Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Information and reporting
- Decision-making processes
- Corporate capabilities
- Operational systems
Corporate culture: In some circumstances, customer-benefit segmentation is unaccep-
table to people inside an organisation, because it is not how they understand the world. Organisations dominated by strong professional groups frequently have struggles with customer-benefit segments – examples are traditional financial service companies and professional service firms such as law and accountancy. ● Information and reporting: Novel segmentation schemes may not fit with existing infor- mation systems and reporting systems. This may mean it is difficult to evaluate the worth of segment targets, or to allocate responsibilities and monitor performance in doing business with them. ● Decision-making processes: If segmentation schemes identify new market targets that are not recognised in plans (they are not currently part of the served market, they are spread across existing segment targets for which responsibility has been allocated, or they are subsumed within an existing segment), then they may be ignored in the planning process and when plans are implemented. Similarly, segment targets that are not recognised by existing resource allocation processes may face difficulty in getting a marketing budget. We should examine carefully how a new segmentation approach can be integrated with planning and budgeting and in evaluation systems. ● Corporate capabilities: It is all too easy for marketing researchers and analysts to develop attractive market targets, but a company may have little basis for achieving a competitive advantage simply because it lacks the capabilities for dealing with this type of customer (see Chapter 6). ● Operational systems: Segmentation strategy may fail because it underestimates the prob- lems faced at the operational level in translating segmentation strategy into effective real- ity. Can salespeople deal with this target customer? Do we have access to the distribution channels we need? Do we have the expertise to develop and operate segment-based advertising and promotion? Do we have market research organised around the segment targets so that we can identify them, measure opportunities and evaluate progress? Do we have the technical facilities to price differently to different customer types if this is required? We should look very carefully at the operational capabilities we have in sales, advertising, promotion and distribution, and question their ability to adapt to a new segmentation-based strategy. Many of these issues are covert and hidden inside the organisation, yet to ignore them is to place the strategy at risk. One proposal is that in addition to the conventional evalua- tion of market targets, each potential target should be tested for internal compatibility, as suggested in Figure 7.6. |
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