Title: MARKETING STRATEGY
1MARKETING STRATEGY
- Learning objectives
- By the end of this lesson, students should be
able to understand the following key issues - What is strategy and what is marketing strategy
- Why is strategy important
- The various different marketing strategies
- Strategy and planning
- Strategic management framework.
2MARKETING STRATEGY
- A marketing strategy serves as the foundation of
a marketing plan. A marketing plan contains a
list of specific actions required to successfully
implement a specific marketing strategy - Without a sound marketing strategy, a marketing
plan has no foundation - Marketing strategies serve as the fundamental
underpinning of marketing plans designed to reach
marketing objectives. It is important that these
objectives have measurable results. - A good marketing strategy should integrate an
organization's marketing goals, policies, and
action sequences (tactics) into a cohesive whole.
The objective of a marketing strategy is to
provide a foundation from which a tactical plan
is developed. This allows the organization to
carry out its mission effectively and efficiently - Marketing strategies are partially derived from
broader corporate strategies, corporate missions,
and corporate goals. They should flow from the
firm's mission statement. They are also
influenced by a range of micro environmental
factors. - Marketing strategies are dynamic and interactive.
They are partially planned and partially
unplanned. See strategy dynamics.
3BUSINESS AND MARKETING STRATEGIES
- BUSINESS STRATEGY
- Ansoff Matrix
- Porters generic strategy
4MARKETING STRATEGIES
- PORTERS GENERIC STRATEGY MODEL
Differentiation
Stuck with no clear strategy
Cost leadership
Focus
5STRATEGIES
Existing
New
MARKET PENETRATION PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
MARKET DEVELOPMENT DIVERSIFICATION
Existing
New
6MARKETING Strategies
Segment 1
MARKETING MIX
Segment 2
Concentrated strategy/marketing
Segment 3
Segment 1
MARKETING MIX 1
Segment 2
MARKETING MIX 2
Segment 3
MARKETING MIX 3
Differentiated strategy/marketing
Whole market
MARKETING MIX
Undifferentiated strategy/marketing
7CORPORATE STRATEGIES
- ATTACH STRATEGIES
- Direct challenge differential advantage
- Direct attack distinctive competence
- Direct attack market share
- Flank attack
- Encirclement
- Bypass
- Guerrilla
8DEFENCE STRATEGIES
MARKETING STRATEGY
- Position defence
- Pre-emptive defence
- Counter-offensive
- Mobile defence
- Flanking defence
- Contraction defence
- By-pass
9COMPONENTS OF A MARKETING PLAN
- EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
- BUSINESS MISSION
- MARKTING AUDITING
- SWOT ANALYSIS
- MARKETING OBJECTIVES
- BUSINESS OBJECTIVES
- MARKETING STRATEGIES
- BUSINESS STRATEGIES
- MARKETING MIX
- IMPLEMENTATION
- EXPECTED RESULT
- MONITORING
- CONTROLLING
10STRATEGY AND PLANNING
- Corporate or visionary planning that provides a
mission and structure for evaluating and
allocating resources to business - Business planning which involves long-range
planning for positioning the company and its
products to best serve its target markets - Functional planning including marketing planning
which is generally annual planning involving
specific goals and plans over one year.
11CORPORATE STRATEGY
- Strategies are formulated as a response to the
various - factors in the companys environment- and these
may - come from both external and internal sources
- External
- Internal
12Organizational Stance and Positioning
- Leaders
- Followers
- Nichers
13Marketing fundamentals - UNIT 2 MARKETING
PLANNING AND BUDGETINGTHE BUSINESS
MISSIONLearning Objectives
- What is a Mission Statement.
- What are the components of a mission statement.
- What is the importance of a mission statemement.
- What are the characteristics of a Mission
Statement - Examples of Mission Statements MS, Asda, Tesco,
Sainsbury, BT Npower.
14Marketing fundamentals - UNIT 2 MARKETING
PLANNING AND BUDGETINGThe Marketing
AuditLearning Objective
- What is the marketing audit
- What are its components
- What is the importance of the marketing audit.
15Marketing fundamentals - UNIT 2 MARKETING
PLANNING AND BUDGETINGTHE SWOT
ANALYSISLearning Objectives
- What is the SWOT Analysis
- What is the importance of carrying out a SWOT
Analysis.
16Marketing fundamentalsMarketing planning and
budgeting.
17PRODUCT PORTFOLIO PLANNING AND ANALYSIS
- Business Portfolio The collection of businesses
and products that make up the company. - Portfolio analysis A tool by which management
- identifies and evaluates the various businesses
that - make up the company
- Strategic business unit (SBU) A unit of the
company that has - a separate mission and objectives and that can be
planned - independently from other company businesses. A
SBU can be - a company division, a product line within a
division, or - sometimes a single product or brand.
18PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
- BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP MATRIX
- Framework of the BCG Matrix
High
20
10
Market growth
0.1x
Low
1x
10x
0
Market share
19PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
- Stars
- Cash cows
- Low-growth
- High-share businesses or products
- Established and successful units that generate
cash that the company uses - to pay its bills and support other business units
that need investment - Question marks
- Low-share business units in high-growth markets
- Dogs
High growth High market share (High-share
businesses) Products often require heavy
investment to finance their rapid growth
20BCG MATRIX BCG CLASSIFICATION OF PRODUCTS
High
20
Dogs
Question marks
Stars
10
Market growth
Cash cows
Low
0
1x
0.1x
10x
Market share
21BCG MATRIX- CASH POSITION FOR PRODUCTS
Stars Revenue Investment - - - 0 Question marks Revenue Investment - - - -
Cash cows Revenue Investment Dogs Revenue Investment 0
22PORTFOLIO STRATEGIES
- Build
- Hold
- Harvest
- Divest
23PRODUCT PORTFOLIO PLANNING AND ANALYSIS
- Business Portfolio The collection of businesses
and products that make up the company. - Portfolio analysis A tool by which management
- identifies and evaluates the various businesses
that - make up the company
- Strategic business unit (SBU) A unit of the
company that has - a separate mission and objectives and that can be
planned - independently from other company businesses. A
SBU can be - a company division, a product line within a
division, or - sometimes a single product or brand.
24PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
- BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP MATRIX
- Framework of the BCG Matrix
High
20
10
Market growth
0.1x
Low
1x
10x
0
Market share
25PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
- Stars
- Cash cows
- Low-growth
- High-share businesses or products
- Established and successful units that generate
cash that the company uses - to pay its bills and support other business units
that need investment - Question marks
- Low-share business units in high-growth markets
- Dogs
High growth High market share (High-share
businesses) Products often require heavy
investment to finance their rapid growth
26BCG MATRIX BCG CLASSIFICATION OF PRODUCTS
High
20
Dogs
Question marks
Stars
10
Market growth
Cash cows
Low
0
1x
0.1x
10x
Market share
27PORTFOLIO STRATEGIES
- Build
- Hold
- Harvest
- Divest
28GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX
29THE GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX BY MCKINSEY
- The GE matrix / McKinsey matrix is a model to
perform a business portfolio analysis on the
Strategic Business Units of a corporation. - A business portfolio is the collection of
Strategic Business Units that make up a
corporation. The optimal business portfolio is
one that fits perfectly to the company's
strengths and helps to exploit the most
attractive industries or markets. - A Strategic Business Unit (SBU) can either be an
entire mid-size company or a division of a large
corporation, that formulates its own business
level strategy and has separate objectives from
the parent company.
30PRODUCT PORTFOLIO PLANNING AND ANALYSIS
- Business Portfolio The collection of businesses
and products that make up the company. - Portfolio analysis A tool by which management
- identifies and evaluates the various businesses
that - make up the company
- Strategic business unit (SBU) A unit of the
company that has - a separate mission and objectives and that can be
planned - independently from other company businesses. A
SBU can be - a company division, a product line within a
division, or - sometimes a single product or brand.
31PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
- BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP MATRIX
- Framework of the BCG Matrix
High
20
10
Market growth
0.1x
Low
1x
10x
0
Market share
32GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX
33THE GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX BY MCKINSEY
- The GE matrix / McKinsey matrix is a model to
perform a business portfolio analysis on the
Strategic Business Units of a corporation. - A business portfolio is the collection of
Strategic Business Units that make up a
corporation. The optimal business portfolio is
one that fits perfectly to the company's
strengths and helps to exploit the most
attractive industries or markets. - A Strategic Business Unit (SBU) can either be an
entire mid-size company or a division of a large
corporation, that formulates its own business
level strategy and has separate objectives from
the parent company.
34PRODUCT PORTFOLIO PLANNING AND ANALYSIS
- Business Portfolio The collection of businesses
and products that make up the company. - Portfolio analysis A tool by which management
- identifies and evaluates the various businesses
that - make up the company
- Strategic business unit (SBU) A unit of the
company that has - a separate mission and objectives and that can be
planned - independently from other company businesses. A
SBU can be - a company division, a product line within a
division, or - sometimes a single product or brand.
35PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
- BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP MATRIX
- Framework of the BCG Matrix
High
20
10
Market growth
0.1x
Low
1x
10x
0
Market share
36PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
- Stars
- Cash cows
- Low-growth
- High-share businesses or products
- Established and successful units that generate
cash that the company uses - to pay its bills and support other business units
that need investment - Question marks
- Low-share business units in high-growth markets
- Dogs
High growth High market share (High-share
businesses) Products often require heavy
investment to finance their rapid growth
37BCG MATRIX BCG CLASSIFICATION OF PRODUCTS
High
20
Dogs
Question marks
Stars
10
Market growth
Cash cows
Low
0
1x
0.1x
10x
Market share
38THE GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX BY MCKINSEY
- The GE matrix / McKinsey matrix is a model to
perform a business portfolio analysis on the
Strategic Business Units of a corporation. - A business portfolio is the collection of
Strategic Business Units that make up a
corporation. The optimal business portfolio is
one that fits perfectly to the company's
strengths and helps to exploit the most
attractive industries or markets. - A Strategic Business Unit (SBU) can either be an
entire mid-size company or a division of a large
corporation, that formulates its own business
level strategy and has separate objectives from
the parent company.
39THE GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX BY MCKINSEY
- The aim of a portfolio analysis is to
- 1) Analyze its current business portfolio and
decide which SBU's should receive more or less
investment, and2) Develop growth strategies for
adding new products and businesses to the
portfolio - 3) Decide which businesses or products should no
longer be retained.The BCG Matrix (Boston
Consulting Group Matrix) is the best-known
portfolio planning framework. The GE / McKinsey
Matrix is a later and more advanced form of the
BCG Matrix.
40THE GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX BY MCKINSEY
- Typical (external) factors that affect Market
Attractiveness- Market size- Market growth
rate- Market profitability - Pricing trends -
Competitive intensity / rivalry - Overall risk
of returns in the industry- Entry barriers -
Opportunity to differentiate products and
services- Demand variability- Segmentation -
Distribution structure- Technology development - Typical (internal) factors that affect
Competitive Strength of a Strategic Business
Unit- Strength of assets and competencies-
Relative brand strength (marketing)- Market
share- Market share growth- Customer loyalty-
Relative cost position (cost structure compared
with competitors)- Relative profit margins
(compared to competitors)- Distribution strength
and production capacity- Record of technological
or other innovation- Quality- Access to
financial and other investment resources-
Management strength
41THE GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX BY MCKINSEY
- The aim of a portfolio analysis is to
- 1) Analyze its current business portfolio and
decide which SBU's should receive more or less
investment, and2) Develop growth strategies for
adding new products and businesses to the
portfolio - 3) Decide which businesses or products should no
longer be retained.The BCG Matrix (Boston
Consulting Group Matrix) is the best-known
portfolio planning framework. The GE / McKinsey
Matrix is a later and more advanced form of the
BCG Matrix.
42THE GENERAL ELECTRIC MATRIX BY MCKINSEY
- Typical (external) factors that affect Market
Attractiveness- Market size- Market growth
rate- Market profitability - Pricing trends -
Competitive intensity / rivalry - Overall risk
of returns in the industry- Entry barriers -
Opportunity to differentiate products and
services- Demand variability- Segmentation -
Distribution structure- Technology development - Typical (internal) factors that affect
Competitive Strength of a Strategic Business
Unit- Strength of assets and competencies-
Relative brand strength (marketing)- Market
share- Market share growth- Customer loyalty-
Relative cost position (cost structure compared
with competitors)- Relative profit margins
(compared to competitors)- Distribution strength
and production capacity- Record of technological
or other innovation- Quality- Access to
financial and other investment resources-
Management strength
43- A six-step approach to implementation of
portfolio analysis (using the GE / McKinsey
Matrix) could look like this 1. Specify
drivers of each dimension. The corporation must
carefully determine those factors that are
important to its overall strategy2. Weight
drivers. The corporation must assign relative
importance weights to the drivers 3. Score SBU's
each driver4. Multiply weights times scores for
each SBU5. View resulting graph and interpret it
6. Perform a review/sensitivity analysis using
adjusted other weights (there may be no
consensus) and scores.
44- Some important limitations of the GE matrix /
McKinsey Matrix are - - Valuation of the realization of the various
factors - - Aggregation of the indicators is difficult
- - Core competencies are not represented
- - Interactions between Strategic Business Units
are not considered
45CHANGES IN PRODUCT/STRATEGIC BUSINESS POSITION
46CONCLUSION
47GENERAL ELECTRIC BUSINESS SCREEN (GE)
48(No Transcript)
49Key terms and definitions
50Questions for revision