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11 NOVEMBER 2016
MARKETING DISCUSSION
Pick an industry. Classify firms according to the four different roles they might play: leader,
challenger, follower, or nicher. How would you characterize the nature of competition? Do the
firms follow the principles described in the chapter?
Suggested Response:
Student answers will differ according to the industries picked and the role the firms play in that
industry. All answers should contain some of the following:
Leaders: largest market share, leads on price changes, new-product introductions, distribution
coverage, and promotional intensity. Have products that generally hold a distinctive position in
the minds of the consumers.
Can use strategies that expand the total market demand: (new customers—market-penetration
strategies, new-market segment strategies, geographic-expansion strategies).
More usage (level of quantity or frequency of consumption).
Protect its current market share through good defensive action (position defense, flank defense,
preemptive defense, counteroffensive defense, mobile defense, contraction defense).
Challengers, followers: can attack the leader for increased market share, (challengers), or
followers (“not rock the boat”), through:
Frontal attack.
Encirclement attack.
Flank attack.
Bypass attack.
Guerrilla warfare.
Suggested Answer: Responsiveness, low cost structure, quick response to economic events. For
example, Samsung cut costs and reemphasized product quality and manufacturing flexibility,
which allowed its consumer electronics to go from project phase to store shelves within six
months. Samsung also invested heavily in innovation and focused intently on its memory-chip
business, and poured money into R&D during the 2000s. Samsung’s success has been driven not
only by successful product innovation, but also by aggressive brand building over the last
decade.
2. Samsung’s goal of $400 billion in sales by 2020 would bring it to the same level as
Walmart. Is this feasible? Why or why not?
Suggested Answer: Student’s answers will vary and of course be opinionated, however, good
students will note the following facts: Samsung ended 2009 with record-high quarterly profits
despite significantly smaller profit margins. Today, Samsung is the global leader in flat-panel
TVs and memory chips, and the number-two player in mobile phones. It is focused on growing
technologies such as smart phones and has partnered with both Microsoft’s Windows Mobile and
Google’s Android software. In addition, Samsung has formed a green partnership with Microsoft
to help create energy efficient computers. And unlike rival firms, Samsung has become a global
leader by making both components for electronics products and the actual devices sold to
consumers without acquiring major competitors.
1. Few companies have had such a long history of ups and downs as IBM. What were some
of the keys to its recent success? Can its plans to solve some of the world’s most
challenging problems succeed? Why or why not?
Suggested Answer: Student answers will be speculative and opinionated however, some of
IBM’s keys to its recent success: the company moved further away from hardware and embraced
global consulting and data analytics by acquiring close to 100 firms, including
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
2. Who are IBM’s biggest competitors today, and what risks do they face with their current
strategy?
Suggested Answer: Today, IBM is the largest and most profitable information technology
company in the world and as a result should consider Microsoft, Apple, Google, and other
information companies as competitors.
As for a risk with their current strategy, their targets are huge problems like pollution and
congestion. Success in tackling these problems would be considered low—but if they are
successful IBM could reap huge profits.
1. Growth
2. An important function of marketing is to drive growth in sales and revenue for a
company.
3. Growth Strategies
1. <CORE><OLINK>Grow by building your market share
2. Grow by developing committed customers and stakeholders
3. Grow by building a powerful brand
4. Grow by innovating new products, services, and experiences
5. Grow by international expansion
6. Grow by acquisitions, mergers, and alliances
7. Grow by building an outstanding reputation for social responsibility
8. Grow by partnering with government and NGOs
4. Growing the Core
1. Growing the core is focusing on a firm’s most successful existing products and
markets
2. Avoid the trap of thinking the “grass is always greener” and overestimating the
upside of new ventures that stretch the company into uncharted territory.
3. Growing the core can be a less risky alternative than expansion into new product
categories.
4. It strengthens a brand’s credentials as a source of authority and credibility and can
yield economies of scale.
5. Through improved revenues and lower costs, growing the core can also lead to
greater profits.
6. Three main strategies:
1. Make the core of the brand as distinctive as possible.
2. Drive distribution through both existing and new channels
1. Growth strategies are not necessarily “either/or” propositions. A focus on core businesses
does not mean foregoing new market opportunities.
