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« Existence precedes essence: Lessons for Future Customer Innovation | Main | Achieving future customer innovation: a managerial perspective »

January 19, 2004

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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Buyer-centric vs. customer-centric: Missing the point:

» Buyer versus Customer-centricity from CRM Mastery E-Journal
In a Creating Positive Context weblog post , OMC Group founder Chris Lawler , Chris writes: The debate over buyer-centric vs. [Read More]

Comments

Ron Snyder

At the risk of oversimplifying, customer-centric focuses on the things a seller needs to do to create and keep a customer. It comes from the seller's point of view.

Buyer-centric looks at the world from the buyer's perspective. It looks at their problems, the results they are trying to produce and the process they go through to to solve the problems and produce the results. The more sellers can walk in the buyer's shoes, the better they will design, sell and deliver products and services in a way that best meets the buyer's needs.

Jennifer Rice

I don't disagree with your distinction between buyer-centric versus seller-centric. Buyer-centricity is a big step in the right direction to get companies out of their seller-centric mindset towards a customer-experience mindset; however, there are stakeholders that must be considered in addition to customers. How are employees prioritized in a buyer-centric organization? What about the larger community in which the company operates? I'm advocating that managers must take the macro view of their business -- using a stakeholder-centric viewpoint -- in order to achieve a measure of socially responsible success.

There. Have we succeeded yet in "beating this topic into subatomic particles and beyond?" (my new favorite quote from an online discussion group) :-)

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