Title: Co.
1Co. Marketing Strategy Partnering to Build
Customer Relationships
- Main Focus
- Marketing Mix (Disney)
- Strategic Planning
- Mission Statements
- Company Objectives Goals
- Business Portfolio
2Where Should the Focus Be?
- Disney Theme Parks
- Cleanliness
- Friendliness of Staffregardless of job title
- Rules and Regulations
- Customer is always right
- Disney World its self-policing policies
- Walt Disney Mission"To make people happy"
- No cynicism
- Nurturing and promulgation of "wholesome American
values" - Creativity, dreams and imagination
- Fanatical attention to consistency and detail
- Preservation and control of the Disney "magic"
3Strategic Planning
- Developing maintaining a strategic fit between
organizations goals and capabilities its
changing marketing opportunities
- It sets the stage for the rest of the firms
planning - Defines the purpose the mission
- The mission then produces detailed supporting
objectives that guide the whole company
4The Strategic Marketing Process
- At the Corporate Level
- Firstdefine the mission
- SecondSet obj. goals
- ThirdBusiness Portfolio
- At Business Unit, product market level
- Plan marketing
- All other functional strategies
5Example
- IBM - if you'd asked top managers at IBM 10 years
ago what business are you in?, they might well
have answered, "We sell computer hardware and
software." a heavily product-focused IBM lost
sight of its customers' needs
- Theyve been transformed beginning in 1993 -
Lou Gerstner, CEObrought a renewed focus on
customer, who were demanding solutions to
increasingly more difficult problems
- Today, if you ask almost any IBM manager to
define the business, they would tell you that,
"We deliver solutions to customers' information
technology problems."
6Vision Statements
- Visionpushes the association toward some future
goal or achievement (Drohan, 1999)it describes
the future
- Together, the Vision and Mission statements
provide direction for the business by focusing
their attention on doing things day-to-day to
accomplish your mission, while taking steps to
pursue your vision of the future your long-term
business intent (Skelton-Star, Inc.)
- Without a vision statement, firms lose their
focus on direction and flounder or fail
7Defining a Market-Oriented Mission
- What is our business?
- Who is the customer?
- What do customers value?
- What should our business be?
- The first step in the strategic planning process
is defining the company mission.
8The Mission Statement
- Missiona mission statement guides current,
critical, strategic decision makingits a
statement of the organizations purpose --- what
it wants to accomplish in the larger
environment(here are some examples not in your
text)
an enduring statement of purpose for an
organization that identifies the scope of its
operations in product and market terms, and
reflects its values and priorities," (Abrahams,
1995)
"A good mission statement captures an
organizations unique and enduring reason for
being, and energizes stakeholders to pursue
common goals. It also enables a focused
allocation of organizational resources because it
compels a firm to address some tough questions
What is our business? Why do we exist? What are
we trying to accomplish?" (Bart, 1998).
"Corporate mission statements...are the
operational, ethical, and financial guiding
lights of companies. They are not simply mottoes
or slogans they articulate the goals, dreams,
behavior, culture, and strategies of companies,"
(Stone, 1996).
- a mission statement is designed to say exactly
what the organization anticipates it will
achieve. - A mission statement gives everyone the
opportunity to know what the organization is
about and what it is not about ("Thinking Ahead,"
1998)
9Mission Statements (Contd)
- A well-developed mission statement offers several
potential benefits
- Direction-what the organization does and what it
wants to be successful in
- Focus-concentrates on the companys strengths and
competitive advantages and tells people how to
obtain them
- Policy-a guideline of what a company finds
acceptable and unacceptable and states
organizational values
- Meaning-shows what a company strives to achieve
and why they wish to do so
- Challenge-setting up of goals and measurements of
achievement for employees
- Passion-makes everyone involved with the
organization show feelings of enthusiasm, pride,
and commitment ("Thinking Ahead,"1998).
- Just remembera mission is only as good as the
employees knowledge of itif the mission is
unclear, so become the rest of your benefits
listed above and the business normally will
flounder or fail - Budweiser Wagon
- Outrigger Canoe
10What is Important to a Mission Statement?
- Target audience important (Abrahams, 1995).
