SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 9
Download to read offline
Minimized Appliance Product Line,
MAXIMIZED SUCCESS
How limiting your hardware appliance product line can increase
revenue, decrease costs, and protect the quality of your product.
Why you need this guide
but your unwieldy product line is getting in the way of
reaching your sales and growth goals. You started out
tailoring orders to customers’ exact software and
hardware needs to win their business, but now you’re
finding it difficult to keep up with and support a
multitude of custom platform orders, or you don’t
receive enough benefit from doing so, or its affecting
your product’s quality. It’s time to limit your product
You’re building a successful software company,
choice to maintain a profitable growth plan.
No, really, it is. Afraid? Think you won’t get as much
business with a limited product line? You’re wrong.
(Yeah, we said it.) Stick with us over the next few
pages to see how offering a refined, limited product
line is actually better for your customers and your
business.
X-2000
X-2010
X-2020
X-3010
X-3000
X-3020
X-4010
X-4020
X-4030
X-4040X-4000
X-1040
X-1050
X-1030
X-1020
X-1010
X-1000 X-2020
X-3010
X-3000
X-3020
X-4010
X-4020
X-4030
X-4040X-4000
X-2000
X-2010
X-1040
X-1050
X-1030
X-1020
X-1010
X-1000
The proof’s in the pudding.
Too many choices can overwhelm and lead to fewer sales. Barry
Schwartz described this as “the paradox of choice,” stating that
while choice is necessary, when it becomes too abundant it begins
to debilitate, and customers become unable to choose.
Maybe you’ve heard of paralysis by analysis; in customers’ efforts to
make sure they receive the bigger, better deal, it leads to a delayed
decision—if a decision is made at all—because the anticipation that
something better might come along keeps them perpetually in the
decision-making process rather than moving forward and
committing to one.
Research shows giving too many choices leads to fewer sales
Or, if a choice is made, customers end up less satisfied with it than
they would have been if they had had fewer options. Schwartz says
this is because it's easy to imagine making a different choice that
could have been better. The feeling of regret subtracts from our
satisfaction: the more options there are, the easier it is to regret the
one we choose.
Offering an abundance of hardware appliance options may not
make customers as happy as one would expect. In fact, they may
end up with buyer’s remorse, regretting their decision as they
compare it with other options they could have had. And, it can
significantly slow down the sales cycle.
A 2006 Bain study also suggested that reducing
complexity and narrowing choice can boost
revenues by up to 40% and cut costs by 10-35%.
And it can double growth.
revenue costs growth
A couple of numbers to consider to understand how your customers make buying decisions.
In one landmark experiment conducted in an upscale grocery store in California, Sheena S. Iyengar, a Professor of Business at Columbia University, sheds
light on how too many options impact the buying decision. Researchers set up a sampling table with an array of 24 different jams to taste; on a different day
they displayed just six. Shoppers who took part in the sampling were rewarded with a discount voucher to buy any jam of the same brand in the store.
Here are the results:
During the showing of 24 jams, 60% of bypassers stopped at the table.
During the showing of 6 jams, only 40% of bypassers stopped at the table.
A strong case that the more options, the more initial attraction. Here, however, is the interesting part:
Of the 60% that stopped to view the 24 jams, only 3% subsequently made a purchase.
Of the 40% that stopped at the table showing 6 jams, 30% made a purchase.
Customers initially exposed to limited choices are substantially more likely to make a purchase. In this case, 10X the amount.
Driving it home: Why limiting choice works
The positive impact of a well defined product line
40% STOPPED TO SHOP60% STOPPED TO SHOP
RATE OF PURCHASE
VS
30%
3%
24JAMS
6JAMS
When you look at the most successful software companies, meaning those with a strong
growth trajectory, one of the things they have in common is a logical and well thought out
product offering. It has purposefully defined limits. But often, they don’t start out this way.
Far from it.
Many beginning software companies are in growth mode, bending over backwards to
offer customers unlimited choices, meaning every plausible hardware configuration.
(Sound familiar?) Choice isn’t just good, it’s great for luring customers away from the
competition! But when a company has reached an inflection point in its growth, the viability
of a limitless product model becomes an obstacle to continuing to scale and grow.
The companies that advance and find success have usually made two pivotal maneuvers:
streamlining their product offering and defining where choice belongs in their portfolio.
