or lesser extent, depending upon its
share of their business.
There was no preconceived notion as to the number of preferred channels that
should be adopted, beyond a desire that it should be kept in single figures, and the
initial range of around thirty were whittled down to the final seven – each of
which would represent a sizeable segment of business. The assignment of each
role within a channel was designed to reflect the existence of a sizeable resource
with a distinct capability.
It was also recognised that the mapping of the seven preferred RTMs onto the 9-
cell blanket could not be permanently fixed, but needed to be dynamic, to respond
to changes in the market.
Designing the detail of the seven RTMs was achieved through taking reference
examples, and codifying best practice. This was internal in most cases, with
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
8
external input where IBM had less experience. In the case of working with
Systems Integrators, for example, there was a complication in that IBM had itself
been a Systems Integrator and was perceived as competition. So a third party
consultancy provided advice in this area.
Each preferred route to market (RTM) is clearly defined in terms of 6 stages (as
illustrated for route 1 by Figure 3): Relationship management; Opportunity
Identification; Opportunity Ownership; Fulfilment Administration;
Implementation; and Post Sales support. The resource responsible for each of
these stages is identified at primary, secondary and a third ‘deselected support’
level. So for each client account, for each product, who does what throughout the
buying cycle is clearly defined. The seven preferred RTMs form the focus of
IBM’s channel investment; however, there is a get-out clause whereby a ‘Unit-
specific’ RTM can be adopted to address unique requirements.
In Preferred Route 1, the resources are almost exclusively internal to IBM; the
process diagram is used to delineate different roles within IBM and establish the
hand-offs. In Preferred Route 6, Solution Providers, it is mainly about providing
the same demarcation between third party resources; only when assistance is
required are IBM resources called in. In each case, the diagram enables
individuals – whether internal or third party – to know what part they play at what
stage of the cycle.
Third parties working together – for example an ISV working with a reseller that
provides operating software to support an application – to sell whole solutions
constitute what in IBM parlance is a ‘Value Net’. To some degree, the preferred
RTMs can be seen as the business processes of the Value Net.
Once this multi-channel strategy was in place, IBM recognised that it would have
to devote marketing resource not just to clients, but equally to the Value Nets.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
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9
Preferred Route 1: IGS
IGSBusiness Value-Led Route for IntegratedandAlignedAccounts
Route Definition: IGSClient Services Principals andLeaders that identify business problems anddesignanddeliver solutions,
pullingthrough IBMproduct platforms
Includes SOsales and delivery teams that manage customer IToperations and have opportunities to specify product platforms
IGSteamwill manage opportunity for total solution, but will required support fromIBMdirect (FTF or Telesales) to delivery specific
product proposals
In 2003, the S&DSolution Specialists may supplement IGSas primary opportunity owner as IGSincreases account coverage and brand
platformskills.
Rel Mgt OI OO
Fulfillment
Admin
Implementation Post-sale TS
Primary
Resource
Client Coverage
Team(Incl. IGS
Relationship
Mangers)
Client Team
Teamand IGS
CSP/CSL
IGSPrincipals CSO IGSServices
IGS, as
specified in
engagement
Secondary
Support
Resources
FTFSolutions
Specialists
FTF Solution
Specialists
FTF or TeleSale
Brand Specialist
ISV(if required)
Tech Support*
FTFBrand Spec
Direct TeleWeb
Subcontracted
Partner or Brand
Services
ITS, LSSupport
(Entitled)
ISV(If required)
e-support
Deselected
Support
Resources
Tech Support *
Business
Partners
Business
Partners
Brand Tech Sale
Specialist
Brand Tech Sale
Specialist
* See appendix for detailed technical support resource requirements
Client Rep Relationship Management
Figure3: Definingtheroutetomarket - examplefor route1
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
10
Esperanto in all channels
For all of this to work, it was essential that everyone – IBM business units, third
parties –spoke the same language, so that, for example, a “qualified lead” meant
the same thing to everybody. IBM decided to formalise its sales process, by
carefully analysing what processes were carried out at each stage in the client
buying cycle. The result was SSM – the Signature Selling Method (Figure 4). This
formalised language was then enshrined in a single global sales management
system, enabling IBM to track the pipeline of opportunities across the business as
a whole. A grid arranging products down the vertical axis and opportunities
identified by customer types, country and initiating channel as well as the owning
channel across the horizontal axis, has become a key tool in controlling the
business for IBM. It is reviewed each week against historical tracks in place since
2002, and enables the company to compare what is in the pipeline with what was
expected. Such grids enable IBM to identify ‘blockages’ in the pipeline – for
example, a problem where leads are not progressing from validated to qualified in
a particular channel – and to take remedial action, perhaps allocating greater
resources.
