AF ELS 18C Pre-Reading

Can You Say What Your Strategy Is?

and train them, at great expense. Until 2007, when it switched to an internet-based service, the firm had to have its own satellite network to provide its widely dispersed offices with real-time quotes and allow them to execute trades. Because the company has 10,000 separate offices, its real estate and communication costs are about 50% higher than the industry average. However, all those offices allow the financial advisers who run them to deliver convenient, trusted, personal service and advice. Other successful players in this industry also have distinctive value propositions

personable, nonthreatening environment— Jones puts its offices in strip malls and the retail districts of rural areas and suburbs rather than high-rise buildings in the central business districts of big cities. These choices alone require Jones to differ radically from other brokerages in the configuration of its activities. With no branch-office management providing direction or support, each financial adviser must be an entrepreneur who delights in running his or her own operation. Since such people are an exception in the industry, Jones has to bring all its own financial advis- ers in from other industries or backgrounds

Edward Jones’s Activity-SystemMap This map illustrates how activities at the brokerage Edward Jones connect to deliver competitive advantage. The firm’s customer value proposi- tion appears near the center of the map—in the “customer relationship” bubble—and the supporting activities hang off it. Only the major connections are shown.

TARGET CUSTOMER

HEADQUARTERS St. Louis home office for all activities

individual conservative

TECHNOLOGY satellite (historically)

delegates decisions

REGIONAL STRUCTURE no regional management

LOCATION rural

PRODUCT blue chips mutual funds

suburban strip mall

COMPENSATION each financial adviser is a profit center

PRICE one-time commission

CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP face-to-face convenient trusted financial adviser

ONE FINANCIAL ADVISER PER OFFICE advisers run their own offices

BRANCH SUPPORT branch-office assistant

MARKETING local mailings knocking on doors

VALUES & CULTURE volunteerism mentoring

OWNERSHIP partnership, not public

INVESTMENT PHILOSOPHY long-term buy and hold

BROKER TYPE entrepreneur

HIRE & TRAIN hire from outside industry internally train all financial advisers

member of community

harvard business review • april 2008

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