Article 2 of 5 - how to seize the potential of a PaaS business model
This is the second article of our five-part series on how to seize the potential of a PaaS business model in your business context. You can find the first part here. Product-as-a-Service (PaaS) requires you to re-think a lot of your business model, including the value proposition. While gaining customer acceptance of your PaaS offering is a key to success, it is also one of the nine business-centered challenges hindering implementation.
There are three reasons why
First, most customers like ownership. For B2C segments in particular, product ownership is culturally embedded and often associated with a sense of security, control, and comfort. However, emotional attachment to products is also present in B2B segments where owning a certain type of equipment can contribute to a company’s identity.
Second, PaaS risks introducing inconvenience to the user. In cases where products are pooled between users, the customer may suddenly have to undertake several activities to use a product, such as booking, locating, adjusting, and returning it. If the customer journey is not well thought through, these inconveniences may outweigh any financial benefits of PaaS.
Third, customers underestimate the cost of ownership. B2C segments are notoriously bad at taking the full cost of product ownership into account. A study in Germany found that on average, people underestimated the cost of car ownership by ≈52%. This lack of insight tends to position PaaS offerings, which often include maintenance, repair, and even depreciation costs, as expensive.
The good news is that all these challenges can be addressed.
What you need is to really understand your customers’ needs, offer unique added value, and explode the myth that ownership is cheap. We will guide you through how.