7
Implement
Solution and
Evaluate
Success
6
Resolve
Concerns
and Decide
5
Select
Solution
Option
4
Evaluate
Options
3
Recognize
Needs
2
Develop
Business
Strategy and
Initiatives
1
Evaluate
Business
Environment
CUSTOMER BUYING STEPS
S I G N A T U R E S E L L I N G M E T H O D ( S S M ) S T E P S
Monitor
Implementation
& Ensure
Expectations
are Met
Close Sale
Develop
Solution with
Customer
Articulate
IBM
Capabilities
and Qualify
Opportunity
Establish the
Buying
Vision with
the
Customer
Understand
Customer's
Business IT
Environment
Develop
Plans Linked
to Customer
Business
Initiatives
Identified
Validated
Qualified Proposed Won
Customer agreement with outcomes & progress
Figure4: Standardisingthesalesprocess- theSignatureSellingMethod
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
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11
All change
So how do you implement a new strategy – a strategy designed for every country,
every marketing channel, and which touches almost every part of the business –
in a company on the scale of IBM? The answer was to launch a fully-resourced
change management project. To ensure that the introduction of the RTM
Simplification Strategy would be a success, a number of points were key:
• The project was dovetailed with IBM’s annual planning cycle, so that change
was instigated through the core planning process, rather than as a separate and
potentially conflicting process.
• Clear executive sponsorship was obtained at the highest level – including the
chairman and CEO, as well as the worldwide head of sales and distribution.
• A pilot was established in Spain, chosen as a market of significant size, and
where the preferred RTMs were all relevant.
• The final component was a re-working of incentives packages so that these were
aligned to the new approach, to bring IBM and third party people on board. In
particular, client managers had the small, simple transactions taken out of their
incentive scheme; in future, they were only required to get involved in these
transactions when something went wrong. Some of this money could be re-
distributed to resellers in the small business segment, in the form of discounts. At
the major consultancy project end, targets were set in relation to cross-IBM
revenues, so that people were no longer focused simply on their line of business.
In all, the implementation of the RTM Simplification Strategy took around five
months in late 2002 and early 2003.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
12
Effects
The potential effects of such a radical shake-up to the whole sales and marketing
organisation of IBM were clearly profound. When the shares of revenues were
subsequently examined for ‘Opportunity Ownership’, covering the negotiation
and sale itself, it was found that there had been a modest shift from the face-to-
face teams to business partners and IBM.com. There had been some shift in
allocation of headcount and investment accordingly.
When Opportunity Identification – essentially the generation of leads – was
reviewed, the results were more startling. Relative to the 4
th
quarter of 2002, in
2003 the share of leads resulting from F2F client coverage fell by 22 per cent; this
was taken up by other channels, most significantly the telephone channel and
business partners. The lesson drawn was that, in the early part of the buying
process, people wanted to do much of the work on their own, either by the web,
trusted advisers or other intermediaries. In this, they had been educated by the
likes of Dell to seek out information and make their own decisions. As a result of
these findings, IBM was able to shift a significant part of its F2F sales force into
other responsibilities, such as providing support and service once a customer was
up and running. It also led to an increased investment in micro-sites for different
industries, geographies and for particular communities, such as the City.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
13
Refining the model
Once the new channel strategy was up and running, IBM wanted to gauge its
success – not least so that the model could be refined. This was defined in terms
of the profitability, and the customer satisfaction, achieved by each of the RTMs.
Analysis of profitability enabled IBM to see where it was adding costs without
adding benefit. Satisfaction was measured by moving from annual or bi-annual
client-based surveys, to feedback based on individual transactions. Some 10 per
cent of all transactions were sampled for client satisfaction, which could be linked
back to the RTM. The seven preferred RTMs remained the same seven, but
changes were made to the way in which they would operate. This is an ongoing
process.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
14
Wider ramifications
As a consequence of its RTM Simplification Strategy IBM’s business has
changed in a number of ways. These include:
• Marketing now spends more time and effort on understanding the marketplace,
rather than on market size and growth.