So to be more successful,
limit your product line.
-Maintaining a broad but not deep supply chain
which limits the opportunity to leverage volume-based discounts.
-Managing an unwieldy product matrix
that complicates sales efforts and can lower quality.
-Delivering an inconsistent look and feel
across your product line that impacts your ability to build a brand identity.
-Needing to wait on product to be custom built
before it can be shipped, which in some markets can impact sales efforts when competitors ship faster.
-Tying up cash in inventory
to hold a wide range of pre-built inventory that ensures fast delivery, but leaves little for necessary investments.
Is your business experiencing any of the above implications as a result of
the size of your product line? As counterintuitive as it may be, offering a
large product mix may not be as beneficial and profitable as it may seem.
The struggle is real.
The negatives to not limiting your product line
Some struggle with paring down product lines, but not making this transition can have negative implications, such as:
Get on the right track to more sales and fewer costs.
Okay, you get it. You need to limit your product line to increase your business. But how do you start?
Rules to go byto minimize your product line
-Follow the 80/20 rule.Find the configurations that represent the bulk of your sales and strip away most of the outliers. A few at
the high and low end of your product mix may be warranted to offer scalability, but not a dozen.
-Identify common ground.Areas of your product line can often be consolidated to a standard base platform (chassis, motherboard,
power supply), with product variants based on a smaller subset of parts (drives, memory or CPU).
-“Condition for complexity.”Let the first decision be one of fewer categories and options than the ones that follow, because it makes
people more likely to participate in ongoing decisions.
-Don’t go it alone.Work with a seasoned hardware platform development team that can help you manage and maximize the
variations. They should have the ability to inventory base configurations and perform final assembly to
complete the build to specifications.
it pays to take a look at your current product line, and MBX can help. By analyzing your
software suite, we can evaluate your platforms to optimize performance on hardware while
consolidating the variety of components to simplify your bills of materials (BOMs).
And, if you need end user customization, we can handle it during configuration or final
assembly. We’ll make sure your customers feel a high sense of being catered to by
tailoring the end product to their needs, whether that means including a certain networking
card, adding additional RAM or hard drives, enabling different software settings, or any
other final touches.
The end results? A finely tuned product offering that increases revenue, decreases costs,
simplifies your sales team’s objectives, shortens build time, and protects the quality levels
of your product. If you’re ready for these results, reach out to us at
(800) 560-1195 or hello@mbx.com
Shameless Plug before We’re Done:
How MBX can help you minimize your product line and maximize your profits
Regardless of the stage your company is in,
Written By: Chris Tucker, VP of Customer Engagement, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/chrisjamestucker
Edited By: Liz Molli, Marketing Manager, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/lizmolli
Jessica Conte, Marketing Coordinator, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/jessicaconte
Designed by: Joel Wolter, Senior Creative Designer, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/wolterjoel
MBX Leadership Team: Tom Crowley, Founder, CEO, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/tomcrowley22
Jill Bellak, President, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/jillbellak
Len Petty, CFO, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/lenpetty
Justin Formella, CIO, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/justinformella
Chris Tucker, VP of Customer Engagement, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/chrisjamestucker
Carl Nothnagel, VP of Operations, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/carlnothnagel
MBX Systems is a leading designer and manufacturer of application-optimized server appliances and
cloud-ready solutions for ISVs and service providers worldwide. MBX delivers turnkey hardware
systems that are 100% customized to the customer's specifications by in-house platform engineers,
while also offering value-added services such as branding, software imaging, regulatory/compliance,
global logistics and warranty support to relieve customers of all hardware responsibilities. That
unusual range of services, along with award-winning quality, innovation and customer service, has
attracted customers in more than 40 vertical industries in the past two decades.
For more information, visit www.mbx.com
About MBX Systems:

