Title: How market-driven management generates shareholder value ?
1How market-driven management generates
shareholder value ?
2OUTLINE
- What is market-driven management?
- How to create customer value?
- How customer orientation leads to growth
opportunities? - How customer value generates
- shareholder value?
3- What is market-driven management?
- Is market-driven management really
different from traditional marketing management ?
4THE AMBIGUITY OF THE TERM MARKETING
- Literally, marketing means the process of
going to the market.
5THE AMBIGUITY OF THE TERM MARKETING
- Literally, marketing means the process of going
to the market. - The term places the emphasis on the selling and
promotional activities of the commercialisation
process.
6THE AMBIGUITY OF THE TERM MARKETING
- Literally, marketing means the process of going
to the market. - The term places the emphasis on the selling and
promotional activities of the commercialisation
process. - Thereby, the importance of the strategic
thinking activities that precede tend to be
underestimated.
7THE MARKET ORIENTATION CONCEPTThree Components
8THE MARKET ORIENTATION CONCEPTThree Components
- CULTURE
- A business philosophy at the core of a
social market economy system, - . emphasising the process of customer value
creation, - . as the best way for the firm to achieve
its objectives of profit and growth.
9THE MARKET ORIENTATION CONCEPTThree Components
- CULTURE
-
- ANALYSIS
- The strategic brain of the firm,
- used to identify profitable customer
activity arenas in which to compete. -
- (strategic marketing)
10THE MARKET ORIENTATION CONCEPTThree Components
- CULTURE
- ANALYSIS
-
- ACTION
- The commercial arm of the firm
- ...used to conquer the target market
segments - (operational marketing)
11THE MARKET ORIENTATION CONCEPTThree Components
- CULTURE
- A state of mind .
- Corporate business philosophy.
- ANALYSIS
- A set of analysis tools to understand the
market. - Strategic marketing.
- ACTION
- A set of selling instruments (the 4Ps)
- Operational marketing
12MARKET-DRIVEN MANAGEMENT Who is in charge ?
13THE MARKET DRIVEN MANAGEMENTConditions of
application
- LIBERTY OF CHOICE
- Individual choice determines what is rewarding.
- COMPETITIVE EXCHANGE
- Competition is the regulating mechanism.
- SOCIAL COLLECTIVE PREFERENCES
- Externalities must be taken into account by the
firm.
14STRATEGIC MARKETINGTwo approaches
- RESPONSE STRATEGIC MARKETING
- Find wants and fill them
- Innovations are market pull.
15STRATEGIC MARKETINGTwo approaches
- RESPONSE STRATEGIC MARKETING
- Find wants and fill them
- Innovations are market pull.
- CREATIVE STRATEGIC MARKETING
- Find new ways to fill existing wants.
- Innovations are supply-push.
16THE ROLE OF STRATEGIC MARKETING
17EXAMPLES OF DISRUPTIVE INNOVATIONS IN MATURE
MARKETS
- The furniture market with Ikea.
- The shoe market with Geox (ventilated soles) and
Mephisto (shock absorber) - The airline market with, Virgin-Express, EasyJet,
Ryan Air, - The liquid food packaging market with Tetrapak.
- The Kinepolis concept in the movie theater
market. - The digital photography market with Sony, HP,
Kodak,
18The Key Market Actors
The General Case
DISTRIBUTORS
COMPETITORS
CUSTOMERS
(user, buyer, payer)
PRESCRIBERS
19The Market viewed as an Eco-system
Competitors
Other customers
licensees,
direct and substitutes
aggregators
,...
Prescribers
Other
stakeholders
Manufacturers direct customers
Intermediaries
agents, wholesalers,
retailers, ...
End
Suppliers
customers
20MARKET-DRIVEN MANAGEMENT (MDM) Its role in the
firm
- For a firm operating in a market economy, the
role of MDM is to design and promote, at a
profit, value-added solutions to people and
organisations problems.
