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Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
Lesson
40
Lesson
overview and learning objectives:
Basic
learning objective of today's Lesson is to discuss
the need to understand competitors as
well
as
customers through competitor analysis.
Explain the fundamentals of
competitive marketing
strategies
based on creating value for customers.
Two key trends in marketing for
the twenty-first
century
are:
(a)
The trend towards the use of
relationship marketing to improve customer
satisfaction.
(b)
The trend towards in-depth
competitor analysis as a means of
identifying the company's
major
competitors
(using both an industry and
market-based analysis) and closely
examining and
formulating
strategies to deal with
competitors' objectives, strategies, strengths
and weaknesses,
and
reaction patterns.
CREATING
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
To
be successful, a company must
consider its competitors as well as its
actual and potential
customers.
In the process of performing a
competitor analysis, the
company carefully analyzes
and
gathers
information on competitors' strategies
and programs. A competitive intelligence
system
helps
the company to acquire and
manage competitive information.
The company must
then
choose
a competitive marketing strategy of its
own. The strategy chosen
depends on the
company's
industry position and its objectives,
opportunities, and resources.
Several basic
competitive
strategies are outlined in
this chapter. Some of these
are time-tested and some
are
relatively
new.
Four
primary competitive positions are
reviewed in the
Lesson.
The
first is that of the
market
leader which
faces three challenges: expanding
the total market,
protecting
market share, and expanding market share.
The market leader is interested in
finding
ways
to expand the total market
because it will benefit from
any increased sales. The
leader must
also
have an eye towards protecting its
share. Several strategies
for accomplishing this
protection
task
are presented. Aggressive
leaders also try to expand
their own market
share.
The
second position is that of
the market
challenger. This
is a firm that aggressively
tries to
expand
its market share by attacking the leader,
other runner-up firms, or smaller
firms in the
industry.
The
third position is that of
the market
follower which
is designated as a runner-up firm
that
chooses
not to rock the boat
(usually out of fear that it
stands to lose more than it
might gain).
Lastly,
the market
niche is a
position option open to smaller firms
that serve some part of
the
market
that is not likely to
attract the attention of the
larger firms. These firms
often survive by
being
specialists in some function
that is attractive to the
marketplace.
The
competitive analysis of these
four competitive position
options presented in this chapter is
a
truly
unique presentation and offers
insight for every potential
manager. This information
can be
used
by every mid-level strategic planner
who seeks insight into
competitive strategy
dynamics.
A.
Competitive
Advantage:
Today's
companies face their
toughest competition ever. To win
in today's marketplace,
companies
must become adept not
just in managing products,
but in managing
customer
relationships
in the face of determined competition.
Building profitable customer
relationships
and
gaining competitive advantage
requires delivering more value
and satisfaction to target
customers
than competitors do. Two steps
must be taken in order to deal
effectively with
competitors
and their strategies:
1).
the first step is competitor
analysis where the company
goes through the
process of
identifying,
assessing, and selecting key
competitors.
200
Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
2).
the second step is
competitive marketing strategies where
the company strongly
positions
itself
against competitors and
finds a way to give itself
the
greatest
possible competitive
advantage.
a.
Competitor Analysis
To
plan effective marketing strategies,
the company needs to find
out all it can about
its
competitors.
In this way the company
can find the areas of
potential competitive advantage
and
disadvantage.
i.
Identifying
Competitors
Competitors
include those who make similar
products and services and
sell them to the
same
customers
at similar prices. Competitors can
be:
1).
those that make the same
product or class of
products.
2).
those that supply the same
services.
3).
those that compete for the
same consumer dollars.
Companies
must avoid "competitive myopia"
(seeing only one set of
competitors). Companies
can
identify
their competitors from the
industry point of view or
the market point of view.
One
approach
is to profile the company's direct and
indirect competitors by mapping the
steps buyers
take
in obtaining and using the
product (i.e., a competitor
map).
ii.
Assessing
Competitors
It
is important to determine the objectives of
the competition. It is important to
determine the
importance
a competitor places
on:
1).
Current profitability.
2).
Market share growth.
3).
Cash flow.
4).
Technological leadership.
5).
Service leadership.
6).
other goals.
The
more that one firm's
strategy resembles another
firm's strategy, the more
the two firms
compete.
Strategic groups should be identified. A
strategic group is a group of
firms in an industry
following
the same or similar strategy in a given
target market.
A).
There is often rivalry among
groups.
b).
All dimensions must be examined to
identify the correct
strategic group.
