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Case Study

Public Sector Revenue Engineering

Case Type Tag: Revenue Growth | Public Sector | Behavioral Economics

Secured Tier-1 University contracts by shifting the negotiation from "Price per Lift" to "Sustainability Optics," utilizing behavioral economics to solve client pain points.

£2.1 M
New Annualised Revenue

Behavioural Architecture
& Strategic Market Capture

The London Universities Purchasing Consortium (LUPC) is a rigid, price-driven environment. To break in, I ignored the price war and engineered a "Psychological Aperture Strategy" at the London School of Economics—physically designing recycling bins with larger openings than general waste bins to subconsciously "nudge" user behavior.


At the University of Westminster, I implemented Logistical Bricolage, utilizing their existing internal mail delivery vans to backhaul cardboard to a central baling station. This turned empty return journeys into a logistics asset, creating a rebate stream that paid the client for waste they previously paid to remove.

  • Client:

    SUEZ Recycling & Recovery UK (FTSE 250) / London Universities

  • Client Snapshot:

     A global leader in environmental services facing aggressive low-cost competition in the UK public sector market.

  • The Landscape:

     The London Universities Purchasing Consortium (LUPC) was a "Red Ocean" environment. Competitors were fighting a "Race to the Bottom" on unit price, making margins razor-thin.

Constraints & Risks:
  • Regulatory: Strict EU/UK public procurement laws (OJEU).
  • Cultural: Academic institutions are risk-averse and slow to change.
  • Financial: Fixed budgets with no room for cost increases.
Key Stakeholders:

Directors of Estates, Heads of Sustainability (Dr. Nicola Hogan), Procurement Directors, Student Union Representatives.

The Core Challenge / Problem Statement:
  • Commoditisation

    Services were viewed as a utility; clients only cared about the lowest price.

  • The "Green Gap":

    Universities had aggressive sustainability targets but no budget to achieve them.

  • Locked Market:

    Incumbent providers held dominant positions via low-cost contracts.

Role & Scope:
Corporate Account Manager (London Region). Responsible for high-value tender acquisition and strategic retention.
The Strategy:

"Value Inversion." Stop selling "Waste Removal" (a cost) and start selling "Sustainability Optics" (value). Use Behavioral Economics to solve the client's reputational problems, making price secondary.

Solution Overview:
  • Psychological Aperture Design:

    Re-engineered bin lids at LSE so recycling apertures were physically larger than general waste, "nudging" users without signage.

  • Internal Logistics Bricolage:

    Utilized Westminster’s existing inter-campus mail vans to backhaul cardboard, removing the need for external trucks.

  • Rebate Engineering:

    Installed central balers to monetize the backhauled cardboard, creating a new revenue stream for the client.

The Commercial Win:

 Shifted the conversation from "Cost Savings" to "Revenue Generation" and "Carbon Reduction," making SUEZ the only viable strategic partner.

3 Key Results:
  • £2.1 Million in new annualised revenue executed within 9 months.

  • Secured Tier-1 Institutions: The University of Westminster & London School of Economics (LSE).

  • Market Lock-Out: Established 3-5 year contracts that competitors could not match on value.

Data Snapshot:
  • Revenue: £0 → £2.1m (Annualised).
  • Conversion Rate: 100% success rate on targeted tenders.
Why It Matters:

Proved that in a commoditised market, Intellectual Property (Nudge Theory) beats Price.

Bear’s Signature Contribution:
  • Insight

    Identifying that "Optics" mattered more to Directors than "Price."

  • Design:

    Creating the "Aperture Nudge" protocol.

  • Innovation:

    Spotting the empty mail vans and repurposing them (Bricolage).

Capabilities Demonstrated:
  • Strategic Bidding & Tender Management

  • Behavioral Capabilities Demonstrated:Economics Application

  • Complex Stakeholder Mapping

  • Revenue Growth Strategy

Transferable Lessons:
  • Don't Sell the Drill, Sell the Hole:

    Clients didn't want "bins"; they wanted "Sustainability Rankings."

  • Hidden Assets:

    Every business has "empty mail vans"—resources that are unutilised. Find them and monetize them.

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