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Mma6e chapter-11 final
- 4. Learning Issues for Chapter Eleven
1. How can market leaders expand the total market and defend
market share?
2. How should market challengers attack market leaders?
3. How can market followers or nichers compete effectively?
4. What marketing strategies are appropriate at each stage of
the product life cycle?
5. How should marketers adjust their strategies and tactics for
an economic downturn or recession?
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- 5. Chapter Outline
• To be a long-term market leader is the goal of any marketer.
• Today’s challenging marketing circumstances, however, often
dictate that companies reformulate their marketing strategies
and offerings several times.
• Economic conditions change, competitors launch new
assaults, and buyer interest and requirements evolve.
• Different market positions can suggest different market
strategies.
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- 6. Chapter Outline
• The chapter examines the role competition plays and how
marketers can best manage their brands depending on their market
position and stage of the product life cycle.
• Competition grows more intense every year—from global
competitors eager to grow sales in new markets, and online
competitors seeking cost-efficient ways to expand distribution, to
private-label and store brands providing low-price alternatives and
brand extensions by mega-brands moving into new categories.
• For these reasons and more, product and brand fortunes change
over time, and marketers must respond accordingly.
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- 7. Competitive Strategies for Market Leaders
• A market leader has the largest market share and usually leads in price
changes, new-product introductions, distribution coverage, and promotional
intensity.
• We can gain further insight by classifying firms by the roles they play in the
target market (see Figure 11.1):
a. Leader
b. Challenger
c. Follower
d. Nicher
• Although marketers assume well-known brands are distinctive in
consumers’ minds, unless a dominant firm enjoys a legal monopoly, it must
maintain constant vigilance.
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- 9. Maintaining Vigilance in the Competitive
Marketplace
After losing its stronghold in the
portable music and television
markets, Sony hopes to regain
its glory days through its Xperia
smartphone line.
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- 10. Marketing Insight: When Your Competitor Delivers
More for Less
• Too many companies search within the conventional
boundaries of industry competition (“do battle”) instead of
finding unoccupied market positions that represent real
value innovation.
• Companies offering the powerful combination of low prices
and high quality are capturing the hearts and wallets of
consumers all over the world.
• See the budget airline example.
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- 11. Marketing Insight: When Your Competitor Delivers
More for Less
In the airline industry,
budget airlines have debuted
in Asia and have proven to
give full-service airlines a run
for their money. AirAsia,
Jetstar Asia, Tiger Airways,
and Bangkok Air are
transforming the way
consumers fly.
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- 12. Marketing Insight: When Your Competitor Delivers
More for Less
Differentiation
• Marketers need to protect areas where their business models
give other companies room to maneuver.
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- 13. Marketing Insight: When Your Competitor Delivers
More for Less
Execution
• To compete effectively, firms may instead need to downplay
or even abandon some market segments. The low-cost
operation must be designed and launched as a moneymaker
in its own right, not just as a defensive play.
• To stay number one, the firm must first find ways to expand
total market demand. Second, it must protect its current
share through good defensive and offensive actions. Third, it
should increase market share, even if market size remains
constant.
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- 14. Expanding Total Market Demand
When the total market expands, the dominant firm usually gains
the most.
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- 15. New Customers
Every product class has the potential to attract buyers who are
unaware of the product or are resisting it because of price or
lack of certain features. A company can search for new users
among three groups:
i. those who might use it but do not (market-penetration
strategy),
ii. those who have never used it (new-market segment
strategy),
iii. those who live elsewhere (geographical-expansion
strategy).
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- 16. Finding New Users
Japan’s Video-Game Industry
—The traditionally male-dominated
video-game
market in Japan is seeing
increased patronage from
female gamers who are
interested in otome-romance
games.
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- 17. More Usage
• Marketers can try to increase the amount, level, or frequency
of consumption.
• They can sometimes boost the amount through packaging or
product redesign.
• Larger package sizes increase the amount of product
consumers use at one time.
• Consumers use more of impulse products such as soft drinks
and snacks when the product is made more available.
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- 18. More Usage—
Increasing Frequency
Increasing frequency of consumption, on the other hand,
requires either
a. identifying additional opportunities to use the brand in the same
basic way or
b. identifying completely new and different ways to use the brand.