• The ‘anarchy’ that previously prevailed in use of channels has been curtailed and
the seven preferred RTMs are readily manageable.
• The total cost of managing RTMs is estimated to have been reduced by around
50 per cent. There has also been significant reduction in the cost of support
programs and marketing communications, since these are now aligned with the
seven preferred RTMs.
• Channel enablement has become a critical part of the Marketing function –
accounting for around one third of Marketing budget.
• Using standardised reporting tools across the business has enabled IBM to
benchmark its RTM processes against the competition – a feat that was previously
unattainable.
• Client satisfaction has increased, but so has people satisfaction, both internally
and among business partners, as people now understand what they have to do and
where they add value.
• The RTM strategy now has a built-in flexibility as channel usage can be
modified, and resources allocated, in response to the changing needs of the
market. What doesn’t change are the standardised processes, systems and
language which are at the heart of IBM’s multi-channel strategy.
15
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In collaboration with
IBM Global Business Services
ForumDirector: Professor Hugh Wilson
[email protected]
www.cranfield.ac.uk/som/ccmf
Cranfield, Bedford, England, MK43 0AL
Telephone: +44 (0)1234 751122
Fax: +44 (0) 1234 751806
doc_570331707.pdf
This case study examines how IBM formulated and implemented a strategy for
Routes to Market that was based upon observation of clients’ buying behaviours
and aligned with their economic value as customers. The case describes how IBM
identified seven preferred RTMs and assigned them to individual transactions; and
how it developed a common terminology, sales management system and metrics
across its product range and geographical operations to put the RTM strategy into
practice. It looks at how the new strategy was introduced within IBM, and the
effect that this had in terms of redeployment of investment and resources, as well
as the result in terms of sales. Finally, the case illustrates how, in adopting its
RTM Simplification Strategy, IBM shifted from a product-centric to a more
customer-centric approach to the market.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
April 2005
IBM’s Route to Market Strategy
Alex Garrett and Professor Hugh Wilson
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
March 2005
Contents
Introduction............................................................................................. 1
Background ............................................................................................. 2
From selling to marketing ..................................................................... 3
Same firm, different modes ................................................................... 4
Seven paths .............................................................................................. 6
Esperanto in all channels ..................................................................... 10
All change............................................................................................... 11
Effects..................................................................................................... 12
Refining the model................................................................................ 13
Wider ramifications.............................................................................. 14
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
1
Introduction
This case study examines how IBM formulated and implemented a strategy for
Routes to Market that was based upon observation of clients’ buying behaviours
and aligned with their economic value as customers. The case describes how IBM
identified seven preferred RTMs and assigned them to individual transactions; and
how it developed a common terminology, sales management system and metrics
across its product range and geographical operations to put the RTM strategy into
practice. It looks at how the new strategy was introduced within IBM, and the
effect that this had in terms of redeployment of investment and resources, as well
as the result in terms of sales. Finally, the case illustrates how, in adopting its
RTM Simplification Strategy, IBM shifted from a product-centric to a more
customer-centric approach to the market.
The case study is based on the following:
• a presentation by Kevin Bishop, IBM’s UK Director of Marketing at the time,
and now VP IBM.Com for NE Europe and subsequent conversations
• a series of conceptual diagrams encapsulating the processes that drive the RTM
strategy.
• a glossary of definitions and common terms used by IBM’s marketing and sales
teams.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
2
Background
IBM’s involvement with third party distribution channels began in the 1970s,
when it started working with applications providers, accrediting them as agents
when they introduced new clients. During the 1980s the advent of personal
computing saw it work with resellers and independent software vendors (ISVs)
for the first time, and in the 1990s, it began experimenting with a wide range of
channels as the technology became simpler to use and more and more people
wanted to use it.
The 1990s was a time of booming sales for technology companies, and IBM was
no exception. At this time, it had reinvented itself as a conglomerate of many
small high-growth businesses of 50 people or so, all trying to be best in their
respective niche. Each of these product-based businesses had its own set of
competitors; and each had built its own channels to serve the specific needs of its
customers. What’s more, there was little in the way of common definition,
systems or processes to establish the cost effectiveness of individual channels; the
proliferation of routes to market was chaotic and involved significant duplication.
