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  2. Value (marketing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_(marketing)

    Value in marketing, also known as customer-perceived value, is the difference between a prospective customer's evaluation of the benefits and costs of one product when compared with others. Value may also be expressed as a straightforward relationship between perceived benefits and perceived costs: Value = Benefits - Cost .

  3. Value proposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_proposition

    In marketing, a company’s value proposition is the full mix of benefits or economic value which it promises to deliver to the current and future customers (i.e., a market segment) who will buy their products and/or services. [1] [2] It is part of a company's overall marketing strategy which differentiates its brand and fully positions it in ...

  4. Value chain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_chain

    A value system includes the value chains of a firm's supplier (and their suppliers all the way back), the firm itself, the firm distribution channels, and the firm's buyers (and presumably extended to the buyers of their products, and so on). Capturing the value generated along the chain is the new approach taken by many management strategists.

  5. Value stream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_stream

    A value stream is the set of actions that take place to add value to a customer from the initial request through realization of value by the customer. The value stream begins with the initial concept, moves through various stages of development and on through delivery and support. A value stream always begins and ends with a customer.

  6. Customer value proposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_value_proposition

    Customer Value Management was started by Ray Kordupleski in the 1980s and discussed in his book, Mastering Customer Value Management. A customer value proposition is a business or marketing statement that describes why a customer should buy a product or use a service. It is specifically targeted towards potential customers rather than other ...

  7. RFM (market research) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFM_(market_research)

    RFMTC – Recency, Frequency, Monetary Value, Time, Churn rate is an augmented RFM model proposed by Yeh et al. (2009). [6] The model utilizes Bernoulli sequence in probability theory and creates formulas that calculate the probability of a customer buying at the next promotional or marketing campaign.

  8. Service-dominant logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service-dominant_logic

    More recently, S-D logic has begun to use to term value-in-context to capture the notion that value must be understood in the context of the beneficiary's world and the associated resources and other actors (Vargo et al. 2009). This collaborative nature of value creation is best viewed from a higher level of aggregation than the dyad (e.g ...

  9. Services marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Services_marketing

    The American Marketing Association defines service marketing as an organizational function and a set of processes for identifying or creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers and for managing customer relationship in a way that benefit the organization and stake-holders. Services are (usually) intangible economic activities ...