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- 19. Additional Opportunities to Use the Brand
• A marketing program can communicate the appropriateness
and advantages of using the brand. Example Microsoft
encouraging users to use its application instead of Google.
• Another opportunity arises when consumers’ perceptions of
their usage differs from reality.
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- 20. What happens when consumers’ perceptions of their
usage differs from reality?
• For many products with relatively short lifespans, consumers may
fail to replace the product in a timely manner because of a
tendency to overestimate the length of productive usage.
• One strategy to is to tie the act of replacing the product to a certain
holiday, event, or time of year.
• Another strategy might be to provide consumers with better
information on either (1) when the product was first used or would
need to be replaced, or (2) the current level of product
performance.
• An Example of Gillette.
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- 21. New Ways to Use the Brand
• The second approach to increasing frequency of consumption
is to identify completely new and different applications.
• For example, food product companies have long advertised
new recipes that use their branded products in entirely
different ways.
• Lee Kum Kee, a Hong Kong-based manufacturer of Chinese
sauces, provides recipes on what dishes to cook using its
sauces.
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- 22. Protecting Market Share
• While trying to expand total market size, the dominant firm
must actively defend its current business.
• The most constructive response is continuous innovation.
The front-runner should lead the industry in developing new
products and customer services, distribution effectiveness,
and cost cutting.
• Comprehensive solutions increase its competitive strength
and value to customers.
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- 23. Proactive Marketing
• In satisfying customer needs, we can draw a distinction between
responsive marketing, anticipative marketing, and creative
marketing.
• A responsive marketer finds a stated need and fills it.
• An anticipative marketer looks ahead to needs customers may
have in the near future.
• A creative marketer discovers solutions customers did not ask for
but to which they enthusiastically respond.
• Creative marketers are proactive market-driving firms, not just
market-driven ones.
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- 24. Proactive Marketing
• Many companies assume their job is just to adapt to customer
needs.
• They are reactive mostly because they are overly faithful to
the customer-orientation paradigm and fall victim to the
“tyranny of the served market.”
• Successful companies instead proactively shape the market to
their own interests. Instead of trying to be the best player,
they change the rules of the game.
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- 25. Proactive Marketing Skills
A company needs two proactive skills:
1. responsive anticipation to see the writing on the wall, as when
IBM changed from a hardware producer to a service business,
2. creative anticipation to devise innovative solutions, as when
Pepsico introduced H2OH (a soft drink-bottled water hybrid).
Note that responsive anticipation is performed before a given change,
while reactive response happens after the change takes place.
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- 26. Proactive Marketing Companies
• Proactive companies create
new offers to serve unmet—
and maybe even unknown—
consumer needs.
• At one time, Sony engaged in
such proactive marketing.
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- 27. Proactive Marketing Companies
Sony has introduced many
successful new products that
customers never asked for or
even thought were possible:
Walkmans, VCRs, video
cameras, and CDs. At that time,
Sony was a market-driving firm,
not just a market-driven firm.
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- 28. Proactive Marketing Companies
• Proactive companies may redesign relationships within an industry,
like Toyota and its relationship to its suppliers.
• Or they may educate customers, as Body Shop does in stimulating
the choice of environmental friendly products.
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- 29. Uncertainty Management
Companies need to practice “uncertainty management.”
Proactive firms:
i. Are ready to take risks and make mistakes
ii. Have a vision of the future and of investing in it
iii. Have the capabilities to innovate
iv. Are flexible and non-bureaucratic
v. Have many managers who think proactively
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- 30. Marketing Insight
• See “Marketing Insight: Sun Tzu Bing Fa: Modern Strategy
Insights from Ancient China”
• His military strategies have been applied to marketing.
• The leader of continuous innovation applies the military
principle of the offensive: the commander exercises
initiative, sets the pace, and exploits enemy weaknesses.
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- 31. Defensive Marketing
• Even when it does not launch offensives, the market leader
must not leave any major flanks exposed.
• The aim of defensive strategy is to reduce the probability of
attack, divert attacks to less-threatened areas, and lessen
their intensity.
• Speed of response can make an important difference to profit.
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- 32. Figure 11.2: Six Types of Defense Strategies
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- 33. Six Defensive Strategies
1. Position Defense—Position defense means occupying the
most desirable market space in consumers’ minds, making
the brand almost impregnable.