The dot com crash and economic slowdown in 2001 signalled a sea change in
technology-related markets. Kevin Bishop, who at the time was director of
distribution channels for IBM in the UK, Netherlands, Ireland and South Africa
puts it thus:
“The market shifted. Clients were no longer interested in
technology for technology’s sake. Instead, they asked: “where’s the
benefit?” So it was time for us to re-evaluate our entire company
structure, our whole way of working.”
New business models had changed the way that people were buying technology.
At one end of the market, companies like Dell were selling direct to customers,
competing keenly on price through its lean supply chain. But the more important
innovation was the information Dell provided its customers, enabling them to
work out their own configuration and ultimately driving customer satisfaction. At
the other end of the spectrum, consultancy firms like Accenture were effectively
seizing a slice of the high-level market through focusing on business outcome
rather than technology. These new models had influenced customers’
expectations; doing business the old way was no longer an option.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
3
From selling to marketing
IBM’s focus had hitherto been on selling, and its channels had been the vehicle
through which sales were delivered. But now it paused to consider the abrupt
change in buying behaviour and how it should respond. In 2002, three questions
were posed:
• what had happened to cause changes in buying behaviour?
• where were those changes in behaviour?
• how could a multi-channel strategy respond to that?
At the same time, the role of the Marketing function within the organisation came
under scrutiny. Three new objectives were established:
• the company should be driven by clients and markets and not by technology;
• Marketing should be judged on the success of the business, and not just be about
advertising and communications;
• Marketing should lead the transition to a more organised, client-focused and
segmented channel system.
It was also recognised that delivery channels must be inherent to the strategic
choices IBM would make about product offerings; and that the company needed
to design more than marketing campaigns: it needed programmes that were as
much about educating the sales force and deployment of channel resources as they
were about communications. The technology downturn meant that a new channel
strategy would also be expected to reduce costs.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
4
Same firm, different modes
In analysing buying behaviours, IBM made a key insight: that the same company,
even the same individual buyer, could behave in different ways when buying
different products. When buying PCs for desktops, for example, their choice
would be largely driven by product comparison; but when making a purchase that
entailed organisational change their motivation would be more around successful
outcome. What this meant was that a simple segmentation around customer size
was not sufficient to form the basis of an effective channel strategy.
IBM’s “nine cell blanket” (see Figure 1) codified the array of possibilities. On the
vertical axis, clients are segmented according to their value; on the horizontal,
three behavioural modes are presented: Commoditized and Simple Transactions;
Technology Platform & Related Services Decisions; and Integrated Solution
Consulting Engagements. A simple transaction could be buying additional
desktop PCs or mainframe storage: in either case the buyer is expected to be
familiar with the product. The second type of transactions are typically those
carried out by technology experts, for example network security products. And the
third category tend to be complex business changes, for example process re-
engineering or applications hosting, in which the buyer groups would include both
experts and non-experts.
Specific transactions were then mapped directly onto this chart.
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In association with IBM Global Business Services
5
Commoditized & Simple
Transactions
Integrated Solution &
Consulting Engagements
Technology Platform &
Related Services Decisions
Integrated
Accounts
Aligned Accounts
and Large SMB
Accounts
Medium Business
Accounts
Retention orientation
Incl. expansion w/i current accounts
and some acquisition in SMB
Expansion and acquisition orientation
Offerings Examples
Rollout of PC Special Bids
Unix server rollouts
ELA or ESA contract extension
iSeries / zSeries / NAS
upgrades
Selling PCD and xSeries products
onto the standards list
Server platform sale for new workload
WebSphere or DB2 adopted as
system architecture
Major ESA acquisition
Managed Hosting
Linux Virtual Services
Major consulting or integration
opportunity
e-business process on demand
Application Hosting - Business
Exchange Services
Application Services - EDI
Integrated Industry Solutions
Partner Industry Offerings
Intel server rollouts and
upgrades
Midrange server and storage
rollout
Ad hoc PC purchases
Dist. software version
upgrades
Selling PCD and xSeries products
onto the standards list
Initial server/storage platform sale
Dist software platform sale
Initial maintenance agreement
e-business infrastructure hosting
Infrastructure Services with Server
mgmt
Services Anywhere
Major consulting or integration
opportunity
e-Marketplace Services for Ariba
Application Hosting for WebSphere
Application Services - EDI
Integrated Industry Solutions
Partner Industry Offerings
Dist. software version
upgrades
PC and low-end xSeries initial
and/or repeat sales
Dist. software platform sale
e-business Hosting through partners
Initial xSeries or PC sale
Facilities Services
Managed Hosting
Infrastructure Services with Server
mgmt
Partner-based solutions offerings
Application Hosting for WebSphere
Application Hosting - Business
Exchange Services
Figure1: The‘ninecell blanket’ coveringthebreadthof I BM’sportfolio
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6
Seven paths
With so many different product and service offerings, and a long list of
distributors, internal client and support teams, telesales and web-based channels,
the potential number of combinations and permutations in which these could be
assembled for individual transactions was potentially almost limitless. What IBM
did next was to identify seven ‘preferred routes to market’ which could between
them cater for its entire range of products and transaction types; and to map these
onto the matrix of transaction types. See Figure 2.
