Literature - Marketing Strategy
Literature - Marketing Strategy
Literature - Marketing Strategy
Michael Porter states that strategy is about the means or ways (steps) of
attaining goals and not their specification. He also indicates that strategy is
one element in a four-part structure. According to Porter, those four part
structures are: (a) what are the goals to be attained? (b) How will the
resources be deployed? (c) The tactics; i.e. the ways in which resources that
have been deployed are actually used or employed and (d) are the resources
(means) themselves available and at our disposal? Both strategy and tactics
bridge the gap between goals and means. In business, as in the military,
strategy bridges the gap between policy and tactics. It is the creation of a
unique and valuable position, involving a different set of activities.
Meaning strategy is about competitive position, about differentiating
Yourself in the eyes of the customer, about adding value through a mix of
activities different from those used by competitors. (Michael Porter, 1996)
TACTICS
Corporate strategy: Strategy at this level attempts to bring together all the
business lines of a company and point them toward an overall goal. It is
mainly concerned with defining the set of businesses that should form the
companys overall profile. [6]
Each functional area of a business (e.g. marketing) makes its own unique
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How to compete; that is, it requires a means for competing (for example,
introducing a new product to meet a customers need or establishing a new
position for an existing product).
When to compete; that is, it requires timing of market entry (for example,
being first in the market or waiting until primary demand is established).