In
this week’s reading “Learning from Tata’s Nano” One word grabs my attention
“Open Distribution”. According to the author, open distribution has three key
characteristics:
1.
increases
modularity.----Product Design
2.
aggressive
leveraging of existing third-parties
3.
creative
use of information technology integrated with social institutions to encourage
use and deliver greater value.
The
first characteristic is particularly relevant to this week’s topic, product
design. One this note, I
found another great example -a McKinsey Report which illustrates the power and
mechanics of open distribution model, particular Modularity. The report
introduces the case that how Cummins, a U.S-based diesel engine producer, tries
to satisfy the needs of less affluent customers in India. (http://www.mckinsey.com/insights/innovation/innovation_blowback_disruptive_management_practices_from_asia)
.
There
are three things that make Cummins chooses this approach: low price needed by
customers (high price sensitivity), very diverse needs about the
functionalities of the product and dispersed customers. What Cummins does is to
build a “base model” and provides an array of “adds-on” that can help customize
the products based on individual needs. These add-ons are made easy to
incorporate to the base model, which appeals to the local, less skilled
third-parties distributors. This model
also reminds me of the idea we discussed last lecture :“variability” is always
a bad thing for SCM. Using this modularity approach, Cummins gets to increase
“production runs of common subsystem and components, and thus keep the cost low”.
In
terms of the relationship between cost and modularization, one sentence in the
report concludes it well:“ When modularization reflects only the need to cut
manufacturing costs—rather than the problem of reaching small, dispersed
segments of low-income customers through third-party channels—it typically
fails to cut the cost of ownership for customers and the cost of sales in the
channel.”
Another
interesting point to me during the
researching of “open distribution” is that, John Hagel describes Grameen Bank,
the most renowned micro-credit institution which won a Nobel Peace Prize, as a
pioneer to Innovate in Distribution Approaches to deliver products to the poor.
John claims that Grameen Bank is one of the earliest examples of “open
distribution”.
After
reading all these articles about open distribution, below are three questions:
1.
It
says that the open distribution is cost-effective compared to direct
distribution. I had hard time figuring this concept out. Needless to say, It
will save companies’ assembly cost and probably decreases transportation cost
as well. However, an affiliate model, using many third-parties to help assemble
and finalize the products may increase more cost and increase more issues to
consider: the selection of third parties; quality control, the risk to
sacrifice scale of economies…
2.
John
says in the article that this approach enables companies to better tailor value
for customers. The concepts of “personalization” and “customization” also have
the same effect. How do they differ from each other?
3. The model’s potential applicability to big
companies and affluent customers.
References:
“Peace
and Entrepreneurship” –BY John Hagel
Innovation
Blowback: Disruptive Management practices from Asia- By John Seely Brown
McKinsey Quarterly
Asking
the right questions- Bloomberg Businessweek
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