The routes to market (RTMs) are labelled with the name of a channel, but
importantly these represent the ‘leading channel’, not the sole channel involved
in the route, as a number of internal and third party units may work together on
the customer relationship. Route 1, which addresses the most complex
engagements, is led by Global Services, now renamed Business Consulting
Services, IBM’s consulting arm which includes the former Price Waterhouse
Coopers consultants. At the other end of the spectrum, simple sales are directed to
the Direct Teleweb route to market (numbered 7), even for major accounts. IBM’s
field sales force still has a vital role for large technology projects, as shown by
route 5. The other routes are led by different categories of intermediary –
independent software vendors, systems integrators and solution providers.
Commoditized & Simple
Transactions
Integrated Solution &
Consulting Engagements
Technology Platform &
Related Services Decisions
Integrated
Accounts
Aligned Accounts
and Large SMB
Accounts
Medium Business
Accounts
Major
SIs
FTF
Specialists
Solution Providers -
Core Business
Partners
Regional SIs and ISVs
Direct TeleWeb
7
3
4
5
6
Major
ISVs
2
IGS
1
Major SIs
(HW & SW)
3
Major
ISVs
2
OI Routes: Closing done by other Routes End-to-End Routes: Include selling activity
Figure2: Theroutetomarket coveragemap
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The process of mapping preferred channels onto the array of transactions involved
two main considerations. The first was to examine IBM’s client set to analyse the
profitability of each client and the cost of servicing that client. This was achieved
through a global account management project, which enabled IBM to make
decisions about allocating resources such as direct client teams or telephone
teams. In tandem with this exercise, IBM carried out benchmarking of successful
multi-channel models, both internally and externally, looking at companies such
as Dell and Hewlett-Packard.
The second consideration was to look at the capabilities of different channels, and
particularly how these were changing, and to take a judgment – with the help of
research – on which channels were likely to prove more relevant and valuable in
future. For example, the trend towards buying business solutions rather than
technology products was anticipated to create a more important role for software
integrators.
Consideration of IBM’s future positioning also played a part in this process, as
the company was moving towards revenues increasingly dominated by providing
services.
Although RTMs were assigned to individual clients as a result of this process, the
final arbiter would be the client itself. IBM recognised that these were preferred,
not prescribed channels, and that ultimately, clients must be serviced through a
channel that “works for them”. Furthermore, the RTMs do not map precisely and
neatly onto the nine cells on the customer/transaction matrix. One reason for this
is that part of the delivery is dependent upon third parties, whose own business
model would be aligned with IBM to a greater or lesser extent, depending upon its
share of their business.
There was no preconceived notion as to the number of preferred channels that
should be adopted, beyond a desire that it should be kept in single figures, and the
initial range of around thirty were whittled down to the final seven – each of
which would represent a sizeable segment of business. The assignment of each
role within a channel was designed to reflect the existence of a sizeable resource
with a distinct capability.
It was also recognised that the mapping of the seven preferred RTMs onto the 9-
cell blanket could not be permanently fixed, but needed to be dynamic, to respond
to changes in the market.
Designing the detail of the seven RTMs was achieved through taking reference
examples, and codifying best practice. This was internal in most cases, with
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external input where IBM had less experience. In the case of working with
Systems Integrators, for example, there was a complication in that IBM had itself
been a Systems Integrator and was perceived as competition. So a third party
consultancy provided advice in this area.
Each preferred route to market (RTM) is clearly defined in terms of 6 stages (as
illustrated for route 1 by Figure 3): Relationship management; Opportunity
Identification; Opportunity Ownership; Fulfilment Administration;
Implementation; and Post Sales support. The resource responsible for each of
these stages is identified at primary, secondary and a third ‘deselected support’
level. So for each client account, for each product, who does what throughout the
buying cycle is clearly defined. The seven preferred RTMs form the focus of
IBM’s channel investment; however, there is a get-out clause whereby a ‘Unit-
specific’ RTM can be adopted to address unique requirements.
