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GRAHAM HOOLEY • NIGEL F. PIERCY • BRIGETTE NICOULAUD

GRAHAM HOOLEY • NIGEL F. PIERCY • BRIGETTE NICOULAUD. 3. The changing market environment. Introduction. How environment in which marketing takes place is changing Marketing environment can be divided into; Competitive environment (including company, its immediate competitors and customers)

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GRAHAM HOOLEY • NIGEL F. PIERCY • BRIGETTE NICOULAUD

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  1. GRAHAM HOOLEY • NIGEL F. PIERCY • BRIGETTE NICOULAUD 3 The changing market environment

  2. Introduction • How environment in which marketing takes place is changing • Marketing environment can be divided into; • Competitive environment (including company, its immediate competitors and customers) • Macro-environment (the wider social, political and economic setting in which organizations operates

  3. Industry vs. markets • Industries are collection of organizations with technology and products in common • White good firm comprise and industry – that make refrigerators, washing machines and so on • Markets are customer linked by their similar needs • Laundry products comprise a market – products and services customer use to clean their clothes

  4. A framework for macro-environmental analysis • Nature of change in macro-environment • Importance of understanding macro-environment is tow fold • Market impact of change • Nature of change facing organizations is itself changing • PEST analysis (political, economic, social, cultural and technological)

  5. Figure 3.1 PEST analysis of the macro-environment

  6. The economic and political environment • The European single market and its enlargement • Single market of over 320 million consumers was created to allow free flow of products and services • Internationalization and globalization • Foundation of OPEC, valuable raw materials • Changes in east/west relationship • Dismantling of berlin wall, liberalization of economies, break-up of soviet union, regional trading blocks

  7. Figure 3.2 The economic and political environment

  8. Social and cultural environment • Demographic change • ‘Demographic time bomb’ • The grey market • Over-60s age group make up 20% of population • The youth market • Multi-ethnic market – western societies • Changing living patterns and lifestyles • Single person households, women employment

  9. Figure 3.3 The social and cultural environmental

  10. Social and cultural pressures • Customers are becoming increasingly demanding • They demand and expect reliable, and durable products with quick, efficient service • Customers are less prepared to pay substantial premium • Change in attitude to, concern for, the physical environment

  11. The technological environment • A shortening of commercialization times of new inventions: • Photography (took over 100 years) • Telephone (56), Radio(35), TV (12) • Transistor (only 3 years) • Innovative marketing research companies • The internet – the global electronic communications network

  12. Globalization of markets • Increasingly becoming global market • Impact of technology • Gigantic, world-scale markets with economies of scale • Problems for competitors that do not operate on a global scale

  13. New strategies for changing macro-environments • Learn fast and adapt quickly (Dickson, 1992) • Combination of culture and climate to maximize learning (Slater and Narver, 1995) • Being market oriented • Multi mode marketing • Pursuing intense relationship-building, less intense and arm’s length strategies

  14. Marketing strategies • Global positioning • Think globalization and focus core competencies • The master brand • Brand identity that links all parts of the business e.g. Toyota, Honda • The integrated enterprise and end-user focus • Challenge of managing people, processes and infrastructure to deliver value to end user

  15. Figure 3.4 The shift in strategy for delivering shareholder value Focus on core competencies The new strategic imperative Domestic focus Global focus Portfolio approaches

  16. Marketing strategies (Cont’d) • Built-in-class processes • Challenge to meet world-class standards from wherever they come • Mass customization • Product or service tailored to the individual customer requirements • Breakthrough technology • New technology e.g. ‘smart toilet’ in Japan

  17. Cravens predicted following forms • Markets shape business strategies • Networks of interlinked product markets • The move from functions to processes • Increasingly focus on process of going to market • Strategic alliances • Collaboration and partnership • The balanced scorecard • Keeping scores involved

  18. Five forces model of the industry competition

  19. Figure 3.5 Five forces driving cmpetition Threat of new entrants Bargaining power of buyers Bargaining power of suppliers Rivalry among existing firms in the industry Threat of substitutes

  20. Rivalry among existing companies • The rivalry is likely to be most intense where; • Competition in the industry are roughly evenly balanced in terms of size and share • During periods of low market growth • Where exit barriers are high • Where product differentiation is low • Where fixed costs are relatively high

  21. The threat of market entry • Potential for new entrants to emerge • Conditions make market entry more likely • Entry barriers can be low where; • Costs of entry are low • Existing/new distribution channels are open to use • Little competitive retaliation is anticipated • Differentiation is low • There are gaps in the market

  22. The threat of substitutes • Substitution can increase competitiveness of an industry for no of reasons • By making existing technologies redundant • By incremental product improvement

