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How Rolls-Royce, AWS, and HubSpot Turned Service Into the Product

Rolls-Royce, AWS, and HubSpot each made a structural decision to embed the service experience into the product itself. When a customer stops evaluating specifications and starts evaluating the certainty of their own success, the competitive dynamic changes fundamentally.
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How Rolls-Royce, AWS, and HubSpot Turned Service Into the Product

The most defensible competitive positions in any market are not built on features. They are built on the experience of success that the customer has while using those features. Rolls-Royce, AWS, and HubSpot each made a structural decision to embed the service experience into the product itself — and that decision became their primary competitive moat.


When a customer stops evaluating technical specifications and starts evaluating the certainty of their own success, the competitive dynamic changes fundamentally. The question is no longer which product has the better feature set. It is which organization will make sure the outcome is achieved.

Rolls-Royce: Power by the Hour

Rolls-Royce does not just sell jet engines. It sells operational availability. The Power by the Hour model means that if the engine is not running, Rolls-Royce is not paid. This alignment of incentives transforms the service relationship from reactive to proactive. Rolls-Royce is financially motivated to ensure the engine performs, which means their service infrastructure is built around preventing failure rather than responding to it.

The structural shift

When the service contract is structured around outcomes rather than inputs, the vendor’s interest and the customer’s interest become identical. The service is not a support function. It is the product.

AWS: The Solution Architect as Product Feature

Amazon Web Services embeds Solutions Architects into enterprise accounts. These are not sales support resources. They are technical partners who understand the customer’s infrastructure as well as the customer does, and who are responsible for ensuring the architecture performs. The customer does not buy cloud infrastructure. They buy the certainty that their cloud infrastructure will work.

The Solutions Architect makes switching to a competitor not just technically difficult but strategically risky. The relationship, the institutional knowledge, and the embedded expertise are not features that can be replicated by a competitor’s spec sheet. They are a moat built through consistent service delivery over time.

HubSpot: The Academy as Retention Engine

HubSpot embeds an Academy into its product — a structured certification program that teaches customers how to use the platform at a progressively advanced level. The customer does not just learn to use HubSpot. They build their professional identity around HubSpot expertise. Switching tools means abandoning a credential.

Service as Cost Center

Support exists to resolve problems when they arise. The customer’s success is their responsibility. The vendor’s obligation ends at delivery.

Service as Product Feature

Success infrastructure is embedded into the product. The vendor’s commercial interest is aligned with the customer’s operational success. The service relationship creates switching costs that the feature set alone does not.

The Principle for Any Organization

The size of the organization is not the variable. The structural decision is: does the customer experience success because of the product alone, or because of the product plus the service infrastructure wrapped around it? Organizations that answer this question correctly build moats that competitors cannot replicate through feature development alone.

The takeaway

A great product with great service is not easily replaced. That combination becomes the moat. The customer stops evaluating technical specifications and starts buying the certainty of their own success.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Power by the Hour model?
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Power by the Hour is Rolls-Royce’s service model for jet engines, where the customer pays based on operational availability rather than a fixed purchase price. If the engine is not running, Rolls-Royce is not paid. This aligns the vendor’s commercial incentive with the customer’s operational success.
How does AWS use Solutions Architects as a competitive moat?
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Solutions Architects are embedded in enterprise accounts as technical partners. They build institutional knowledge of the customer’s infrastructure over time. This knowledge, and the relationship it represents, cannot be replicated by a competitor’s feature list. Switching vendors means losing the embedded expertise, not just changing a software provider.
How does HubSpot’s Academy create switching costs?
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HubSpot Academy certifies customers in platform usage. Over time, users build professional credentials around HubSpot expertise. Switching to a competitor means abandoning a certification, a professional identity, and accumulated knowledge. The Academy transforms a software subscription into a career asset.
How does service-as-product apply to smaller organizations?
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The scale differs but the principle does not. Any organization that embeds structured success support into its product delivery — consistent follow-up, proactive problem identification, knowledge transfer — creates a relationship that the feature set alone does not. The moat is built through service quality over time, not through technology alone.
What is the difference between service as a cost center and service as a product feature?
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Service as a cost center exists to resolve problems reactively. Service as a product feature is embedded proactively into the customer’s success architecture. In the former, the customer’s success is their own responsibility. In the latter, the vendor’s commercial interest is aligned with the customer’s operational outcome.

 


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Daniel Suky

Founder, Elevate Labs | We help executives to lead RevOps and GTM Operations.

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