More Related Content

Viewers also liked

Non Sparking Tools
Non Sparking ToolsNon Sparking Tools
Non Sparking ToolsElla Zhang
 
Preview of whats to come
Preview of whats to comePreview of whats to come
Preview of whats to comeFatima Khan
 
Mood board – domestic violence
Mood board – domestic violenceMood board – domestic violence
Mood board – domestic violenceFatima Khan
 
BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15
BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15
BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15Tammie Mays
 
Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016
Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016
Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016Stuart Tayler
 
The contessa at quail west naples florida
The contessa at quail west naples floridaThe contessa at quail west naples florida
The contessa at quail west naples floridaQuail Naples
 
Inside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim Urban
Inside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim UrbanInside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim Urban
Inside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim Urban67 Golden Rules
 
The dream we haven't dared to dream
The dream we haven't dared to dreamThe dream we haven't dared to dream
The dream we haven't dared to dream67 Golden Rules
 
La cenicienta que no queria comer perdices
La cenicienta que no queria comer perdicesLa cenicienta que no queria comer perdices
La cenicienta que no queria comer perdicesAna Cubas
 
A second a day videoo
A second a day videooA second a day videoo
A second a day videooFatima Khan
 
Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016
Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016
Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016Alexey Krivitsky
 
Self-Reinforcement
Self-ReinforcementSelf-Reinforcement
Self-ReinforcementMissStone
 
Secrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutes
Secrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutesSecrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutes
Secrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutes67 Golden Rules
 
Studying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agility
Studying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agilityStudying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agility
Studying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agilityAlexey Krivitsky
 
Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles
Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles
Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles Gloria Cid
 
The Demo Driven Product Development Abstract
The Demo Driven Product Development AbstractThe Demo Driven Product Development Abstract
The Demo Driven Product Development AbstractOana Juncu
 

Viewers also liked (17)

Non Sparking Tools
Non Sparking ToolsNon Sparking Tools
Non Sparking Tools
 
Preview of whats to come
Preview of whats to comePreview of whats to come
Preview of whats to come
 
Mood board – domestic violence
Mood board – domestic violenceMood board – domestic violence
Mood board – domestic violence
 
BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15
BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15
BrightFuturesApplicationForm_July15
 
Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016
Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016
Tinker Tayler Solder Pi – UX Scotland 2016
 
The contessa at quail west naples florida
The contessa at quail west naples floridaThe contessa at quail west naples florida
The contessa at quail west naples florida
 
Inside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim Urban
Inside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim UrbanInside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim Urban
Inside the mind of a master procrastinator - Tim Urban
 
The dream we haven't dared to dream
The dream we haven't dared to dreamThe dream we haven't dared to dream
The dream we haven't dared to dream
 
La cenicienta que no queria comer perdices
La cenicienta que no queria comer perdicesLa cenicienta que no queria comer perdices
La cenicienta que no queria comer perdices
 
A second a day videoo
A second a day videooA second a day videoo
A second a day videoo
 
Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016
Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016
Agile Coaching Canvas at #agile2016
 
Book: The First 20 Hours Written by Josh Kaufman
Book: The First 20 Hours Written by Josh KaufmanBook: The First 20 Hours Written by Josh Kaufman
Book: The First 20 Hours Written by Josh Kaufman
 
Self-Reinforcement
Self-ReinforcementSelf-Reinforcement
Self-Reinforcement
 
Secrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutes
Secrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutesSecrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutes
Secrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutes
 
Studying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agility
Studying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agilityStudying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agility
Studying organizational complexity and its effects on scaling agility
 
Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles
Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles
Estratègies comprensió lectora Taller de lectura Endevinalles
 
The Demo Driven Product Development Abstract
The Demo Driven Product Development AbstractThe Demo Driven Product Development Abstract
The Demo Driven Product Development Abstract
 

Similar to Minimized Appliance Product Line, Maximized Success

How to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business Strategy
How to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business StrategyHow to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business Strategy
How to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business StrategyJoseph Essien
 
Is Your Product Channel Friendly?
Is Your Product Channel Friendly?Is Your Product Channel Friendly?
Is Your Product Channel Friendly?SVPMA
 
