A. Introduction / Overview: BUS 1010 - GROUP 8
A. Introduction / Overview: BUS 1010 - GROUP 8
A. Introduction / Overview: BUS 1010 - GROUP 8
A. INTRODUCTION / OVERVIEW
In order to determine the marketing strategies for Mama Mia Milk Company to be incorporated in
Nairobi, Kenya, as the owners of the prospecting company we would primarily employ the services of a
consumer market surveyor and a marketing manager with the following qualification and to provide
guidance/leads:
Your behavior and operation can be a real competitive advantage and the rise of information
technology has made good behavior more important because it has become increasingly hard
to hide bad behavior.
Therefore, the only way to enjoy a good reputation is to earn it by operating with integrity as
one is constantly on candid camera.
Globalization has made it increasingly difficult for companies to differentiate themselves
based on their products or services alone as chances are that someone on the other side of the
world can copy and sell it for less money (generic companies). If money is the only bond
between you and your employees, they will quit the moment another firm offers them more
cash. All the more important then for companies to compete at the level of behaviors:
crucially, how they treat customers and employees-it’s about who has the most trust in their
relationships and where most people want to work. This will be the soft currency of the 21st
century.
By doing the right things you create a brand that lasts forever rather than a few years!
(Maxwell, 2010).
1.2 Re-governing Markets In Kenya-Trends in growth of modern retail and wholesale chains
and related agribusiness. Key points:
Market changes taking place in subsectors of the dairy industry
Key drivers of market changes are consumer “pull”, policy “push”, urbanization, commercial
opportunity, food standards, foreign investment, tourism, changing urban habits, environmental
awareness and social welfare.
Key demands and issues of the dynamic markets are consistent supply, quality standards, freshness,
hygiene, quantity, variety, reliability, traceability, safety, sanitary and phytosanitary standards and
maximum residue levels.
The standards set by local private sector and the international markets are more or less the same, an
indication that the formally clear distinction between the local and export markets is becoming
blurred/slim.
High value markets tend to procure from medium or large-scale farmers or from organized small-scale
farmers thereby minimizing transaction costs.
For small-scale dairy farmers to meet the conditions of high value dynamic markets, they require
technology, financial capital, human capital and organization.
1. Qualification
2. EDUCATION
MBA/B.Com/Bus.-Marketing.
3. COMPETENCIES
Demonstrate excellent understanding of the dairy industry in Kenya, the region and globally.
Excellent negotiation, interpersonal and communication skills.
Team leader and player.
Computer literate.
Production stands at 3.1 billion litres per annum; sufficient for domestic consumption but
more required for the export market. Kenya has an estimated cattle population of 13 million
(mainly grade cows 3.3 million and 9.7 million beef).
Kenyan dairy industry based mostly on smallholder milk production. 600,000 smallholders
produce some 70% of the country’s marketed milk, approximately 56% of this milk is sold
raw in the unregulated informal market leading to public concerns about hygiene and safety).
KDB states the dairy sub sector has grown at a record 179 per cent in the past five years.
The total inbuilt capacity of Kenyan processors is estimated at 2.5 million litres per day.
Currently high raw milk yield leading to wastage due to alleged under-processing from lack of
technological facilities by existing processors.
The Kenyan market wants milk of appropriate quality that includes taste, appearance, hygiene and
solids. Most of Kenya’s dietary appreciation is that an edible must taste well i.e. sugary or salty.
Competitive situation:
The major competitors are New Kenya Co-operative Creameries Ltd., Brookside Dairy, Tuzo,
Fresha, Eldoville, Limuru Milk, Bio, etc.) and their size, market share, types of products and
product quality, distribution, etc.
Fresh Milk (Low Fat Milk, Standardized and Full Cream); Powder milk; Ultra Heat
Treatment (UHT); Sour milk; Yoghurt-flavored/sugar; unflavored/diabetic; Milk shake; Ice
Cream; Whipped Cream; Ghee; Butter; and Cheese.
Distribution channels:
See Figure 1 for the different marketing channels for milk and milk products in Kenya.
Quality:
Licensed informal milk traders pay an annual licence fee ranging from KShs.1,000 to KShs.