212. How to create customer value? Refer to
the customers generic need and to the
customer mental virtual market
22THE VALUE APPROACHFROM THE CUSTOMER VIEWPOINT
- What the customer buys and considers value is
not the product, but the result or the service
provided by the product.
23THE VALUE APPROACHFROM THE CUSTOMER VIEWPOINT
- What the customer buys and considers value is
not the product, but the result or the service
provided by the product. - The result sought by customers correspond to a
generic need which is stable over time.
24THE VALUE APPROACHFROM THE CUSTOMER VIEWPOINT
- What the customer buys and considers value is
not the product, but the result or the service
provided by the product. - The result sought by customers correspond to a
generic need which is stable over time. - Technologies are fast changing, while generic
needs remain unchanged.
25WHAT BUSINESS ARE WE IN ?Examples of generic
need definitions
- We (Tetrapak) are selling liquid food
conservation" solutions (...and not carton
containers).
26WHAT BUSINESS ARE WE IN ?Examples of generic
need definitions
- We (Tetrapak) are selling liquid food
conservation" solutions (...and not carton
containers). - We (Automatic Systems) are selling "access
control" solutions (...and not gates and doors).
27WHAT BUSINESS ARE WE IN ?Examples of generic
need definitions
- We (Tetrapak) are selling liquid food
conservation" solutions (...and not carton
containers). - We (Automatic Systems) are selling "access
control" solutions (...and not gates and doors). - We (General Motors) operate in the personal
mobility market arenas (and not simply in the
car market).
28WHAT BUSINESS ARE WE IN ?Examples of generic
need definitions
- We (Tetrapak) are selling liquid food
conservation" solutions (...and not carton
containers). - We (Automatic Systems) are selling "access
control" solutions (...and not gates and doors). - We (General Motors) operate in the personal
mobility market arenas (and not simply in the
car market). - We (IBM) are selling global networking
capabilities ( ...and not only personal
computers).
29WHAT BUSINESS ARE WE IN ?Examples of generic
need definitions
- We (Tetrapak) are selling liquid food
conservation" solutions (...and not carton
containers). - We (Automatic Systems) are selling "access
control" solutions (...and not gates and doors). - We (General Motors) operate in the personal
mobility market arenas (and not simply in the
car market). - We (IBM) are selling global networking
capabilities ( ...and not only personal
computers). - We (BP) are selling integrated energy assurance
( and not simply oil, gas and lubricants).
30THE CONCEPT OFVIRTUAL MARKET
- 1.To achieve the generic result sought, customers
engage in different activities, directly or
indirectly related to the desired outcome. -
31THE CONCEPT OFVIRTUAL MARKET
- 1. To achieve the generic result sought,
customers engage in different activities,
directly or indirectly related to the desired
outcome. - 2. A mental virtual market regroup all the
activities undertaken by customers to achieve a
specific generic result. -
32THE CONCEPT OFVIRTUAL MARKET
- 1. To achieve the generic result sought,
customers engage in different activities,
directly or indirectly related to the desired
outcome. - 2. A mental virtual market regroup all the
activities undertaken by customers to achieve a
specific generic result. - 3. Thus, a virtual market represents an
end-to-end temporal sequence of logically related
activities in the cognitive space of customers. -
33(No Transcript)
34EXAMPLE OF THE DANISH LEGO COMPANY(1)
- Consider Lego, the Danish toy company, In 1995,
it had a worldwide construction toy market share
of 72, in Europe its market share in that
category was over 90. - But children were spending more spare time with
computers, video games and television than with
traditional toys. - So while Lego had been gaining market shares,
toys in general and construction toys in
particular had been losing their share of
childrens spare-time activities
35EXAMPLE OF THE LEGO COMPANY (2)
- The need addressed by Lego, the Danish toy
company, is family edutainment.
(education-entertainment) and not
construction-toy market. - The generic need is defined as ...having fun and
exercising the mind - The Lego virtual market is a convergence of toys,
education, interactive technology, software,
computers and consumer electronics.
