Marketing Strategy: Introduction
What is strategy? How does marketing contribute? - The marketing concept - Market orientation
Marketing Strategy: Introduction
What is strategy?
A fundamental pattern of present and planned objectives, resource deployments, and interactions of an organization with markets, competitors, and other environmental factors
the search for a favourable competitive position (Porter, 85)
Marketing Strategy: Introduction
Corporate strategy
-organizations scope and resource deployment
Business-level strategy
-competitive strategy of a business unit in its industry
Marketing strategy
-targeting, segmenting and positioning for a product. Figuring out the marketing mix
Marketing Strategy: Introduction
What is the marketing concept?
determining the needs and wants of target markets and delivering the desired satisfactions more effectively and efficiently than competitors do. (Kotler et al, 96)
Marketing Strategy: Introduction
What do marketers mean when they say their firms are market oriented?
Marketing Strategy: Introduction
What are advantages and disadvantages of market orientation?
Why do some firms lack orientation towards the market ?
Marketing Strategy: Introduction
Market oriented in not marketing oriented
- information on all important buying influences permeates every corporate function -Strategic/tactical decisions are made interfunctionally and inter-divisionally -divisions and functions make well-coordinated decisions and execute them with commitment
Marketing Strategy: Introduction
Which should come first the customer need or the product idea?
- Marketing myopia
Discussion questions
Q.1 : In defining their strategies, should companies pursue broadly or narrowly defined missions?
Q. 2: What are the advantages of each approach?
Characteristics of Effective Corporate Mission Statements
Broad
Functional Based on customer needs
Transportation business
Specific
Long-distance transportation for largevolume producers of lowvalue, low-density products
Railroad business Long-haul, coal carrying Physical railroad Based on existing products or technology
Ansoff Strategies
Current Markets
Current Products Market penetration strategy Market development strategy
New Products Product development strategy Diversification strategy
New Markets
The BCG Growth Share Matrix
High
Stars 5 4
Question marks 2 3 7 Dogs 12 13
0.1
Market growth rate 10% (in constant dollars)
6 Cash cows
11 10
9
Low 10
1 Relative market share
Source: Adapted from Barry Hedley, Strategy and the Business Portfolio, Long Range Planning 10 (February 1977).
Cash Flows Across Businesses in the BCG Portfolio Model
Growth rate (cash use) High
Stars
Cash Flows
Question marks
Low
Cash cows
Dogs
High
Relative market share
Low
Desired direction of business development
The GE Nine-Cell Matrix
Industry attractiveness High Medium Low High Medium Low
Businesss competitive position
1
2
2
3
3
3
1 Invest/grow 2 Selective investment/ maintain position 3 Harvest/divest