Title: Managing Business Relationships and Networks
1Managing Business Relationships and Networks
- Morten H. Abrahamsen, PhD
- Associate Professor at BI
- Associate Professor II at TØH
2Overview of Module
- Introduction to Industrial Marketing
- Brief historical and economical background
- Business Network and Business Relationships
- Some underlying theoretical assumptions
- Implications for strategy
3Traditional market view
Sellers
Buyers
- Transactions are important
4However, what do we find?
- Limited amount of sellers and buyers
- Market consentrations
- Repeated transactions relationships over time
- Mutual adaptations
- Both parties are active
- Mutual interdependence
- Cooperation and conflict
5Relationship Marketing
- A few number of customers represents the majority
of turnover (80 20) - A whole range of contacts across the
organisations involved - Purchases are few but substantial
- Handling of key relationships becomes main factor
for success
6Typology of relationships
Transactions (market)
Repeated transactions
Long-term relationships
Partnering
Strat. Alliancer (joint ventures)
Network organisations
Vertical Integration (hierarchy)
7Agenda I
- What is a business relationship?
- What is a business network and what is it not?
- Industrial Network Approach to industrial
marketing - Myths and paradoxes related to business markets
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11Business Relationship
- Connects two organizations
- Economic dimension
- Technical dimension
- Social dimension
- Immaterial
- Interdependence!
12What is a Business Network?
- Business network vs. Cluster
- Business network vs. Market
13A Busines Network is not
- a cluster.
- ...a personal network.
- ...mainly something that is based on
- power/politics.
- ...something secret.
14What is a cluster?
- A group of companies...
- In the same type of industry ?
- ...develops/uses closely related technology?
- Located in the same region?
- Visible from outside?
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17Business NetworksBasic Assumptions
- Perspective A
- Designed
- Formal
- Within a business sector
- Relationships as
- chosen
- Center/locomotive
- Common Goal
- Perspective B
- Emergent
- Informal
- Across business sectors
- Relationships as
- inevitable
- No center
- No common goal
18A network perspective
Network Connected relationships
19So, what is a Business Network?
- A business network consists of two building
blocks - companies and business relationships.
- The companies and business relationships are
interconnected, and together form a complex,
web-like structure.
20Traditional value chain
Raw materials
Horizontal integration
Producer
Vertical integration
Wholesaler
Retailer
21The network on the contrary has no centre, no
beginning and no end..
No company is an island
22Industrial Network Approach
23Industrial Network Approachand the IMP Group
- Ever-changing number of researchers in business
markets, and is therefore a loosely defined group
of researchers - (Ford, in Naude Turnbull, 1998)
- IMP1 Research Project Interaction Model
- Håkansson (ed., 1982)
- IMP2 Research Project Industrial Networks
- http//www.impgroup.org/
24Appliance of theIndustrial Network
Approach(Håkansson Snehota, 2000)
- IMP International/Industrial Marketing and
Purchasing. - Industrial Marketing and Purchasing.
- Internationalization (The Uppsala
Internationalization Model, Johanson Vahlne,
1977) - Technical development.
- Strategy development and organization.
25The Norwegian story..
- We identified an segment in Japan with strong
potential - We started by making initial sales
- We positioned our farmed salmon as suitable for
sushi - We managed to convice the Japanese of our
superiority - Gradually export volumes increased and we
extended our operations - Sales from Norway at first
- Then we set up our own sales office in Tokyoand
subsequently our own import company - This strategy has made us the main supplier of
fresh salmon in Japan
26The Japanese story..
- Fresh salmon first introduced by Japanese chefs
working in French restaurants - Kaiten belt made sushi affordable for a larger
public - Price of salmon fell due to increased production
volumes - Yen became stronger to the NOK
- It was not our aim, but it happened
27Who is right?
- Is the success of salmon in Japan a consequence
of the Norwegians being good sellers? - Is the success of salmon in Japan a consequence
of the Japanese being good buyers?
283 Myths in Business
- The Myth of Action
- The Myth of Independence
- The Myth of Completeness
291. The Myth of Action
- The supplier acts and the customer reacts
- The marketing actions of a supplier and the
purchasing reactions of a customer can be
analyzed separately from each other
30Rather Business Interaction
- Each business sale and purchase is not an
isolated event, but part of a continuing
relationship between a supplier and a customer
312. The Myth of Independence
- A company is able to act independently. It can
carry out its own analysis of the environment in
which it operates, develop and implement its own
strategy based on its own resources, taking into
account its own competences and shortcomings.
32Rather Interdependence
- The management process in any company is
interactive, evolutionary and responsive -
management involves lots of reacting to the
actions of others - Strategising is not simply concerned with
competition - A companys position is based on its total set
of relationships - A companys network position changes and
develops through interaction with other companies
333. The Myth of Completeness
- Based on traditional ideas of strategy
- A belief that a company is a complete
organisation able to operate on the basis of its
own abilities and resources
34Traditional view on marketing strategy
Mission
- Corporate mission statement
- Vision
SWOT anaysis
- Internal (Strengths and Weaknesses)
- External (Opportunities and Threats)
Objectives
- Clear, consise, measurable, etc.
Strategy
- Segmentation, Targeting and Positioning
- 4 P s
Implemen- tation
- Excecution of market plan (who, what where, when
and how)
35Rather Interconnectedness
- A large part of what a company sells is made up
of what it buys - Companies are becoming less complete
- Core competencies are based in the network
- Technologies are developed interactively
36The network on the contrary has no centre, no
beginning and no end..
No company is an island
37An empirical example from my research
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39The Norwegian story..
- We identified an segment in Japan with strong
potential - We started by making initial sales
- We positioned our farmed salmon as suitable for
sushi - We managed to convice the Japanese of our
superiority - Gradually export volumes increased and we
extended our operations - Sales from Norway at first
- Then we set up our own sales office in Tokyoand
subsequently our own import company - This strategy has made us the main supplier of
fresh salmon in Japan
40The Japanese story..
- Fresh salmon first introduced by Japanese chefs
working in French restaurants - Japanese chefs approached their existing
suppliers of seafood - Existing suppliers contacted their Norwegian
suppliers - Norwegian exporters developed farming facilities
- Kaiten belt made sushi affordable for a larger
public - Price of salmon fell due to increased production
volumes - Yen became stronger to the NOK
- It was not our aim, but it happened
41Implications for marketing strategy
- The key issue is to handle a complex set of
relationships to your benefit - Value creation through co-operation and
competition with key partners (co-opetition) - Segmentation in terms of partners or other actors
- Targeting and positioning in terms of value
co-creation and mutual dependence
42Oppgave 1
- Diskuter de tre mytene om markedsføring. Hvor
representative er disse for måten dere tenker på? - Gi konkrete eksempler.
43Network Paradoxes(Håkansson Ford, 2000)
- Opportunities - Limitations
- Influencing - Being influenced
- Controlling - Being out of control
44The First Network Paradox
- Both opportunities and constraints
- The diversity of the network gives every
decision-maker myriad opportunities to act - Can not think of its own interests in isolation
- Many network designers, even though companies
often see themselves as the sun in the universe
- Change can only be achieved through the network
- Any change in a network involves costs, both for
those involved in the change and perhaps for
others elsewhere in the network
45The Second Network Paradox
- Influence or being influenced
- The chicken and egg dilemma
- A companys relationships are the outcomes of its
own decisions and actions - A company is the outcome of those relationships
and of what has happened in them - Meaningless to determine what came first
- Both situations exist simultaneously and both
premises are equally valid
46The Second Network Paradox
- Strategy is inter-active. Not just a question of
generating a plan internally, but to generate
plans with others - Both parties necessary for relationship
development - least committed company restricts development
- most committed company drives development
- Nodes and threads are interdependent
47The Third Network Paradox
- Control and letting go of control
- Companies try to manage their relationships and
control the network that surrounds them to
achieve their own aims - The more a company achieves this ambition of
control, the less effective and innovative will
the network be and ultimately the less
successful they will be
48Implications for marketing strategy
- The key issue is to handle a complex set of
relationships to your benefit - Value creation through co-operation and
competition with key partners (co-opetition) - Segmentation in terms of partners or other actors
- Targeting and positioning in terms of value
co-creation and mutual dependence
49Industrial Marketing is not a new thing The
Stavanger Canning industry
- 14 canneries in Stavanger in 1900
- 36 in 1915, equaling 350 million cans
- 72 in 1922
- Exports to almost every corner of the world.
Labels were found in French, German, Spanish,
Finnish, Icelandic, Chinese, Thai, Arabic and
Hebrew, besides English for the markets in the
US, England, Australia, New Zealand and South
Africa!
50- The following quantities of items would be
required for the production year 1915 - 4.000 -5.000 brisling (fish),
- 350 million rubber rings,
- 350 million lids and cans,
- 350 million labels,
- 3.500.000 wooden boxes and
- 10 million liters of olive oil.
51- Along the development of the canning production,
Stavanger saw the growth of - a large printing industry (for can labels),
- a rubber industry (for rubber sealing between can
and lid), - a packaging industry (for lids, cans and keys)
- a range of other industries such as machines,
rods, frames, threading tables, and advertising
material
52New innovations needed
- The rapid development of the industry was aided
by a number of product innovations, most notably
the Reinert and Opsal seeming machines - Before the invention of these machines, lids had
to be manually welded onto the cans - A welded could manage between 600 and 700 lids
per day. The new machine increased this number by
a tenfold - Price of cans was halved in 1912
53End of the industry in the 1960s
54And then..