Why I Keep Coming Back to the Si2 Service Leaders Network Summit

Why does Martina Krengel from Georg Sahm keep coming back to the Si2 Summit? She says that Si2 has created a trusted environment for open, honest discussions with peers facing similar challenges. I gained practical, immediately applicable insights, valuable connections, and fresh perspectives from real-world experiences. The strong sense of community, shared learning, and collaborative problem-solving help’s me as a leader to improve faster and create greater value.
Implementing Total Cost of Ownership (TCO): A SMART Strategy for Service Growth

For many industrial OEMs and technology providers, the greatest growth opportunity is often hidden in plain sight.
Most manufacturers can tell you exactly what it costs to build their equipment. They know their material costs, production overheads, warranty reserves, and sales margins. Yet when asked a much more important question — what does it actually cost your customer to own and operate your equipment over its lifetime? — the answers are often surprisingly vague, incomplete, or entirely absent.
This gap in understanding matters enormously.
At Si2-Group, we have observed this repeatedly across industrial sectors ranging from Equipment Manufacturers to components, to heavy vehicles, aerospace, energy systems, as well as larger assets such as building infrastructure. The businesses that consistently outperform their competitors are not necessarily those with the best products. They are the businesses that deeply understand their customers’ Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and use that understanding to shape their service strategy, innovation roadmap, commercial model, and operational priorities.
The most successful industrial organisations do not simply sell products. They help customers improve profitability!
They understand where the real cost drivers sit inside the customer’s operation and identify the hidden risks and inefficiencies that damage profitability. They develop services that reduce those costs and risks and crucially, they communicate this value in a way that resonates commercially and emotionally with decision makers.
This is where TCO becomes strategically powerful.
Unfortunately, many organisations still treat TCO as a narrow procurement calculation focused on acquisition cost, maintenance expense, and lifecycle accounting. While these elements are important, this approach alone misses the broader strategic value of TCO thinking.
Used correctly, TCO is not simply a finance tool, it is a TOOL FOR GROWTH!
Textron Fastening Systems: From Product Supplier to Full Service Innovator

Si2’s Nick Frank first cut his teeth in driving Service Change with a major component manufacturer in the early 2000’s. This case study perfectly illustrates the advisory skill and deep knowledge that all Si2’s partners have acquired. We help make change happen faster, not just talking about it.