36CHARACTERISTICS OF A VIRTUAL MARKET
- 1. In a virtual market, the activities
generally cut across traditional industry and
product-market boundaries and are not necessarily
in the core business of the firm. -
37CHARACTERISTICS OF A VIRTUAL MARKET
- 2. Virtual markets absorb a higher proportion
of customer spending than a specific
product-market, and represents a higher market
potential. -
38CHARACTERISTICS OF A VIRTUAL MARKET
- 3. Internet information technology makes the
objective of addressing virtual markets
achievable. -
39EXAMPLE OF VIRTUAL MARKET (1)
- To achieve the home ownership generic need,
customers might engage with contractors,
realtors, insurance companies, mortgage firms,
removal companies, telecom, interior designers,
40EXAMPLE OF VIRTUAL MARKET (2)
- In the personal mobility virtual market, in
addition to car ownership, related activities
cover car maintenance, car insurance, roadside
assistance, emergency services dispatch, route
support, stolen vehicle location, .
41FROM THE VIRTUAL MARKET TO THE META MARKET
- A meta-market is created when the cognitive
associations between these activities are
reproduced in the physical market place, thereby
streamlining customer activities and providing
them with seamless experience.
42CREATING THE META-MARKET The home ownership
virtual market
The cognitive space of the potential customer
The cognitive space of the potential customer
Negotiation and
Insurance and
Repairs and
Negotiation and
Insurance and
Renovation and
Information
Information
The purchase decision
The purchase decision
financing
maintenance
Reselling value
financing
maintenance
decoration
search and evaluation
search and evaluation
Need of the potential customer
Need of the potential customer
To buy a new car
Home ownership
Removal companies
Real estate agencies
Banks, mortgage firms
Insurance brokers
Painters and interiors designers
Insurance companies
Financing
Garages and
Cars builders
Car dealers
and brokers
mechanics
The global supply
The industry supply
43META-MARKETSManagerial implications
- 1. Do not define your reference market in terms
of product categories. - (cars, metallic gates, detergents, toys)
44META-MARKETSManagerial implications
- 1. Do not define your reference market in terms
of product categories. - (cars, metallic gates, detergents, toys)
- 2. Refer to the result or the generic outcome
customers want to achieve. - (personal mobility, access control, home
care, edutainment,)
45META-MARKETSManagerial implications
- 1. Do not define your reference market in terms
of product categories. - (cars, metallic gates, detergents, toys)
- 2. Refer to the result or the generic outcome
customers want to achieve. - (personal mobility, access control, home
care, edutainment,) - 3. Identify all the activities that, from the
customer point of view, are part of the virtual
market.
46META-MARKETSManagerial implications
- 1. Do not define your reference market in terms
of product categories. - (cars, metallic gates, detergents, toys)
- 2. Refer to the result or the generic outcome
customers want to achieve. - (personal mobility, access control, home
care, edutainment,) - 3. Identify all the activities that, from the
customer point of view, are part of the virtual
market. - 4. Create the reference meta market by
reproducing in the physical market place the
mental associations made by customers.
47META-MARKETSManagerial implications
- 1. Do not define your reference market in terms
of product categories. - (cars, metallic gates, detergents, toys)
- 2. Refer to the result or the generic outcome
customers want to achieve. - (personal mobility, access control, home
care, edutainment,) - 3. Identify all the activities that, from the
customer point of view, are part of the virtual
market. - 4. Create the reference meta market by
reproducing in the physical market place the
mental associations made by customers. - 5. Present the total solution customers seek.
48BENEFITS OF THE META-MARKET CONCEPT
- 1. The concept is perfectly aligned on the
customer views and therefore facilitates
communication.
49BENEFITS OF THE META-MARKET CONCEPT
- 1. The concept is perfectly aligned on the
customer views and therefore facilitates
communication. - 2. The revenue potential of a meta-market is
always larger than the discrete
product-market.