Why B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeed
Why B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeedWhy B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeed
Why B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeedElizabeth Allcock
 
Minimal Viable Product - Final Paper
Minimal Viable Product - Final PaperMinimal Viable Product - Final Paper
Minimal Viable Product - Final PaperRicha Sharma
 
MKT 575 Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.com
MKT 575   Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.comMKT 575   Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.com
MKT 575 Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.comDavisMurphyB15
 
How to Shift to Product-Led Growth
How to Shift to Product-Led GrowthHow to Shift to Product-Led Growth
How to Shift to Product-Led GrowthProductPlan
 
Sales great value
Sales great valueSales great value
Sales great valueLe Van Linh
 
Emerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products faster
Emerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products fasterEmerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products faster
Emerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products fasterMeasureWorks
 
Perfecting Your Seed Funding Pitch
Perfecting Your Seed Funding PitchPerfecting Your Seed Funding Pitch
Perfecting Your Seed Funding Pitchasuarea48
 
Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...
Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...
Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...The Codest
 
Thailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide Book
Thailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide BookThailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide Book
Thailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide BookCanvassco
 
Thirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS Growth
Thirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS GrowthThirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS Growth
Thirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS GrowthAnkur Tiwari
 
Crafting A Business PORTER’S Industry Ana
 Crafting A Business   PORTER’S Industry Ana Crafting A Business   PORTER’S Industry Ana
Crafting A Business PORTER’S Industry AnaMargaritoWhitt221
 
Mobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation Slides
Mobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation SlidesMobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation Slides
Mobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation SlidesSlideTeam
 
MKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.com
MKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.comMKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.com
MKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.combellflower205
 

Similar to Minimized Appliance Product Line, Maximized Success (20)

How to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business Strategy
How to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business StrategyHow to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business Strategy
How to Dominate the Marketplace with a Great Product & Winning Business Strategy
 
Bad Apple
Bad AppleBad Apple
Bad Apple
 
Is Your Product Channel Friendly?
Is Your Product Channel Friendly?Is Your Product Channel Friendly?
Is Your Product Channel Friendly?
 
Lost Business Analysis
Lost Business AnalysisLost Business Analysis
Lost Business Analysis
 
Why B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeed
Why B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeedWhy B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeed
Why B2B customer programs fail and how to make yours succeed
 
Minimal Viable Product - Final Paper
Minimal Viable Product - Final PaperMinimal Viable Product - Final Paper
Minimal Viable Product - Final Paper
 
MKT 575 Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.com
MKT 575   Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.comMKT 575   Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.com
MKT 575 Exceptional Education - snaptutorial.com
 
How to Shift to Product-Led Growth
How to Shift to Product-Led GrowthHow to Shift to Product-Led Growth
How to Shift to Product-Led Growth
 
Sales great value
Sales great valueSales great value
Sales great value
 
Emerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products faster
Emerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products fasterEmerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products faster
Emerce eTravel - 5 startups lessons to build better products faster
 
Perfecting Your Seed Funding Pitch
Perfecting Your Seed Funding PitchPerfecting Your Seed Funding Pitch
Perfecting Your Seed Funding Pitch
 
Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...
Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...
Highest quality code in your SaaS project. Why should you care about it as a ...
 
Closing the deal
Closing the dealClosing the deal
Closing the deal
 
Thailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide Book
Thailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide BookThailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide Book
Thailand B2B Marketing & Branding Guide Book
 
Thirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS Growth
Thirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS GrowthThirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS Growth
Thirteen Pillars of Organic SaaS Growth
 
Crafting A Business PORTER’S Industry Ana
 Crafting A Business   PORTER’S Industry Ana Crafting A Business   PORTER’S Industry Ana
Crafting A Business PORTER’S Industry Ana
 
Mobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation Slides
Mobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation SlidesMobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation Slides
Mobile Data Management Strategy Powerpoint Presentation Slides
 
Bd conversion mapping
Bd conversion mappingBd conversion mapping
Bd conversion mapping
 
MKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.com
MKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.comMKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.com
MKT 575 Great Stories /newtonhelp.com
 
AS 4Ps 2021.docx
AS   4Ps 2021.docxAS   4Ps 2021.docx
AS 4Ps 2021.docx
 

Minimized Appliance Product Line, Maximized Success

  • 1. Minimized Appliance Product Line, MAXIMIZED SUCCESS How limiting your hardware appliance product line can increase revenue, decrease costs, and protect the quality of your product.
  • 2. Why you need this guide but your unwieldy product line is getting in the way of reaching your sales and growth goals. You started out tailoring orders to customers’ exact software and hardware needs to win their business, but now you’re finding it difficult to keep up with and support a multitude of custom platform orders, or you don’t receive enough benefit from doing so, or its affecting your product’s quality. It’s time to limit your product You’re building a successful software company, choice to maintain a profitable growth plan. No, really, it is. Afraid? Think you won’t get as much business with a limited product line? You’re wrong. (Yeah, we said it.) Stick with us over the next few pages to see how offering a refined, limited product line is actually better for your customers and your business. X-2000 X-2010 X-2020 X-3010 X-3000 X-3020 X-4010 X-4020 X-4030 X-4040X-4000 X-1040 X-1050 X-1030 X-1020 X-1010 X-1000 X-2020 X-3010 X-3000 X-3020 X-4010 X-4020 X-4030 X-4040X-4000 X-2000 X-2010 X-1040 X-1050 X-1030 X-1020 X-1010 X-1000
  • 3. The proof’s in the pudding. Too many choices can overwhelm and lead to fewer sales. Barry Schwartz described this as “the paradox of choice,” stating that while choice is necessary, when it becomes too abundant it begins to debilitate, and customers become unable to choose. Maybe you’ve heard of paralysis by analysis; in customers’ efforts to make sure they receive the bigger, better deal, it leads to a delayed decision—if a decision is made at all—because the anticipation that something better might come along keeps them perpetually in the decision-making process rather than moving forward and committing to one. Research shows giving too many choices leads to fewer sales Or, if a choice is made, customers end up less satisfied with it than they would have been if they had had fewer options. Schwartz says this is because it's easy to imagine making a different choice that could have been better. The feeling of regret subtracts from our satisfaction: the more options there are, the easier it is to regret the one we choose. Offering an abundance of hardware appliance options may not make customers as happy as one would expect. In fact, they may end up with buyer’s remorse, regretting their decision as they compare it with other options they could have had. And, it can significantly slow down the sales cycle. A 2006 Bain study also suggested that reducing complexity and narrowing choice can boost revenues by up to 40% and cut costs by 10-35%. And it can double growth. revenue costs growth
  • 4. A couple of numbers to consider to understand how your customers make buying decisions. In one landmark experiment conducted in an upscale grocery store in California, Sheena S. Iyengar, a Professor of Business at Columbia University, sheds light on how too many options impact the buying decision. Researchers set up a sampling table with an array of 24 different jams to taste; on a different day they displayed just six. Shoppers who took part in the sampling were rewarded with a discount voucher to buy any jam of the same brand in the store. Here are the results: During the showing of 24 jams, 60% of bypassers stopped at the table. During the showing of 6 jams, only 40% of bypassers stopped at the table. A strong case that the more options, the more initial attraction. Here, however, is the interesting part: Of the 60% that stopped to view the 24 jams, only 3% subsequently made a purchase. Of the 40% that stopped at the table showing 6 jams, 30% made a purchase. Customers initially exposed to limited choices are substantially more likely to make a purchase. In this case, 10X the amount. Driving it home: Why limiting choice works The positive impact of a well defined product line 40% STOPPED TO SHOP60% STOPPED TO SHOP RATE OF PURCHASE VS 30% 3% 24JAMS 6JAMS
  • 5. When you look at the most successful software companies, meaning those with a strong growth trajectory, one of the things they have in common is a logical and well thought out product offering. It has purposefully defined limits. But often, they don’t start out this way. Far from it. Many beginning software companies are in growth mode, bending over backwards to offer customers unlimited choices, meaning every plausible hardware configuration. (Sound familiar?) Choice isn’t just good, it’s great for luring customers away from the competition! But when a company has reached an inflection point in its growth, the viability of a limitless product model becomes an obstacle to continuing to scale and grow. The companies that advance and find success have usually made two pivotal maneuvers: streamlining their product offering and defining where choice belongs in their portfolio. So to be more successful, limit your product line.
