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Structure

Structure

Product-Unit Dimensions

Every Product-Unit must be defined across five dimensions:

1. Product-Unit (Identity)

A discrete commercial object that can be referenced in pricing, contracts, channel activities, and customer interactions.

Characteristics:

  • Clearly identified and uniquely named
  • Can appear alone or as part of a bundle
  • Must be traceable through the operational workflow

2. Product-Unit Value

Defines why this unit exists commercially.

Includes:

  • Customer-perceived value
  • Business commitments
  • Risk exposure
  • Expected lifecycle contribution (revenue / cost / retention)

3. Product-Unit Context

Defines the dependencies required for a Product-Unit to function.

Examples:

  • A swap credit only has meaning if a valid battery subscription exists
  • An installation service requires a physical device as context
  • A subscription requires an app onboarding context

4. Product-Unit Obligations

Defines operational duties the company must fulfill when the Product-Unit is sold.

Examples:

  • Warranty terms
  • Service response time
  • Charger maintenance
  • App support
  • Battery replacement guarantees

5. Product-Unit Costs

Defines all costs directly mapped to obligations and value delivery.

Categories:

  • Capital cost
  • Operating cost
  • Logistics & deployment
  • Customer support
  • Depreciation & lifecycle management