Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
Underestimating the rate of change
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
Underestimating the rate of change
Even if a customer is willing and eager to offer a seller the status of a strategic supplier and is treated as a strategic account, with all the additional investment that this is likely to require, some sellers mistakenly believe that strategic relationships with these accounts will be stable and long term. The more likely truth is that as a seller’s own strategy changes, the importance of a particular supplier will change – possibly dramatically and quickly. As the recorded music business transformed to one based on Internet downloads instead of physical products, strategic suppliers became those with expertise in the new technology, not those offering CDs and support for the old technology. Indeed, supplier switching may increasingly be an explicit element of a company’s business strategy. In 2005, Apple announced it was teaming up with Intel to provide the components suitable for new generations of Apple products, effectively bringing an unexpected end to long-term supplier relationships with IBM and Freescale (formerly Motorola) (Morrison and Waters, 2005; Witzel, 2005a). Apple’s goal was to build on the momentum created by its iPod digital music player and to meet the lower prices demanded in the mass consumer market. Supplier switching may be an inevi- table consequence of strategic change. The reality is that the strategic supplier relationship for many suppliers will be tem- porary and transitory, as customers develop their own market strategies and adopt new technologies. This leaves the supplier investing heavily in the strategic account relationship, only to see that relationship disappear as the customer moves on. Custom- ers rarely offer recompense to a supplier to cover the costs of dismantling a redundant SAM system. Even more traumatic is the sudden collapse of a key account/strategic supplier rela- tionship. Changes in customer businesses may end relationships that had taken years to build: the key account is taken over and the acquiring company imposes its own supplier arrangements on the acquired business; there is a change in supply strategy from the top of the customer organisation – for example, the move from single sourcing to multiple sourc- ing; the customer learns technology and process from its strategic supplier, enabling it to 417 undertake production of the product in-house; or customer personnel move on and their replacements do not have a close relationship with the supplier and maybe do not want one. The collapse of a strategic account relationship will have a major negative impact on sales volume, which may not have been predicted. The end of a SAM relationship may impose additional and substantial costs – adjusting operations capacity to allow for short-term volume reduction, disentangling integrated systems, rebuilding processes previously shared with the key account, reallocating or removing personnel previously dedicated to the key account, or putting in place new arrangements to retain whatever residual business there may be in the account. The failure of a strategic account relationship may be very public and create additional vulnerability. If a company’s shares are written down because of the collapse of business with a strategic account, then the supplier becomes vulnerable to a predator – perhaps even the customer in question, who has the opportunity to in-source the product by buying the supplier, or possibly a competitor, or possibly a stalker from outside the sector. The point is that the cost of a failed key account relationship may not simply be losing the customer, it may be losing the company as well. Consider the experiences of Marconi in its strategic relationship with British Telecom. Marconi was the rump of the former GEC and through the 1990s focused heavily on invest- ment with dominant customers in the telecommunications sector. Marconi was one of British Telecom’s largest suppliers of network equipment for several decades. By 2004, BT represented a quarter of Marconi’s total sales – as much as the next nine customers put together. Notwithstanding being described as a ‘terrific partner’ by the chief executive of BT Wholesale, in 2005 Marconi was shut out of BT’s £10-billion ‘21st Century Network’ pro- ject. BT’s decision was based on price, not technology or relationships, and Marconi could not equal the prices of overseas competitors from eight countries, ranging from France to China. Under BT pressure, Marconi had even lowered prices to a level that would have represented substantial losses in its UK operation, but not enough to satisfy BT. With the loss of a quarter of its sales base, shares falling 60 per cent in value and substantial job losses in prospect, Marconi’s experience underlines the risks of over-reliance on one customer, and the critical error of believing that a customer would be a loyal partner. The loss of the BT business fundamentally weakened Marconi’s ability to compete globally in new areas such as Internet Protocol networks. Within months of the BT decision, it was clear that inves- tors were looking for Marconi to sell the business or merge to survive. Marconi’s Chinese joint venture partner, Huawei, gained two parts of the BT contract, and BT even hoped it would get access to Marconi’s technology through this lower-price channel. In 2006, the main Marconi business was sold to Ericsson, leaving Marconi only a smaller services busi- ness working on maintenance of legacy systems (Ashton, 2005; Brummer, 2005; Durman and Box, 2005; Grande, 2005). Download 6.59 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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