Creating Value for Mining Machinery Companies through Services
Service strategy of any mining machinery service companies should be designed to maximise service-based value creation to OEM or end customers. Ranjit Ravindran elaborates...

There is no one-size-fits-all service strategy to suit every machinery company, but there are three broad models that cover how most can make money from services:

  • A strategy focused on spare parts. With this model, companies extract most of their value from spare-parts sales, tailoring services and product offerings to capture the maximum number of spare parts throughout the lifecycle of the equipment.
  • A strategy focused on maintenance. Industry value is concentrated in service contracts in this model, and companies aim to maximise the penetration rate and loyalty of customer contracts.
  • Offering the complete process. In this model, suppliers expand beyond machinery servicing to cover the whole processes in which their equipment plays a leading role. They can do this by using their specialised expertise to save costs for the customer.
Most machinery companies use a mix of these business models, offering a wide portfolio of services that includes spare parts, maintenance, and complete processes. It is typical, however, for one model to predominate and the others to fill in the missing pieces.

A strategy focused on spare parts
This strategy is typically used by companies whose products require frequent component replacement due to wear and tear-such as manufacturers of construction, mining, and power generation equipment. Companies that generate value through spare parts should do more than simply responding to customer demand. With the right strategy, they can also increase the flow and value of spare parts while improving machine performance and efficiency. This increases the value generated for them and for their customers. Here?s how to put that strategy to work.
Turn the wrench: Service-related labour activities can look like an unattractive business. They yield low margins, yet require skills and resources well outside an equipment manufacturer?s usual core. But taking on those activities-or ?turning the wrench?-can stimulate value generation by enabling companies to prescribe the use of spare parts.

If independent service companies are the ones to make decisions about which parts to use in a service operation, they may have an incentive to refurbish used parts or to use less optimised spares. This will typically increase the labour share of the service bill-which is how independent service companies make a profit-and will likely result in a reduced flow of spare parts from OEMs as well as a lower value for customers.

If OEMs themselves perform this labour element, it links them directly to decisions about part usage. This can unleash large amounts of value, even if the overall sales margin declines.

Establish customer service agreements: In spite of the widely held belief that service operations-in particular those involving spare parts-are hard to plan ahead, much can be handled through OEM-customer contracts such as customer service agreements. Although they come in many shapes and sizes, they usually offer the customer three things:

  • Predictable operation costs, since these include the replacement of critical (and expensive) wear parts
  • Fewer unexpected operating problems and less downtime for servicing, since major replacements are planned beforehand
  • Better service levels, basic field and data services, and replacement of minor worn parts-all complementing the main offering.

Machinery companies also do better by selling more parts and benefiting from enhanced service work. They engage in longer, closer relationships with customers, which increase opportunities to understand-and cater to-client needs. In addition, they schedule part replacements before failures occur, which helps the service provider offer simpler, faster, more spare-part-intensive operations-minimising machine downtime.

These mutual benefits mean service agreements can be introduced as part of the equipment sales process-to both help sell the equipment and create value as early as possible in the relationship.

Prevent spare part leakage: Spare parts leakage is synonymous with value leakage. Machinery companies, especially those with long equipment life cycles, should try to keep track of their equipment and components as they are retired from use.Customers and independent service providers sometimes build a stock of used components recovered from old equipment. This can create two problems:
competition that can cut into manufacturers? spare part sales and the potential for costly malfunctions or reduced performance and efficiency for the machine owner. This is why a market leader in the engine industry offers the dismantling of used equipment and a discounted price for spare parts in its customer-service agreements. By discouraging the reuse of used spare parts, the company creates value for itself and the customer.

New spare parts can also provide competition. Companies can counter this by preventing arbitrage trades of new parts based on price differences among different regions and clients and ensuring that their own spare parts are competitive in performance and price when compared with parts manufactured by third parties.

Optimise commercial and operational processes: Because of the high costs of machine downtime-particularly for that of critical equipment-some customers build their own stock of new spare parts and develop service capacities. Not all customers and repair operations can be dealt with this way, so customers will still contact service providers to fix their equipment. Speed as well as high-quality commercial and operational processes become a key success factor.

