Missed this on account of being in Melbourne for Agile Australia. This is me reviewing the lecture slides.
Decision tools
Tools to deliver higher-level strategies:
Problems with the PLC concept
Porter’s generic strategies
Porter has identified three generic strategies:
Market Research
Questionnaire Do’s and Don’ts
Sampling Plan
Proven SCAs:
Competitive strategies for a market leader
Decision tools
Tools to deliver higher-level strategies:
- Portfolio analysis
- Product life cycle concept
- Product portfolio models (BCG and McKinsey)
- Value Chain analysis
- Porter’s generic strategies
- Industry (motor cars)
- Category (sports cars)
- Brand (Porsche)
- Products have a limited life
- Products pass through distinct stages with different challenges and opportunities
- Profits rise and fall at different stages
- Products require different strategies in each life cycle stage
Problems with the PLC concept
- Lacks predictive and explanatory power.
- Can’t predict the length of time between stages.
- Hard to determine where a product is on the curve.
- Difficult to anticipate when changes will occur.
- Divergent patterns between industries.
- Competitors can affect the growth curve.
- "Stars" - Continue to increase market share, if necessary at the expense of short term earnings
- "Cash Cows" - Maintain share and leadership until further investment becomes marginal
- "Question Marks" - Assess chances of dominating market segments: if good, go after share: if bad, redefine business or withdraw
- "Dogs" - Plan an orderly withdrawal so as to maximise cash flow
Porter’s generic strategies
Porter has identified three generic strategies:
- Overall cost leadership: making units of a fairly standardised product and under-pricing everybody else
- Differentiation: turning out something which the customers perceives as unique
- Focus: concentrating on a particular group of customers, geographic market, channel of distribution, or distinct segment of the product line
Market Research
- Define the problem
- Specify decision alternatives
- State research objectives
- Qualitative (exploratory)
- Quantitative (descriptive)
- Autonomic measures (eye cameras, ECG, sweat tests, neuromarketing, micri-expressions)
Questionnaire Do’s and Don’ts
- Ensure questions are free of bias
- Make questions simple
- Make questions specific
- Avoid jargon
- Avoid sophisticated words
- Avoid ambiguous words
- Avoid negatives
- Avoid hypotheticals
- Avoid words that could be misheard
- Use response bands
- Use mutually exclusive categories
- Allow for “other” in fixed response questions
Sampling Plan
- Sampling unit: Who is to be surveyed?
- Sample size: How many people should be surveyed?
- Sampling procedure: How should the respondents be chosen?
- Competitive advantage (Porter 1990) is when an organisation develops/acquires a combination of attributes that enables it to outperform its competitors, in an area of importance to its customers.
- There must be a reason why a customer does business with your organization, rather than your competitors.
- Marketing is about generating competitive advantages – reasons for customers to do business with you. It is also about taking competitors’ advantages away.
- real (capability gap)
- rare
- valuable (positively influence customers’ decisions)
- hard to duplicate
- enduring over time
- conscious or subconscious
Proven SCAs:
- Brand/reputation/image
- Understanding customers better
- Relationships with customers
- Organisational culture
- Intellectual properties (e.g. trademarks, logos)
- Location
- Distribution channel relationships & structure
- Relationships with suppliers (e.g. contracts, loyalty)
- Responsiveness to change and opportunities
- Niche markets
- Think about your own organization…
- What sustainable competitive advantages does it have?
- Which of its SCAs are most important?
- What must they do to sustain these SCAs over time?
- Think about your organization’s key competitor(s)…
- What competitive advantages does it have?
- Which of these competitive advantages are sustainable, and which have the potential to be eliminated?
- Identify all possible competitors
- Direct (immediate competition)
- Who is in your strategic group (similar strategies in similar markets)?
- Positioning maps help identify them and indicate perceived proximity
- Indirect (product substitutes)
- Any entity that can deliver the same fundamental value to the customer
- Understanding what customers do and don’t value is key.
- Direct (immediate competition)
- Rate all possible competitors as threats to your ongoing performance
- Profile/analyse the most threatening competitors
- Benchmark
- Select competitors to attack and to avoid.
- Current market performance
- Competitive position
- – Markets they compete in
- – How they compete
- Corporate and marketing objectives and strategies
- Likely future goals and strategies
- Likely reactions to competitive moves.
- Strengths and weaknesses
- Capabilities and vulnerabilities
- Promotional activity
- – Key messages
- – Ad spend
- First read the Code of Ethics from the Society of Competitive Intelligence Professionals (SCIP):
Competitive strategies for a market leader
- Increase market share
- Defend market share
- Preemptive attack
- Position defense
- Counterattacks
- Flank defense
- Mobile defense
- Contraction defense
- Expand the market
- Finding new users
- Creating new uses
- Encouraging more usage
- Counterfeiter
- Cloner
- Imitator
- Adapter
- Little Creatures Pale Ale
- Green & Black's Organic Chocolate
- Define the strategic objectives
- Define your opponents
- Choose a general attack strategy
- Choose a specific attack strategy
- Frontal attack: Virgin Cola declares war on Coke and Pepsi!
- Encirclement attack from Seiko
- Bypass strategy: Pepsi buys Gatorade
- Guerilla warfare from McDonald’s "You start with an ad campaign, making creative use of the competitor's identity, along with the line 'It just tastes better'…
- Price
- Product
- – Product innovation
- – Lower-priced goods
- – Value-priced goods
- – Prestige goods
- – Product proliferation
- – Manufacturing-cost reduction
- Place
- – Distribution innovation
- – Reduced delivery times
- Promotional intensity
- Service improvements