2. Flank Defense—The market leader should erect outposts to
protect a weak front or support a possible counterattack.
3. Preemptive Defense—A more aggressive maneuver is to
attack first, perhaps with guerrilla action across the market
—hitting one competitor here, another there—and keeping
everyone off balance.
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- 34. Six Defensive Strategies
4. Counteroffensive Defense—In counteroffensive defense
the market leader can meet the attacker frontally, hit its
flank, or launch a pincer movement so it will have to pull
back to defend itself.
5. Mobile Defense—In mobile defense, the leader stretches its
domain over new territories through market broadening and
market diversification.
6. Contraction Defense—Sometimes large companies can no
longer defend all of their territory.
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- 35. Example of Position Defense Strategy
Uni-President — Taiwanese
leading retail company, Uni-
President, through its chain of
7-Eleven convenience stores,
sells its own brand of frozen
foods, milk, hot dogs, cooking
oil, and just about every major
food group to make itself a
complete food retailer. Further,
it regularly introduces new
products.
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- 36. Example of Flank Defense Strategy
Shiseido’s main focus in China
is to make over its upmarket
Auprés brand specifically for the
Chinese market. To cater to
rising purchasing power among
Chinese consumers, it
repackaged the Auprés line by
adding a deluxe version and a
men’s skincare line called JS.
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- 37. Example of Pre-emptive Defense Strategy
Singapore Airlines — To fortify its position as the premier Asian airline, SIA was the first airline to fly
the double-decker super-jumbo Airbus aircraft known as A380. The 555-seat juggernaut jet enables
the airline to take a larger number of passengers on long-haul routes at a lower operating cost per
seat. The services that SIA offers on these jets are aimed to give an unprecedented flying
experience, setting new standards for the airline industry.
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- 38. Pre-emptive Defense Strategy
• A company can launch a pre-emptive defense in several ways.
• It can wage guerrilla action across the market—hitting one
competitor here, another there—and keep everyone off balance; or
it can try to achieve a grand market envelopment.
• It can introduce a stream of new products, making sure to precede
them with preannouncements—deliberate communications
regarding future actions.
• Preannouncements can signal to competitors that they will have to
fight to gain market share.
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- 39. Counteroffensive Defense Strategy
• In a counteroffensive, the leader can meet the attacker
frontally or hit its flank or launch a pincer movement.
• An effective counterattack is to invade the attacker’s main
territory so that it will have to pull back to defend the
territory.
• Another common form of counteroffensive is the exercise of
economic or political clout.
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- 40. Mobile Defense Strategy
• In mobile defense, the leader stretches its domain over new
territories that can serve as future centers for defense and
offense through market broadening and market
diversification.
• Market broadening involves shifting focus from the current
product to the underlying generic need. The company gets
involved in R&D across the whole range of technology
associated with that need.
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- 41. Market Diversification
• Market diversification involves shifting into unrelated
industries.
• When tobacco companies like Reynolds and Philip Morris
acknowledged the growing curbs on cigarette smoking, they
were not content with position defense or even with looking
for cigarette substitutes.
• Instead they moved quickly into new industries, such as beer,
liquor, soft drinks, and frozen foods.
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- 42. Contraction Defense Strategy
• Large companies sometimes recognize that they can no
longer defend all of their territory.
• The best course of action then appears to be planned
contraction (also called strategic withdrawal): giving up
weaker territories and reassigning resources to stronger
territories.
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- 43. Increasing Market Share
• Market leaders can improve their profitability by increasing their
market share.
• Gaining increased share, does not automatically produce higher
profits, especially for labor-intensive service companies that may not
experience many economies of scale.
• Because the cost of buying higher market share through acquisition
may far exceed its revenue value, a company
should consider four factors first.
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- 44. Factors Involved in Increasing Market Share
1. The possibility of provoking antitrust action. Frustrated
competitors are likely to cry “monopoly” and seek legal
action if a dominant firm makes further inroads.
2. Economic cost. Figure 11.3 shows that profitability might fall
with market share gains after some level. In the illustration,
the firm’s optimal market share is 50%. The cost of gaining
further market share might exceed the value if holdout
customers dislike the company, are loyal to competitors,
have unique needs, or prefer dealing with smaller firms.
