Is service now what you sell?

IFS study finds aftermarket services a valuable profit center

By Charles Rathmann, IFS October 29, 2018

The servitization megatrend is upon us. Product-driven companies are adding services revenue streams to business models, usually to augment but sometimes to replace product-based business.

Servitization is driven in part by limited opportunity for many product-centric companies to grow in terms of product revenue and profits-due to factors like downward price pressure, volatile demand, and increased prices for inputs and raw materials. In other markets such as machine tools, lumpy year-over-year business may make the stable, recurring revenue of services attractive.

Aftermarket services may also make the customer more dependent, as they push important value-added services like maintenance, operation, and asset lifecycle management onto the supplier. This may insulate the vendor from competitors. It also enables a vendor to access deep insights on how their customer is using their products, which can in turn drive a consultative selling process.

But enabling technologies are also making servitization more feasible. The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) enables companies to sensor products they sell and use the resulting data stream to automate everything from re-order to dispatch of a service technician. A recent report from McKinsey suggests that while margin on new product sales is typically 10%, aftermarket service margin averages 25%.

But realize that revenue poses some significant management and enterprise software problems. Executives will need to live increasingly in the mental future-planning around not only the product lifecycle but the service cost and revenue cycle. When the service agreement is sold, a company will be committing to deliver against a contract that they could make or lose money on for years.

“To gain clarity and remain competitive, they must undertake a more detailed examination of aftermarket lifetime value-the total revenue they receive from servicing their installed base,” the McKinsey report stated. “This measure, which is typically calculated for each product line, provides a more comprehensive view of aftermarket value than commonly used metrics, such as service revenue captured per customer.”

Now, a 2018 IFS study of 200 North American manufacturing and industrial executives delivers insights into the extent of servitization and its impact on profitability and the extent of companies’ adoption of service lifecycle and field service management technologies.

Trends in servitization

Among respondents to the IFS study, the majority had some type of aftermarket revenue stream, even if that revenue stemmed strictly from aftermarket parts sales. The smallest segment were those who had servitized completely-essentially doing away with product revenue and charging for a product by duty cycle, usage, or some other metric.

  • 38% of respondents sold only products, with no aftermarket or other service revenues
  • 19% sold products and some aftermarket service parts
  • 15% sold products and aftermarket field service through break-fix repair
  • 16% sold planned maintenance contracts with service level agreements (SLAs).

Only 4% of respondents reported full servitization-selling products on a subscription rather than a discrete item through power-by-the-hour, fee-for-usage, or revenue sharing agreements. Companies operating in this fully-servitized business model include:

  • 22% of medical device manufacturers
  • 5% of metal fabrication businesses
  • 5% of companies in the oil & gas industry.