The document discusses marketing auditing and analyzing an organization's marketing capability. It describes conducting a marketing audit to understand an organization's current market position, environmental opportunities and threats, and ability to operate in the environment. The audit involves analyzing the marketing environment, strategy, organizational issues, systems, productivity, and functions. SWOT analysis is then used to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. The results are incorporated into assessing the organization's overall marketing capability.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
42 views
Chapter 2 Marketing Analysis
The document discusses marketing auditing and analyzing an organization's marketing capability. It describes conducting a marketing audit to understand an organization's current market position, environmental opportunities and threats, and ability to operate in the environment. The audit involves analyzing the marketing environment, strategy, organizational issues, systems, productivity, and functions. SWOT analysis is then used to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. The results are incorporated into assessing the organization's overall marketing capability.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 49
Chapter 2
Marketing Auditing and
the Analysis of Capability Strategic and marketing analysis • The starting point in this process of strategic and marketing analysis involves a detailed marketing audit and review of marketing effectiveness. • This helps identify their current position and the nature of their marketing capability. Cont’d • Together, the two techniques are designed to provide the strategist with a clear understanding of: The organization’s current market position The nature of environmental opportunities and threats The organization’s ability to cope with the demands of this environment. • The results of this analysis are then incorporated in a statement of Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats (SWOT), and subsequently a measure of capability Cont’d • Although there is no single format for the audit, it is generally acknowledged that, if the process is to be worthwhile, account needs to be taken of six dimensions: 1 The marketing environment 2 The current marketing strategy 3 Organizational issues 4 The marketing systems in use 5 Levels of marketing productivity 6 Marketing functions. Marketing audit An organization’s performance in the marketplace is directly influenced by the marketing planner’s perception of three factors: 1. The organization’s current market position 2. The nature of environmental opportunities and threats 3. The organization’s ability to cope with environmental demands. Marketing audit is designed to provide the strategist with a clear understanding of these three dimensions Cont’d If the purpose of a corporate plan is to answer three central questions: • Where is the company now? • Where does the company want to go? • How should the company organize its resources to get there? then the audit is the means by which the first of these questions is answered. Cont’d • An audit is a systematic, critical and unbiased review and appraisal of the environment and of the company’s operations. • Marketing audit is the means by which a company can identify its own strengths and weaknesses as they relate to external opportunities and threats. • A marketing audit is part of the larger management audit and is concerned (specifically) with the marketing environment and marketing operations. Cont’d • Given this, the three major elements and potential benefits of the marketing audit can be seen to be: The detailed analysis of the external environment and internal situation The objective evaluation of past performance and present activities The clearer identification of future opportunities and threats. The place of the marketing audit in the overall management audit The Structure and Focus of the Audit
In terms of its structure, the marketing audit
consists of three major and detailed diagnostic steps. These involve a review of: 1. The organization’s environment (opportunities and threats) 2. Its marketing systems (strengths and weaknesses) 3. Its marketing activities. Cont’d • In conducting an audit, the strategist is concerned with two types of variable. First, there are the environmental or market variables, over which the strategist has little or no direct control. Second, there are the operational variables, which can be controlled to a greater or lesser extent. Cont’d • This distinction can also be expressed in terms of the macro-environmental forces (political/legal, economic/demographic, social/cultural, and technological) that affect the business ,and micro-environmental actors (customers, competitors, distributors and suppliers) who subsequently influence the organization’s ability to operate profitably in the marketplace. Cont’d • It begins with an external audit covering the macro-environmental forces referred to above and the markets and competitors that are of particular interest to the company. The internal audit then builds upon this by assessing the extent to which the organization, its structure and resources relate to the environment and have the capability of operating effectively within the constraints that the environment imposes. The stages of the audit
• In discussing this, Grashof (1975) advocated
