Participant Handbook (MSW SM B2C CG)
Participant Handbook (MSW SM B2C CG)
Participant Handbook (MSW SM B2C CG)
Jean-Claude Larrch
The Alfred H. Heineken Chaired Professor of Marketing
INSEAD
Hubert Gatignon
The Claude Janssen Chaired Professor of Business Administration and Professor of Marketing
INSEAD
Rmi Triolet
Simulation Expert
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TABLE OF CONTENT
I.
II.
Clinite Products_____________________________________________________________________________________ 4
Nutrite Products ____________________________________________________________________________________ 5
Naming Conventions ________________________________________________________________________________ 6
Clinite Customers ___________________________________________________________________________________ 6
Nutrite Customers __________________________________________________________________________________ 7
Distribution Channels ________________________________________________________________________________ 7
Private Label Brands _________________________________________________________________________________ 8
Economic Environment ______________________________________________________________________________ 8
V.
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
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TABLE OF FIGURES
Figure 1 How to print two pages per sheet __________________________________________________ 3
Figure 2 Clinite main physical characteristics ________________________________________________ 5
Figure 3 Nutrite main physical characteristics _______________________________________________ 6
Figure 4 Inventory and production plan versus market demand ________________________________ 10
Figure 5 From retail price to unit contribution ______________________________________________ 11
Figure 6 Available market research studies_________________________________________________ 13
Figure 7 Productivity gains _____________________________________________________________ 16
Figure 8 Sample Loan Schedule __________________________________________________________ 17
Figure 9 Market & Competitive News Industry dashboard (part 1) _____________________________ 19
Figure 10 Market & Competitive News Industry dashboard (part 2) ____________________________ 19
Figure 11 Market & Competitive News Brand Characteristics _________________________________ 20
Figure 12 Company dashboard __________________________________________________________ 21
Figure 13 Financial Report P&L statement ________________________________________________ 22
Figure 14 Financial Report Brand contribution ____________________________________________ 22
Figure 15 Production report Sales, production & inventory __________________________________ 23
Figure 16 R&D report Sample chart & explanations ________________________________________ 24
Figure 17 Market Research Industry Benchmarking ________________________________________ 26
Figure 18 Market Research Consumer Survey Average Awareness ___________________________ 27
Figure 19 Market Research Consumer Survey Purchase intentions by segment _________________ 27
Figure 20 Market Research Consumer Survey Shopping habits ______________________________ 27
Figure 21 Market Research Consumer Panel Market shares ________________________________ 28
Figure 22 Market Research Consumer Panel Market shares ________________________________ 28
Figure 23 Market Research Distribution Panel Channel sales ________________________________ 28
Figure 24 Market Research Distribution Panel Distribution coverage _________________________ 29
Figure 25 Market Research Distribution Panel Share of Shelf Space __________________________ 29
Figure 26 Market Research Semantic Scales Brand perceptions______________________________ 30
Figure 27 Market Research Semantic Scales Ideal values ___________________________________ 30
Figure 28 Market Research Semantic Scales Importance of characteristics _____________________ 30
Figure 29 Market Research MDS Study Perceptual map (Economy X Performance) ______________ 31
Figure 30 Market Research MDS Study Influence of Product Characteristics____________________ 32
Figure 31 Market Research Competitive Advertising Brand expenditures ______________________ 33
Figure 32 Market Research Competitive Commercial Team Size by firm and channel _____________ 33
Figure 33 Market Research Commercial Team Experiment ___________________________________ 34
Figure 34 Market Forecast Market Size broken down by Consumer Segment ____________________ 34
Figure 35 Conjoint Analysis Relative importance of attributes ________________________________ 35
Figure 36 Conjoint Analysis Utility charts _________________________________________________ 35
Figure 37 Tools Charting tool __________________________________________________________ 38
Figure 38 Tools Charting tool __________________________________________________________ 39
Figure 39 Starting a working session ______________________________________________________ 41
Figure 40 Markstrat home ______________________________________________________________ 42
Figure 41 Markstrat decision home_______________________________________________________ 43
Figure 42 Team Identity decision ________________________________________________________ 43
Figure 43 Brand portfolio decisions Home ________________________________________________ 44
Figure 44 Brand portfolio decisions New brand launch ______________________________________ 45
Figure 45 Brand portfolio decisions Brand modification or withdrawal _________________________ 46
Figure 46 Marketing mix decision home ___________________________________________________ 46
Figure 47 Marketing mix decision screen __________________________________________________ 47
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Interface with the R&D department to design and develop new products;
Prepare the launch of new products, improve, maintain or withdraw existing ones;
Make marketing mix decisions (pricing, advertising, ) for each of your brands;
Order market research studies to get up-to-date information for decision making.
2. Your objective
Your objective over the next years is to maximize the Share Price Index (SPI) of your division. The SPI takes
into account several indicators including net contribution generated, product market share, your ability to
grow the organizations revenues and the quality of projects successfully completed.
3. Your team
An important aspect of the Markstrat Challenge is that you will be part of a team. It is helpful to establish a
good working relationship with your teammates and to organize your work with them. Here are a number
of questions to take into consideration:
Will you work non-stop on your Markstrat exercise for 3 hours from start to finish or will you spread
your work over several days?
Will all team members meet when they make decisions or are you geographically dispersed?
Will all team members be involved in all decisions? Or will you assign responsibilities (R&D, Production,
Finance, etc.) to team members, each making decisions on his or her own?
Regarding the last point, try to avoid letting each member concentrate solely on his/her area of
professional expertise. Initially, we strongly recommend that each team member be involved in all
discussions in order for everyone to have the same understanding of the business situation. As the
simulation evolves, your team will develop a common understanding of the strategic issues. In parallel, the
management of the organization will become increasingly complex. At some point, the members of the
team can begin focusing on a specific area of responsibility.
By following this process, not only will you maximize your internal resources, but also ensure that everyone
benefits equally from the Markstrat experience.
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4. Getting prepared
Preparation includes reading the handbook and trying out the Markstrat software with the Preview data.
A. Pre-Reading
It is highly recommended to read this handbook carefully prior to the beginning of the Markstrat Challenge.
If you do not do it, you may put your team at a disadvantage.
Unless otherwise instructed by your professor, you should read the following four chapters prior to
Decision Round 1:
In these four chapters, you will discover what your new challenge and objective is, what the Markstrat
world looks like in term of products, consumers, distribution channels, competitors, etc.; how your
company operates and what decisions you will have to make in order to run it through the next 5 to 10
years, and what information will be made available to you in your annual report.
You are then advised to read the last two chapters prior to Decision Round 2:
There, you will learn in more detail: how to use the semantic scales and the multidimensional studies to
reposition brands; how and when to reposition brands or to launch new ones; and how the R&D and
Marketing departments work together.
B. Previewing Markstrat
Unless otherwise instructed by your professor, you are invited to preview a Markstrat Team to test your
knowledge of the Markstrat environment. All registered users have access to the Preview Markstrat data.
Refer to section V.2 for instructions on how to access them. The Preview Markstrat data have been
obtained during a past Markstrat course with real students making the decisions. You will be allowed to
browse through all charts and graphs and to open decision screens. Please note that you will be able to
preview the content of decision screens but will not be allowed to enter decisions and run the
mathematical model on this preview data.
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participants may have already asked similar questions and a response may be available in the FAQs. Save
time by checking the site first.
Responses to frequently asked questions do not address specific team situations and do not provide advice
or hints on strategy, management, marketing, finances or any other topic. For these subjects, you should
only count on your knowledge and your experience.
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1. Clinite Products
At the beginning of the simulation, all rival firms market two Clinite brands. Clinites are skin-care cosmetic
products such as beauty or anti-aging creams, sun-care or skin care lotions. Clinite products have existed
for several years and the market has grown quite consistently since the introduction of the first Clinite
brand. It is now a well-established market, with several strong brands at different price points covering a
wide range of needs. Analysts believe that the Clinite market will continue to grow over the next five years.
Clinites have complex formulas and are made of several active ingredients. They exist in all sort of
presentations (cream, liquid, spray, etc.), packaging, colors, sizes, etc.. Although they can be evaluated
along more than fifty attributes, Clinite products are primarily differentiated in terms of five characteristics
that are considered as the most important ones by industry experts. These characteristics are described
below and additional details are given in Figure 2.
Efficacy: This refers to the ability of the product to deliver the benefit intended. For instance, the rating
is a measure of the products sun protection, anti-wrinkle effect, color coverage, micro-emulsion, etc.;
Safety: This attribute measures the degree to which the product produces few or many side effects. A
high rating is an indicator of harmlessness, absence of allergic reactions, purity, medical approval, etc.;
Packaging. Characteristics of the product packaging. Several benefits are included here, such as
attractiveness, convenience to carry, appropriate size, etc.;
Pleasure: This is a somewhat subjective attribute, but it is a measure of how pleasing a product is to
use, over and above its efficacy or convenience. Here it refers to texture, scent, etc.
Usability: A measure which indicates ease of use, time to dry, required number of applications per day,
compatibility with other skin care products, resistance to water, etc.;
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The base cost is also an important factor; this is the cost at which each unit will be produced, based on an
initial production batch of 2.5 million units. The base cost is decided jointly by the Marketing department
which is mainly concerned with margin and profitability and by the R&D department which is mainly
concerned with product feasibility.
Characteristic
Unit
Range
Efficacy
Index
10 100
Safety
Index
10 100
Packaging
Index
10 100
Pleasure
Index
10 100
Usability
Index
10 100
1.20+
2. Nutrite Products
Recently, there has been industry speculation that a new type of food-based beauty care products, the
Nutrite. It is expected that these products will cover a wide range of medical conditions or special
challenges of different life stages, and will have an impact on various parts of the body (skin complexion,
skin elasticity, lank hair, nails, etc.). Although no Nutrite products are available at the start of the
simulation, industry experts have a pretty good idea of what future Nutrite products might resemble.
Nutrite products will satisfy entirely different needs from that of Clinite products so that demand for the
two products will be completely independent. They will not be complementary in any way and there will
not be any substitution from one to the other. It is anticipated that the Nutrite market will be quite
attractive if high quality and great tasting products with clinically proven benefits is made available at the
right price.
The expertise required of potential suppliers is similar for both markets in terms of science, manufacturing,
marketing and distribution. Therefore, your division and your competitors are the most likely suppliers of
Nutrites. All firms will have to engage substantial R&D resources to develop their first Nutrite product.
Recent calculations suggest that an investment of about 10 million dollars may be required for the first
Nutrite.
Experts agree that Nutrite products will primarily be differentiated in terms of their five most important
physical characteristics. These are described below and additional Additional details are given in Figure 3.
