Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
Inside–outside venture approaches fit both big and small/medium-sized firms. Smaller
firms with the advantages of advanced technology, flexibility, vigour and/or entrepre- neurial flair could team up with larger firms with the capital, distribution network and marketing muscle to gain market entry. The big firm gains through achieving entry into promising technologies that were too risky and ill-fitted to their mainstream business (the alliances between pharmaceuticals and biotechnology firms are a case in point). The more radical the new product project (which means higher risk), the greater the need for project focus and its protection from current departmental and operational influences and constraints. The functional and taskforce options are therefore appropriate for low- risk, incremental product innovations (such as improvements, repositionings, new sizes, etc., involving present product lines). A project team–functional matrix is most suitable for marginally riskier projects, involving expansion in the number of product lines. Venture teams, spin-outs and inside–outside venture options are for radical, high-risk projects where internal constraints and opposition are expected to be very high. The proposed radical structures help large firms capture the benefits of a small firm. Ironically, the idea that ‘small is good’ stems from the observation that large, innovative firms work in non-bureaucratic, smaller settings. They try to gain the advantages of being small. But, of course, size is not a determinant of innovation success. Many new products introduced by small firms fail because they should never have come about – it may be that they were badly conceived, they failed to meet market needs, or that the company lacked the marketing skills required to prise open new markets. Summary In this chapter we approach innovation at two levels: strategic innovation issues and the mechanics of new product development processes. Innovation strategy is driven by the goal of creating the innovative company and achieving real value innovation that drives effective strategy and positioning in a market. Issues exam- ined include: the link between innovation patterns and fundamental change in an industry; the creation of new business models to drive effective value innovation; the impact of radical and disruptive innovation on competitive patterns; the possibilities for proactive cannibalisation strategies; and the creation of innovation networks, often on a global basis, to encompass collaborative and open source innovation. We then turned attention to the product development process in companies. Importantly, we saw that product innovation is not a one-off activity. A successful, profitable innovation can see a firm through for a while, but long-run survival depends on new products to balance its future portfolio ( Chapter 2 ), replace declining products and cater for new customer needs. Many businesses are caught out because management has failed to use the profits from current innovations to develop more innovations for future markets. Today’s breadwinners will eventually dry up as competitive forces intensify over the product’s life cycle. New products – tomorrow’s breadwinners – are necessary to maintain the firm’s position in the marketplace. One win is insufficient; multiple wins are necessary for corporate longevity. Summary |
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