5,000.
Kenya Bureau of Standards is the statutory body charged with enforcement of standards and
certification of quality standards of all products and services in Kenya. Mama Mia should
ensure they target ISO-certification.
-Through the main regulatory body, Kenya Dairy Board established under the Dairy Industry
Act., Cap 336 of the Laws of Kenya. KDB’s main functions are the enforcement of national
standards for the dairy industry, training for the industry; facilitation of stakeholders’
activities; maintenance of databank for the dairy industry and regulation of imports.
-Commercial courts also handle disputes brought before them by the dairy sector players.
2.2 Opportunities:
Infrastructure: Stable political climate; strategic location having the port of
Mombasa and Kisumu for access to East and Central African market. Also regional
hub for airlines allowing for easy access from and to any part of the world.
Kenya’s high population of about 39 Million majority of who require or in need of
dairy products and the trend of eating healthy is unnoticeable as most are not obese
and a large population is starved. Purchasing power of the majority is inclined
towards poverty-Mama Mia Milk Company should ensure to package product
according to (predictable) hot or cold/rainy weather and in complimentary offers e.g.
small pack of Standard pasteurized milk with medium-sized KETEPA tea leaves
(affordable & favorite consumer good) or Cadbury’s or Nestle’s Drinking Chocolate
during cold season with the former offer to the rural consumer and the latter to the
urban consumer as a seasonal one week or a month-long promotion.
Conduct research from renowned national chefs like Susan Kamau of Let’s Cook
local TV show and magazine to identify which menus (confectionery, African and
European and Western dishes) can be prepared with milk products and use the
feedback as part of the marketing campaign ad for Mama Mia Milk products.
Overstretched New KCC has a full storage of 18 million litres of UHT milk and 1
million kilos of powder milk at February 21, 2010 and price reduction of milk was
meant to encourage consumption but they have to hire other storage facilities. Mama
Mia Milk Company should urgently become a player in the market and ease the glut
(over-supply/abundance).
Look at the strengths and weakness of the investor to define what Mama Mia must
address/gap.
- Per Tegemeo researchers, most of Kenya’s install processing capacity has been
shrinking following the demise of some processors.
Use of artificial intelligence marketing (AIM) is a form of direct marketing
leveraging database marketing techniques as well as AI concept and model such as
machine learning and Bayesian network. The main difference resides in the
reasoning part which suggests is performed by computer and algorithm instead of
human.
Behavioral Targeting: AIM provides a set of tools and techniques that enable
behavioral targeting whose principle is based on the Perception-Reasoning-action
cycle found in cognitive science. In marketing context this cycle is adapted to form
the collect, reason and act cycle.
-Collect: term relates to all activities which aims at capturing customer or prospect
data, whether online or offline, these data are then saved into customer or prospect
databases.
-Reason: This is the part where data is transformed into information and eventually
intelligence or insight. In this section, AI and machine learning in particular have a
key role to play. (Machine learning is concerned with the design and development of
algorithms and techniques that allow computers to “learn”. This is one of the
techniques that can be employed to enable more effective behavioral targeting.)
-Act: With the intelligence gathered from the reason step above you can then act. In
marketing context act would be some sort of communications that would attempt to
influence a prospect or customer purchase decision using incentive driven message.
Again, AI has a role to play in this stage as well. Ultimately in an unsupervised
model the machine would take the decision and act accordingly to the information it
receives at the collect stage.
Concerns: Many online users and advocacy groups are concerned about
privacy issues around doing this type of targeting. This is an area that the
behavioral targeting industry is trying to minimize through education, advocacy
and product constraints to keep all information non-personally identifiable or
to use opt-in and permission from end-users (permission marketing).
Source-http://www.investorwords.com/1967/firm.html
Daily Nation P.1, 4, 5 (Feb. 22, 2010) Nation Media Group, Nairobi
Business Daily P.1&4 (Feb. 17, 2010) Nation Media Group, Nairobi
Internet
Personal Communication
Kiarie, S. W. (2010, February 23). E-mail.
Figure 1: The different marketing channels for milk and milk products
PRODUCER/
FARMER
CONSUMER CONSUMER