Clinical Benefit: This refers to the ability of the product to deliver the benefit intended. For instance,
the rating is a measure of the increase in skin elasticity, reduction of aging spots, reduction of hair loss,
etc.;
Nutrition Facts: This attribute measures the degree to which the product is good for you or has high
quality ingredients. A high rating is an indicator of no preservatives, little artificial color, no added
sugar, reduced salt, low saturated fat, etc.;
Packaging. Characteristics of the product packaging. Several benefits are included here, such as
attractiveness, convenience to carry, appropriate size, etc.;
Flavor: Quality of the product taste, in terms of uniqueness and pleasure of the taste experience with
the product, and of ability to support the performance claim. For instance, high quality flavors can
express concepts such as smooth, natural, fresh, etc..
Variety: A measure which indicates the number of product variations, in term of serving sizes, flavors
or presentations.
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Characteristic
Abbreviation
Unit
Range
Clinical Benefit
Clinical Benefit
Index
10 100
Nutrition Facts
Nutrition
Index
10 100
Packaging
Packaging
Index
10 100
Flavor
Flavor
Index
10 100
Variety
Variety
Index
10 100
Base Cost
2.30+
3. Naming Conventions
Brand names are made up of up to six characters. The first letter identifies the firm marketing the brand
(M, R, S, T, L or N). The second letter must be an 'I' for a Clinite or an 'U' for a Nutrite. The other characters
can be letters or numbers and can be freely chosen by each firm to generate different brand names.
For instance, brands TINY and TIME would be Clinites marketed by firm TIGERS, while MUST and MUCH
would be Nutrites marketed by company MARMOTS. All new brands must follow these conventions, and
must have different names. The selected name has no influence on the market response to the brand.
4. Clinite Customers
The consumers who purchase the cosmetic products made by the companies in the Markstrat world are of
varying ages, occupations, and family status. They are all adults, over 16 years of age, generally women,
who purchase the products for personal use. Market studies show that these consumers can be divided
into five major groups, or segments, having similar needs and purchasing behavior.
High Earners (Hi) The members of this group are characterized by their high incomes. They are
women over 25 years of age, either single or married without kids, and studies show that they usually
buy expensive products, which they can afford, and that their purchases are partially motivated by
social status. They are heavy users, with an average loyalty to their favorite brands, and they are price
insensitive to the point of disregarding cheap brands, and they demand high levels of performance
attributes from their products.
Affluent Families (Af) Women in this segment are aged 25 45, are either married with kids or single
parents. Their high income levels leads them to be highly loyal, frequent buyers and users of cosmetics,
and they are definitely not price sensitive. Consumers in this segment are looking for high quality, highperformance and pleasant-to-use products. They can afford expensive products and often view price as
an indication of quality.
Medium Income Families (Me) These consumers have less disposable income than the Affluent
Families, and are thus more price sensitive. This segment also includes some sub-groups who do not fit
with the other segments. Although this segment is the largest and is composed of several sub-groups,
most customers have similar needs. They are looking for relatively inexpensive products with average
physical attributes. Experts believe that the penetration of this segment is not as high as the other
segments. As a consequence, its future growth rate could exceed forecasts. Their loyalty is above
average.
Low Income Families (Lo) Individuals in this segment have a similar family situation and age range as
the Affluent Income families. Their lower income levels, however, causes their budgets to be strained,
and leads them to be less frequent buyers and users of cosmetics, and to be very price sensitive. Their
loyalty is below average.
Singles (Si) As the name of this segment indicates, Singles live alone. They are generally between 16
and 35 years of age and can be students or employees. All in all, while being relatively heavy users, they
demand average levels of both performance and pleasure from their cosmetic products and tend to be
rather price-sensitive. Singles are not loyal to any brand; on the opposite, they tend to favor new
brands and switch very easily is the new brands fit their needs.
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Each segment has specific needs in terms of physical characteristics and price, and these needs will most
probably evolve over time. Awareness levels and purchase intentions vary significantly for existing products
from one group to the other. In addition, market forecast studies show that the size and growth rates of
the five segments are quite different. This is explained in part by the development stage of each segment,
by the varying product offerings, and by the intensity of marketing efforts targeted at each segment.
5. Nutrite Customers
While potential consumers for Nutrites are the same individuals as those who buy Clinites, a different
segmentation strategy is likely to be appropriate for Nutrites. Further studies need to be completed, but
marketing experts believe that it will be more effective to group consumers according to how fast they are
likely to adopt Nutrites. In this light, three groups are examined.
Health Conscious (He). Those are individuals, usually young adults, who lead a "wellness-oriented"
lifestyle and are generally concerned with nutrition, fitness, stress, and their environment. They accept
responsibility for their health and are excellent customers for health-related products. Although this
segment will probably be the largest one in the early days, it represents only a small percentage of total
potential consumers.
Families (Fa). The second wave of Nutrite product will include affluent and medium-income families
who are concerned with nutrition and its impact on their health. They believe that healthy food can
help parents and children live a better life and solve minor medical conditions.
Elderly (El). Many metabolic and physiological changes occur in the body when people get older. Some
medical conditions are also directly related to age such as dehydration, cholesterol, hypertension,
osteoporosis, etc. As getting older people to eat better is actually easier than persuading many young
adults to do the same, industry experts believe that elderly are likely to become the biggest segment of
Nutrite consumer within 3 to 5 years.
6. Distribution Channels
Clinite and Nutrite consumers tend to shop in the following four distribution channels:
Mass Merchandisers and e-Grocers (e.g.: Carrefour, Walmart, peapod.com, walmart.com) These
super stores typically sell a wide variety of goods, including food items, housewares, and personal
care products. They strive to operate on a low-price, high-volume basis and to minimize overheads. As
a consequence, the level of service offered is lower than that of the two other channels. While mass
merchandisers carry many different product categories, the depth of each product line is usually
restricted to few units. They often distribute the cheaper, lower-quality products. Their lack of
technical expertise and the low level of service may well prevent them from distributing Nutrites in the
early years. There are 3 main chains of such stores, for a total of 12,000 outlets.
Specialized Mass Retailers (e.g.: Sephora, Boots, CVS, Duane Reade) These stores are usually smaller
and also belong to organized chains. They are geographically close to their customers (in shopping
centers or downtown areas) and can provide a high level of customer service. As they do not distribute
many different product categories, cosmetics account for a large proportion of their sales. These stores
usually carry a broad product line for each category, including the most expensive and/or highperformance products. Because of their high level of expertise in cosmetics, specialty stores are likely
to be the preferred distribution channel for Nutrite products. Four main chains exist in this category,
representing 2,000 stores.
Department stores (e.g.: Nordstrom, Macys, Sogo) Department stores are characterized by the wide
product assortment they offer. They usually have a significant amount of space displaying cosmetics,
often with a specific counter dedicated to each major manufacturer. They also provide extensive
customer service. Department stores are often organized in chains that have a degree of power in
negotiating margins with manufacturers. Similar to specialized mass retailers, department stores are
likely to be the second preferred distribution channel for Nutrite products. Five such chains with a total
of 10,000 stores are identified in the Markstrat world.
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In addition to the traditional distribution channels described above, you also need to consider the
marketing opportunities offered by the Internet.
Beauty Specialist Portals. This category of stores includes the web-only merchants (such as
buymebeauty.com or feelunique.com) as well as the e-commerce websites of traditional retailers (e.g.
ulta.com, sephora.com) These are dedicated to highlighting the range of beauty products found in
the owners stores. There are about a dozen specialized web sites in period 0. All these various portals
and sites have different characteristics in terms of image, awareness levels, financial strength, range of
products offered, price ranges, the selling mechanisms applied (up-selling, cross-selling, automated
replenishment), the customer base (proportion of each segment likely to visit the site), etc.
Convenience is the key advantage of online stores as consumers may shop from their home at the time
of their choice. In addition, they have access to an almost unlimited choice and can compare features
and prices very easily. Privacy and security are the primary concerns of online shoppers, but new
mechanisms are put in place by banks and e-commerce sites so as to reduce fraud. Online stores are
likely to become more important in the next 5 to 10 years.
Within the Clinite market, market research studies show that all distribution channels are important;
therefore each of them should be contacted by the companies commercial team.
Differences between margins obtained by the stores in each of the three channels are mainly due to
differences in the level of service and volume sold. These margins are applied to retail prices and are
approximately constant across brands for a given channel. In Markstrat, the distributor margins are 30% for
Mass Merchandisers; 40% for department stores; and 35% for the other ones.
8. Economic Environment
You operate in an economy that currently has an average inflation rate of 2%. Inflation affects the
production, advertising, commercial and market research costs of your company. It is unlikely that inflation
will reach much higher levels in the future. Should this be the case, the government may decide to impose
price control on all brands.
The Gross National Product (GNP) provides you with information about trends in the Markstrat economy.
In the recent past, the overall economy has been growing at a rate of 4%.
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The product portfolio strategy which brands the company will develop and market;
The segmentation and positioning strategy which market segments will be targeted and how
products will be positioned;
The marketing mix strategy the day-to-day operational marketing decisions such as pricing,
production, communication and distribution.
Your performance will be measured by several indicators such as net contribution generated, brand market
shares, your ability to grow the firms revenues, quality of R&D projects successfully completed, etc. Finally,
the best measure of your company's success will be its share price index, a measure that takes all of the
above indicators into account.
This chapter describes how your company operates as well as the decisions you will have to make each
period. Before making dramatic changes, you should try to get a feel for the behavior of the market. Do not
jump hastily to conclusions and bear in mind that obvious solutions may be based upon an incomplete
analysis. To reach more robust decisions, use the information from your company results, from the
newsletter and from market research studies to analyze your situation and past competitive behavior.
These reports are described in the chapter entitled Understanding Your Annual Report.
You will manage the Marketing department as a profit center. We will see in the next paragraphs that most
of your decisions will cost you money: advertising budgets, commercial team expenditures, R&D expenses,
etc. We will recap all of these costs at the end of the chapter and we will explain where your money comes
from.
1. Decision rounds
You will follow a decision-making cycle that will repeat itself for each simulated year, for instance 8 years in
total. This cycle is called a decision round or a round. A simulated year is also called a period.
1. At the beginning of each round, the instructor will provide you with your results for the previous year
(sales, R&D, production) together with additional information on the market and your competitors. In
the first year, you and your team should begin analyzing this information and then start formulating a
strategy for your company and agree on objectives. In the subsequent years, you should appraise your
results, check if you have met your objectives and possibly review your initial strategy and decide on
what changes should or should not be made.
2. The previous step will lead to a series of decisions, which will be input into the decision forms provided.
Decisions can be modified and refined throughout the decision round until the time is over.
3. At the end of the round, the instructor collects and audits the decisions of all teams. If everything looks
fine, the instructor runs the Markstrat mathematical model to simulate the round and produce new
results. At this stage, you are ready to start a new round.