Assessment
of strengths and weaknesses should be
accomplished. Benchmarking is the
process of
comparing
the company's products and
processes to those of competitors or
leading firms in
other
industries to find ways to improve
quality and performance. A company
also wants to know
what
a competitor will do in a certain
situation. Each competitor normally
reacts differently.
iii.
Selecting
Competitors to Attack and
Avoid
It
is very important that a
company have an idea of how
to select competitors to attack
and avoid.
Strong
or weak competitors may be
attacked. Weak competitors
are easier targets but
less
profitable.
Succeeding against stronger
competitors often provides greater
returns. A useful
tool
for
assessing competitor strengths and
weaknesses is customer value analysis.
The aim of customer
value
analysis is to determine the benefits
that target customer's value and
how customers rate
the
relative
value of various competitors'
offers.
Steps
in conducting customer value analysis
include:
·
Identify
the major attributes that
customer's value and the importance
customers place on
these
attributes.
·
Assess
the company's and competitors'
performance on the valued
attributes.
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Principles
of Marketing MGT301
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Close
or distant competitors may be
targeted. A company really
needs and benefits
from
competitors.
Benefits
of competition include:
·
Competitors
may help to increase total
demand.
·
They
may share the costs of
market and product development
and help to legitimize
new
technologies.
·
They
may serve less-attractive
segments or lead to more
product differentiation.
·
They
lower the antitrust risk and
improve bargaining power
versus labor or regulators.
A
company may not view
all competitors as beneficial. "Good" or
"bad" competitors also
provide
opportunities
and different threats. Good
competitors play by the rules of the
industry while bad
competitors
break the rules.
b.
Designing
a Competitive Intelligence
System
The
company must design a broad
competitive strategy by which to
gain competitive
advantage.
No
one strategy, however, is best for
all companies. The
competitive intelligence system does
the
following:
·
Identifies
the vital types of
competitive information and
the best sources of
this
information.
·
The
system continuously collects information
from the field and
from published data.
·
The
system checks the
information for validity and
reliability, interprets it,
and organizes it
in
an appropriate way.
·
It
sends key information to
relevant decision makers and
responds to inquiries from
managers
about competitors.
c.
Competitive Strategies
i.
Approaches
to Marketing Strategy
No
one strategy is best for all
companies. Companies differ on
how they approach the
strategy
planning
process. Approaches to marketing strategy
often pass through three
stages:
1).
Entrepreneurial marketing--companies
started by individuals.
2).
Formulated marketing--as small companies
achieve success, they
inevitably move
toward
more formulated marketing (formulated
marketing strategies).
3).
Entrepreneurial marketing--companies that
became lost and
re-established themselves
with
the entrepreneurial spirit and
actions that made them
successful in the first
place.
ii.
Basic
Competitive Strategies
Basic
competitive positioning winning
strategies include (as
suggested by Michael
Porter):
1).
Overall
cost-leadership--cost-leadership
is gained by being the lowest-cost
producer in
the
industry. This affords the
company flexibility in responding to
competitive moves by
always
being
able to offer the lowest
price to the consumer.
This strategy usually wins
the company a
large
market share.
2).
Differentiation--this
strategy creates competitive
advantage by offering products
with
unique
customer benefits or features not
available from competitive
offerings. Here the
company
concentrates
on creating a highly differentiated
product line and marketing program so
that it
comes
across as the leader in the
industry. This image helps
it to compete against lower
cost rivals.
3).
Focus--this
narrow-focus strategy
achieves competitive
advantage by
concentrating
on narrow segments of a larger market.
Emphasis is often on quality or benefits
in
tightly
defined market sub segments.
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Firms
that do not pursue a clear
strategy (a losing strategy) are
called middle-of-the-readers.
According
to Porter, these firms do
the worst in competitive
struggles. Another set of
strategies
based
on what they call value disciplines
are:
1).
Operational excellence--the company
provides superior value by leading its industry
in
price
and convenience.
2).
Customer intimacy--the company provides superior value
by precisely
Segmenting
its markets and tailoring its
products and services to
match
Exactly
the needs of targeted
customers.
3).
Product leadership--the company provides
superior value by offering a
Continuous
stream of leading-edge products or
services that make their
own and
competing
products obsolete.
iii.
Competitive
Positions
Firms
competing in a given target market, at any
point in time, differ in
their objectives and
resources.
These firms might take
four different forms:
1).
Market
leader--the
firm with the largest market
share.
2).
Market
challenger--the
runner-up firm, fighting to overtake
the leader.
3).
Market
follower--the
firm that also has
runner-up status but seeks
to maintain share
and
not rock the boat.