1. More Usage</title><para><inst></inst>
1. Increase the amount, level, or frequency of consumption
2. Boost the <emphasis>amount</emphasis> through packaging or product redesign
Identify additional opportunities to use the brand in the same basic way
1. Identify completely new and different ways to use the brand </para>
Proactive firms are ready to take risks and make mistakes,</para></listitem> have a
vision of the future and of investing in it, have the capabilities to innovate, are flexible
and non-bureaucratic, and have many managers who think proactively
4. <section id="ch11lev3sec4"><title id="ch11lev3sec4.title">The aim of defensive
strategy is to reduce the probability of attack, divert attacks to less-threatened areas, and
lessen their intensity.
1. A leader would like to do anything it legally and ethically can to reduce
competitors’ ability to launch a new product, secure distribution, and gain
consumer awareness, trial, and repeat.
2. In any strategy, speed of response can make an important difference to profit.
Encirclement attack</title><para><inst></inst><emphasis>
1. Attempts to capture a wide slice of territory by launching a grand offensive on
several fronts.
2. Makes sense when the challenger commands superior resources. <listitem><inst>
Adapter—The adapter takes the leader’s products and adapts or improves them.
1. Counterfeiters duplicate the leader’s product and packages and sell them on the black
market or through disreputable dealers.
<para>Nichers have three tasks: creating niches, expanding niches, and protecting niches.
1. Early users will recall the pioneer’s brand name if the product satisfies them.
2. The pioneer’s brand also establishes the attributes the product class should possess
Customer inertia also plays a role, and there are producer advantages: economies of scale,
technological leadership, patents, ownership of scarce assets, and the ability to erect other
barriers to entry.
1. Pioneers can spend marketing dollars more effectively and enjoy higher rates of repeat
purchases.
1. Improves product quality and adds new features and improved styling.
2. Adds new models and flanker products (of different sizes, flavors, and so forth) to protect
the main product
1. In the first, sales growth starts to slow. There are no new distribution channels to fill.
New competitive forces emerge.
2. In the second phase, sales per capita flatten because of market saturation. Most potential
consumers have tried the product, and future sales depend on population growth and
replacement demand.
In the third phase, decaying maturity, the absolute level of sales starts to decline, and
customers begin switching to other products
1. This third phase poses the most challenges. The sales slowdown creates overcapacity in
the industry, which intensifies competition. Weaker competitors withdraw.
1. A few giants dominate—perhaps a quality leader, a service leader, and a cost
leader—and they profit mainly through high volume and lower costs.
2. Surrounding them is a multitude of market nichers, including market specialists,
product specialists, and customizing firms
3. The question is whether to struggle to become one of the big three and achieve
profits through high volume and low cost or to pursue a niching strategy and
profit through low volume and high margins. Sometimes the market will divide
into low- and high-end segments, and market shares of firms in the middle will
steadily erode.
1. Three ways to change the course for a brand are market, product, and marketing program
modifications
1. A company might try to expand the market for its mature brand by working with
the two factors that make up sales volume, number of brand users and usage rate
per customer
2. Managers also try to stimulate sales by improving quality, features, or style.
1. The first step is to cut R&D costs and plant and equipment investment.
2. The company might also reduce product quality, sales force size, marginal services, and
advertising expenditures, ideally without letting customers, competitors, and employees
know what is happening.
Harvesting is difficult to execute, yet many mature products warrant this strategy.
1. If the company can’t find any buyers, it must decide whether to liquidate the
brand quickly or slowly. It must also decide how much inventory and service to
maintain for past customers
2. Evidence for the Product Life-Cycle Concept
1. New consumer durables show a distinct takeoff, after which sales increase by
roughly 45 percent a year, but they also show a distinct slowdown, when sales
decline by roughly 15 percent a year
2. Slowdown occurs at 34 percent penetration on average, well before most
households own a new product
3. The growth stage lasts a little more than eight years and does not seem to shorten
over time
4. Informational cascades exist, meaning people are more likely to adopt over time if
others already have, instead of making careful product evaluations. One
implication is that product categories with large sales increases at takeoff tend to
have larger sales declines at slowdown
3. Critique of the Product Life-Cycle Concept
1. Life-cycle patterns are too variable in shape and duration to be generalized
2. Marketers can seldom tell what stage their product is in
4. Market Evolution
1. Affected by new needs, competitors, technology, channels, and other
developments and change product and brand positioning to keep pace
2. Like products, markets evolve through four stages: emergence, growth, maturity,
and decline.
1. Brands and sub-brands targeting the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum may be
particularly important during slow growth.
2. Slow times also are an opportunity to prune products with diminished prospects.
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