  • 6. -Maintaining a broad but not deep supply chain which limits the opportunity to leverage volume-based discounts. -Managing an unwieldy product matrix that complicates sales efforts and can lower quality. -Delivering an inconsistent look and feel across your product line that impacts your ability to build a brand identity. -Needing to wait on product to be custom built before it can be shipped, which in some markets can impact sales efforts when competitors ship faster. -Tying up cash in inventory to hold a wide range of pre-built inventory that ensures fast delivery, but leaves little for necessary investments. Is your business experiencing any of the above implications as a result of the size of your product line? As counterintuitive as it may be, offering a large product mix may not be as beneficial and profitable as it may seem. The struggle is real. The negatives to not limiting your product line Some struggle with paring down product lines, but not making this transition can have negative implications, such as:
  • 7. Get on the right track to more sales and fewer costs. Okay, you get it. You need to limit your product line to increase your business. But how do you start? Rules to go byto minimize your product line -Follow the 80/20 rule.Find the configurations that represent the bulk of your sales and strip away most of the outliers. A few at the high and low end of your product mix may be warranted to offer scalability, but not a dozen. -Identify common ground.Areas of your product line can often be consolidated to a standard base platform (chassis, motherboard, power supply), with product variants based on a smaller subset of parts (drives, memory or CPU). -“Condition for complexity.”Let the first decision be one of fewer categories and options than the ones that follow, because it makes people more likely to participate in ongoing decisions. -Don’t go it alone.Work with a seasoned hardware platform development team that can help you manage and maximize the variations. They should have the ability to inventory base configurations and perform final assembly to complete the build to specifications.
  • 8. it pays to take a look at your current product line, and MBX can help. By analyzing your software suite, we can evaluate your platforms to optimize performance on hardware while consolidating the variety of components to simplify your bills of materials (BOMs). And, if you need end user customization, we can handle it during configuration or final assembly. We’ll make sure your customers feel a high sense of being catered to by tailoring the end product to their needs, whether that means including a certain networking card, adding additional RAM or hard drives, enabling different software settings, or any other final touches. The end results? A finely tuned product offering that increases revenue, decreases costs, simplifies your sales team’s objectives, shortens build time, and protects the quality levels of your product. If you’re ready for these results, reach out to us at (800) 560-1195 or hello@mbx.com Shameless Plug before We’re Done: How MBX can help you minimize your product line and maximize your profits Regardless of the stage your company is in,
  • 9. Written By: Chris Tucker, VP of Customer Engagement, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/chrisjamestucker Edited By: Liz Molli, Marketing Manager, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/lizmolli Jessica Conte, Marketing Coordinator, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/jessicaconte Designed by: Joel Wolter, Senior Creative Designer, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/wolterjoel MBX Leadership Team: Tom Crowley, Founder, CEO, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/tomcrowley22 Jill Bellak, President, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/jillbellak Len Petty, CFO, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/pub/lenpetty Justin Formella, CIO, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/justinformella Chris Tucker, VP of Customer Engagement, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/chrisjamestucker Carl Nothnagel, VP of Operations, MBX Systems, linkedin.com/in/carlnothnagel MBX Systems is a leading designer and manufacturer of application-optimized server appliances and cloud-ready solutions for ISVs and service providers worldwide. MBX delivers turnkey hardware systems that are 100% customized to the customer's specifications by in-house platform engineers, while also offering value-added services such as branding, software imaging, regulatory/compliance, global logistics and warranty support to relieve customers of all hardware responsibilities. That unusual range of services, along with award-winning quality, innovation and customer service, has attracted customers in more than 40 vertical industries in the past two decades. For more information, visit www.mbx.com About MBX Systems: