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How platforms are transforming customer information management

Merlin Stone (Department of Management and Social Sciences, St Mary’s University, London, UK)
Eleni Aravopoulou (Department of Management and Social Sciences, St Mary’s University, London, UK)
Gherardo Gerardi (Department of Management and Social Sciences, St Mary’s University, London, UK)
Emanuela Todeva (Department of Management and Social Sciences, St Mary’s University, London, UK)
Luisa Weinzierl (Department of Management and Social Sciences, St Mary’s University, London, UK)
Paul Laughlin (Laughlin Consultancy, Newport, UK)
Ryan Stott (IDC, London, UK)

The Bottom Line

ISSN: 0888-045X

Article publication date: 13 November 2017

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to explain how ecosystems and platforms have evolved to manage customer information and to identify the management, research and teaching implications of this evolution.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper is based on research and industrial experience of two of the co-authors in customer relationship management, further developed with other co-authors in the field of business models, the research and teaching experience of the university authors and cross-functional literature reviews in the areas of strategy, marketing, economics, organizational behaviour and information management.

Findings

This paper shows that digitalization, cloud computing and new information-based platforms are beginning to change how customer information is being managed, creating new opportunities for improving marketing, customer relationship management and business strategy.

Research limitations/implications

The impact of platforms on the management of customer information needs to be confirmed by primary empirical research.

Practical implications

This paper identifies the need for senior marketing management to examine closely how internal and external/public customer information platforms may enhance their capability for managing customers and setting new strategic directions.

Social implications

The emergence of giant multi-sided platforms has clear implications for data protection and privacy, which need to be explored more in research.

Originality/value

This paper highlights the move to customer information platforms and identifies how senior managers should consider them as an option for better customer information management and as a basis for new business strategies.

Keywords

Citation

Stone, M., Aravopoulou, E., Gerardi, G., Todeva, E., Weinzierl, L., Laughlin, P. and Stott, R. (2017), "How platforms are transforming customer information management", The Bottom Line, Vol. 30 No. 3, pp. 216-235. https://doi.org/10.1108/BL-08-2017-0024

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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