Ovidiu -
Can you show an example of how your framework can help?
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Dear Matt, thank you for the question!
BREP is mostly a strategic marketing tool, as it should focus on a genuine customer experience management improvement.
My understanding on the current state of affairs, globally and on average, is that few companies/ organizations really know who their clients are (discreet segmentation based on changing behavior) and which is the pattern of behavior of the entire market "wallet" (here comes the pattern-based strategy paradigm). I also understand that in doing that, organizations need to reshuffle so that it may be able to switch, as a whole (as Gartner say, the op-tempo), in order to respond to new patterns, in a rational manner (both needs matching and cost effectiveness).
Let me give you a straight-forward example of how this should work: I had a discussion with a colleague coordinating the customer service area in electronic channels, B2B. He acknowledged that in the last two-three years there is a change in who is calling for support, from older, lack computer-skilled clients users, to younger, more technology-driven ones. He understood that there is a changing pattern and, as a consequence, he and his team need reshuffle: in how they design the script for support, in how they may communicate with the clients' users (moving from phone to chat solution, etc).
That's a simple, but inspiring philosophy of getting back, looking the problem in a rational manner (chat is less expensive), centered on who the customer are, how they behave, in order to improve the overall experience; and only because he was smart enough to understand the pattern and to ADAPT to it.
Now, just imagine that you are a company with thousands of clients that may be clustered smarter from their expectation perspective. You should pursue, as I have mentioned, an internal assessment to see the degree of preparation, because implementing a customer experience program, having in mind to leverage on customer advocacy (word-of-mouth equity), and pursuing a pattern-driven organization is not an easy task. A lot of soft and hard capabilities (data-warehouse mining tools and pattern modeling ones) are needed and associated investments required. But, it would be a natural, organic development. Another particular impact is that that company should accept, at least initially, very low margins.
As for KNOS, I have applied it, with certain success for redesigning the functional and business flows for a company moving from a natural monopoly stance, to a more commercial oriented one. The logic was like that: which are the knowledge and capabilities the company should acquire and develop so that it can expend the network/ relationship base? Equally, which processes should be re-drawn so that people to assume ownership of genuine customer centricity? So, in short, a knowledge-based plan, articulated on the network-based ecosystem of stakeholders, new challenges in ownership, and certain capabilities for supporting that program. As I said, is more tactical and focus on balancing resources.
Hope I have responded to your question! Many thanks!
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Dear Evan,
One may approach BREP as a set of principles when (re)designing a business. So, yes, one may consider it a mind-set framework. However, with a more detailed definition of each "letter", one may use it as a guideline for setting business values.
KNOS is more practical and may be more straight-forward as instrument. Is more like a checklist. As I have mentioned, I used it in designing the business flows in a organizational transformation program.
Thank you for your feedback! Helped me to see what's the next step for refining the concepts.
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So BREP is really a mindset? And KNOS is a set of questions for inquiry into problems? Is this a correct characterization?
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