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The Servitization of Manufacturing: An Empirical Case Study of IBM Corporation
Author(s) -
Zahir Ahamed,
Takehiro Inohara,
Akira Kamoshida
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
international journal of business administration
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1923-4015
pISSN - 1923-4007
DOI - 10.5430/ijba.v4n2p18
Subject(s) - ibm , corporation , business , empirical research , service (business) , manufacturing , resource (disambiguation) , quality (philosophy) , goods and services , product (mathematics) , marketing , process (computing) , adaptation (eye) , industrial organization , process management , computer science , economics , finance , market economy , computer network , philosophy , materials science , geometry , mathematics , physics , epistemology , optics , nanotechnology , operating system
A conceptual model of firm process transition from manufacturing to servitization is proposed based on empirical case study. It denotes that the firm process in traditional manufacturing is run by resource and technology, and the primary objective of the company is making a good quality product, which has been observed a significant difference in servitized manufacturing firms that are conducted through skills and knowledge, and the firms main focus on developing value added services and more solutions oriented to customers. This research explains how a traditional hardware manufacturer, namely ‘IBM Corporation’ revolutions in the computer industry through non-hardware (Service-ware) depend services activities; consulting, financing, training, and so on and has fundamentally shifted their business from not only producing goods to offering a bundle of goods and services (Servitization). It also discusses the pertinent aspects of the firm’s cultural adaptation and strategic change process towards servitization of manufacturing based on our observations and interview results of IBM professionals

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