Phil Fersht of HFS Research recently did a great LinkedIn post summarizing a fascinating conversation with Malcolm Frank that summarized a few key takeaways, including the following:
For 25 years, IT services optimized SG&A instead of transforming cost of goods sold. AI changes that. The real value now sits in agentic, vertical, customer-facing transformation, not back-office efficiency.
Customer-facing transformation is definitely where the value is in a global economy that is (borderline) recessionary, with joblessness and insecurity increasing by the day, and most people having less (and less) to spend on non-essentials and essentials alike. If you want their business, especially if your product or service is discretionary, it needs to be what they want. With constantly crushing weights on their shoulders, they need products that make them feel good, that make them feel like they are being listened to and catered too, that were created for consumer use (and not for the use by the atypical person in the lab who created something just for them), etc. The companies that deliver those will be the big winners, not the ones that still follow the old Ford Mantra (where you can have any colour you want as long as it’s black).
However, it’s not just creating the product that the customers want because IF you can’t deliver the goods at a price point the majority of your customers can afford and will pay in tight/recessionary economies, then you won’t sell any product at all!
We all need to remember that COGS was always a proxy, as it was easy for the accountants to measure, the same way we use revenue as a proxy for determining if a company is an appropriate target for our software and services. In Procurement, it’s not revenue — it’s how much spend is external, how much we can actually manage (retailers can have large leases that make up a significant portion of external spend which Procurement can’t do a thing about), and how many categories are big enough to give us leverage or real options when sourcing that can lead to savings, quality improvements, more resilience, etc.
This means that the future of business is about two things:
- tailoring to customers (because we’re long beyond you can have any colour you want as long as its black) to maximize the amount they will pay (to the point they can pay), which Phil astutely noted in his post and
- (dynamically) re-configuring the supply chains (as needed) to offer the products at profitable price points based on what the majority of the market will pay
So this would mean it’s simultaneously optimizing the product mix for customer adoption while ensuring the supply chains are ready to serve and re-optimizing them as needed.
As was noted, at the end of the day, back-office costs are pretty insignificant compared to supply chain costs and increased profits from increased price points that create a product that maximizes what a customer will pay (because the product is precisely what the customer wants, and not a product that is simply close enough that it might work for them).
