Valerie Mathieu

A Customer-oriented Manager for B2B Services


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is positioned: customer orientation, service and B2B.

      Customer orientation is debated in a dense literature that focuses on defining and justifying its benefits and also questions how it can be implemented in the company. This customer orientation is a direct result of the marketing culture. Translated into a managerial skill, customer orientation allows for the diffusion of a marketing culture within the organization as a whole.

      The interest in the service sector in particular is justified by its economic weight and also indicates the need for a specific approach in order to implement customer orientation in a relevant and effective way. It is, thus, necessary to understand the reality, the stakes and the specificities of the service sector in order to introduce an adapted customer orientation.

      As for the focus on B2B, it implies a significant distinction between B2B and B2C in terms of customer orientation. One often resorts to endless lists to justify what distinguishes B2B from B2C. Two specificities are in fact essential to understand, the first one is related to the market and the second one to the relationship. While the first one, involving the notions of channel and derived demand, is specific and exclusive to B2B markets, the second one, which defends the importance of the relationship between customers and their providers, is also at the heart of B2C. Nevertheless, the B2B relationship, because of its strength, depth and duration, is becoming a major managerial challenge.

      Customer Orientation

      1.1. Outlines and challenges of customer orientation

      1.1.1. Customer orientation framework

      1.1.1.1. Customer and market orientation

      The notion of market orientation was first proposed in the academic literature, whereas a more managerial literature would later more easily refer to the term customer orientation. Market orientation has historically been defined on the basis of three pillars: customer focus, broad involvement of different departments in the company and profitability (Kohli and Jaworski 1990, p. 3).

      Here the preferred term “customer orientation” seems to be more anchored in reality and pragmatic. While the invisible hand of the market does not need to be tightened, on the other hand, many customers will judge one by one’s handshake! Nevertheless, a full and true customer orientation must also integrate competitive issues and more broadly a set of stakeholders that will be presented throughout the book.

      1.1.1.2. Customer orientation between cultural and behavioral approaches

      Today, we find these two questions in the company: how to spread an actual customer culture within the organization and also how to implement strategies, actions and behaviors that are truly customer oriented.

      1.1.2. Benefits of customer orientation

      1.1.2.1. Customer orientation and company performance

      The impact of customer orientation on factors such as return on investment (ROI), sales volume, market share and sales growth was quickly identified. Studies based on different methodologies have validated the link between customer orientation and performance, including:

       – a meta-analysis of 114 empirical studies (Kirka et al. 2005): the results of 114 empirical studies on the effects of market and customer orientation on performance were analyzed. The results show that market and customer orientation have an impact of 20% on a company’s ability to innovate, 10% on its market share and 7% on its profits and sales;

       – a longitudinal study over three periods (Kumar et al. 2011): the observation of the same sample of companies, in 1997, 2001 and 2005, showed that the first companies to have adopted a market orientation benefited from an impact that was twice as strong on their sales and profits, compared to companies that adopted this orientation later;

       – an analysis based on a sample of 7,500 French companies (Pekovic and Rolland 2012): the relationship between customer orientation and EBITDA per employee was highlighted. The relationship appears to be stronger the more the company operates in a competitive, growing and uncertain market.

      1.1.2.2. Customer orientation and its impact on the customer

      Customer orientation can be expected to trigger positive attitudes and behaviors from the customer. Customer satisfaction is of course the most important consequence of customer orientation. As a corollary to this satisfaction, the customer’s positive word of mouth is more active and thus has an impact on the company’s reputation. Customer loyalty is also easier to build from a stronger customer relationship (Mullins et al. 2014). Knowledge of markets, consideration of customer expectations and preferences makes it possible for the company to develop and perform better services (Hartline et al. 2000).

      The employee, immersed in a customer-oriented culture, should more naturally engage in building strong and lasting relationships with the customer. It is the values, attitudes and behavior of the customer-oriented employee