- to whom the mission statement will be directed
to - what groups are to be considered (employees,
stockholders, customers, the community)
- Length of the mission statement - "All thats
necessary is that the mission be long enough to
reach the target audience," (Abrahams, 1995)
- Tone - use appropriate language that is directed
to the target audience and reflects the makeup of
the organization (Abrahams, 1995)
- Should be written to encourage commitment and
to energize all employees toward fulfilling the
mission" (Stone, 1996).
11Basic Elements of a Mission Statement (contd)
- Endurance - "Mission statements should serve to
guide and inspire the organization for many
years," (Stone, 1996)
- Remain current - When the competitive
environment changes the mission should be revised
(Stone, 1996)
- consist of an element of uniqueness - It should
portray the individuality of the company (Stone,
1996)
- Research shows that there is a strong correlation
between performance and well-developed mission
statements
- Effective mission statements can be a great asset
to an organization
12Examples of Mission Statements
- Powerful sample mission statements
- PEPSI - "Beat Coke"
- HONDA - "We will crush, squash, and slaughter
Yamaha" - NIKE - "Crush Reebok"
- Older sample mission statements that are quite
grandiose in scale - Wal-Mart (1990) "Become a 125 billion company
by the year 2000" - Sony (1950's) "Become the company most known for
changing the worldwide poor-quality image of
Japanese products" - Boeing (1950) "Become the dominant player in
commercial aircraft and bring the world into the
jet age" - Ford Motor Company (early 1900's) "Ford will
democratize the automobile"
- One-line sample mission statements
- Wal-Mart - "To give ordinary folk the chance to
buy the same thing as rich people." - Mary Kay Cosmetics "To give unlimited
opportunity to women." - 3M "To solve unsolved problems innovatively"
13Turning the Mission into Objectives Goals
- The companys mission needs to be turned into
detailed supporting objectives for each level of
management - Each manager should have objectives and be
responsible for reaching them - This mission leads to a hierarchy of objectives,
including Business Marketing objectives - Marketing strategies must be developed to support
these marketing objectives - (exampleMonsantofor foreign expansion)
- increase its products availability and promotion
- more salespeople and more advertising
- cut prices and target large farms abroad
14Turning the Mission into Objectives Goals
- The major activity in strategic planning is
business portfolio analysis, whereby management
evaluates the products and businesses making up
the company - identify the key businesses making up the company
(SBUStrategic Business Unit) - assess the attractiveness of its various SBUs and
decide how much support each deserves - The purpose of strategic planning is to find ways
in which the company can best use its strengths
to take advantage of attractive opportunities in
the environment - Evaluation by
- attractiveness of the SBUs market or industry
- strength of the SBUs position in that market or
industry
15Designing a Business Portfolio
- The 3rd step in the strategic planning process is
designing the business portfolio (def. a
collection of businesses products that make up
the company) - The best portfolio is the one that best fits the
companys strengths and weaknesses to
opportunities in the environment - To design a portfolio, a business must
- Analyze its current portfolio and decide which
business should receive more, less, or no
investment - Shape the future portfolio by developing
strategies for growth and downsizing
16Analyzing the Current Business Portfolio
- The major activity in strategic planning is
business portfolio analysis - Step 1 identify the key businesses (SBUs
strategic business - Step 2 Assess attractiveness of its various
SBUs and decide how much support each deserves - BCG Matrix
17BCG Growth Share Matrix(Approach to Strategic
Planning)
- Question Marks- low-share business units
- In high-growth markets
- Need lots of cash to hold share of
- Market
- Managerial decisions need to be
- Made on whether to drop or build up
- Dogs low-growth, low-share businesses
- And products
- May be self sustaining cash sources
- Not good bet on large cash sources
- Stars high growth, high-share businesses or
products - Heavily financed (loans stocks bonds)
- Cash Cows low-growth, high-share businesses or
products - Established and successful SBUs
- Less investment to hold market sharethereby
producing lots of cash
Beware of the problems involved with formal
matrix methods
18Strategies for Growth Downsizing
- Marketings main objective achieving profitable
growth for the company
- It must identify, evaluate, select market
opportunities - It must set strategies for capturing these
opportunities
- Identifies growth opportunities, such as
- Market penetration increasing sales to current
customers without changing products
- Market Development developing new markets for
current products
- Product Development new or modified products
to current markets
Product/Market Expansion Grid
- Diversification expand beyond current
- Products or business units
Downsizing reverse growth strategies
19Strategies for Growth Downsizing
- Product/market expansion grid another tool for
portfolio planning that identifies company growth
opportunities thru - Market Penetration
- Market Development
- Product Development
- Diversification
20Strategies for Growth Downsizing
- Develop downsizing strategies too!
