Every successful organization competes by creating value. Customers purchase products and services because they believe those offerings provide benefits that justify the price paid. At the same time, businesses seek to generate profits, growth, and long-term sustainability from the value they create. The bridge between customer satisfaction and organizational success is formed by value drivers. Value drivers are the factors that influence how value is created, perceived, delivered, captured, and expanded. They represent the strategic mechanisms that transform resources, capabilities, technologies, and relationships into meaningful outcomes for both customers and organizations. A valuable competitive position is achieved when a company creates superior value for customers while simultaneously generating superior economic returns for itself. This balance cannot be accomplished through isolated activities. Instead, it emerges from the effective management of two interconnected domains of...
The concept of return lies at the heart of every financial, strategic, and investment decision. Whether an entrepreneur invests in a startup, a multinational corporation builds a new manufacturing facility, a government finances infrastructure, or an individual purchases shares in a company, the underlying question remains the same: What return will this investment generate? Although the word return appears simple, it carries different meanings across disciplines. Economists, accountants, investors, financial analysts, lenders, corporate executives, and policymakers often use the same term while referring to different measurements. This difference is not merely academic; it has profound implications for investment decisions, business valuation, corporate performance evaluation, strategic planning, and capital allocation. Two of the most widely recognized measures of return are the Internal Rate of Return (IRR) and the Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) . While both aim to evaluate ...