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consumer segments or to explore new markets. Chapter VI provides you with more information on
situations where brand upgrades or brand launches are necessary.
3. Production
Each period, you must submit a production plan for each of your marketed brands, i.e. you must specify
how many units you want to produce for the period. This decision must take into account the potential
sales for the brand, the existing inventory at the beginning of the period and the flexibility of the
Production department.
The Production department of your company is working for several divisions. It can thus be viewed as a
highly flexible external supplier. As a consequence, you are not concerned about manufacturing
investments, fixed costs or capacity utilization.
From one period to the next, you are completely free to increase or decrease the production plan of a given
product, without any penalty. The Production department will always manufacture the required quantities
in the best possible conditions.
Moreover, the actual production level for each product is automatically adjusted in response to actual
demand for that product in the period, within 20% of your initial production plan. Hence, if you did not
order enough units to cover the demand, the production will be automatically increased by up to 20%. On
the contrary, if you ordered too many units and cannot sell them in the period, the production will be
automatically reduced by up to 20%. In case your production plan was inaccurate by more than 20%, you
will either lose sales or build inventory.
Figure 4 gives a few examples of varying situations of inventory, production plan and market demand (all
numbers are in units).
Potential sales
Beginning inventory
Production plan
(your decision)
Case A
Case B
Case C
Case D
(a)
(b)
1 540 000
200 000
1 540 000
200 000
1 540 000
200 000
1 540 000
None
(c)
1 500 000
1 000 000
2 000 000
2 000 000
1 340 000
Reduced to
(a) - (b)
1 540 000
= (a) = (d) + (b)
1 200 000
Increased to
(c) + 20%
1 400 000
= (d) + (b)
1 600 000
Reduced to
(c) - 20%
1 540 000
= (a)
1 600 000
Reduced to
(c) - 20%
1 540 000
= (a)
(f)
None
140 000
None
None
(g)
None
None
260 000
60 000
Actual production
(automatic adjustment)
(d)
Actual sales
(e)
Lost sales
Equal to (a) (e)
Ending inventory
Equal to (b) + (d) (e)
The flexibility of the Production department goes beyond automatic adjustment of production plans. The
units produced are charged to the Marketing department only when they are shipped to distributors to be
sold to consumers. The price paid by Marketing to Production is called the transfer unit cost; it incorporates
all costs associated with this high level of flexibility, including depreciation and fixed costs.
The transfer cost of a product is initially equal to the base cost of its base project, i.e. the unit cost decided
when the project was developed by R&D. It will then increase with inflation and decrease over time
because of experience effects and economies of scale. As a rule of thumb, you can expect the transfer cost
to be reduced by about 15% each time the cumulative production of a given product is doubled.
Units produced in excess are kept in inventory, and inventory-holding costs are charged to the Marketing
department until these units are sold. Inventory costs per unit are calculated as a percentage of the
transfer cost. This information can be found in the Newsletter.
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Production plans must be entered each period in the Marketing Mix decision form. These decisions should
be based on your sales forecasts for the upcoming period and should take into account any units left in
inventory. If you are holding a high level of inventory, you can set the production plan to 0 but in this case,
no automatic adjustment is possible.
4. Pricing
Each period, you must set the recommended retail price for each of your marketed brands. The retail price
is the list price for customers. The average selling price is the price at which you sell your product to
distributors. It varies by distribution channel since different margins hold in each of the three channels, as
explained in the Distribution Channels section.
Department stores tend to respect the recommended retail prices set by companies. However, the other
three channels use promotions or special offers to sell products. On average, these promotions are
equivalent to a discount rate of 10% off the list price for mass merchandisers and beauty portals, and 5%
for specialized mass. Figure 5 provides a summary of prices, margins and discounts for a recommended
Retail Price of $15.00 and a unit transfer cost of $4.75.
Dumping is strictly forbidden in the Markstrat world; therefore in all channels the recommended retail
price must be set so that the selling price of a product is higher than its transfer cost.
Prices must be entered each period in the Marketing Mix decision form. Price increases or decreases
greater than 30% in one period are highly discouraged as they often result in negative market reactions. On
one hand, an excessive price increase is usually not accepted by consumers who may react strongly and
stop purchasing the brand. On the other hand, an excessive price decrease will result in a proportional cut
in the distributors margin and your commercial team may have a hard time finding distributors for the
brand. A message will warn you when such decisions are made. If you ignore the warning, the
recommended retail price will be automatically adjusted up or down to stop such adverse reactions.
Mass
Merchandisers
Specialized
Mass
Department
Stores
Beauty
Portals
$15.00
$15.00
$15.00
$15.00
Average Discount
10% $1.50
5% $0.75
None
10% $1.50
$13.50
$14.25
$15.00
$13.50
30% $4.05
35% $4.99
40% $6.00
35% $4.73
Selling price
$9.45
$9.26
$9.00
$8.78
Transfer cost
$4.75
$4.75
$4.75
$4.75
$4.70
$4.51
$4.25
$4.03
Distribution margin
5. Advertising
Advertising decisions must be made each period for each of your marketed brands. Indeed, the practice in
Markstrat is to advertise on brands rather than on company names. As a consequence, even if your firm
markets several brands, possibly to the same consumer segment, these brands will not benefit from the
companys identity and image.
The primary objective of advertising is to build awareness for brand names and to make consumer familiar
with the characteristics and price of your product. Advertising is crucial for new brands, but is also
important for brands that have been on the market for some years. Indeed, consumers tend to forget
about a brand in the absence of advertising.
Another objective of advertising is to develop demand for the whole market. Indeed, as potential
consumers become more familiar with the products and their characteristics they are more likely to
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purchase one of them. The size and growth rate of consumer segments is influenced by the amount spent
in advertising by the entire industry.
Finally, advertising will influence the decision of whether or not distributors will carry your products.
Spending more in advertising will most likely increase your distribution coverage. It also creates a barrier to
entry for your competitors.
The absolute amount of advertising spent on your brands is a key factor in the success of your campaign.
But because of the competitive nature of the Markstrat industry, your advertising share of voice is
important as well. The share of voice is calculated by dividing your own advertising budget (usually several
million dollars for a given brand and period) by the industry total advertising budget. A share of voice
greater than the ones of your direct competitors is required for a successful new brand launch or for brand
repositioning.
There are two separate advertising budgets: advertising media and advertising research. As its name
indicates, the advertising media budget is used to purchase media space and time. Advertising research is
about the creative work, media selection, or other activities conducted by advertising agencies, that
improve the quality and the persuasive power of your message.
If your objective is to increase or maintain awareness, you should spend the bulk of your budget in media
space purchase and only a small percentage in advertising research to make your advertising more
effective (for instance 4% to 8%). If your objective is to reposition a brand, i.e. to change consumers
perceptions, then you should spend a significant percentage of your total budget in advertising research
(usually from 10% to 15%). In past years, companies have devoted on average 4% of their total advertising
expenditures to advertising research.
You are also required to specify which segments should be targeted with your advertising. This decision
should be consistent with the marketing strategy of your firm and/or brand. The advertising agency will
select the most appropriate vehicle for the targeted segments (for instance, targeting Affluent Families
through specific magazines, associations or trade-shows). Because media selection is not an exact science,
some consumers may be exposed to your advertising campaign even if you do not target them explicitly.
Finally, you must define perceptual advertising objectives for each brand. This enables you to convey a
perceptual message and emphasize, for instance, that a given brand is very powerful or that another one
has a very large display and many features. You will learn more in the Repositioning section at the end of
the handbook; it is devoted to brand positioning through advertising and explains how to set perceptual
objectives.
Advertising budgets must be entered each period in the Marketing Mix decision form. Both the advertising
media and research budgets must be given in thousands of dollars. You must also indicate the proportion
of the budget targeted to each segment. The percentages must add to 100%.
6. Commercial Team
Your commercial team is responsible for obtaining and entering orders and for supporting distributors. It is
organized by channel in order to better meet the needs of the distributors, and by brand. The team
includes multiple categories of people and resources depending on the channels: sales representatives,
customer support, merchandisers, web masters, blog managers, etc. The main tasks conducted by the
commercial team are to visit stores, distributors and wholesalers; to enroll them in trade programs; to take
orders; to handle out of stock situations; to participate in trade shows; and to help stores organize and
conduct promotions.
The marketing department must specify the number of people to allocate to each channel and each brand.
Commercial people may be reallocated at no cost across distribution channels and/or across brands.
However, hiring or firing costs will be automatically charged to your department when the total size of the
commercial team increases or decreases.
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The marketing department must also specify the merchandising budget to allocate to each channel and
each brand. This budget is aimed at enhancing the physical presentation of your products in such a way
that it stimulates consumer interest.
Your decisions must be entered each period in the Commercial Team decision form. The size of your
commercial team must be entered in number of Full-Time-Equivalent (FTE), i.e. the equivalent of one
person working full-time for one period. Merchandising budgets must be entered in thousands of dollars.
The impact of these two decisions is to increase and/or maintain distribution coverage and to gain share of
shelf space.
The cost of your commercial team is proportional to the number of allocated FTEs plus the hiring or firing
costs in case you have extended or decreased its size. Hiring and firing costs are calculated as a percentage
of the FTE cost, as indicated in the newsletter. This cost includes the salary of the person plus additional
expenses such as company car, medical/dental care, etc.
Consumer survey
Consumer panel
Industry benchmarking
Distribution panel
Advertising experiment
Semantic scales
Multidimensional scaling
Market forecast
Conjoint analysis
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Chapter VI includes detailed information on R&D strategies and processes. The overview given below will
show you how you can control the marketing strategy of your company and will give you the level of details
necessary to understand the other chapters of this handbook.
When requesting a new R&D project, the Marketing department must specify the name of the project, the
desired characteristics for the new or improved product, and the target base cost. The Marketing
department must also allocate a budget to the project. Up to ten R&D projects may be ordered each period
for the two markets, five Clinite projects and five Nutrite projects.
A. Project Name
Project names may have up to 12 characters. The first letter must be a P, as in Project. The second one
identifies the market of the product being developed: I for a Clinite product and U for a Nutrite. The
other characters may be chosen freely. We advise you to give meaningful names to your projects. For
instance, PI-MINT2 would be a Clinite project developed to upgrade brand MINT and PUHEALTH would be a
Nutrite project developed to launch a new brand targeted at Health Conscious.
The name of a completed project can never be reused for a new project, even if it is a minor modification
of the older project.
B. Project Characteristics
The physical characteristics of the project must be given along with the five most important attributes
described in the sections Clinite Products and Nutrite Products. The values entered must within the
feasible range of 10 to 100.
Obviously, the Marketing Department should evaluate the attractiveness of various offerings before
deciding on specific characteristics. The needs of the target consumers should be taken into account for
this evaluation. There are multiple methodologies to determine the characteristics of a project; they are all
discussed in chapter VI.