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- 45. Factors Involved in Increasing Market Share
3. The danger of pursuing the wrong marketing activities.
Companies successfully gaining share typically outperform
competitors in three areas: new-product activity, relative
product quality, and marketing expenditures.
4. The effect of increased market share on actual and perceived
quality. Too many customers can put a strain on the firm’s
resources, hurting product value and service delivery.
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- 46. Figure 11.3: The Concept of Optimal Market Share
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- 47. Other Competitive Strategies
• Firms that occupy second, third, and lower ranks in an
industry are often called runner-up, or trailing firms.
• These firms can adopt one of two postures.
• Each can attack the leader and others in an aggressive bid for
further market share (market challengers), or they can play
ball and not “rock the boat” (market followers).
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- 48. Market Challenger Strategy
• Many market challengers have gained ground or even
overtaken the leader.
• Toyota today produces more cars than General Motors.
• Challengers set high aspirations, leveraging their resources
while the market leader often runs the business as usual.
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- 49. Defining the Strategic Objective and Opponents(s)
A market challenger must first define its strategic objective. The
challenger must decide whom to attack:
a. It can attack the market leader
b. It can attack firms of its own size that are not doing the job and
are underfinanced
c. It can attack small local and regional firms
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- 50. Choosing a General Attack Strategy
We can distinguish among five attack strategies:
1. Frontal
2. Flank
3. Encirclement
4. Bypass
a. Diversifying into unrelated products.
b. Diversifying into new geographical markets.
c. Technological leapfrogging into new technologies.
5. Guerrilla Warfare
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- 51. Attack Strategies in Marketing
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- 52. Frontal Attack Strategy
• In a pure frontal attack, the attacker matches its opponent’s
product, advertising, price, and distribution.
• The principle of force says that the side with the greater
manpower (resources) will win.
• A modified frontal attack, such as cutting price vis-à-vis the
opponent’s, can work if the market leader does not retaliate
and if the competitor convinces the market that its product is
equal to the leader’s.
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- 53. Example of Frontal Attack Marketing Strategies
Chinese Sports Brand:
• After tasting some success in
Tier 1 cities, Nike and adidas
are muscling their way into
China’s smaller cities by
lowering prices to compete
with local brands.
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- 54. Example of Frontal Attack Marketing Strategies
Chinese Sports Brand:
• However, local sportswear
companies such as Li Ning
and Peak are not taking it
lying down.
• They have taken the
offensive by stepping up their
overseas presence, especially
in the U.S. basketball turf.
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- 55. Flanking Attack Strategy
• A flank attack can be directed along two strategic dimensions
—segmental and geographic.
• The segmental attack involves serving uncovered market
needs, as Japanese automakers did when they developed
more fuel-efficient cars.
• In a geographic attack, the challenger spots areas where the
opponent is underperforming.
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- 56. Example of Flanking Attack Strategy
• Very often market leaders
were attacked by flanking
competitors because they
were unwilling to improve on
areas beyond their expertise.
• Holding on to its laurels in
the photographic film market,
and not pressing on in the
digital photography business,
led to Kodak’s bankruptcy.
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- 57. Flanking Strategy
• A flanking strategy is another name for identifying shifts in
market segments that are causing gaps to develop, then
rushing in to fill the gaps and develop them into strong
segments.
• Flanking is in the best tradition of modern marketing, which
holds that the purpose of marketing is to discover needs and
satisfy them.
• Flank attacks are particularly attractive to a challenger with
fewer resources than its opponent and are much more likely
to be successful than frontal attacks.
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- 58. Encirclement Attack
• The encirclement maneuver is an attempt to capture a wide
slice of the enemy’s territory by launching a grand offensive
on several fronts.
• It makes sense when the challenger commands superior
resources and believes a swift encirclement will break the
opponent’s will, in making a stand against an arch rival.
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- 59. Bypass Attack
• The most indirect assault strategy is the bypass.
• It means bypassing the enemy and attacking easier markets
to broaden one’s resource base.
• This strategy offers three lines of approach: diversifying into
unrelated products, diversifying into new geographical
markets, and leapfrogging into new technologies to supplant
existing products.
