Lecture Notes On Strategic Marketing Management
Lecture Notes On Strategic Marketing Management
I. MANAGING GROWTH
A. Gaining and Defending Market Positions
B. Managing Sales Growth
C. Managing New Products
D. Managing Product Line
• TYPES OF PIONEERS:
a. Technology pioneer – the company that first introduces new technology.
b. Product pioneer – the company that is first to commercially introduce an entirely new product.
c. Business model pioneer – the company that is first to introduce a new business model.
d. Market pioneer – the company that first introduces a given offering to a particular target market.
• BENEFITS OF PIONEERING:
a. preference formation – opportunity to shape customer preferences, creating close association with its
brand and underlying customer need. (e.g. google, xerox, twitter, ebay)
b. switching cost – opportunity to build loyalty by creating switching costs.
▪ TYPES OF SWITCHING COSTS:
i. functional – loss of the unique feature of the pioneer’s offering.
ii. monetary – cost of replacing current offering or penalty for breaking a contract.
iii. psychological – cost of learning the functionality of a competitor’s offering.
c. resource advantage – the pioneer can benefit from pre-empting scarce resources such as raw materials,
human resources, geographical locations, and collaborator networks. (e.g. exclusive access to strategic
raw materials)
d. barriers to entry – opportunity to create technological barriers to prevent competitors from entering the
market. (e.g. exclusive right to a particular invention or design)
e. learning curve – allows to heighten production effectiveness and efficiency as its cumulative output
increases over time.
b. (NEW Customers) –
i. VERTICAL REPOSITIONING – refers to a scenario in which the company modifies the value
proposition of an offering by moving it into a different price tier (either UPSCALE or DOWN
SCALE).
ii. HORIZONTAL REPOSITIONIN – altering the benefits without necessarily moving into a different
price tier.
b. HORIZONTAL EXTENSION – offerings that are primarily differentiated by functionality rather than the
price.