C. Desired Base Cost
The base cost of a project is equal to the transfer cost that will be charged by Production to Marketing for
each unit of the future product, assuming an initial production batch of 2.5 million units. Note that the
transfer cost will decrease if you produce more than 2.5 million units, as explained in the Productivity
Gains chapter.
You may ask the R&D department to develop the project at the lowest possible base cost also called
minimum base cost. This cost depends on the project characteristics: the higher the level in each attribute
(Efficacy, Safety, etc.), the higher the minimum unit cost. Developing a project at the minimum base cost
will usually be quite expensive in term of the development budget. Indeed, the R&D team must not only
develop the new characteristics requested, but also select materials and ingredients that are compatible
with the low cost target.
You may also ask the R&D department to develop the project at a specified base cost, higher than the
minimum cost. This will give more flexibility to the R&D team in the materials and technology selection,
and is likely to reduce the development budget. Obviously, the desired base cost must be compatible with
the expected brand profitability, taking all factors into account: price, distributor margin, production costs,
marketing and sales expenses, etc.
D. Project Allocated Budget
The Marketing department must allocate a budget to cover the project expenses. These expenses include
the cost of developing the prototype and all the costs related to the transition from R&D to production, i.e.
ensuring that large quantities of identical units can be economically and reliably produced.
At the early stage of the project development, the R&D team will estimate the budget required for
completing the project. This budget will depend on how different the new characteristics are compared to
the ones of projects already developed. Upgrading a Clinite product will initially cost between a few
hundred thousand dollars and 2 million dollars. Industry experts believe that developing the first Nutrite
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prototype will cost each firm a minimum of 5 million dollars. In both cases, R&D costs will decrease over
time as more projects are successfully developed.
If the budget allocated by Marketing to the project is equal to or higher than the budget required for
completion, then the project will be successfully completed and available during the following period. As
the R&D department works as a profit center, any budget allocated in excess of the required budget will
not be given back to Marketing.
If the allocated budget is much lower than the budget required for completion, the project will not be
successfully completed. In this case, you have the choice to complete the project in the following period by
allocating the amount required by R&D in the annual report, or shelve the project, i.e. put it aside until
such time as you have sufficient funds to complete it. Note that a project does not have to be finished in
one or two periods; you may well decide to develop your first Nutrite prototype in 3 or more periods.
If the allocated budget is slightly lower than the budget required for completion, there is a chance that the
project will be successfully completed despite the lack of funds. Taking such a risk might not be a good idea
if millions of dollars in revenues depends on the availability of the project.
E. Feasibility Studies
When specifying a new R&D project, you have the choice to allocate a budget to it or to order a feasibility
study. A feasibility study costs $100,000 and takes one period to complete. The information is provided in
the next period within the R&D section of the company results; it includes the minimum base cost at which
the product can realistically be manufactured, and the budget required to guarantee its completion at the
currently requested base cost. The main advantages of feasibility studies are the low cost and the accuracy
of the information provided. Their main drawback is the time it takes to get this information: a full period.
F. Online Queries
An online query provides you with an estimate of the budget required to complete a project. You may
order an online query only when the project is fully specified, i.e. when you have entered the physical
characteristics and the requested base cost.
The main advantage of online queries is that the information is provided to you immediately. Their main
drawbacks are that their results are usually over-estimated by as much as 15% (or even more for the new
Nutrite technology) and that no more than 5 queries may be made in any given period
Finally, please note that if you change the specifications of your project (characteristics and/or requested
base cost) after you have run the online query; you will no longer be guaranteed that the project will be
completed within one period of the budget given by the query. In this case, you should run a new query to
adjust your decisions according to the new specifications.
9. Productivity Gains
Manufacturing costs tend to decrease over time thanks to the experience effect. This is due to many factors
such as: increase in labor efficiency (fewer mistakes are made), improvement of methodologies &
processes, use of new and fewer expensive materials and/or technologies and product redesign.
Experience effect should not be confused with economies of scale (the fact that manufacturing costs
decrease with the size of the plant). Indeed, large plants amortize fixed costs on larger production batches;
they have a higher negotiation or lobbying power; include machines of varying sizes and speeds (ensuring
higher usage ratio); other cost reduction factors include transportation in big containers or access to less
expensive financing. As the Marketing department is not responsible for production capacity, you are not
concerned with economies of scale.
Hence, one way to reduce manufacturing costs is simply to produce more units of the same product. On
average, it is estimated that manufacturing costs decrease by 15% each time cumulative production is
doubled. This is represented by the blue curve on Figure 7: point A represents the base cost that was
specified when the base project was developed and point B represents the transfer cost a few periods later
when cumulative production reached 15 million units. The unit cost of this brand has decreased from $7.60
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to $5.00 (a 35% reduction). Unfortunately, the slope of the curve decreases quite rapidly: the additional
production necessary to get an additional 15% reduction in unit cost gets bigger and bigger.
Firms can further reduce manufacturing costs by launching a cost reduction R&D project, i.e. a project
specifying the same physical characteristics as the initial project, but at a lower base cost. This is
represented by the red curve on Figure 7. Although the unit cost will initially be higher than $5.00 (point
A), the curve shows that transfer costs below $5.00 will be obtained as soon as cumulative production
goes beyond point B. Then, the transfer costs will be much lower than the ones achievable by the original
blue curve.
Finally, one should not forget that costs will be adjusted for inflation; this will offset part of the reduction
obtained through experience.
Commercial: merchandising budget plus costs incurred by the commercial team, in all three channels;
A. Marketing Budget
Each period, you are allocated a budget to cover your expenses in R&D, advertising, commercial activities
and market research purchase. This budget is linked to the success of the department, being equal to 40%
of the net contribution generated in the previous period. However, there is a maximum level where
resources are reallocated to other divisions of the company to maximize the return on investment at the
corporate level. Similarly, there is a minimum budget level for each period, whereby headquarters may
effectively subsidize your division if you are not generating the contribution sufficient for your division can
continue operations.
In general, your budget for each period will be between 7 and 20 million dollars, adjusted for inflation. You
will have to work within this given budget: if total spending exceeds the allocated budget for a period,
expenses will be automatically cut by the Finance Control department, starting with advertising
expenditures.
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Your objective is to maximize your return on investment. As a consequence, you should not necessarily
spend your entire budget in every situation. Indeed, you should not spend one additional dollar unless you
expect this dollar to generate a return higher than one dollar. If you perform outstandingly, you may be
granted a large budget; however, spending it completely might be a waste of money.
Please note that unused budget will not be carried forward to the next period.
B. Loans & Budget Increase or Decrease
Your instructor may decide to grant you a loan or a budget increase or decrease. This will usually be done
at specific periods and under certain conditions to be defined by your instructor.
A loan is characterized by its principal the amount of additional money that you will get its interest rate
in %, its duration in years and the period P at which it is granted. For example, a $5 million loan is granted
to team R in Period 3 at 4% interest rate over 5 years.
In the Markstrat world, loans are granted at the beginning of the year so that you can use the principal
immediately, for instance to invest in new R&D projects. As a consequence, you will incur interests in the
first year of the loan. However, you will not start to reimburse the principal before period P+1 so that it can
be paid with the outcome of the period P investment. A complete example is detailed in Figure 8.
Principal
Received
Principal
Reimbursed
Interests
Paid
5 000 000
200 000
Period P+1
923 136
200 000
Period P+2
960 061
163 075
Period P+3
998 463
124 672
Period P+4
1 038 402
84 734
Period P+5
1 079 938
43 198
Period P
Period P+6
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B. Industry Information
This is a short report showing the evolution of economic variables such as inflation rate and GNP growth
rate, and providing the cost for the next period of items such as market research studies, commercial
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people, holding units in inventory or the disposal of inventory units in the case of a product withdrawal or
upgrade.
All cost calculations are done for you by the simulation. So you should not need to look at the report in
detail.
C. Market Report
This report provides you with the market shares (in units and in dollar value), the volume sold and the retail
sales of all marketed brands (Clinites or Nutrites). Volume and retail sales are given for the current period,
and the variation with the previous period is provided as well. Newly launched or upgraded brands are
flagged. The physical characteristics, base cost and price of all marketed brands are given as well. Again,
newly launched or upgraded brands are flagged.
2. Company Results
The Company Results provide confidential company information. You and your team members are the only
ones who have access to the information disclosed in your company results, with the exception of data
given in the Industry Benchmarking study. The company results are comprised of the following five
sections:
Company Dashboard
Financial Report
Production Report
Decision Review
Select Analyze > Company Results in the menu to access the home page of this section.
A. Company Dashboard
The company dashboard provides you with a one page summary of the key performance indicators of your
firm and your brands such as stock market data, market shares in value and volume, revenues and
contribution. The layout will vary over time, especially when you introduce your first Nutrite brands. A
sample company dashboard is depicted in Figure 12.
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B. Financial Report
This report provides you with revenues, costs and profit information at the company, market and brand
levels.
The Profit & Loss statement of your company is illustrated in Figure 13 and is explained below.
Revenues: Number of units sold x Average selling price. The selling price is equal to the retail price
(your decision) minus the distributors margin.
Cost of goods sold (COGS): Number of units sold x Unit transfer cost. The transfer cost is equal to the
base cost of the underlying R&D project minus the productivity gains.
Inventory holding costs: Units in inventory x Unit transfer cost x Inventory holding cost in %
(given in the market news report).
Inventory disposal loss: Loss incurred when selling inventory to a trading company because of a
product upgrade or brand withdrawal. Units in inventory x Unit transfer cost x Inventory disposal
cost in % (given in the market news report).
Contribution after marketing (CAM): CBM advertising media advertising research commercial
team costs (your decisions).
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Market research studies: costs of the market studies purchased during the period (your decision).
Research & Development: budgets allocated to R&D projects during the period (your decision).
Exceptional cost or profit (ECP): Exceptional items such as brand withdrawal costs.
Net earnings: CAM market research studies R&D interests paid ECP.
The Market and Brand Contribution reports are similar to the company profit & loss statement. They
provide financial elements for each marketed brand as well as the consolidation of all brands by market. A
sample brand contribution chart is shown on Figure 14.
C. Production Report
The Production Report provides you with information on the number of units produced, the number of
units in inventory and on production costs for each of the brands marketed in the period.
The Sales, Production and Inventory table shows detailed information on planned production versus actual
production and the inventory levels at the beginning and at the end of the current period. All numbers are
given in thousands of units.
The variation between the production plan (your decision) and the actual production (number of units
produced) is due to the automatic adjustment of plus or minus 20%, depending on market demand.
The inventory at the end of period is equal to (inventory at beginning of period + actual production units
sold).
