Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
CHAPTER 12 COMPETING THROUGH INNOVATION
The broader implications are interesting. A number of influential global companies, such as General Electric and Procter & Gamble, are adopting strategies of ‘reverse innova- tion’ – that is, turning products created for the emerging markets into low-cost products for developed world customers (Govindarajan and Trimble, 2012). The new approach is also known as ‘trickle-up innovation’. GE, for example, has created a portable ultrasound busi- ness, stemming from products originally designed for China, which has achieved growth rates of 50–60 per cent a year in its early stages (BusinessWeek, 2009). In another example, consumer goods company Nestlé is bringing sales and packaging techniques pioneered in emerging markets to improve its position in problematic markets in Europe. Marketing innovations developed in countries such as Thailand and Russia are being applied in stressed European markets including Greece, Spain and Ireland, to famil- iarise less affluent consumers with Nestlé brands. Innovations include smaller packs of Nescafé instant coffee and ‘refill’ coffee packs, and Maggi soup powders sold in individual units (Simonian, 2010). It is clear that emerging markets are not only providing multinationals with faster growth prospects, but also new products, services, manufacturing methods and business processes. For example, Pulpy is a drink developed by Coca-Cola’s Chinese offshoot, which is being launched in eastern Europe after a successful entry to Latin American markets. Similarly, Levi Strauss, makers of Levi’s jeans, has brought its Denizen brand of jeans, nurtured in China, back to its home US market. A mobile payment system that has revolutionised busi- ness and banking in sub-Saharan Africa is being brought to Europe by Vodafone. These are examples of emerging markets spawning new products with global potential. While once business solutions flowed only from the West to the East, they are now flowing from East to West as well (Wagstyl, 2011). The underlying point is that the model that companies such as GE have followed in the past – developing high-end products for the home market and adapting them for export – does not work as growth slows in the developed markets. The goal is to develop products in markets such as China and India, and then distribute them globally to tap into value-based segments across the world (Immelt et al., 2009). Indeed, some argue that the real revolution in business is doing more with less. For example, Radjou and Prabhu make a compelling case for ‘frugal innovation’, learning from the emerging markets where engineers move away from plentiful resources in a rich market to constrained resources and value-hungry customers (Radjou and Prabhu, 2015). When Renault found its expensive cars were outsold in India by the $6,000 locally produced Lada, they created the no-frills $6,000 Logan. Designed for India but now selling well in Europe, Renault developed a line of low-cost vehicles that today constitutes nearly half its global sales. A similar view is adopted by Charles Leadbeater in his work on ‘shoestring innova- tion’, emphasising reuse and recycling in low-cost innovation (Leadbeater, 2014). Frugal innovation has produced ultra-cheap laptops, mobile phones, refrigerators and even ECG machines (Coy, 2015). Radjou and his co-authors use the Hindi word jugaad to describe the approach of entre- preneurs in India and other emerging markets, where innovation is driven by finding oppor- tunities in scarcity and developing smart ways to make more from less. They argue that businesses in the richer Western world have lost their innovation edge and executives should study and learn from jugaad innovation. The focus should be on simplicity, not endless new product features (Radjou et al., 2012). The globalisation of innovation suggests new approaches and models from which to learn. Certainly, it is likely that radical innovation will lie at the heart of strategic thinking in many companies, and the new context is global. Indeed, as we noted earlier, the most important innovations may be in how we change the ways in which we work, organise and manage (Mol and Birkinshaw, 2007) – the issue is not just a new product, but a new business model. We turn attention now to the innovation process – or new product development – within a company. 337 NEW PRODUCTS 12.2 New products Studies that compare new product successes with failures are consistent in their observa- tions of the key factors that influence a new product’s success in the marketplace. Getting to grips with these factors helps executives to understand successful product innovation. For example, one interesting method of categorising the new products that firms produce is as follows: ● Download 6.59 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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