Companies should focus on the following:Customer requests should be processed and responded to promptly. Machinery companies need to transform their commercial processes and organisations in order to optimise response times, since these are a key determinant in service-purchasing decisions. This can mean assessing the number of commercial and engineering specialists required, training such specialists, providing the tools required to rapidly identify needs and prepare documentation, and creating mechanisms for agile price decision making.

Responses should ensure the quick delivery of services and spare parts.Customers need to not only get a quick response to a spare part request but also receive the part as rapidly as possible to get their machine running again. By smartly optimising logistics and designing inventory levels according to demand, OEMs can both reduce the capital invested in spare parts and speed up delivery. One European power plant and engine manufacturer redesigned its logistics so that spare parts can now be delivered anywhere in the world faster than before even though they are centralised in a single global warehouse.

Value-added services: Services ranging from traditional technical assistance, such as installation and repairs, to more advanced technical operations-even helping clients with tasks closer to their business needs-can generate great value for OEMs and customers alike. Some of these services-such as data analysis, remote monitoring, and predictive maintenance-can greatly improve the performance and reliability of machines; thus, customers are willing to pay for them. In some industries, however, such services offer limited margins and income potential. Even if direct margins are low, offering additional services can drive spare parts sales. Service design helps manufacturers know the status of their equipment and offer service operations and spare parts accordingly. It prevents costly machine downtime for owners and allows service providers to perform scheduled, spare-part-intensive repair operations. What?s more, additional services can differentiate a manufacturer from competitors, which may increase sales not only of services but of equipment.

Establish value-based pricing: While the above levers rely on increasing the volume of spare-part sales, profitability can also be driven by ensuring that prices reflect the value provided to customers. Yet many machinery companies still base spare-part prices on an unsophisticated cost-plus methodology. Value-based price setting optimises the profitability of spare parts by assigning a margin to each part based on the value generated for the client. This value is determined by analysing part characteristics according to several objective criteria such as part uniqueness and criticality, OEM competitive advantage, purchasing frequency, and age of machine. Margins are then assigned based on these criteria. Combined with sensible commercial policies, these measures can increase margins per unit sold by 5-10 per cent.

The same criteria may be used to bundle and sell highly related spare parts that have different competitiveness and unique features. This not only increases spare part sales but also reduces spare part complexity by reducing the number of references.

A strategy focused on maintenance
Maintenance can become the main value-generating activity when customers do not want to create their own dedicated maintenance systems, but still need to ensure optimal operation because of the potential economic and safety costs of machine failure. Customers may be in this situation because they lack critical mass or, perhaps, because of the complexity of their equipment.

External factors such as regulation can also play a very important role. Many European countries demand a minimum number of maintenance operations for some types of machinery. Even in less regulated countries, insurance companies may charge a premium to equipment owners that do not perform safety maintenance operations. Manufacturers of building-automation equipment and elevators are prime candidates for this strategy.

Adopting a maintenance strategy requires two different mind-set changes from the spare part model. First, because relationships with customers through maintenance contracts become a key driver of value generation for customer and service provider, they demand careful attention. Second, service cost structures are no longer based mainly on spare parts; they are a labour business requiring specific management.

These two principles are essential to maximising value for maintenance-focused companies-and fundamental to several initiatives that companies adopting this model should implement.

Pursue service contracts at the time of purchase: Just as the moment of purchase is the best time for retailers to offer extended warranties, it is an outstanding opportunity for proposing service contracts to machinery customers. Machinery companies should develop an attractive service offering for new equipment and consider creating combined offers of equipment and service.

Such simultaneous equipment and service sales are not always possible. For example, even though elevators are sold to construction companies, maintenance contracts are concluded with building owners. When this is the case, commercial processes should identify owners and offer maintenance contracts as soon as possible. Consider the extension of the service offering to third-party equipment: Extending the service offering to equipment manufactured by competitors increases the potential market size. This approach can work for any of the service strategies (such as spare parts), but it is more common in labour-related activities such as maintenance. Some machinery OEMs following this strategy buy and analyse competitor equipment in order to design services for it-complying with intellectual-property laws by keeping R&D teams for services independent from new-equipment teams.

The attractiveness of providing services for third-party equipment varies according to individual industries. Those with a high volume of profitable maintenance contracts or strong scale effects from regional concentration offer serious promise. So, too, do sectors characterised by limited numbers of brands and models and that have long platform lives. Such conditions offer companies the time needed to acquire and apply competitor equipment know-how over a broad installed base.