- Experts agreeboth small and large companies
benefit from strategic planning - Put out less fires by planning
- Long-term growth will be more difficult without
long-term planning - Strategic planning can help small business
managers to anticipate difficult situations and
prevent or handle them.
21Customer Relationship Mgmt Partner Relationship
Mgmt (CRM/PRM)
- CRM develops the relationship between the
company the customer
PRM develops the relationship between the
company its suppliers partners (supply
chain) so that customer centricity becomes the
total focus
Both focus on creating value for the customer
and builds a value chain amongst and within
the companys departments partners for the
customerknown as the value-delivery network
22Partnering with Others in the Company in the
Marketing System
- Value Chain
- Internal
- External
- Supply Chain
23Marketing Process
(1) analyzing marketing opportunities (2)
selecting target markets (3) developing the
marketing mix (4) managing the marketing
effort (goal is to build strong and profitable
relationships with customers)
Customer is centric (keysee fig 2.4 p 51)
- Segment the market consists of consumers who
respond in a similar way to a given set of
marketing efforts - Target Market evaluation of each segments
attractiveness and selecting one or more segments
to enter - Market Positioning where a product occupies a
clear, distinctive, desirable place relative to
competing products in the minds of targeted
customers
24Marketing Process
(1) analyzing marketing opportunities (2)
selecting target markets (3) developing the
marketing mix (4) managing the marketing
effort (goal is to build strong and profitable
relationships with customers)
Customer is centric (keysee fig 2.4 p 51)
- Segment the market consists of consumers who
respond in a similar way to a given set of
marketing efforts - Target Market evaluation of each segments
attractiveness and selecting one or more segments
to enter - Market Positioning where a product occupies a
clear, distinctive, desirable place relative to
competing products in the minds of targeted
customers
25Marketing Strategies for Competitive Advantage
- Must be geared to the needs of consumers the
strategies of competitors - Designing competitive strategies
- Who are our competitors?
- What are their objectives and strategies?
- What are their strengths weaknesses?
- How will they react to our different strategies?
- Industry Positioning
- Market-leaders
- Market-challengers
- Market-followers
- Market-nichers
264 Ps of Marketing Mix
27Trap Ease Case
- Questions for discussion
- Martha and the Trap-Ease America investors feel
they face a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. What
information do they need to evaluate this
opportunity? How do you think the group would
write its mission statement? How would you write
it? - Has Martha identified the best target market for
Trap-Ease? What other market segments might the
firm target? - How had the company positioned the Trap-Ease
relative to the chosen target market? Could it
position the product in other ways? - Describe the current marketing mix for Trap-Ease.
Do you see any problems with this mix? - Who is Trap-Ease Americas competition?
- How would you change Trap-Eases marketing
strategy? What kinds of control procedures would
you establish for this strategy?
28Trap Ease Case Discussion
- Martha and the Trap-Ease America investors feel
they face a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. What
information do they need to evaluate this
opportunity? How do you think the group would
write its mission statement? How would you write
it?
- Analyze the Markets Environments to find
attractive opportunities avoid environmental
threats (macro-environment demographics,
economic, natural, technological, political,
cultural task environment market size, growth,
geographic distribution, profits, defining major
markets, customer buying decisions, product
rating by customer value/service/quality/efficienc
y)
- Analyze company strengths weaknesses (SWOT)
- Analyze current and possible marketing actions to
determine which opportunities it can best pursue
How do you think the group would write its
mission statement? How would you write it?
29Trap Ease Case Discussion
- 2. Has Martha identified the best target market
for Trap-Ease? What other market segments might
the firm target?
- 3. How had the company positioned the
Trap-Ease relative to the chosen target market?
Could it position the product in other ways?
30Trap Ease Case Discussion
- 4. Describe the current marketing mix for
Trap-Ease. Do you see any problems with this mix?
31Trap Ease Case Discussion
- 5. Who is Trap-Ease Americas competition?
6. How would you change Trap-Eases marketing
strategy? What kinds of control procedures would
you establish for this strategy?