  23. Bargaining power of suppliers • Suppliers tend to have more bargaining power where holds; • Suppliers are more concentrated than buyers • Costs of switching suppliers are higher • Supplier's offerings are highly differentiated

  24. Bargaining power of buyers • Buyers tend to be more powerful in the supply chain where the following is true • They are more concentrated than sellers • They are readily available alternative sources of supply • Buyer switching costs are low

  25. Competitiveness drivers • Where following industry characteristics are present, expect greater level of competition: • There is little differentiation between market offers • Industry growth rates are low • High fixed costs need to be recovered • High supplier switching costs • Low buyer switching costs • Low entry barriers • High exit barriers

  26. The product life cycle

  27. Figure 3.6 The product life cycle Sales Sales & profit Time Profit Loss Pre-launch Growth Maturity Decline Introduction Launch

  28. Introduction stage • Product is launched into the market and sales are slow to pick up • Customer and distribution have to be found • The first HD DVD player • Motorola razr in the fashion phone market

  29. Growth stage • Rapid increase in sales • Product starts to attract different types of customers • Repeat purchases may start • Microsoft Zunes as the ‘IPod killer’

  30. Maturity stage • Growth slows down significantly • Lasts longer than the previous one, the most challenging one • Severe competition, market fragmentation and declining profits • Weaker competitors will exit

  31. Decline stage • Rapid decline of the sales of the product • Better solutions • New technology such as the flash pen replacing flopping and zip-disk • A change in consumer taste or an increase in competition, domestic or international

  32. Strategic groups • Firms within industry following similar strategies for similar customer groups • Coca Cola and Pepsi • Barriers to mobility within industry • Vertical integration of companies • Geographical boundaries • Differences in technology • Threat of substitute or new entrants

  33. Figure 3.7 Map of strategic groups in the US automobile market The Faded Champions VW Audi, Rover Group Broad line The Big Three GM, Ford, Chrysler The Samurai Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Mazda Luxury Cars Mercedes, BMW, Volvo, Saab, Jaguar Degree of specialization Specialists Rolls-Royce, Ferrari, Aston Martin Lamborghini, Lotus, Morgan, McLaren Narrow line High Low Local content

  34. Industry evolution and forecasting • Porter (1980) discussed evolution of industry through three main stages; emergence, transformation to maturity and decline Industry Evolution Product Product Lifecycle Brand

  35. Figure 3.8 Industry evolution

  36. Emerging stage • Uncertainty • Big losses can be associated • Out of three competing video disks and video cassette recording technology in mid-1980s only one, VHS, has survived • Philip with laser disk and V2000 VCRs and Sony with Betamax were two of losers

  37. Transition to maturity • Uncertainty declines • Competition intensifies • Rapid growth, high margins, little competition and apparent size of industry within late stage of emergence attract many competition

  38. Decline • Emergence of substitute or demographic shift • Two main strategies are usually appropriate; • Divest or focus on the efficient supply of a robust segment

  39. Environmental stability • Limitation of porter’s industry model • Technological and marketing uncertainty to emerging stage of the industry • Environmental turbulence is fundamental to understanding industries (Ansoff – 1984) • Marketing and innovation turbulence • Try to match its capability to appropriate environmental turbulence

  40. Figure 3.9 Environmental turbulance Repetitive Surpriseful Developing Discontinuous Marketing Turbulence Innovation Turbulence Changing Changing Discontinuous Developing Surpriseful Repetitive Grocers (Tesco, Sainsbury etc. Convenience stores (7/11, SPAR etc.) Environmental Turbulence Strategic Thrust Capability

  41. Space analysis • SPACE (strategic position & action evaluation) • Relates industry strength to the competitive advantage and financial strength of company • Financial strength, high liquidity or access to resources; withstand environmental volatility • Industry strength, attractiveness in terms of growth potential, profitability and ability to use its resources efficiently

  42. Space analysis (Cont’d) • Competitive posture; competitive advantage in an attractive industry • Aggressive quadrant; significant advantages, likely to face threats of new competition • Conservative posture; mature markets, lack of needs for investment, financial surplus • Defensive posture; vulnerable, little residual strength to combat competition

  43. Figure 3.10 Space analysis map Financial Strength Conservative Aggressive Competitive advantage Industry strength Strategic postures Defensive Competitive Environmental stability

  44. The advantage matrix • Boston consulting group (1979) developed it • Classify competitive environment within industry • Framework identifies two dimensions; • Approaches for achieving advantage in market • Potential size of advantage • Quadrants of advantage matrix show how relationship between relative size and return on asset can differ

  45. Figure 3.11 The Advantage Matrix Fragmented Specialized ROA ROA Many RS RS Number of ways to achieve advantage Stalemate Volume ROA Few ROA RS RS Small Large Potential size advantage ROA – Return on asset RS – Relative size

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