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The Unit Cost, COGS and Inventory Holding Cost chart shows the unit transfer cost for each of your
marketed brands. The current unit cost is the cost of the most recently produced units, while the average
unit cost takes into account the units that were in your inventory at the beginning of the period. You may
ignore the difference in most cases. Unit transfer costs are given in $; units sold in thousands of units. Cost
of Goods Sold (COGS) are equal to Units sold x Average unit transfer cost. COGS are given in thousands of $.
This table also shows the costs incurred for holding your inventory throughout the period. These costs
include for instance the storage cost, the cost of capital, etc. Inventory holding cost is equal to Units in
inventory x Average unit transfer cost x H%. In the case of a product upgrade or brand withdrawal, you
must dispose of your inventory at the beginning of the period and a loss is incurred. Inventory disposal loss
is calculated as D% of the value of your inventory at the beginning of the period. H and D are given in the
market news. Inventory holding and disposal costs are given in thousands of $.
D. Research & Development Report
This set of reports provides information on all R&D projects launched in the previous periods. To facilitate
the reading, separate charts are provided for projects that have just been completed, for the ones that
were completed in previous periods, and for projects that are not yet finished either because the allocated
budget was not sufficient or because you have decided to shelve them.
The report in Figure 16 shows the list of R&D projects completed in past periods. All reports share the same
layout and include the same information:
Project name.
Available since. Completed projects only. This is the period when the project was completed.
Physical Characteristics. The physical characteristics of the future product. This data is given in
the relevant units for each characteristic, e.g. gigaflops for processing power or kilograms for
carbon footprint.
Current and minimum base costs. The base cost is the manufacturing unit cost of the future
product, assuming an initial production batch of 100,000 units. The current base cost is the one
that you entered in the R&D decision form when specifying the project. The minimum base cost
is the cost below which it is impossible to manufacture the future product without taking
productivity gains into account.
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Platform of brand. This is the name of the brand that is based on this project. This column is void
for projects that are not yet or no longer in use.
Cumulative and required allocated budgets. Uncompleted projects only. The cumulative budget
is the total budget that has been allocated to this project over time. The required budget is the
budget required to finish the project, i.e. the additional budget that must be invested to ensure
that the project will be completed in the following period. You may attempt to finish the project
with a lower budget but its successful completion is not guaranteed.
E. Decision Review
This report recalls the decisions that your team made at the beginning of the current period: brand
management, commercial team management, R&D projects and the market research studies purchased.
Note that the decisions shown in Period 0 were made by the previous management team which you and
your teammates have replaced.
The Brand Management chart lists the brands that were marketed during the period, including the ones
that were launched in that period. The base R&D project indicates which project was used as the platform
of the brand. The other lines show the marketing decisions made for the brand: advertising media and
research budgets; segmentation strategy, i.e. how to allocate advertising across consumer segments; and
communication objectives (in case of brand positioning or repositioning through advertising).
The Commercial Team chart shows how many full-time equivalent people you have allocated to each brand
and each distribution channel. Two graphs show how your commercial team resources were allocated
across channels and brands. Similarly, the Merchandising chart shows how much merchandising budget
you have allocated to each brand and each distribution channel.
The R&D Projects chart shows the projects that you have initiated or continued in the period in a format
similar to the one of the R&D Report. The Online Queries chart reminds you of the online queries that you
have requested from R&D while making your decisions to evaluate the budgets to allocate to projects. Note
that this chart might be empty in case you ordered no R&D projects.
Finally, the Market Research Studies chart lists the studies that you have ordered. Note that this chart
might be empty in case you ordered no study.
F. Feedback from your coach
This report provides you with a list of feedback messages that have been generated by the simulation
based on your firm and brand situations. This report is aimed at helping identify some critical issues within
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you decisions and results. It is a nice complement to your own analysis, but certainly not a substitute. Make
sure to spend a good part of your decision time to review and analyze your report and your market studies.
Your professor may decide to hide the automated feedback. Some professors prefer to provide their own
feedback while facilitating the Markstrat group work. Others want to make sure that you to do your own
analysis and are not misled by automatically generated messages.
The feedback starts with a section on your firm and continues with a section for each of your brands. The
feedback messages focus mainly on your weaknesses and issues rather than on your strengths or
successes. So, do not be surprised if your only get negative messages.
Some messages are highly important and require immediate corrective actions. Other messages are less
important as they will only lead to a minor improvement of your decisions and results. Finally, a few
messages cannot be ignored if the suggested actions are not part of your strategy.
At the firm level, you will be notified if:
Your revenues are not growing and/or your costs are growing more rapidly than your revenues.
Etc.
Your brand perceptions are not quite different from segments expectations.
Your awareness is much lower than that of your competitor and your sales would increase with
additional advertising.
You have not set perceptual objectives or your spending in advertising research is too low.
You have lost sales due to a poor distribution (small commercial team or low merchandising budget).
Your commercial efforts are not aligned with the shopping habits of your consumers.
Etc.
Some numbers will be hidden in the messages if you did not purchase all market studies.
Important Note. This report has been recently introduced in Markstrat and is still being beta-tested. If
you feel that a particular message or sequence of messages is inappropriate, please drop us a quick email
at simulation.expert@stratx.com including your course ID, industry name, team name and period. We do
not need your PAK and/or password. Thank you in advance for your cooperation.
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A. Industry Benchmarking
The benchmarking study compiles general information from annual reports about each of the Markstrat
competitors. The same data is provided in a common format for all companies in such a way that would
allow you to compare competitive performance. Summary graphs are provided as well to facilitate the
comparison of key data across competitive teams.
The data provided includes sales, production costs, marketing expenditures and other expenses, including
R&D. See Figure 17 for a sample benchmarking study.
B. Consumer Survey
The consumer survey is a survey questionnaire administered to 3,000 individuals during the simulated
period. It gives brand awareness, purchase intentions and shopping habit data for each consumer segment
in the market.
The brand awareness figures represent the proportion of individuals who have unaided recall of a brand
name. This is obtained by asking respondents a question such as: What Clinite brands do you know? and
allowing them to list several brands. The report gives the information for each brand currently on the
market in total and by consumer segment. See Figure 18 for a sample graph showing average awareness
figures.
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The purchase intentions figures represent the proportion of individuals who would select a brand as their
first choice, if they were buying within a year. This is obtained by asking respondents a question such as:
Do you intend to purchase a Nutrite brand this period? If the response is yes, then respondents are asked
to indicate the brand of their choice. The report gives the information for each brand currently on the
market in total and by consumer segment. See Figure 19 for a sample chart. Please note that these figures
correspond to the period when the study is done and does not necessarily represent purchase intentions
for the following year.
Two points require additional explanations. First, awareness is factored in purchase intentions. Indeed, if
respondents are not aware of a specific brand they will not list this brand as the brand of their first choice.
Second, purchase intentions are normalized so as to sum up to 100%. This facilitates the comparison
between purchase intentions and market shares but it may produce purchase intentions figures that are
higher than awareness figures. A typical example is the launch of the first Nutrite brand: even if this brand
is known by only a few passionate innovators it will have 100% purchase intentions if it is the only one on
the market.
The shopping habit data represent, for each of the three channels, the proportion of individuals who would
choose that channel when shopping for a Clinite or a Nutrite product. See Figure 20 for a sample graph.
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C. Consumer Panel
The consumer panel study is based on a sample group of over 500 consumers whose buying behavior is
believed to be representative of the entire market. It provides market share by consumer segment as well
as industry sales in the product category. The market share figures represent the proportion of individuals
who have purchased a given brand during the simulated period. The report gives the information for each
brand currently on the market in total and by consumer segment; see Figure 21.
Additional charts give the unit product category sales by consumer segment and in total. The relative sizes
of the consumer segments are provided as well in Figure 22.
D. Distribution Panel
The distribution panel provides continuous tracking of product sales to consumers based on information
gathered at the retail point-of-sale. Information is primarily gathered from scanning cash-registers with
supplementary store audits. Our read represents sales in about 45,000 retail outlets in the Markstrat
world. The table and charts of this study provide the market shares, based on unit sold, by channel for each
brand currently on the market. They also give the unit product category sales by channel and in total. The
relative sizes of the channels are provided as well in Figure 23.
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The distribution coverage figures in Figure 24 represent the proportion of stores that carry a given brand.
The report gives the information for each brand currently on the market. The number of outlets in each
distribution channel is provided as well.
Finally, this study gives the share of shelf space allocated to each brand in a given channel. Shelf space is
usually measured in meters or in number of facings. If a product is given a large shelf space, it is likely to be
highly visible and thus to be purchased more frequently. This is especially true for impulse product
categories such as cosmetics. In addition, because shelves are used as stocking space, a product is less likely
to be out of stock if it has been allocated a large share of the total shelf space. See for a sample share of
shelf space table.
E. Semantic scales
The semantic scales study provides data based on a semantic differential questionnaire administered to
600 individuals. Several semantic scales corresponding to the physical attributes were presented to the
respondents. The figure below shows a sample scale for Processing Power.
Crucial information is derived from these questionnaires: brand perceptions, ideal value along each scale,
ideal value evolution, brand maps and ship between brand attributes and brand perceptions.
Brand perceptions. Respondents are asked to rate each brand on a scale from 1 to 7 according to the way
they perceive the brand. The reported results are summarized in a table such as the one in Figure 26, using
the mean value for each brand. For example, a brand rated 2.3 on the Power scale is perceived as being
less powerful than a brand rating 5.5 on the same scale.
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Ideal values. Respondents are also asked to indicate their preferred (also called Ideal) value on each
scale. The reported results are summarized in a table such as the one in Figure 27, using the mean value for
each segment.
Importance of characteristics. Finally, respondents are asked to rate the importance of each characteristic
in their purchasing decision. Although consumer segments differ on the exact importance attributed to
each characteristic, they tend to agree on the ranking of the scales, i.e. their relative importance. This is
why only average values are reported on the chart of Figure 28. Ratings are given on a scale from 1 (not
important) to 10 (very important).
Brand maps. Additional charts and graphs are available in the study. Brand maps provide a graphical
representation of ideal values and brand perceptions on two dimensions at a time. Five maps are provided
in the study.
Ideal value evolution. The study monitors the evolution of consumer needs over time. The preferred values
on each scale over the past 3 years are recorded and displayed in a table for each consumer segment, as
shown on Figure 58.
Additional graphs. The charts and graphs listed above are given in the main report of the study. Two
additional series of charts can be found by clicking on a link at the top of the study. The first series will
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provide you with a graphical representation of ideal point evolution since the beginning of the simulation.
The second series shows the relationships that exist between brand physical characteristics and brand
perceptions. These charts are mostly used to design R&D projects are discussed in more details in chapter
VI.