4).
Market niche--the firm that
serves small segments that
the other firms overlook
or
ignore.
iv.
Market
Leader Strategies
Market
leader strategies--most industries contain an
acknowledged market leader. The
leader has
the
largest market share and
usually leads the other
firms in price changes, new
product
introductions,
distribution coverage, and
promotion spending. Competitors
focus on the leader
as
a
company to challenge, imitate, or avoid. To remain
number one, leading firms
may take any of
three
actions.
A).
Expanding the
total demand--the
leader gains the most
when the market
expands.
1.
New users can be attracted
from those who are still
unaware of the
product.
2.
New uses can be discovered
and marketed to increase
purchase.
3.
More usage strategies aim at
convincing buyers to use the
product more
often
and in greater amounts for
each existing usage
occasion.
B).
Protecting market share.
1.
Prevent or fix weaknesses
that provide opportunities
for competitors.
2.
The best defense is a
good offense, and the best
response is continuous
innovation.
3.
Increase competitive effectiveness
and value to customers.
C).
Expanding market
share--sometimes
the leaders can expand
their relative market
share.
If this expansion comes in the
served market then even small
increases in share can lead
to
large
increases in profitability.
v.
Market
Challenger Strategies
These
firms are usually the
second, third, or lower in an
industry. These runner-up
firms can
adopt
one of two competitive
strategies:
·
They
can challenge the leader
and other competitors in an
aggressive bid for
more
market share (market
challengers).
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·
They
can play along with competitors
and not rock the boat
(market followers.
A
market challenger must first define the
strategic objective and
competitor. The market
challenger
must decide from among the
following strategies:
A).
Attack the leader.
b).
Avoid the leader.
c).
Attack other firms.
d).
Acquire smaller firms.
Choosing
an attack strategy. The options
available are:
A).
Frontal attack. Strong challengers
sometimes match the market
leader's product,
advertising,
price, and distribution
efforts. It strengths rather than
weaknesses.
b).
Indirect attack. Attack
competitive weaknesses or on gaps in
the competitor's market
coverage.
c).
Diversify into unrelated products or
leapfrog into new technologies to
replace
existing
products.
vi.
Market
Follower Strategies
Market
follower strategies--not all
runner-up companies want to
challenge the market leader.
The
follower
can learn from the leader's
successes and failures and
copy or improve on the
leader's
product
and programs, usually with
less investment. This might
be called following closely.
The
follower
must also be aware of
attacks from challengers.
The follower must keep
costs low and its
product
quality and services high,
look for new markets as
they open. This might be
called
following
at a distance.
vii.
Market
Niche Strategies
Market
niche strategies--mass marketers
achieve high volume, the
niche achieves high
margins.
These
firms have limited
resources. These firms
usually know their markets
very well. The key
idea
in
nichemanship is specialization. They look
for markets that are
safe and profitable. The
niche can
specialize
along any of several market, customer,
product, or marketing mix lines
(Risks are often
overcome
by multiple nicking).
a).
End-user specialist.
b).
Customer-size specialist.
c).
Specific-customer specialist.
d).
Geographic market specialist.
e).
Quality-price niche.
f).
Service niche.
d.
Balancing Customer and Competitor
Orientations
Organizations
must continually adapt their
strategies to fit the
fast-paced and ever-changing
environment.
A competitor-centered company is one that
spends most of its time
tracking
competitors'
moves and market shares and
trying to find strategies to
counter them.
1).
Advantages
include:
A).
A fighter orientation.
b).
Alertness.
2).
Disadvantages
include:
A).
the company becomes too
reactive.
b).
Strategy is built on what
others do. Bases goals on
what others do.
c).
Lessens innovation. It only
matches or extends what
others does.
Customer-centered
company focuses more on customer
developments in designing
strategies.
1).
in a better position to identify
new opportunities and set
long-run strategies that
make
sense.
2).
It can concentrate on serving the needs
of important customer groups.
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Principles
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Market-centered
companies are ones that
watch both their customers
and their
competition.
Companies
have moved through four
orientations over the
years:
1).
Product-oriented--pay
little attention to either customers or
competitors.
2).
Customer-oriented--started
to pay attention to customers.
3).
Competitor-oriented--when
they started to pay
attention to customers, they
became
competitor-oriented.
4).
Market-oriented--this
advanced form balances
attention between customers
and
competition.
This method finds new
ways to deliver satisfaction to customers and,
therefore,
overcomes
competition. Find innovative
ways to deliver more value
than competitors do.
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