50BENEFITS OF THE META-MARKET CONCEPT
- 1. The concept is perfectly aligned on the
customer views and therefore facilitates
communication. - 2. The revenue potential of a meta-market is
always larger than the discrete product-market. - 3. It enables the firm to offer a total
solution to customers thereby building
exclusivity, loyalty and trust.
51BENEFITS OF THE META-MARKET CONCEPT
- 1. The concept is perfectly aligned on the
customer views and therefore facilitates
communication. - 2. The revenue potential of a meta-market is
always larger than the discrete product-market. - 3. It enables the firm to offer a total
solution to customers thereby building
exclusivity, loyalty and trust. - 4. It helps identifying growth opportunities
in activities directly or indirectly related to
the core service.
52BENEFITS OF THE META-MARKET CONCEPT
- 1. The concept is perfectly aligned on the
customer views and therefore facilitates
communication. - 2. The revenue potential of a meta-market is
always larger than the discrete product-market. - 3. It enables the firm to offer a total
solution to customers thereby building
exclusivity, loyalty and trust. - 4. It helps identifying growth opportunities
in activities directly or indirectly related to
the core service. - 5. It helps identifying who are the indirect
(or substitute) competitors.
533. How customer orientation leads to growth
opportunities? Analyze the customer
activity cycle
54THE ACTIVITY CHAIN CONCEPT
- A virtual market is a sequence of logically,
directly or indirectly, related activities
customers engage in to achieve a specific
outcome.
55THE ACTIVITY CHAIN CONCEPT
- Pre, or before when customers are deciding what
to do to get the result desired. - During When customers are doing what they
decided on. - Post, after when customers are maintaining the
result, reviewing, renewing, extending, upgrading
and updating
56THE PRIMARY ACTIVITY CYCLE
Before customer is deciding what to do
Post Customer is keeping it going
During Customer is doing it
Customer- Activity cycle
57STRUCTURE OF THE ACTIVITY CHAIN
- PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN
- A sequence of logically and directly
related activities customers engage in to achieve
a specific outcome. - (Visiting a car dealer on the car
ownership chain is a primary activity)
58STRUCTURE OF THE ACTIVITY CHAIN
- PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN
- A sequence of logically and directly
related activities customers engage in to achieve
a specific outcome. - (Visiting a car dealer on the car
ownership chain is a primary activity) - ADJACENT ACTIVITY CHAINS
- A sequence of logically but indirectly
related activities engaged by the customer in its
search of the problem solution. - (seeking car insurance quotes is a
complementary activity that falls in a adjacent
chain)
59The Growth Opportunity Matrix
Adding new activities
1. Primary chain extension
3. Adjacent chain broadening
How ? Type of growth
4. Adjacent chain reconfiguration
2. Primary chain reconfiguration
Reconfiguring existing activities
Primary activity chain
Adjacent activity chain
Where ? Focus on growth
60PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN EXTENSION
Moving along the customer activity chain by
adding new services
61THE CUSTOMER ACTIVITY CYCLE Search for value gaps
Before customer is deciding what to do
Value Gap
Post Customer is keeping it going
During Customer is doing it
Customer- Activity cycle
Value Gap
62PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN EXTENSION
- Can services be added that precede the sale of
the core product? - Can services be added that follow the sale of the
core product? - Can services be added to accompany the product?
- Can the product be augmented with network based
services? - Can the product be updated with services ?
-
63The Dutch Construction Group Heimans N.V
Before Customer is deciding what to do
Value gap Project development
During Customer is doing it
Customer Activity cycle
Post Customer is keeping it going
Core business Construction capacity
Value gap Maintenance activities
642. PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN RECONFIGURATION
Changing the structure of the primary chain by
shifting the boundary between the activities
performed by the customer and by the firm."
652. PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN RECONFIGURATION
- Can customer burdens involving customization be
reduced? - Can customer burdens involving product storage be
reduced? - Can process expertise be leveraged?