the following steps: 1. Pre-audit activities in which the auditor decides upon the precise breadth and focus of the audit 2. The assembly of information on the areas which affect the organization’s marketing performance – these would typically include the industry, the market, the firm and each of the elements of the marketing mix Cont’d 3. Information analysis In analyzing information the auditor therefore needs to consider three questions: a. What is the absolute value of the information? b. What is its comparative value? c. What interpretation is to be placed upon it? 4. The formulation of recommendations 5. The development of an implementation programme. Reviewing marketing effectiveness Marketing effectiveness is, to a very large extent, determined by the extent to which the organization reflects the five major attributes of a marketing orientation, namely: A customer-oriented philosophy An integrated marketing organization Adequate marketing information A strategic orientation Operational efficiency. Cont’d • Each of these dimensions can be measured relatively easily by means of a checklist and an overall rating then arrived at for the organization • The purpose of going through the process of a marketing effectiveness rating review is to identify those areas in which scope exists for marketing improvement. • Action, in the form of revised plans, can then be taken to achieve this. The role of SWOT analysis • SWOT stands for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats STRENGTHS : Areas of (distinctive) competence that: • Must always be looked at relative to the competition • If managed properly, are the basis for competitive advantage • Derive from the marketing asset base WEAKNESSES : Areas of relative disadvantage that: • Indicate priorities for marketing improvement • Highlight the areas and strategies that the planner should avoid Cont’d THREATS : Trends within the environment with potentially negative impacts that: • Increase the risks of a strategy • Hinder the implementation of strategy • Increase the resources required • Reduce performance expectations OPPORTUNITIES: Environmental trends with positive outcomes that offer scope for higher levels of performance if pursued effectively: • Highlight new areas for competitive advantage Identifying opportunities and threats
Faced with a constantly changing
environment, each business unit needs to develop a marketing information system (MkIS) that is capable of tracking trends and developments within the marketplace. Each trend or development can then be categorized as an opportunity or a threat Cont’d • For our purposes, an opportunity can be seen as any sector of the market in which the company would enjoy a competitive advantage. These opportunities can then be assessed according to their attractiveness and the organization’s probability of success in this area. Cont’d • The probability of success is influenced by several factors, but most obviously by the extent to which the organization’s strengths, and in particular its distinctive competences, match the key success requirements for operating effectively in the target market and exceed those of its competitors. Opportunity Matrix Sources of Competitive Advantage • Superior market position ((e.g. a differentiated competitive stance, a lower cost base or a protected niche) • A superior knowledge and/or relationship base (e.g. detailed customer knowledge, trade relationships, technical expertise, political links, or cartel membership) • A superior resource base (e.g. size and economics of scale, financial structures, strategic alliances, the breadth of geographic coverage, marketing and manufacturing flexibility, image/reputation, or channel control) Threats Threat Matrix Cont’d • In essence four possibilities exist to measure the market’s overall attractiveness: An ideal business that is characterized by numerous opportunities but few, if any, threats A speculative business that is high both in opportunities and threats A mature business that is low both in opportunities and threats A troubled business that is low in opportunities but high in threats. Identifying strengths and weaknesses
• Each business needs therefore to evaluate on
a regular basis its strengths and weaknesses • Factors for strengths and weaknesses are categorized under marketing, financial, manufacturing and organizational factors. • These factors are not equally important. Thus, the importance is shown on next page. Performance-Importance Matrix Issues of capability • The value of any strategy or plan is ultimately determined not by strengths and weaknesses, but by the organization’s capability and the extent to which it is able to outperform its competitors. • It is the ability of the management team to get things done. Cont’d • In arriving at a measure of capability, the marketing strategist needs to come to terms with six principal areas: 1 Managerial capability. This includes not just the abilities of individuals, but also – and perhaps more importantly – that of the team. 2 Financial capability is determined by the availability of money, the expectations of how it is used, the willingness to take risks when investing, and the returns that are expected. Cont’d 3 Operational capability. This involves the levels of day-to-day efficiency and effectiveness. 4 Distribution capability. This is determined by a combination of geographic reach or coverage, penetration (the proportion of possible outlets) and the quality of these distributors. Cont’d 5. Human resource capability. This is a reflection of the nature and experience of staff throughout the business. 6. Intangible factors (such as the brand). In the case of a powerful brand, capability is extended enormously, since it provides the opportunity not just for brand stretching, but also for pricing at a premium, gaining access to the strongest forms of distribution and increasing levels of customer loyalty Making SWOT analyses more effective
Weaknesses of SWOT Analysis include:
