Principles of Strategic Marketing Management
Principles of Strategic Marketing Management
Principles of Strategic Marketing Management
Strategic
Marketing
Management
What is a strategy?
Corporate Strategy:
Mission & •Corporate Operating
Objectives •Business Plans
•Functional
“Know your enemy, know yourself, and your
victory will not be threatened.
Know the terrain, know the weather, and your
victory will be complete.”
Sun Tze
What is Competitive Advantage?
“Competitive advantage is a company’s ability to perform in
one or more ways that competitors cannot or will not match.”
Philip Kotler
• Differentiating feature(s)
• Narrow market niche
• Serving unique needs better
• Expertise, resource strengths, and capabilities not easily
imitated
• Low-cost provider
Companies seeking competitive
advantages
• Positions of advantage
• Superior customer value
• Lower relative total cost
• Performance advantages
• Customer satisfaction, Loyalty, Market Share, Profit
• Sources of advantages
• Superior skills & knowledge, Superior resources,
Superior business process
Other characteristics of CA
Substantiality
• Is it substantial enough to make a difference?
Sustainability
• Can it be neutralized by competitors quickly?
• Ability to be leveraged into visible business attributes that
will influence customers
Distinctive Capabilities
An Organization’s Mission:
Requires
•Detailed understanding of market needs
•Proactive use of competitive intelligence at the corporate
as well as SBU’s levels
Strategic planning
• Strategic planning is the process of developing and
maintaining a strategic fit between the organization’s goals
and capabilities and its changing marketing opportunities
• Process to establish priorities on what you will accomplish
in the future
• Forces you to make the right choices
• Pulls the entire organization together around a single
game plan for execution
• Broad outline on where resources will get allocated
Why do Strategic Planning?
• If you fail to plan, then you plan to fail – be proactive about
the future
20%-
Market Growth Rate
?
10%-
8%- Cash cow Dogs
6%- 8
4%-
2%- 6
0
7
10x 4x 2x 1.5x 1x .5x .4x .3x .2x .1x
Relative Market Share
• The growth-share matrix is divided into 4 cells, each indicating a
different kind of business decision need.
• Build: Here the goal is to increase market share. This is a strategy best suited for
“question marks” as they must grow to become stars.
• Hold: The goal is to keep market share and is best suited for “cash cows” so that they
could continue to yield large positive cash flow.
• Harvest: Here the goal is to increase short-term cash flow. Harvesting involves a
decision to exit from the business (market). Harvesting involves “milking the business”
to get out as much resources as it can. Harvesting best suited for weak cash cows,
question marks and dogs.
• Divest: Sell or liquidate to be able to direct the resources elsewhere. This strategy
best suited for “dogs” and “question marks” that are a drag on profitability and has no
real chance of future profitability. Before divesting the firm should evaluate whether
divesting is a better option than harvesting.
Three Paths to Success
Relative Market Share
High Low
High
Market
Growth
Rate
Low
Three Paths to Failure
High
Market
Growth
Rate
Low
Ansoff’s Product-Market Grid
•Is a tool that helps businesses decide their product and market growth strategy.
3.Restructure a mature market by driving out competitors; this would require a much
more aggressive promotional campaign, supported by a pricing strategy designed to
make the market unattractive for competitors
.
Market Development (new markets, existing products):
Market our existing product range in a new market.
This means that the product remains the same, but it is marketed to a new
audience.
This often happens with the auto markets where existing models are updated or
replaced and then marketed to existing customers.
Business Diversification (new markets, new products):
Market completely new products to new customers.