The Explainer: Don’t Just Sell Stuff — Satisfy Needs

Описание к видео The Explainer: Don’t Just Sell Stuff — Satisfy Needs

Theodore Levitt's classic theory says that an industry is a customer-satisfying process, not a goods-producing process.



An industry begins with the customer and his or her needs, not with a patent, a raw material, or a selling skill. Given the customer’s needs, the industry develops backwards, first concerning itself with the physical delivery of customer satisfactions. Then it moves back further to creating the things by which these satisfactions are in part achieved.

How these materials are created is a matter of indifference to the customer, hence the particular form of manufacturing, processing, or what have you cannot be considered as a vital aspect of the industry. Finally, the industry moves back still further to finding the raw materials necessary for making its products.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

At Harvard Business Review, we believe in management. If the world’s organizations and institutions were run more effectively, if our leaders made better decisions, if people worked more productively, we believe that all of us — employees, bosses, customers, our families, and the people our businesses affect — would be better off. So we try to arm our readers with ideas that help them become smarter, more creative, and more courageous in their work. We enlist the foremost experts in a wide range of topics, including career planning, strategy, leadership, work-life balance, negotiations, innovation, and managing teams. Harvard Business Review empowers professionals around the world to lead themselves and their organizations more effectively and to make a positive impact.

Sign up for Newsletters: https://hbr.org/email-newsletters
Follow us:
https://hbr.org/
  / harvard-business-review  
  / hbr  
  / harvardbiz  
  / harvard_business_review  

Комментарии

Информация по комментариям в разработке