F. Multidimensional scaling of brand similarities and preferences
This study provides a joint space configuration obtained with non-metric multidimensional scaling. It relies
on similarity and preference data on the complete set of brands available in the market. These data were
obtained through interviews with 200 individuals. Several charts and graphs are given in this study, as
explained in the next few paragraphs.
Perceptual Maps. The study gives the minimum number of dimensions that are sufficient to provide a good
fit to the data. In the case of the Clinite product category, three dimensions are necessary: Economy,
Performance and Convenience. Then, the study provides a graphical representation of the perceptual
positioning of the marketed brands.
Respondents are also asked to indicate their preferred (also called Ideal) position on the map. The
reported results are summarized on the map, using the mean value for each segment. A sample perceptual
map is depicted in Figure 29.
Obviously, only two dimensions out of the three can be represented simultaneously. The circles Hi, Af, Me,
Si, and Lo on the graph represent the ideal points of the five segments, i.e. the average position of the
whole segment. The various geometric shapes (square, triangle, star...) correspond to the positioning of the
brands as they are perceived by the market at the time of the study. Each brand name is clearly labeled.
One specific color and shape is attributed to each firm (for example, all brands marketed by firm M are
represented by blue circles).
One key difference between this study and the semantic scale one is that the dimensions on which to
evaluate the brands are not given to the respondents. Instead, they are identified by the methodology from
the respondents data.
Building a perceptual map is a complex task that requires many data points. Hence, this study will not be
available for the Nutrite product category until several brands are marketed in the category.
Two tables give the coordinates of the brand positions and of the consumer segment ideal points on the
perceptual map, on a scale from -20 to +20.
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Ideal value evolution. The study monitors the evolution of consumer needs over time. For each consumer
segment the preferred values on each dimension over the past 3 years are recorded and displayed in a
table.
Influence of Product Characteristics on Perceptual Dimensions. We will see in chapter Positioning and
Research & Development that the MDS study is useful in positioning brands. This is why it is important to
relate the three dimensions identified by the MDS study to the most important physical characteristics of
the category. An indication of the influence of product characteristics on perceptual dimensions is provided
in a table such as the one in Figure 30. For example, you may see that Convenience is very strongly
related to Pleasure and strongly to Packaging and Usability.
Additional graphs. The charts and graphs listed above are given in the main report of the study. Two
additional series of charts can be found by clicking on a link at the top of the study. The first series will
provide you with a graphical representation of ideal point evolution since the beginning of the simulation.
The second series shows the relationships that exist between brand physical characteristics and brand
perceptions. These charts are mostly used to design R&D projects are discussed in more details in chapter
VI.
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Figure 32 Market Research Competitive Commercial Team Size by firm and channel
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I.
Market Forecast
This study provides estimates of the expected market size in one period and in five periods. Results are
given for the whole market and are also broken down by consumer segment. These estimates are based on
the current market situation and assume that no substantial changes such as brand introductions, or
significant price increases or decreases will take place in the future. Consequently, depending on what
actions are actually taken by your firm and your competitors, the resulting market size will either be higher
or lower. For the new Nutrite market, the estimates are based on interviews of potential consumers: These
are less accurate and often turn out to be optimistic. See Figure 34 for an extract of this study.
J. Conjoint Analysis
Conjoint analysis is a statistical technique used to calculate the value also called utility attached by
consumers to varying levels of physical characteristics and/or price. Conjoint analysis is conducted by
showing respondents a set of fictitious products each having a specific price and specific levels of limited
number of attributes and asking them to sort these products by decreasing order of preference. By
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analyzing the preference data and the combination of attributes and price for each product, the
methodology evaluates the utility attached by respondents to the individual elements making up the
product.
This study is rather complex and expensive and is therefore not always made available to participants.
Check with your professor if this study will be available in your course. The complexity of the study
increases dramatically with the number of attributes and the number of levels included in the study. Hence,
only price and the three physical characteristics that are perceived as most important are studied; four
levels are tested for each attribute. For instance, the four prices $13, $17, $21 and $25 will be tested.
Relative importance of price and physical characteristics. The chart depicted in Figure 35 shows the
relative importance of price and the three physical characteristics that are perceived as most important in
the market. Note that importance ratings for a given segment sum to 100%.
Utility charts. The charts depicted in Figure 36 show the utilities attached to four arbitrary levels in each
dimension included in the study. Utilities are measured on a scale from 0% (very low utility) to 100% (very
high utility): the higher the utility the higher the preference of the consumer for the corresponding level in
this dimension. The four levels have been chosen in the feasible range for the dimension (e.g.: from 10 to
100 for Pleasure) so as to test varying levels of interest. Results are broken down by consumer segment.
It is important to note that the level with the highest utility is not necessarily the ideal level, as given in the
semantic scales or MDS studies. For instance, in Figure 36, the ideal price may be anywhere between $12
and $20.
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Use the Semantic Scales study to design R&D projects, i.e. to determine the ideal level in each physical
characteristic. This study is very much appropriate to do this because there is a one-to-one relation
between the dimensions of the study and product physical characteristics.
Use the MDS study to decide on your strategy. The MDS study is great for strategy because it provides
a helicopter view of the entire competitive situation. Putting the two perceptual maps next to each
other on the same page or screen will help you; find where to reposition your existing brands; where to
launch new ones; and, last but not least, anticipate the moves of your competitors.
Use the MDS study also for communication. The reason is twofold: (1) you will communicate on the
dimensions that really matter to your customers: Economy, Performance, Reliability, ; (2) You can
reposition a brand along more physical characteristics by using MDS than by using Semantic Scales.
Use Conjoint Analysis to validate or invalidate the findings made with the other two studies. Will the
new characteristics or price of my product maximize total utility? But be cautious: this study may be
misleading because only four levels are tested along four dimensions. The optimal level for a given
dimension is usually in between two of the four tested values, but you do not know where exactly.
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4. Tools
Select Tools in the menu to access the home page of this section. This menu will usually be available as of
Period 3.
The Tools section provides you with a charting tool as well as with other decision-support tools that may
become available at a later stage depending on your instructor.
The charting tool is depicted on Figure 37. It provides you with a multitude of graphs and with a scorecard.
It is pretty easy to use. The menu at the top lists all the available graphs and charts. Select one of them in
the list to display it in the main window.
Depending on the chart that you have selected, additional drop-down choice boxes will show up below the
menu, as shown on Figure 37. These choice boxes will let you zoom in a particular market, segment,
channel, period or firm. They may also be used to view the data in units (e.g.: volume sold) or in value (e.g.:
retail sales). The Next and Previous buttons let you navigate across all graphs without using the menu.
All charts may be copied and pasted in PowerPoint; printed or saved in a file. Click on the chart and rightclick your mouse to show a menu that will let you choose what you want to do with the picture.
A. Graphs
Over 50 graphs can be plotted. They are organized in 5 categories.
Market. Evolution of selected market data: market sizes and growth rates; segment sizes; number of
marketed brands; prices, market average and by consumer segment.
Performance. Evolution of key performance indicators at firm level: retail sales; sales and shares by
market, segment and channel; contribution (profit) per period and cumulative; return on investment;
share price index.
Benchmarking (M$ and %Revenues). Evolution of profit and loss data at firm level: retail sales;
revenues; production costs; marketing costs; R&D costs; profit; etc. Benchmarking charts are available
in million dollars as well as in percentage of revenues to allow an easier comparison across firms of
varying sizes.
Brand charts. Evolution of key performance indicators at brand level: retail sales; market shares;
contribution. Brand charts are available in varying format, for instance top 5 brands across all marketed
brands, or only the brands of a selected firm.
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B. Scorecard
The Company Scorecard shows the evolution of key performance indicators of your company in Finance,
Marketing, Production, Distribution and R&D. It allows you to monitor these KPIs over time and check if
you are going in the right direction.
Financial KPIs. Total revenues; revenues in each market; revenues from new brands (other than your
two initial brands); Total contribution after marketing (CAM); CAM generated by each market; CAM
generated by new brands; net contribution, in million dollars and in percentage of revenues.
Marketing KPIs. Total market share, in volume and value; market share in each market; number of
marketed brands, in total and in each market; number of brands leading in a segment.
Distribution KPIs. Overall distribution coverage; distribution costs, in million dollars and in percentage
of revenues; estimates of lost sales due to insufficient commercial efforts.
Production KPIs. Volume sold; volume produced; units in inventory; inventory costs; estimates of lost
sales due to production shortage.
R&D KPIs. R&D expenses, in total and in each market; number of completed R&D projects, in total and
in each market.
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e.g. BNP-4GSV2
e.g. B07528
e.g. ANANAS
e.g. T
e.g. 9751
All elements except the PAK will be given to you by your instructor. If this has not yet been done, please
contact him or her.
To log in, go to www.stratxsimulations.com and follow the instructions below:
Click the Login link at the top-right corner of the page and select A Participant in the You are: dropdown box.
Enter your PAK and click the Submit button.
Click the Access Markstrat logo on the home page shown in Figure 39 and enter your team password.
At this stage, you may either do the preparation activities, described in the section Getting prepared, or
choose your industry and team in the drop-down choice boxes to finalize the login process and access your
team data.
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the left-hand bar includes the frequently used commands and information;
The Main Window is where reports and decision forms are displayed.
A. Left-Hand Bar
This bar includes frequently used commands and information such as access to documentation and
frequently asked questions; information on what your teammates are doing; log out; due date for your
next decisions; number of errors and warnings in your current decisions; as well as the current budget
deviation.
In most cases, clicking one of the icons will open a new window or tab in your browser to show the
requested information. You may analyze the data provided and then simply close the window to return to
Markstrat. Each of these commands is discussed in a separate section later in this document.
B. Menu Bar and Main Window
The menu includes three main items: Prepare, Analyze and Decide. The Prepare menu was discussed in
section Starting a working session (log in). The other two are discussed below:
The Analyze menu includes several sub-menus, each one giving access to a series of reports. The main
window is updated upon each sub-menu selection to show miniature pictures of the available reports, as
shown in Figure 40. Clicking on a picture will open the corresponding report in a new browser window.
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Alternatively, you can click the PDF icon to print a PDF version of the report or the Excel icon to download
the report in Excel. All available reports are discussed in the chapter Understanding Your Annual Report.
The Decide window leads to the Decision Home. This page, depicted in Figure 41, includes icons for all
decision forms available in Markstrat. Clicking on an icon will open the corresponding form in the main
window. Decision forms are discussed in the following sections.
5. Decision Home
The decision home page is displayed in Figure 41. It is the main entry point to all decision forms and tools:
R&D, Brand Portfolio, Marketing Mix, Commercial Team, Market Research Studies and Decision Review.
All decision forms include a Decision Home button that should be used to save the decisions and return to
home. You may then open another decision form.
Clicking on an icon will open the corresponding decision form. You will be invited to wait in case one of
your teammates is already using the same form.