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- 60. Haier Marketing Strategy in the US
• When Haier, China’s home
appliance company, entered
the U.S., it knew it could not
compete head on with
General Electric and
Whirlpool for the large-sized
white goods market.
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- 61. Haier Marketing Strategy in the US
• Instead, Haier entered the
U.S. market through the
backdoor by catering to
college students with small-sized
refrigerators that can
be fitted into crammed
college dorm rooms.
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- 62. Haier Marketing Strategy in the US
• This bypass strategy worked
as it allowed Haier to
leverage its market
leadership in the small- and
medium-sized refrigerators
market to slowly establish a
foothold in the large
refrigerator market.
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- 63. Bypass Attack Strategy – Technological
Leapfrogging
• In technological leapfrogging, a challenger patiently researches
and develops the next technology and launches an attack, shifting
the battleground to its territory, where it has an advantage.
• Nintendo’s successful attack in the video-game market with the Wii
was precisely about wresting market share by introducing a
superior technology and redefining the “competitive space.”
• Challenger Google used technological leapfrogging to overtake
Yahoo! and become the market leader in search engines.
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- 64. Guerrilla Attacks
• Guerrilla attacks consist of small, intermittent attacks to harass and
demoralize the opponent and eventually secure permanent footholds.
• The guerrilla challenger uses both conventional and unconventional means
of attack.
• These include selective price cuts, intense promotional blitzes, and
occasional legal action, to harass the opponent and eventually secure
permanent footholds.
• A guerrilla campaign can be expensive, although admittedly less expensive
than a frontal, encirclement, or flank attack, but it typically must be backed
by a stronger attack if the challenger hopes to beat the opponent.
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- 65. Choosing a Specific Attack Strategy
• Any aspect of the marketing program can serve as the basis
for attack, such as lower-priced or disconnected products,
new or improved products and services, a wider variety of
offerings, and innovative distribution strategies.
• A challenger’s success depends on combining several
strategies to improve its position over time.
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- 66. Market- Follower Strategies
• Product imitation might be as profitable as product
innovation.
• Many companies prefer to follow rather than challenge the
market leader.
• The innovator bears the expense of developing the new
product, getting it into distribution, and informing and
educating the market.
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- 67. Market- Follower Strategies
• The reward for all this work and risk is normally market
leadership.
• However, another firm can come along and copy or improve
on the new product.
• Although it probably will not overtake the leader, the follower
can achieve high profits because it did not bear any of the
innovation expense.
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- 68. Market- Follower Strategies
• There are patterns of “conscious parallelism.”
• A market follower must know how to hold current customers
and win a fair share of new customers.
• Each follower tries to bring distinctive advantages to its target
market—location, services, and/or financing.
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- 69. Strategies Used by Market-Followers
• A market follower must know how to hold current customers and
win a fair share of new customers.
• Each follower tries to bring distinctive advantages to its target
market—location, services, financing.
• Because the follower is often a major target of attack by
challengers, it must keep its manufacturing costs low and its
product quality and services high.
• It must also enter new markets as they open up.
• The follower has to define a growth path, but one that does not
invite competitive retaliation.
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- 70. Four Broad Strategies
1. Counterfeiter:
The counterfeiter duplicates the leader’s product and package
and sells it on the black market or through disreputable dealers.
1. Cloner:
The cloner emulates the leader’s products, name, and
packaging, with slight variations.
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- 71. Four Broad Strategies
3. Imitator:
The imitator copies some things from the leader but maintains
differentiation in terms of packaging, advertising, pricing, or
location. The leader does not mind the imitator as long as the
imitator does not attack the leader aggressively.
3. Adapter:
The adapter takes the leader’s products and adapts or improves
them. The adapter may choose to sell to different markets, but
often the adapter grows into the future challenger.
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- 72. Counterfeiting Problems in Asia
• Music record firms, Louis
Vuitton, and Rolex have been
plagued with the
counterfeiter problem,
especially in Asia.
• See “Marketing Insight:
Counteracting
Counterfeiting”.
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- 73. Market-Nicher Strategies
• An alternative to being a follower in a large market is to be a
leader in a small market, or niche.
• Firms with low shares of the total market can be highly
profitable through smart niching.