The planner fails to relate strengths and weaknesses to critical success factors Strengths and weaknesses are seen in absolute terms rather than in relation to the competition The elements of the analysis are insufficiently specific Cont’d Competitors’ capabilities are underestimated and/or misunderstood The focus is upon marketing-specific issues rather than reflecting a broader company perspective Emphasis is placed largely upon the ‘hard’ or quantifiable elements and fails to take account of managerial attitudes, cultures, capabilities and competencies Cont’d • In order to make better use of the SWOT framework, Piercy proposes five guidelines: 1. Focus the SWOT upon a particular issue or element, such as a specific product market, a customer segment, a competitor, or the individual elements of the marketing mix. 2. Use the SWOT analysis as a mechanism for developing a shared vision for planning/a team consensus about the future and the important issues. Cont’d 3. Develop a customer orientation by recognizing that strengths and weaknesses are largely irrelevant unless they are recognized and valued by the customer. 4. The analysis of opportunities and threats must relate to the environment which is relevant to the organization’s point of focus. Cont’d • 5. The final guideline is concerned with what Piercy refers to as structured strategy generation. This involves: • Matching strategies - Strengths must be matched to opportunities • Conversion strategies - change weaknesses into strengths and threats into opportunities. • Creative strategies - develop the business and emerge as the result of a detailed analytical process • Iteration - periodic need to go back to the beginning of the process Conducting effective audits To be worthwhile, effective audits should be • 1. Comprehensive auditing - it covers all of the major elements of the organization’s marketing activity • 2. Systematic auditing - adopting sequential diagnostic process followed by development and implementation of both short-term and long-term plans Cont’d • 3. Independent auditing: Ways of audit include a self-audit by managers, an audit by a manager of the same status, an audit by a more senior manager with in the same dept., the use of a company auditing office, a company task force audit group and an audit conducted by an outside specialist. Cont’d
4. Regular Auditing: is carrying out marketing
audit on a regular basis. It is stated that ‘No marketing operation is ever so good that it cannot be improved. Even the best must be better. Why bother with a marketing audit? • The audit is designed to avoid the need for crisis management. The ten most common findings of marketing audits: 1. A lack of knowledge of customers’ behavior and attitudes. 2. A failure to segment markets effectively 3. The absence of marketing planning procedures 4. Reductions in price rather than increases in volume 5. The absence of market-based procedures for evaluating products. Cont’d 6. Misunderstanding company marketing strengths 7. Short-term views of the role of promotion 8. A perception that marketing is limited just to advertising and sales activity 9. Inappropriate organizational structures 10. Insufficient investment in the future, particularly in the area of human resources. The auditing process
• The auditing process should begin with
agreement being reached between the organization’s marketing director and the marketing auditor – someone from inside or outside the organization – regarding the specific objectives, the breadth and depth of coverage, the sources of data, the report format and the time period for the audit. Included within this should be a plan of who is to be interviewed and the questions that are to be asked. Cont’d • With regard to the question of who is to be questioned, it needs to be emphasized that the audit should never be restricted to the company’s executives; it should also include customers, the dealer network and other outside groups. Cont’d • Once the information has been collected, the findings and recommendations need to be presented with emphasis being given to the type of action needed to overcome any problems, the time scale over which remedial action is to be taken, and the names of those who are to be responsible for this. Components of the audit
• Components of marketing audit include:
1. The marketing environment audit. This involves an analysis of the major macro-economic forces and trends within the organization’s task environment, including markets, customers, competitors, distributors, dealers and suppliers. 2. The marketing strategy audit. This focuses upon a review of the organization’s marketing objectives and strategy, with a view to determining how well suited they are to the current and forecasted market environment. Cont’d 3 The marketing organization audit - an evaluation of the structural capability of the organization and its suitability for implementing the strategy needed for the developing environment. 4 The marketing systems audit. covers the quality of the organization’s systems for analysis, planning and control. Cont’d 5 The marketing productivity audit. This examines the profitability of different aspects of the marketing programme and the cost- effectiveness of various levels of marketing expenditure. 6 The marketing functions audit. This involves a detailed evaluation of each of the elements of the marketing mix. How are the audit results used?
• To ensure that the results are incorporated
most effectively within the strategic planning process , the major findings of the audit need to be incorporated within an appropriate framework. This can be done in SWOT and TOWS frameworks discussed earlier and include a summary of the reasons for good or bad performance