The implications of lean operations for sales strategy: from sales-force to marketing-force
Author
Piercy, Niall
Rich, Nick
Date
2009Type
Article
Publisher
Routledge
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Lean operating principles are based on the systems of Toyota Japan. Companies around the world, in all sectors of the economy, now embrace these approaches to improve quality, cost and productivity. Different purchasing and sourcing practices in lean organisations mean that winning sales from them requires major changes to sales strategy and practice. This process has not been fully explored. Serving lean customers, who demand complete transparency across the supplying organisation and focus on capability not cost, has proven problematic for traditional sales departments. Further, as supplying organisations themselves become lean (this transformation being a result and requirement of selling to a lean company), organisational redesign extends from operations into sales. This paper illustrates the shifts needed in sales approach and strategy in selling to, and subsequently, becoming a lean business. The role of this future-sales-force is considered in relation to its shift towards a marketing-orientated rather than sales-push strategy.
Journal/conference proceeding
Journal of Strategic Marketing
Citation
Piercy, N. & Rich, N. (2009) 'The implications of lean operations for sales strategy: from sales-force to marketing-force', Journal of Strategic Marketing, 17 (3-4), pp 237-255
Description
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