In Preferred Route 1, the resources are almost exclusively internal to IBM; the
process diagram is used to delineate different roles within IBM and establish the
hand-offs. In Preferred Route 6, Solution Providers, it is mainly about providing
the same demarcation between third party resources; only when assistance is
required are IBM resources called in. In each case, the diagram enables
individuals – whether internal or third party – to know what part they play at what
stage of the cycle.
Third parties working together – for example an ISV working with a reseller that
provides operating software to support an application – to sell whole solutions
constitute what in IBM parlance is a ‘Value Net’. To some degree, the preferred
RTMs can be seen as the business processes of the Value Net.
Once this multi-channel strategy was in place, IBM recognised that it would have
to devote marketing resource not just to clients, but equally to the Value Nets.
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Preferred Route 1: IGS
IGSBusiness Value-Led Route for IntegratedandAlignedAccounts
Route Definition: IGSClient Services Principals andLeaders that identify business problems anddesignanddeliver solutions,
pullingthrough IBMproduct platforms
Includes SOsales and delivery teams that manage customer IToperations and have opportunities to specify product platforms
IGSteamwill manage opportunity for total solution, but will required support fromIBMdirect (FTF or Telesales) to delivery specific
product proposals
In 2003, the S&DSolution Specialists may supplement IGSas primary opportunity owner as IGSincreases account coverage and brand
platformskills.
Rel Mgt OI OO
Fulfillment
Admin
Implementation Post-sale TS
Primary
Resource
Client Coverage
Team(Incl. IGS
Relationship
Mangers)
Client Team
Teamand IGS
CSP/CSL
IGSPrincipals CSO IGSServices
IGS, as
specified in
engagement
Secondary
Support
Resources
FTFSolutions
Specialists
FTF Solution
Specialists
FTF or TeleSale
Brand Specialist
ISV(if required)
Tech Support*
FTFBrand Spec
Direct TeleWeb
Subcontracted
Partner or Brand
Services
ITS, LSSupport
(Entitled)
ISV(If required)
e-support
Deselected
Support
Resources
Tech Support *
Business
Partners
Business
Partners
Brand Tech Sale
Specialist
Brand Tech Sale
Specialist
* See appendix for detailed technical support resource requirements
Client Rep Relationship Management
Figure3: Definingtheroutetomarket - examplefor route1
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Esperanto in all channels
For all of this to work, it was essential that everyone – IBM business units, third
parties –spoke the same language, so that, for example, a “qualified lead” meant
the same thing to everybody. IBM decided to formalise its sales process, by
carefully analysing what processes were carried out at each stage in the client
buying cycle. The result was SSM – the Signature Selling Method (Figure 4). This
formalised language was then enshrined in a single global sales management
system, enabling IBM to track the pipeline of opportunities across the business as
a whole. A grid arranging products down the vertical axis and opportunities
identified by customer types, country and initiating channel as well as the owning
channel across the horizontal axis, has become a key tool in controlling the
business for IBM. It is reviewed each week against historical tracks in place since
2002, and enables the company to compare what is in the pipeline with what was
expected. Such grids enable IBM to identify ‘blockages’ in the pipeline – for
example, a problem where leads are not progressing from validated to qualified in
a particular channel – and to take remedial action, perhaps allocating greater
resources.
7
Implement
Solution and
Evaluate
Success
6
Resolve
Concerns
and Decide
5
Select
Solution
Option
4
Evaluate
Options
3
Recognize
Needs
2
Develop
Business
Strategy and
Initiatives
1
Evaluate
Business
Environment
CUSTOMER BUYING STEPS
S I G N A T U R E S E L L I N G M E T H O D ( S S M ) S T E P S
Monitor
Implementation
& Ensure
Expectations
are Met
Close Sale
Develop
Solution with
Customer
Articulate
IBM
Capabilities
and Qualify
Opportunity
Establish the
Buying
Vision with
the
Customer
Understand
Customer's
Business IT
Environment
Develop
Plans Linked
to Customer
Business
Initiatives
Identified
Validated
Qualified Proposed Won
Customer agreement with outcomes & progress
Figure4: Standardisingthesalesprocess- theSignatureSellingMethod
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11
All change
So how do you implement a new strategy – a strategy designed for every country,
every marketing channel, and which touches almost every part of the business –
in a company on the scale of IBM? The answer was to launch a fully-resourced
change management project. To ensure that the introduction of the RTM
Simplification Strategy would be a success, a number of points were key:
• The project was dovetailed with IBM’s annual planning cycle, so that change
was instigated through the core planning process, rather than as a separate and
potentially conflicting process.