At the same time, third-party service may be less attractive if complex competitor-equipment know-how at all levels-information systems, sales force, and field personnel-demands increased investment. This effect can be magnified when there is limited access to the parts and components required to perform third-party operations, whether by a company?s own development or through other suppliers. Companies can use this analysis to understand whether they will be able to create value for owners of third-party equipment-or if they will incur costs that will burden their competitiveness.

Maximise the length and value of client relationships: Machinery companies should actively manage customer and maintenance contracts to maximise the value created for both sides. This means not only increasing services provided in all phases of the client life cycle but also remaining the preferred provider of services for as long as possible-both of which can happen through the following initiatives:
Contract Design: Contracts can be crafted specifically to benefit customers that remain longer with the service provider-and make it simple for customers to extend contract duration by including predictable price-updating mechanisms.

Relationship Danagement: Machinery companies need to learn about customer needs throughout the equipment lifecycle, proactively offering timely value-creating services such as retrofits.

Attrition Monitoring and Customer Retention: Contract cancellation rates should be monitored on an ongoing basis, enabling prompt identification of and reaction to major events such as changes in market conditions. Companies should design commercial responses to customers requesting contract cancellations but also identify patterns that usually lead to cancellation-a customer that has remained for longer than two years but has had technical problems in recent months, for example-and take action before cancellations occur.

Coordination between service and new equipment strategies
All of the above initiatives show that interaction between new-equipment and service businesses can be essential to realising service-based value-creation opportunities. It is usually also better to coordinate equipment decisions with service strategy than to use independent perspectives to maximise value from new equipment and services. This coordination starts with new-equipment design. Design can have a significant impact on service costs since it is responsible for the type of spare parts needed, the intervals between services, and the time in the field needed by maintenance personnel. Optimising these costs is vital in any service model, making it important to control future expenses from the beginning. To do so, companies need to minimise the maintenance tasks needed to keep equipment running and reduce the time needed to perform those tasks. They must facilitate failure diagnostics and reduce spare-part needs, costs, and replacement times. And they need to optimise the operating costs of any additional services that are offered as part of the service portfolio, including in the complete process-offering business model. Companies should also consider the interaction between the new-equipment and service businesses in their commercial strategy. New-equipment prices should reflect not only new-equipment business-unit profitability but also projected service-business profits throughout the life cycle of the equipment. This future service business can be a more relevant determinant of commercial discounts on equipment sales than, for example, the volume of new units being sold.

Companies also need clear guidelines for decisions such as whether a customer should be offered a new machine or a retrofit for its existing equipment. This means not only aligning the strategies of each business unit but also establishing communication between service and new-equipment sales forces.

When none of the service strategies seems to apply
As already noted, few companies pursue a single service strategy and instead prefer to combine models. There may even be times when none of the models works, and companies may appear unable to extract value from services. This can be true if some of the following conditions are present:

  • Equipment characteristics do not foster service value creation. This can happen if the required service adds too little value (because of low complexity and frequency), the equipment life cycle is too short, or the equipment costs too little to warrant significant attention.
  • Too many companies are competing on price and offering little differentiation. If barriers to enter the service market are very low, large numbers of companies-typically non manufacturers-may reduce business profitability.
  • A company cannot deliver the required services. This capability deficit may result from service personnel shortages (in sales and field positions, for example), insufficient financing needed to set up a service organisation, or insufficient presence in relevant regions.
  • A company prefers to focus on equipment sales. Company history and culture can be an important deterrent to service, and high profitability from some types of equipment might lead to a misplaced perception that services dilute margins.

For some companies, these barriers may be insuperable, but most should be asking themselves whether they can really afford to lose the service opportunity. They should be thinking about how to increase the volume and profitability of services, how to improve competitiveness by differentiating themselves from other companies, whether they can build capabilities to reach service excellence, and how to create a service focus without neglecting their new-equipment business.
Hence to conclude, service strategy of any mining machinery service companies should be designed to maximise service-based value creation to OEM or end customers.

Extending the service offering to equipment manufactured by competitors increases the potential market size. This approach can work for any of the service strategies (such as spare parts), but it is more common in labour-related activities such as maintenance.

The author is Business Head - Mining Machinery, Voltas Ltd, Mining & Construction Equipment Division, Thane