- Can customers inventory control and stocking
processes be replaced? - Can processes unrelated to customers core
competences or strategic objectives be taken
over?
663. ADJACENT ACTIVITY CHAIN BROADENING
- Introducing new services, not typically
part of the primary chain, but closely associated
with it.
673. ADJACENT ACTIVITY CHAIN BROADENING
- Can products become platform for embedded
services? - Can the existing customer base be rented?
- Can the existing customer interface be leveraged?
684. ADJACENT ACTIVITY CHAIN RECONFIGURATION
-
- Taking charge of activities in an adjacent
chain.
694. ADJACENT ACTIVITY CHAIN RECONFIGURATION
- Can services be added to integrate complementary
customer activities? - Can services be added to leverage the brand?
- Can services change the way customers acquire
products? -
70MANAGING THE RISKSThree types of risk
- 1. CAPABILITY RISK
- 2. MARKET RISK
-
- 3. FINANCIAL RISK
-
711. CAPABILITY RISKS
- Can we execute and deliver?
- Do we have the organizational culture to sell
services?
722. MARKET RISKS
- Will customers adopt the service provided?
- Are we credible as a service provider among our
customers base?
733. FINANCIAL RISKS
-
- Can we make money?
- Is the initial cost of development not too high?
744. How customer value generates shareholder
value? Analyze the customer response chain
75 Customer value triggers a chain of effects
Perceived value
Satisfaction
Trust
Affect
LOYALTY
76TRUST AND AFFECT
- TRUST
- The willingness of the customer to rely on the
ability - of the brand to perform its stated function.
- AFFECT
- A brands potential to elicit a positive
emotional response - as a result of its use.
77LOYALTY BEHAVIORAL AND ATTITUDINAL
- PURCHASE LOYALTY
- Repeated purchases of the brand
- ATTITUDINAL LOYALTY
- A dispositional commitment in terms of some
- unique value associated with the brand
-
78The Satisfaction
-
Loyalty Relationship
PURCHASE LOYALTY
100
Highly competitive market
Low switching costs
Many substitutes
50
0
5
2
3
1
4
SATISFACTION
1
completely dissatisfied
5
completely satisfied
79Impact on the Economic Performance
Customer value (utilitarian and hedonic)
Brand trust
Purchase loyalty
Market share
Brand affect
Attitudinal loyalty
Relative price
Brand strengths (differentiation and share of
voice)
80 NET PROFIT CONTRIBUTION (NPC)
Variable cost per unit
Price per unit
Marketing expenses
Market share
-
Market demand
-
NPC
x
x
81 NET PROFIT CONTRIBUTION (NPC)
Strategies to target the virtual market
Strategies to increase value for customers
Variable cost per unit
Price per unit
Marketing expenses
Market share
-
Market demand
-
NPC
x
x
Strategies to increase market share
Strategies to increase marketing efficiency
82CONCLUSIONS
- 1. Market-driven management implies
culture,analysis and action. In the global
economy, being action-oriented in not enough.
83CONCLUSIONS
- 1. Market-driven management implies
culture,analysis and action. In the global
economy, being action-oriented in not enough. - 2. Customers are looking for the total
solution of their problems and the firm should
target the customer mental reference market . -
84CONCLUSIONS
- 1. Market-driven management implies
culture,analysis and action. In the global
economy, being action-oriented in not enough. - 2. Customers are looking for the total
solution of their problems and the firm should
target the customer mental reference market . - 3. Referring to customer mental virtual
markets offer to the firm attractive growth
opportunities. -
85CONCLUSIONS
- 1. Market-driven management implies
culture,analysis and action. In the global
economy, being action-oriented in not enough. - 2. Customers are looking for the total
solution of their problems and the firm should
target the customer mental reference market . - 3. Referring to customer mental virtual
markets offer to the firm attractive growth
opportunities. - 4. Customer value generates satisfaction,
trust and loyalty, thereby creating shareholder
value. -
86BIBLIOGRAPHY
- J.J. Lambin (2000), Market-driven Management,
London, Palmgrave Macmillan. See also the Russian
translation, Saint Petersburg, Piter 2004. - S. Vandermerwe, (2000), How Increasing Value to
Customers Improves Business Results, Sloan
Management Review, Fall. - A.Chaudhuri and M.B. Holbrook, (2001), The Chain
of Effects from Brand Trust and Brand Affect to
Brand Performance the Role of Brand Loyalty,
Journal of Marketing, Vol.65, April. - M. Sawhney, S. Balasubramanian and V.V
Krishnan,(2004), Creating Growth with Services,
Sloan Management Review, Winter.
87PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN EXTENSION Moving along
the customer activity chain by adding new
services
- Can services be added that precede the sale of
the core product? - (Training courses organized by
computer companies) - Can services be added that follow the sale of the
core product? - (Maintenance activities)
- Can services be added to accompany the product?
- (Assistance in use)
- Can the product be augmented with network based
services - (On line access to a range of
software for complex applications) - Can the product be updated with services ?
- (Anti-virus software regularly
updated) -
882. PRIMARY ACTIVITY CHAIN RECONFIGURATION
- Can customer burdens involving customization be
reduced? - (Dell provides services into the IT
operations of its customers) - Can customer burdens involving product storage be
reduced? - (Companies store customers products off
season) - Can process expertise be leveraged?
- (Dupont is running Fords paint shop)
- Can customers inventory control and stocking
processes be replaced? - (PG is handling these activities
for Wal-Mart stores) - Can processes unrelated to customers core
competences or strategic objectives be taken
over? - (Companies subcontract non strategic
tasks,like cleaning, maintenance, repair,..)
893. ADJACENT ACTIVITY CHAIN BROADENINGIntroducing
new services, not typically part of the primary
chain, but closely associated with it.
- Can products become platform for embedded
services? - (digital camera embedded in mobile
phones) - Can the existing customer base be rented?
- (Subscribers of a magazine receive
special deals, or credit card holders) - Can the existing customer interface be leveraged?
- (eBay teams with consulting firms to
offer the services of professional working on
web-delivered projects)
904. ADJACENT ACTIVITY CHAIN RECONFIGURATION
- Can services be added to integrate complementary
customer activities? - (Nike involvement in sport camps)
- Can services be added to leverage the brand?
- (The reputation of the John Deere
brand allows the company to sell credit card and
operating loans to farmers) - Can services change the way customers acquire
products? - (the Nespresso system has changed
customers habits in coffee purchasing)
911. CAPABILITY RISKS CAN WE DO IT?
- ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGIES THE PEOPLE
- Incubate separately
- Create, acquire or partner with a
company having the service culture - DESIGN STRATEGIES THE OFFERING
- Design services that build on
existing product platforms - Design product architectures to
support services - Involve lead users
- DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES THE PROCESS
- Use partners to fill competence gaps
- Inventory new competencies
922. MARKET RISKS WILL CUSTOMERS COME?
- ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGIES THE PEOPLE
- Focus on existing customers
- Train sales force to get an early
adoption success stories - Train sales force to manage customer
expectations - Train the sales force to clarify
expected costs and income - DESIGN STRATEGIES THE OFFERING
- Use partners to fill in reputation
gaps - Offer trial periods
- Reduce customer adoption risk (e.g.
pay from savings) - DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES THE PROCESS
- Prototype and iteration
- Blueprint to customers specifications
933. FINANCIAL RISKS CAN WE MAKE MONEY?
- ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGIES THE PEOPLE
- Use partner assets
- Use the internet to decrease labor
costs - Encourage customer self service and
automated service - DESIGN STRATEGIES THE OFFERING
- For smaller customers, create
productized versions of services - Use annuity payment model to obtain
steady revenues - DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES THE PROCESS
- Quantify economic value to customers
and compare with service delivery costs. - Perform robust, early and frequent
economic value analyses.