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Maintained. No brand portfolio operation has been conducted on this brand. Hence, you will market
the same product as in the previous period.
Modified. This brand will be based on a new R&D project as of the decision period. It means that a
different product, e.g. one more powerful or with a longer battery life, will be marketed under this
brand name.
Launched. This brand is a new one that will be marketed for the first time next period.
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Withdrawn. This brand will no longer be marketed as of the beginning of the decision period.
From this form, you may modify or withdraw one of your existing brands or launch a new one. You may
also undo any of your previous decisions.
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Click on a brand name to zoom in this brand. This will open the second decision form, displayed in Figure
47, where you can view and/or modify the detailed marketing mix decisions of this particular brand.
Production
The production plan must be entered in units. To help you make this decision, the form indicates how many
units were sold in the previous period and how many units are held in inventory at the beginning of the
period. Note that if you had modified the base project of the brand, these units will not be available.
Price
The price entered in this form is the recommended retail price or list price, i.e. the price paid by customers,
except for consumers shopping in channels which practice a discount. The price must be given in dollars
with two digits after the decimal place. The form indicates the price that was set in the previous period.
Advertising
The advertising media and research budgets must be entered in thousands of dollars. The form indicates
what the total advertising budget of the brand was in the previous period.
You must also indicate how you want to allocate these budgets across consumer segments. The
percentages entered in the cells must sum to 100%, otherwise you will not be allowed to close the form
and save your decisions.
Perceptual objectives
Perceptual objectives allow you to reposition the brand, i.e. to change consumers perceptions of the
brand. Read section VI.5 to learn more on repositioning brands through advertising.
If your intent is just to raise awareness, simply select No objectives. Otherwise, you may specify your
objectives in term of Semantic Scales or Multidimensional Scales. Objectives can be set on one or two
dimensions. Select the dimensions on which you want to communicate in the Dimension 1 and Dimension
2 choice boxes. Finally, enter the desired level on each dimension in the Objective 1 and Objective 2 choice
boxes. If you wish to focus on a single dimension, pick None in the Dimension 2 box.
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The market research studies decision form is displayed in Figure 48. All available studies are listed together
with their cost. To purchase market studies, simply check the boxes that correspond to the studies you
would like.
Click the Decisions Home button when you are done.
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The commercial team decision form is displayed in Figure 50. The form includes one column per
distribution channel and one row per marketed brand. Enter the number of commercial people that you
wish to assign to each brand and each distribution channel. You can modify the allocation across
distribution channels and the brands at no cost.
The form calculates total size of your commercial team by brand, by channel and in total each time you
enter new numbers.
The input form to enter merchandising budget is identical to the one of Figure 50. Merchandising budgets
must be entered in thousands of dollars.
The Commercial Budget button takes you to a form showing the cost of your commercial decisions, broken
down by type and channel, and a comparison with the previous period. The Commercial Allocation button
shows how your commercial resources are allocated across markets (this may not be relevant if you have
not yet launched a Nutrite brand), across channels and across brands. You may thus check that the
numbers you have entered are in line with your overall market, channel and brand strategies.
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R&D; and sections VI.5.B and VI.6 to review situations where R&D will be necessary to reposition your
brands.
The R&D series of decision forms will guide you through these decisions. The form depicted in Figure 51
shows up when you choose the R&D icon on the decision home. It gives an overview of your current R&D
projects.
Knowing the R&D terminology is necessary to fully understanding this section.
Completed project. A project is completed if it was created in a past period and sufficient budget was
allocated to it. Completed projects may be used for brand portfolio operations, as explained in section
V.6. Completed projects do not show up in R&D decisions.
Uncompleted projects. A project is uncompleted if it was created in a past period and the R&D
department could not complete it because the allocated budget was not sufficient. Uncompleted
projects may be continued or shelved.
Continued projects. An uncompleted project is continued if you allocate a budget to it in the current
decision period. A continued project may be shelved in a later period.
Shelved projects. An uncompleted project is shelved if you have stopped allocating budget to it. A
shelved project may be continued in a later period.
New projects. A project is new if it has been created in the current decision period. A new project can
be deleted if you change your mind.
From this form you may create new projects or manage uncompleted ones, i.e. continue or shelve them.
A. Creating a project
Choose the Launch a new project button corresponding to the market in which you want to create the new
project. A series of forms will guide you through the process of creating the project: name, objective,
physical characteristics, base cost and allocated budget. These forms are depicted in sections V.11.D,
V.11.E, V.11.F and 0.
When the process is completed, the project home page will be displayed. This page provides you with a
recap of your project decisions and allows you to adjust these decisions. Refer to section 0.
B. Continuing or shelving a project
Past projects that could not be completed in the previous period are automatically continued at the
beginning of the decision period. Hence, all your uncompleted projects will appear in the R&D home form
shown in Figure 51. Click on a project name to zoom in the project and show its recap form, as shown in
Figure 55.
To continue a project, you simply need to allocate a budget to it, as explained in sections V.11.F and 0.
Because a continued project is a past project, the recap form tells you exactly what budget is required to
complete it. The other decisions name, description, characteristics and base cost cannot be modified.
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To shelve a project, simply click the Shelve button at the bottom of the form. The project will be removed
from your current R&D decisions and will no longer appear on the form in Figure 51. Shelved projects may
be continued at any time, as explained in section V.11.C.
C. Unshelving a project
Choose the Unshelve one of your past projects button to unshelve a past project. If this button does not
appear on your R&D home form, then it means that you do not have any shelved projects that can be
continued.
The list of past shelved projects is displayed. Click on a project name to zoom on the project and show its
recap form, as shown on Figure 55. Make sure that this is the project that you want to continue and, if yes,
click the Unshelve button.
You will then have to allocate a budget to the project. Because this is a past project, the recap form tells
you exactly what budget is required to complete the project. The other decisions name, description,
characteristics and base cost cannot be modified.
D. Project name and objective
The form depicted in Figure 52 allows you enter the project name and description. The name of a project
must be entered using the naming conventions discussed in section III.8.A. The objective of the new project
should be entered as well.
Note that names of continued projects cannot be changed.
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The first option is to do a feasibility study, as explained in section III.8.E; the cost will be $100k.
The second option is to allocate a budget to the project. To help you decide which budget to allocate,
you may run an online query, as explained in section III.8.F. Upon completion of the query, an estimate
of the budget required to complete the project will be given. Allocating this amount will guarantee
project completion at the end of the current decision period. The form tells you how many queries you
have done so far. Remember that the number of online queries authorized in a period is limited to 5
(but this limit may have been adjusted by your instructor).
If you change the physical characteristics of your project or the requested base cost after you have run
the online query, the estimate provided by the query will not show up on the form as it is no longer
valid. In this case, you should run a new query to adjust the estimate according to the new project
specifications.
If you do not have sufficient funds, you may allocate a budget lower than the full amount indicated by
the query. In this case, you have no guarantee that the project will be completed by the end of the
decision period.
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G. Project overview
The project overview page is a recap form that can be accessed by clicking on a project name in the
summary form shown in Figure 51. This is the final step in the project creation process.
This form allows you to adjust your project decisions by clicking on:
This form also allows you to delete the current project (in the case of a new project) or shelve it (in the case
of a continued project).
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Team Identity In Period 1, your company name is initially equal to your initial letter: M, R, S, T, L or N.
R&D All projects that have been partially developed in the previous period will be completed. This
means that the budget required for completion is automatically allocated. If you wish to stop the
development of a project, you need to shelve this project in the R&D decision page.
Brand Portfolio All brands marketed in the previous period will be marketed automatically in the new
period. Brands will not be launched, withdrawn or modified automatically.
Marketing Mix The following decisions are copied from the previous period: production plan, price,
advertising media, advertising research and segmentation strategy. Perceptual objectives are reset to
No Objectives.
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Commercial Team The size of your commercial team is not changed. Similarly, the allocation over
channels and brands is the same as in the previous period.
Merchandising The merchandising budgets allocated to brands and channels are copied from the
previous period.
Market Research Studies The same studies as in the previous period are ordered.
Do not be surprised if a share of your marketing budget is already allocated when you start the decision
round. This is due to the expenses corresponding to the initial decisions: completed R&D projects,
advertising, commercial team and market studies. When you change your decisions, these expenses will be
changed accordingly.
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Neither segmentation nor competitive strategies are addressed in this manual. Your professor may deliver
conceptual sessions on these subjects during the course. You may also find useful information on these
topic in your marketing textbook. In this chapter, we will assume that you have identified the consumer
segment(s) that you want to target for a specific brand, and we will describe the various approaches that
can be used in Markstrat to address product design and brand positioning.
MINT (2.6)
Low
Safety
RISE (5.6)
Average
Power
High
Safety
The study also provides the ideal rating for each characteristic and each segment. The results of this study
are shown in Figure 26 and Figure 27. By comparing the perceived ratings of your brand with the ideal ones
for a given segment, you can determine if this brand fits the needs of consumers in that segment.
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The table depicted in Figure 58 is included in the Multidimensional Scaling study as of Period 2. A
similar table is also included in the Semantic Scales study. Positions are tracked over only three periods
but you may use the graphs described in the next paragraph to obtain a longer tracking.
The graph depicted in Figure 59 is included in the additional graphs available both in the Semantic
Scales and Multidimensional Scaling studies. It shows the evolution of ideal points since the beginning
of the simulation. The latest data point is the one with the strongest color. All dimensions can be
plotted by using the choice boxes on the left-hand side.
Using these charts, you can interpolate where ideal points will be located in few periods time. This is an
important step in your positioning strategy. Indeed, you want to choose a position for your brand that will
be close to the needs of consumers for several periods. In addition, you should take into account the time it
will take to reach this position, especially if a research project is necessary. Hence, you probably need to
look 2 or 3 periods ahead of time, if not more.
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Repeat the process above for each dimension for which you need to find the physical characteristic
corresponding to a desired coordinate.
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case, you will have to use your judgment. This is also true in case the Semantic Scales study and the MDS
one give two different readings.
Repeat the process above for each dimension where you need to find the physical characteristic
corresponding to a desired coordinate.
5.5 1.0
] = 88 ( )
7.0 1.0
or
= + [( )
1.0
]
6.0
where P is the desired value on the 1 to 7 scale; X is the corresponding physical level; and LB and UB are the
lower and upper limits of the physical characteristics feasible range, 10 and 100 in our market.
= 10 + [90
1.0
]
6.0
This method, although imperfect, allows you to make approximations until more data becomes available
over time.
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5. Repositioning strategies
Repositioning can be achieved by advertising or by research & development. Although consumers'
perceptions are linked to the brands physical characteristics, they can be slightly influenced by
communication. But the repositioning effect is limited; this is especially true when the brand awareness
level is high, because a brand with which consumers are extremely familiar is more difficult to reposition.
