How do you know whether the software you buy for your business is worth the money? Here’s a clue: it’s not just what you pay for it.
It’s an easy mistake to make, and lots of service providers still make it. When trying to understand the value of a software solution, they calculate the total cost of ownership (TCO). It includes the purchase/rental cost, operating costs, maintenance costs, upgrade costs, and other indirect costs.
But, if you’re thinking about TCO, it means you don’t see your company’s IT as a business driver, nor as an asset that can generate revenue, profit and customer satisfaction. Which, of course, it is. Better IT enables you to be more efficient, more productive and more profitable — something all service providers want, particularly in an economy that demands a service excellence approach. So why are they only worrying about how much the software will cost?
It's Not About TCO - It's About ROI
The reason some companies focus on TCO is because it’s easy to calculate. But TCO only looks at one side of the equation. Companies need to focus not just on how much the software costs, but on how much money they can make and save by using it.
Looking at return on investment (ROI) instead of TCO lets you balance the costs against the financial benefits the software will bring to your operation. At Asolvi, we look at 3 key value drivers in order to make ROI calculations for our customers in the Managed Print Services (MPS) industry.
These are:
Trying to persuade customers that they should be using ROI to drive their technology decisions is a challenge for any salesperson. Not because generating an ROI calculation using these 3 value drivers is particularly difficult. It’s not. But a general calculation isn’t enough. To get a realistic view of the ROI, you need to calculate it specifically for your customer’s business, and you and your customer have to put time and effort in to do it. It’s why many customers choose the easier path of forecasting the TCO for the proceeding 5-7 years instead.
Do Vertical Solutions Have An Edge?
If you sell specialist software for a vertical market, you’re well placed to generate a sensible ROI calculation without much input from the customer. A lot of horizontal software vendors, who sell broad-scope products that have general, pan-industry usefulness, may lack depth of insight and understanding of the industries they sell to.
What this means is that we’ve had to learn a lot about this market in order to better serve the needs of providers within it. We’ve watched it change from selling printers and copiers and doing chargeable after sales maintenance and consumable replenishment to selling all-inclusive managed print services (MPS) And it means we understand the here-and-now challenges faced by service providers as print volumes decline and costs per page increase.
Our insight into our customers’ industry, business and operational obstacles lets us generate realistic ROI calculations that prove to them the real value of our software. We’re able to demonstrate how we can improve their service delivery and profitability by ensuring all losses are plugged and opportunities seized.
ROI Is Better For An Increasingly Service-Driven Economy
We live in a service economy that’s constantly changing and evolving thanks to a relentless wave of new technologies making more and more things possible. As a result, customers demand quicker response times, more reliable machinery, and all-round better service.
So, service providers need to thinking less about how much a software solution costs and more about the business capabilities that the solution makes possible. Only by making an ROI-based decision can you really know how much money you can save and how much better your service will be.