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Chapter 2 Company and Marketing Strategy

This document discusses strategic planning and marketing strategies. It covers defining a company's mission and objectives, analyzing its current business portfolio using tools like the BCG matrix, and developing strategies for growth through market penetration, development, product development, and diversification. It also discusses partnering within a company's value chain and with external partners in its value delivery network.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
806 views42 pages

Chapter 2 Company and Marketing Strategy

This document discusses strategic planning and marketing strategies. It covers defining a company's mission and objectives, analyzing its current business portfolio using tools like the BCG matrix, and developing strategies for growth through market penetration, development, product development, and diversification. It also discusses partnering within a company's value chain and with external partners in its value delivery network.

Uploaded by

Genoso Otaku
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 42

PRINCIPLE OF MARKETING

Philip Kotler & Gary Armstrong

Chapter 2
Company and Marketing strategy
Senior lecturer: Asso.Prof.Dr. Le Thi My Linh

1-1
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Strategic Planning
 Strategic planning is the
process of developing and
maintaining a strategic fit
between the organization’s
goals and capabilities and
its changing marketing
opportunities.

2-4
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Defining a Market-Oriented Mission
 Mission statement: The organization’s
purpose, what it wants to accomplish in the
larger environment
 Market-oriented mission statement:
Defines the business in terms of satisfying
basic customer needs

2-5
 Mission statement:
 Amazon.com: we make internet buying
experience fast, easy, and enjoyable-we are
the place where you can find and discover
any thing you want to buy online
 Adidas: we strive to be the global leader in
the sporting goods industry with sports
brands build on passion for sport and a
sporting lifestyle
 L’Ore’al: we sell life style and self
expression; success and status; memories,
hopes and dreams
2-6
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Setting Company Objectives and Goals
 Business objectives
 Marketing objectives

2-7
Developing SMART marketing
objectives

 S Specific: It should be clearly stated.


 M Measurable: The scale of measurement should be in
place.
 A Achievable: It should be achievable (given the
market situation).
 R Realistic: It should not be over- optimistic.
 T Time based: There should be a specified date of
completion.

8
Example of SMART Marketing
objectives
 To increase customer satisfaction by 10% over the next
12 months.
 To retain 70% of existing customers over the next 3
years.
 To acquire a 5% increase in market share over the next
3 months.
 To expand the distribution system to an additional 5
international markets within the next 12 months.
 To increase brand awareness, in our markets, by 20%
over the next 12 months.
9
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Designing the Business Portfolio
 The business portfolio is the collection of
businesses and products that make up the
company.

2-10
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Analyzing the Current Business Portfolio
 Analyzing the current business portfolio is
the process by which management evaluates the
products and businesses making up the
company.

2-11
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Steps in Analyzing the Current Business
Portfolio
 Identify key businesses making up the
company
 Assess the attractiveness of its various SBUs
 Decide how much support each SBU deserves

2-12
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Steps in Analyzing the Current Business
Portfolio
 Identify key businesses making up the company:
 A strategic business unit (SBU) is a unit of the
company that has a separate mission and
objectives that can be planned separately from
other company businesses.
 Company division
 Product line within a division
 Single product or brand

2-13
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Steps in Analyzing the Current
Business Portfolio
 Assess the attractiveness of
various SBUs and decide how
much support each deserves.

2-14
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Analyzing the Current Business Portfolio
The Boston Group Approach
 Growth share matrix is a portfolio planning method
that evaluates a company’s strategic business units in
terms of their market growth rate and relative share.
 Strategic business units are classified as:
 Stars
 Cash Cows
 Question marks
 Dogs

2-15
BCG Market Growth Relative
Share Matrix
HIGH Problem
Star
Child

Market
growth
rate

Cash cow Dog


LOW
HIGH LOW
Relative market share & profitability
16
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Analyzing the Current Business Portfolio
The Boston Group Approach
 Stars are high-growth, high-share businesses or
products requiring heavy investment to finance rapid
growth. They will eventually turn into cash cows.
 Cash cows are low-growth, high-share businesses or
products that are established and successful SBUs
requiring less investment to maintain market share.

2-17
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Analyzing the Current Business Portfolio
The Boston Group Approach
 Question marks are low-share business units in
high-growth markets requiring a lot of cash to hold
their share.
 Dogs are low-growth, low-share businesses and
products that may generate enough cash to maintain
themselves but do not promise to be large sources of
cash.

2-18
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Analyzing the Current Business Portfolio
Problems with Matrix Approaches
 Difficulty in defining SBUs and measuring market
share and growth
 Time consuming
 Expensive
 Focus on current businesses, not future planning

2-19
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Developing Strategies for Growth and
Downsizing
 The product/market expansion grid is a tool
for identifying company growth opportunities
through market penetration, market
development, product development, or
diversification.

2-20
Growing Your Market
M A R K E T

Existing New

P Market penetration
Increase market share Market development
R Medium risk
Existing steal competitor’s
O
D business
U Low risk -Low return
C
T
Product development Diversify
New Same market/ High risk
new product

21
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Developing Strategies for Growth and
Downsizing
 Product/market expansion grid strategies
 Market penetration
 Market development
 Product development
 Diversification

2-22
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Developing Strategies for Growth and Downsizing
 Market penetration is a growth strategy
increasing sales to current market segments
without changing the product.
 Market development is a growth strategy that
identifies and develops new market segments for
current products.