Beyond a certain level, brand repositioning can no longer be done by advertising alone. At this point one
must complete an R&D project with physical characteristics matching consumers' needs, and then to
upgrade the brand. R&D projects will take at least one period to complete, while repositioning through
advertising has an immediate effect.
A. Positioning with Advertising
Advertising in Markstrat is mainly used to build brand awareness and to inform customers about
productsphysical characteristics, but it can also be used to reposition a brand. Using advertising to
reposition a product is a four step process:
Identify your desired position on the perceptual map or on the semantic scales chart (for example, to
reposition a brand closer to the Shoppers segment along dimensions Pleasure and Efficacy, first
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estimate the future ideal positions of that segment on these two dimensions, as explained in section
VI.2).
Enter the coordinates identified in the previous step in the perceptual objectives for the brand when
making Marketing Mix decisions, as explained in section 0. You can choose to set perceptual objectives
base on either semantic scales or MDS dimensions. Select the two chosen dimensions and enter the
coordinates of the point that you want to reach. A maximum of two dimensions may be specified to
keep the message simple and effective. Actually, there is no reason to communicate on two dimensions
if repositioning is required on only one dimension; in such a case, select None for the second dimension
and your communication message will be even clearer.
Allocate an advertising media budget for the brand, to buy media space and time, and an advertising
research budget. The effect of advertising research is two-fold. First, it makes your advertising
campaign more effective, by a better selection of media and a better design of the advertising copy.
Second, the repositioning impact will be higher in terms of reaching the perceptual objectives, although
there will naturally be a limit as to how far and how fast advertising can change perceptions. It is
considered that between 10% and 15% of your total advertising budget should be spend in advertising
research for an effective repositioning to take place.
Indicate how you want to allocate your advertising budget across consumer segments. The targeted
segments must be consistent with the perceptual objectives that you have set. Please note that this
decision alone is not sufficient to reposition a brand. Indeed, targeting specific segments is mainly done
by selecting the most appropriate media to communicate the message, but it has little effect on the
content of the message.
Finally, you will have to implement the same type of advertising program when you change the physical
characteristics of a brand or when you change its price significantly.
B. Positioning through Research & Development
As explained before, a brand must be repositioned through R&D when the distance between the desired
position on the perceptual map or on the semantic scales chart and the brand is too large. Research
and development must also be used to introduce new brands, since all marketed brands must be based on
R&D projects.
Using R&D to reposition a product or to introduce a new one is a four step process:
Identify the desired position on the perceptual map or on the semantic scales chart.
Estimate the physical characteristics that correspond to this desired position (as explained in section
VI.3).
Develop an R&D project with the physical characteristics calculated above. This is done in cooperation
with the R&D department as explained in section III.8.
Introduce a new brand or modifying an existing one. Completed R&D projects can be used to reposition
existing brands by modifying the physical characteristics that are the basis of consumers perceptions.
They can also be used to introduce new brands. In both cases, a coherent advertising campaign will
have to be implemented at the same time to inform consumers about these changes.
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department have agreed to specify the transfer cost of the first 100,000 units of the new product. This cost
is called the Base cost.
Base costs have no upper limit. If you indicate a high base cost, the R&D department will have more
flexibility in finding the appropriate materials and manufacturing processes. As a consequence, the project
is easier to develop, and is less expensive in terms of the total development budget.
The lower limit of the base cost for a given project depends on its technical specifications: the more
sophisticated a product is, the higher the minimum base cost will be. The higher the level of each attribute
(Efficacy, Safety, etc.), the higher the minimum unit cost.
One strategy for choosing a base cost is to request that the R&D department develop the project at the
minimum price. This solution is highly attractive in terms of margins, but may be more expensive overall
since its development budget is likely to be much higher than alternatives.
Another solution is to calculate the highest base cost economically achievable. You start from the desired or
ideal price of the targeted consumers, i.e. the price that consumers are willing to pay for a product fitting
their needs. The base cost is then obtained by subtracting the average distributors margin plus the margin
that will make the future product economically attractive for you to market (including advertising and
commercial team costs). A base cost calculated this way will be higher than the minimum one in many
cases.
Finally, you may order a feasibility study to obtain an estimate of the minimum base cost and of the
required development budget. Feasibility studies cost $100,000 and take one period to complete.
B. Budget required for completion
An R&D project includes the research work necessary to develop a prototype of the desired product and
the development work necessary to find potential suppliers and set up manufacturing processes. Your
department must allocate a budget to each project to cover these R&D expenses. When the project is
completed, the production department is ready to produce the first units of the produc at the transfer cost
specified in the R&D report, assuming a first production batch of 2.5 million units.
The budget required for the completion of a project is a function of several parameters. The budget
depends on the requested physical characteristics: the more sophisticated the future product, the higher
the budget. It also depends on the experience of the firm with comparable products, i.e. on the number of
projects completed in the past with similar characteristics. Finally, the development budget depends on the
base cost requested, as explained in the previous section. Note that the R&D department is managed as a
profit center, and will not reimburse you if you allocate exceedingly high budgets.
The budget required to complete a project may be estimated through an online query, as explained in
section III.8.F. It may also be obtained with a feasibility study.
C. Responses from the R&D department
All the R&D projects which the firm has worked on in the previous periods are listed in the R&D section of
the company results. The report details completed and uncompleted projects, including the two projects
which existed at the beginning of the simulation. A typical report is shown in Figure 16.
Lets use the following example to illustrate the possible responses from the R&D department after one
period of development. The table in Figure 62 summarizes the responses for a new project with identical
physical characteristics but with four different requested levels of base cost and allocated budget.
The figure in the middle, Normal budget for completion, is calculated by R&D at an early stage of the
project. This figure is internal to the R&D department and is not disclosed to Marketing. It is the same in
case A and B, or in cases C and D, because it depends on the technical specifications and on the requested
base cost. The project will be completed only if the allocated budget is greater than or equal to the normal
budget. This is what happens in cases A and C. Note that the extra budget ($200k in case A and $450k in
case B) is not given back to Marketing.
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The project is completed in case A despite the fact that the base cost specified ($8.00) was below the
minimum base cost ($11.00); it was automatically adjusted and the project is successfully developed at the
minimum base cost.
Note that the Minimum base cost is the same in all cases because it only depends on the technical
specifications. For case C, the Marketing department could decide to immediately launch a cost reduction
project, so as to complete a new project with the same physical characteristics and a base cost of $11.
Case A
Case B
Case C
Case D
Efficacy
17
17
17
17
Safety
26
26
26
26
85
85
85
85
35
35
35
35
70
70
70
70
$8.00
$8.00
$13.00
$13.00
$1 000k
$300k
$1 000k
$300k
$800k
$800k
$550k
$550k
Yes
No
Yes
No
$11.00
$11.00
$13.00
$13.00
$11.00
$11.00
$11.00
$11.00
500k
250k
Packaging
Project
Pleasure
specifications
Usability
Requested base cost
Allocated budget
R&D Internal
Normal budget for completion
Data
Project successfully completed
Response from Current base cost
R&D at end of Minimum base cost
period
Additional budget for
completion
Uncompleted R&D projects may be continued the following period or may be suspended (shelved) for one
or several periods. If you choose to never continue the project, the budget allocated so far is lost. The
technical characteristics of a continued project may not be changed from their original values.
D. Brand introduction, modification or withdrawal
R&D projects may be used as soon as they are completed to launch new brands or to modify existing ones.
They may also be shelved for future use. Brand portfolio decisions are summarized below and are detailed
in section V.6.
A new brand is introduced on the market by entering a brand name which has not been used in the past.
This brand name is completely independent of the code used for the R&D project. An existing brand is
modified by keeping its current name and using the physical characteristics corresponding to a new
completed project. Using a new brand name will facilitate the products positioning, but its brand
awareness will have to be completely built from scratch. Using an existing brand name makes its
repositioning more difficult, since consumers are familiar with the brand at its previous position. However,
as the awareness level is maintained, the brands purchase intentions are likely to be higher than with a
new brand.
The same product can be marketed under different names. The presence of multiple brands targeted at the
same segment is a good strategy to build barriers to entry of new brands by competitors. A company may
also market multiple brands based on the same project to different segments which are willing to pay
different prices while having similar technical needs.
When a brand is modified, the Production department will immediately start producing the new version of
the product. Lowering the cost of a brand is considered a brand modification. Obsolete inventories are sold
by the Production department to a trading company at a fixed percentage of their value, usually 80%. This
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company will then export the old products outside the Markstrat world. Consequently, a loss of x% (the
given percentage) of the inventory value is charged to the marketing department. The same rule applies if
inventories remain when a brand is withdrawn from the market.
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If the product is not right, should you launch an R&D project to improve your brand characteristics?
Should you increase price to raise your profitability or should you decrease your price to align on
competition and get a bigger market share?
Should you increase your marketing efforts (advertising & commercial team) ?
Should you focus these efforts on a single consumer segment or should you try to reach two or even
three segments to target more consumers?
Etc.
Should you lower your production plan to get rid of your existing inventory?
Should you, on the opposite, increase your production to benefit from the experience effect? This is
usually a good idea for new brand launches in markets or consumer segments with low volume.
Is your awareness high enough so that you can reduce advertising spending?
How does your commercial team compare to the ones of your competitors? Do you really need such a
large number of people?
Etc.
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Copyright 2003, 2012 by Jean-Claude Larrch, Hubert Gatignon & Rmi Triolet
Software 2003, 2012 by StratX
Markstrat is a registered trademark of StratX
All rights reserved
ISBN-10 :
ISBN-13 :
0-9858432-1-7
978-0-9858432-1-2
ABOUT MARKSTRAT
The Markstrat simulation was created more than thirty years ago by Jean-Claude Larrch, Alfred H.
Heineken Professor of Marketing at INSEAD, and Hubert Gatignon, The Claude Janssen Chaired Professor of
Business Administration and Professor of Marketing at INSEAD, and has been constantly improved since its
creation.
Used in combination with traditional training methods such as conceptual sessions or case studies,
Markstrat is a highly effective tool for learning strategic marketing concepts, such as brand portfolio,
segmentation, and/or positioning strategies, as well as for learning operational marketing. Similar to a flight
simulator, this marketing simulation allows students and managers to practice new skills in an intensive
time frame and in a risk-free environment before trying them out in a real business environment.
The mathematical model of Markstrat is based on solid theoretical foundations, whose underlying formulas
have been extensively tested. These simulations have been used to successfully train large number of
participants and executives from many universities and organizations.
You and your team will be given a company and product portfolio to manage in a dynamic and interactive
environment. No previous computer experience is required but it is important to read this handbook prior
to your course. If you do not read it carefully, you will run the risk of putting your team at a competitive
disadvantage!
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