Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook


Download 6.59 Mb.
Pdf ko'rish
bet265/576
Sana15.08.2023
Hajmi6.59 Mb.
#1667229
1   ...   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   ...   576
Bog'liq
hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit

Company change. As companies evolve, their views about market attractiveness may 
develop. In the Virgin example given, these criteria may describe the company’s view of 
how it is developing; they do not describe how it has invested in markets in the past.
● 
Markets change. The attractiveness of a market can alter dramatically. Matthew Clark, 
the UK drinks group, reported at the end of 1996 that sales of Diamond White and K 
Ciders had dropped 40 per cent, with declining profits following. The reason was a 
switch by young drinkers to alcopops such as Bass’s ‘Hooch’ brand of alcoholic lemon-
ade. Disparaged by the industry experts, a year after launch alcopops were selling 100 
million litres a year. Nevertheless, ten years later and the cider market was experiencing 
another boom with a 23 per cent increase in sales in 2006 alone (growth that is continuing 
to date, albeit at a slower pace). Dubbed the ‘Magners Effect’ (the brand grew by 225 
per cent in 2006), this was attributed to a ‘step change in consumer attitudes’ (National 


243
DETERMINING MARKET SEGMENT ATTRACTIVENESS
Association of Cider Makers). The boom in cider sales became global partly due to the 
absence of gluten in the drink and increased awareness of gluten-intolerance. The growth 
of cider sales has now flattened, while gin has replaced it in experiencing a boom as 
drinking habits change again, this time driven by millennials. At the end of 2017, Britain 
alone could count 315 gin distilleries (up from 116 in 2010).
● 
Competitors change. The UK market for household vacuum cleaners had been dominated 
by Hoover and Electrolux since the 1950s, with very conventional technology. James 
Dyson offered his new product, ‘the world’s first bag-less vacuum cleaner’, to the existing 
players and was laughed at. After many difficulties he launched his own product – with 
unknown technology and a high price. He sold £3 million worth of vacuum cleaners 
in the first year and has tripled sales every 12 months. Hoover’s share of the upright 
vacuum cleaner market halved, and in 1995 in the high-margin market for cleaners priced 
over £180 Dyson took 58 per cent of the market, compared with Hoover’s 14 per cent. 
The attractiveness of markets, and segments within them, can change dramatically: in 
2015 Dyson launched its first cordless handheld vacuum cleaner, and as soon as late 2018 
announced it had stopped developing its corded vacuum cleaners as the new technology 
had supplanted the traditional one. Dyson has also developed a robotic vacuum cleaner 
to tap into this fastest growing vacuum cleaner category. This segment was forecast to 
grow by 14 per cent between 2016 and 2021.
● 

Download 6.59 Mb.

Do'stlaringiz bilan baham:
1   ...   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   ...   576




Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling