Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin: © 2006 The Mcgraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved
Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin: © 2006 The Mcgraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved
CHAPTER ONE
New Challenges for Market-
Driven Strategy
Chapter Outline:
Market-Driven Strategy
Corporate, Business and Marketing
Strategy
Challenges of a New Era for Strategic
Marketing
1-3
MARKET-DRIVEN
STRATEGY
All business strategy decisions should
start with a clear understanding of
markets, customers, and competitors.
The market and the customers that
form the market should be the starting
pint in shaping business strategy.
1-4
Characteristics of a Market-
Driven Strategy
(1) Becoming Market-
Orientation
(3) Customer
Value/
Capabilities
Match
1-6
(1) Becoming market oriented
Activities need to perform
Customer is the focal point of the organization
Commitment to continuous creation of superior
customer value
Superiorskills in understanding and satisfying
customers
Requires involvement and support of the entire
workforce
Monitor rapidly changing customer needs and wants
Continued….
1-7
Characteristics of Market
Orientation
1. Customer Focus
What are the customer’s value requirements?
2. Competition Intelligence
Importance of understanding the competition as
well as the customer
3. Cross-Functional Coordination
Remove the walls between business functions
4. Performance Consequences
Market orientation leads to superior organizational
performances
1-9
Capabilities
Desirable
Desirable
Capabilities
Capabilities
Difficult to
Duplicate
Source: George S. Day, Journal of Marketing, October 1994, 49.
1-12
Outside-In
Processes
Inside-Out
Processes
Spanning
Processes
1-13
Classifying Capabilities
EXTERNAL INTERNAL
EMPHASIS EMPHASIS
Outside-In Inside-Out
Processes Processes
Spanning Processes
Value Requirements
Distinctive
Capabilities
1-15
Benefits Costs
1-16
Value Composition
Product
Services
Benefits
Employees
Image Value
(gain/loss)
Monetary
costs Costs
Time (sacrifices)
Psychic and
physic costs
1-17
BECOMING MARKET
DRIVEN
Initiatives:
1. Market Sensing Capabilities
– Effective processes for learning about markets
– Sensing:
Collected information needs to be shared
Initiatives:
Planning
2 Establish SBU’s
What is our
business? What is of value to
the customer?
What should
our business be?
What will our
business be?
1-22
Mission Statements
Characteristics of good mission statements:
GOOGLE’S Mission
Statement
To organize the world’s
information and make it
universally accessible and
useful.
(SBU)
Three Characteristics of an SBU:
Unique competitors
A single business or
collection of related
businesses Leader responsible
for planning and
profitability
Strategic Business Units
1-26
(SBU)
1-27
Defining Strategic
Business Units
Customer
groups
We make copying
Xerox We help improve office productivity.
equipment.
Encyclopaedia
We sell encyclopedias We distribute information.
Britannica
Assigning Resources
GE/McKinsey Matrix
HIGH
Business Position
3 Hold 4 Divest
Preserve market share Sell or liquidate
1-32
Assessing Growth
Opportunities
1-33
Alternative Growth
Opportunities
1-34
Intensive Growth
Product-Market Expansion Grid
Market
New
Diversification
Development
Markets
Current
Market Product
Penetration Development
Current New
Products
1-35
Integrative Growth
Business Wholesaler
Competitor
1-36
Diversification Growth
it y
un
rt
po
Op
ew
N
1-37
SWOT Analysis
Internal
SW
Strength Weakness
O T
External
Opportunity Threat
1-39
Goal Formulation
Ranked
Consistent Quantified
Realistic
Strategy Formulation
1-41
Porter’s Generic
Strategies
Strategic Alliances
Types:
Program Formulation and
1-42
Implementation
If the unit has decided to attain
technological leadership, it must
strengthen its R&D department,
gather technological intelligence,
develop leading-edge products, train
its technical sales force, and
communicate its technological
leadership.
Strong leadership
Self Study 1-44
1-45
4 Challenges
1. Escalating Globalization
2. Technology Diversity and
Uncertainty
3. Internet Dynamics
4. Ethical Behavior and
Corporate Social
Responsiveness
1-47
1. Escalating Globalization
3. Internet Dynamics
WEB……..
1-50
Responsibilities to stakeholders
End of Ch. 1