Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
CHAPTER 18 MARKETING IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
A small detail that has been deliberately omitted thus far, however, is the publication date of the report. . . 1994! It is comforting to know that the strategic issues faced by modern businesses are not totally new challenges, but it is perhaps the new and novel formats and contexts through which they present themselves that make the potentially negative impacts no smaller or less problematic. The broad trends listed have all continued, and in many ways accelerated in the 25-plus years since the report was published. The economic shocks and aftershocks of the recent global recession, coupled with increased concerns over climate change and sustainability, have served to drive companies to look increasingly at efficiency, and how costs can be reduced. At the macro-level, changes can be grouped into economic, technological, social, legal and political issues. Just as water supply companies cannot change weather patterns, most macro-environmental factors are outside the control of individual firms. Few companies have the ability to influence political, economic, social and technological processes signifi- cantly, but most need to try and understand and predict changes. Water companies need to predict both weather patterns (supply of water) and demand (water usage), so that they can then put strategies in place to meet that demand. A once very well-known company that failed to grasp the significance of crucial change in its market was Encyclopaedia Britannica (EB). EB went from peak profits to severe difficulties in the 1990s, as it failed to anticipate and appreciate the impact of technology (specifically the CD-ROM) on its business. The business had been built through a highly motivated and successful salesforce selling encyclopaedias to middle-class families (often bought by parents for their children’s education) at around $1,500 each. Then along came home computers, with CD-ROM players and encyclopaedias such as Encarta at around $50. The new entrants may not have had the depth of coverage of EB, but they were in a format children enjoyed using, offered the opportunities for multi- media display (video and audio clips and animations), could be more easily updated and, perhaps most crucially, offered middle-class parents a justification for the purchase of often expensive home computer systems, which in many cases were used primarily for games purposes! With the advent of the ‘information superhighway’, the World Wide Web/Internet and cloud storage, holding large amounts of data on individual PCs has, for many, become a thing of the past – posing potential problems (and of course opportunities) for marketers of CD-ROM-based encyclopaedias. In particular, the advent of open access, user-built encyclopaedias such as Wikipedia have significantly impacted on the CD-based products. Rapidly updated, and relying on users to submit, update and expand on the content, these are essentially free at the point of use (making their money out of advertising links), rapidly expanding in content and do not take up local storage space on hard disk or other media (see www.wikipedia.org). More recently, EB has made its encyclopaedia available online to subscribers (http://www.britannica.com/), recognising that a key advantage lies in its expert editorial staff. While Wikipedia relies on random contributors with minimal edito- rial control to check for accuracy, EB trades on its expert contributors and the constant updating available online. Similarly, Hoover and Electrolux suffered greatly from the overnight success of the Dyson bagless vacuum cleaner – both losing a great deal of market share to the innova- tion. However, an often-forgotten nuance of this story is that both were offered (prior to Dyson going to market with his own product) the rights to the new and innovative bagless technology. The issue was not that Hoover and Electrolux did not see the innovation com- ing, indeed they knew about it in advance, but rather they both had a vested interest in preserving the status quo. It is also easy to underestimate the practical realities of rapid accelerations in the speed and disruptive impact of change. For example, consider the unfolding impact of Internet telephony. While it took 50 years for the telephone to gain widespread diffusion, it took less than a decade for the mobile phone to do the same. It is expected that Internet telephony will 527 THE CHANGING COMPETITIVE ARENA reach critical mass in only a few years. Similarly, in the photography market, the disrup- tive and pervasive impact of digital technology demanded rapid transformation in business models by existing players such as Kodak. The failure of Kodak to understand the speed of change and rapid decline in demand for traditional cameras and film led to major financial losses, extensive lay-offs and plant closures for the company. No company can ever hope to predict every aspect of the macro-environment in which it operates, but organisations should aim to achieve profound understanding of their core markets (the micro level). There will always be surprises and shocks as new technological breakthroughs emerge, or political discontinuities occur. However, successful companies are able to identify what is important and respond to trends and changes more effectively than competitors. Shocks are less for those companies prepared to think the ‘unthinkable’ and to challenge the status quo in their strategising. Importantly, disruptive changes have the potential to make deep changes in the structure of a market, which may disadvantage existing competitors but offer important opportuni- ties to others. 18.1.2 Changes in markets A number of trends can be seen in modern markets that are likely to continue into the future (see Figure 18.1). First, customers are becoming increasingly demanding of the products and services they buy. Customers demand, and expect, reliable and durable products with quick, efficient service at reasonable prices. They also expect the products and services they buy to meet their needs. Different customers have different wants and needs, and hence companies have an opportunity to select segments where their offerings most closely align with those needs, and where they can focus activities to create competitive advantage. What is more, there is little long-term stability in customer demands. A relatively strong market position may be achieved through offering superior customer value, and yet without constant improvement value is likely to be eroded by competitive actions. A second major trend, and one that has particularly differentiated the early part of the twenty-first century, is that customers are less prepared to pay a substantial premium for products or services that do not offer demonstrably greater value – possibly exacerbated by very challenging global economic conditions. While it is undeniable that well-developed and well-managed brands can generally command higher prices than unbranded products in many markets, the differentials commanded are now much less than they were, and customers increasingly question the extra value they get for the extra expense incurred. Download 6.59 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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