2-23
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Developing Strategies for Growth and
Downsizing
 Product development is a growth strategy that
offers new or modified products to existing
market segments.
 Diversification is a growth strategy through
starting up or acquiring businesses outside the
company’s current products and markets.

2-24
Companywide Strategic Planning:
Defining Marketing’s Role
Developing Strategies for Growth and
Downsizing
 Downsizing is the reduction of the business
portfolio by eliminating products or business
units that are not profitable or that no longer fit
the company’s overall strategy.

2-25
Planning Marketing: Partnering to
Build Customer Relationships
Partner Relationship Management
 Partner relationship management is the
process of:
 Working closely with partners in other company
departments to form an effective value chain that
serves the customer, as well as
 Partnering effectively with other companies in the
marketing system to form a competitively superior
value-delivery network.

2-26
Planning Marketing: Partnering to
Build Customer Relationships
Partnering with Other Company Departments
• A value chain is a series of departments that
carry out value-creating activities to design,
produce, market, deliver, and support a firm’s
products.

2-27
Planning Marketing: Partnering to
Build Customer Relationships
Partnering with Others in the Marketing
System
 A value delivery network is made up of the
company, suppliers, distributors, and ultimately
customers who partner with each other to
improve performance of the entire system.

2-28
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Marketing Strategy
 A marketing strategy is the
marketing logic by which the
business unit hopes to achieve its
marketing objectives.
 The company decide which customer it will
serve (segmentation and targeting) and how
(differentiation and positioning)

2-29
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Customer-Driven Marketing
Strategy
 Market segmentation is the
division of a market into
distinct groups of buyers who
have distinct needs,
characteristics, or behavior and
who might require separate
products or marketing mixes.

2-30
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Customer-Driven Marketing Strategy
 A market segment is a group of consumers who
respond in a similar way to a given set of
marketing efforts.
 Target marketing is the process of evaluating
each market segment’s attractiveness and
selecting one or more segments to enter.

2-31
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Customer-Driven Marketing Strategy
 Market positioning is the arranging for a product
to occupy a clear, distinctive, and desirable place
relative to competing products in the minds of the
target consumer.

2-32
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Developing an Integrated Marketing Mix
 The marketing mix is the set of controllable
tactical marketing tools—product, price, place,
and promotion—that the firm blends to produce
the response it wants in the target market.

2-33
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Developing an Integrated Marketing Mix
 The four Ps
 Product
 Price
 Place
 Promotion

2-34
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Developing an Integrated Marketing Mix
The four Ps
 Product is the goods and services in combination that the
company offers to the target market.
 Price is the amount of money customers have to pay to obtain
the product.

2-35
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
Developing an Integrated Marketing Mix
The four Ps
 Place is the company activities that make the product
available to target customers.
 Promotion is the activities that communicate the
merits of the product and persuade target customers to
buy it.

2-36
Marketing Strategy and the
Marketing Mix
The 4 Ps versus The 4 Cs
Product Customer solution
Price Customer cost
Place Convenience
Promotion Communication

2-37
Managing the Marketing Effort

Managing the marketing effort requires:


 Analysis
 Planning
 Implementing
 Controlling

2-38
Managing the Marketing Effort
Marketing Analysis
 Marketing analysis is the complete analysis of
the company’s situation in a SWOT analysis that
evaluates the company’s:
 Strengths
 Weaknesses
 Opportunities
 Threats

2-39
Managing the Marketing Effort
Marketing Analysis
 Strengths include internal capabilities, resources, and
positive situational factors that may help to serve company
customers and achieve company objectives.
 Weaknesses include internal limitations and negative
situational factors that may interfere with company
performance.
 Opportunities are favorable factors or trends in the
external environment that the company may be able to
exploit to its advantage.
 Threats are unfavorable factors or trends that
may present challenges to performance.

2-40
Managing the Marketing Effort
Market Planning
 Planning is the development of strategic and
marketing plans to achieve company objectives.
 Marketing strategy consists of the
specific strategies for target markets,
positioning, the marketing mix, and
marketing expenditure levels.

2-41
Managing the Marketing Effort
Market Planning
 Sections of a marketing plan include:
 Executive summary
 Current marketing situation
 Threats and opportunities
 Objective and issues
 Action programs
 Budgets
 Controls

2-42
Managing the Marketing Effort

Marketing Implementation
 Implementing is the process that turns
marketing plans into marketing actions to
accomplish strategic marketing objectives.
 Successful implementation depends on how well
the company blends its people, organizational
structure, decision and reward system, and
company culture into a cohesive action plan that
supports its strategies.

2-43
Managing the Marketing Effort
Marketing Control
 Controlling is measuring and evaluating results and
taking corrective action as needed.
 Operating control
 Strategic control
 Operating control involves checking ongoing
performance against annual plan and taking corrective
action as needed.
 Strategic control involves looking at whether the
company’s basic strategies are well matched to its
opportunities.

2-48

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