• Clear executive sponsorship was obtained at the highest level – including the
chairman and CEO, as well as the worldwide head of sales and distribution.
• A pilot was established in Spain, chosen as a market of significant size, and
where the preferred RTMs were all relevant.
• The final component was a re-working of incentives packages so that these were
aligned to the new approach, to bring IBM and third party people on board. In
particular, client managers had the small, simple transactions taken out of their
incentive scheme; in future, they were only required to get involved in these
transactions when something went wrong. Some of this money could be re-
distributed to resellers in the small business segment, in the form of discounts. At
the major consultancy project end, targets were set in relation to cross-IBM
revenues, so that people were no longer focused simply on their line of business.
In all, the implementation of the RTM Simplification Strategy took around five
months in late 2002 and early 2003.
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Effects
The potential effects of such a radical shake-up to the whole sales and marketing
organisation of IBM were clearly profound. When the shares of revenues were
subsequently examined for ‘Opportunity Ownership’, covering the negotiation
and sale itself, it was found that there had been a modest shift from the face-to-
face teams to business partners and IBM.com. There had been some shift in
allocation of headcount and investment accordingly.
When Opportunity Identification – essentially the generation of leads – was
reviewed, the results were more startling. Relative to the 4
th
quarter of 2002, in
2003 the share of leads resulting from F2F client coverage fell by 22 per cent; this
was taken up by other channels, most significantly the telephone channel and
business partners. The lesson drawn was that, in the early part of the buying
process, people wanted to do much of the work on their own, either by the web,
trusted advisers or other intermediaries. In this, they had been educated by the
likes of Dell to seek out information and make their own decisions. As a result of
these findings, IBM was able to shift a significant part of its F2F sales force into
other responsibilities, such as providing support and service once a customer was
up and running. It also led to an increased investment in micro-sites for different
industries, geographies and for particular communities, such as the City.
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Refining the model
Once the new channel strategy was up and running, IBM wanted to gauge its
success – not least so that the model could be refined. This was defined in terms
of the profitability, and the customer satisfaction, achieved by each of the RTMs.
Analysis of profitability enabled IBM to see where it was adding costs without
adding benefit. Satisfaction was measured by moving from annual or bi-annual
client-based surveys, to feedback based on individual transactions. Some 10 per
cent of all transactions were sampled for client satisfaction, which could be linked
back to the RTM. The seven preferred RTMs remained the same seven, but
changes were made to the way in which they would operate. This is an ongoing
process.
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Wider ramifications
As a consequence of its RTM Simplification Strategy IBM’s business has
changed in a number of ways. These include:
• Marketing now spends more time and effort on understanding the marketplace,
rather than on market size and growth.
• The ‘anarchy’ that previously prevailed in use of channels has been curtailed and
the seven preferred RTMs are readily manageable.
• The total cost of managing RTMs is estimated to have been reduced by around
50 per cent. There has also been significant reduction in the cost of support
programs and marketing communications, since these are now aligned with the
seven preferred RTMs.
• Channel enablement has become a critical part of the Marketing function –
accounting for around one third of Marketing budget.
• Using standardised reporting tools across the business has enabled IBM to
benchmark its RTM processes against the competition – a feat that was previously
unattainable.
• Client satisfaction has increased, but so has people satisfaction, both internally
and among business partners, as people now understand what they have to do and
where they add value.
• The RTM strategy now has a built-in flexibility as channel usage can be
modified, and resources allocated, in response to the changing needs of the
market. What doesn’t change are the standardised processes, systems and
language which are at the heart of IBM’s multi-channel strategy.
15
Cranfield Customer Management Forum
In collaboration with
IBM Global Business Services
ForumDirector: Professor Hugh Wilson
[email protected]
www.cranfield.ac.uk/som/ccmf
Cranfield, Bedford, England, MK43 0AL
Telephone: +44 (0)1234 751122
Fax: +44 (0) 1234 751806
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