Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
Marketing and sales activities inform buyers about products and services, provide buyers
with a reason to purchase and can be a significant value-add when used effectively. Nike is a business widely acknowledged for its advertising prowess. In 1988, Nike’s ‘Just Do It’ campaign was launched – words that are still used and have great resonance today. At the time, Nike’s total sales were around the $800 million mark, but within a decade sales had surpassed $2 billion, and they were a world-leading company. Equally, great sales activities can add value in competitive markets. Those organisations able to integrate these two vital areas are likely to create (or ‘add’) a great deal of value in those areas. 5 Service includes all the activities required to keep the product or service working effec- tively for the buyer, after it is sold and delivered. This can involve training, return of goods policies, a consultation hotline and other facilities. Since customer satisfaction is central to achieving repeat sales and word-of-mouth communication from satisfied customers, after-sales service is clearly a major part of added value. The Ritz Carlton hotel chain is famous for excellent customer service, delivered in part through front-line employees empowered to make decisions that directly enhance customer satisfaction and experience. In support of the primary activities of the value chain, Porter (1985) also identified support activities. These are procurement, human resource development, technological Figure 5.5 The value chain and direct product costing Support activities Inbound logistics Direct product cost Allocated product cost Operations Outbound logistics Marketing and sales Service Added value *Procurement *Human resource development *Technical development *Infrastructure Primary activities 127 THE DIMENSIONS OF COMPETITOR ANALYSIS development and infrastructure. Each, of course, feeds into the stages of the primary activi- ties of the value chain. There are several ways in which analysis of the value chain can provide an insight into competitors: ● It can reveal cost advantages that competitors may have because of their efficient manu- facture, inbound or outbound logistics. It may also reveal why, with better marketing, sales and service, a company making intrinsically similar products may be achieving higher added value through its operations. ● Many conventionally orientated companies perceive operations as their primary source of added value and therefore leave opportunities for competitors that take a more extended view of the value they can add in the customers’ eyes. ● Where the value added is costed effectively, it can help locate economical ways of adding value to the customer. There are numerous ways of achieving this, such as: the efficient management of single sourcing and just-in-time inbound logistics; total quality being incorporated in the operations, thus reducing the service requirements and maybe adding to the appeal of the marketing and sales activity by offering extended warranties; well- targeted marketing and sales activities that ensure that maximum perceived added value is communicated to the customer while incurring lower marketing and sales activity than if blanket sales activity was attempted. A company’s assumptions about how costs are allocated across products, and elements of the value chain, can provide clear competitive guidelines. For instance, many compa- nies add most of their overheads to manufacturing operations where inputs can usually be measured. This occurs despite products having vastly different inbound logistics, outbound logistics, marketing, sales and service expenditures. The result can be that the final price of the products in the marketplace has little bearing on the overall inputs and the value chain. Similarly, where overheads are allocated equally across products, direct product pricing can show where some products are being forced to carry an excessive burden of overheads, thus allowing a competitor to enter the market and compete effectively on price. When a company is competing in many different markets, it is likely that allocated product costs are completely out of line with some of the markets in which it is competing, acting as an overall constraint upon its intention to support those products. IBM once encountered this problem in its PC marketing, where margins were incapable of carrying the allocated overheads coupled to its mainframe and mini-PC business, making it uncompetitive on price (there were also some quality issues at the time). This became particularly apparent with IBM’s misguided venture into the home computer market with the ‘Peanut’, launched with an inappropriate and uneconomical performance-to-price ratio, and also not helped by particularly strong competitors such as the Commodore 64 and an early Apple offer. 5.2.3 Assessing competitors’ capability profiles The previous discussion has highlighted what the competitor is seeking to achieve and what it may be doing now. Also critical, of course, are the degrees of freedom open to the competitor. What might it do in future? The assessment of a competitor’s resources involves looking at its strengths and weak- nesses. Whereas a competitor’s goals, assumptions and current strategy would influence the likelihood, time, nature and intensity of a competitor’s reactions, its resources, assets and capabilities will determine its ability to initiate and sustain moves in response to environmental or competitive changes (see Figure 5.6). Competitor resource profiles (see Section 5.1 on benchmarking) can be built in much the same way as a firm conducts an analysis of its own assets and capabilities. A useful starting point is to profile competitors against the key factors for success in the particular industry. Among these could be operational areas (such as research and engineering, or financial |
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