• Such companies tend to offer high value, charge a premium
price, achieve lower manufacturing costs, and shape a strong
corporate culture and vision.
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- 74. Why is Niching so Profitable?
• The main reason is that the market nicher ends up knowing
the target customers so well that it meets their needs better
than other firms selling to this niche.
• The nicher achieves high margin, whereas, the mass
marketer achieves higher volume.
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- 75. Niche Marketing
• Nichers have three tasks: creating niches, expanding niches,
and protecting niches.
• Niching carries a major risk in that the market niche might
dry up or be attacked.
• The company is then stuck with highly specialized resources
that may not have high-value alternative uses.
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- 76. Marketing Memo: Niche Specialist Roles
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- 77. Product Life-Cycle Marketing Strategies
• A company’s positioning and differentiation strategy must change
as the product, market, and competitors change over the product
life cycle (PLC).
• Products have a limited life.
• Product sales pass through distinct stages, each posing different
challenges, opportunities, and problems to the seller.
• Profits rise and fall at different stages of the product life cycle.
• Products require different marketing, financial, manufacturing,
purchasing, and human resource strategies in each life-cycle stage.
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- 78. Product Life Cycles (PLC)
• Most PLC curves are portrayed as bell-shaped (see Figure
11.4). This curve is typically divided into four stages:
introduction, growth, maturity, and decline.
1. Introduction—A period of slow sales growth as the product is
introduced in the market. Profits are nonexistent because of the
heavy expenses of product introduction.
2. Growth—A period of rapid market acceptance and substantial
profit improvement.
3. Maturity—A slowdown in sales growth because the product has
achieved acceptance by most potential buyers. Profits stabilize
or decline because of increased competition.
4. Decline—Sales show a downward drift and profits erode.
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- 79. Figure 11.4: Sales and Profit Life Cycles
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- 80. Product Life Cycles (PLC)
• The PLC concept can be used to analyze a product category
(television), a product form (flat screen), a product (plasma),
or a brand (Pioneer).
• Not all products exhibit a bell-shaped PLC.
• Three common alternate patterns are shown in Figure 11.5.
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- 81. Figure 11.5: Common Product Life-Cycle Patterns
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- 82. Growth-Slump-Maturity Pattern
Figure 11.5(a) shows a growth-slump-maturity pattern, often
characteristic of small kitchen appliances such as hand-held
mixers and bread makers. Sales grow rapidly when the product
is first introduced and then fall to a “petrified” level that is
sustained by late adopters buying the product for the first time
and early adopters replacing the product.
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- 83. Cycle-Recycle Pattern
• The cycle-recycle pattern in Figure 11.5(b) often describes
the sales of new drugs.
• The pharmaceutical company aggressively promotes its new
drug, and this produces the first cycle.
• Later, sales start declining and the company gives the drug
another promotion push, which produces a second cycle
(usually of smaller magnitude and duration).
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- 84. The Scalloped Pattern
• The scalloped pattern is shown in Figure 11.5(c).
• Here sales pass through a succession of life cycles based on
the discovery of new product characteristics, uses, or users.
• For example, the sales of nylon show a scalloped pattern
because of the many new uses—parachutes, hosiery, shirts,
carpeting, boat sails, automobile tires—that continue to be
discovered over time.
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- 85. Styles, Fashions and Fads
We need to distinguish three special categories of PLCs—styles,
fashions, and fads (Figure 11.6).
•A style is a basic and distinctive mode of expression appearing
in a field of human endeavor.
•A fashion is a currently accepted or popular style in a given
field. Fashions pass through four stages: distinctiveness,
emulation, mass-fashion, and decline. The length of a fashion
cycle is hard to predict.
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- 86. Styles, Fashions and Fads
• Fads are fashions that come quickly into public view, are
adopted with great zeal, peak early, and decline very fast.
Their acceptance cycle is short, and they tend to attract only
a limited following of those who are searching for excitement
or want to distinguish themselves from others.
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- 87. Figure 11.6: Style, Fashion, and Fad Life Cycles
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- 88. Fads: Angry Birds
Is the mobile games the mobile
game Angry Birds a fad? People
are crazy over it and both
official and pirated merchandise
are selling like hotcakes.
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- 90. Marketing Strategies: Introduction Stage and
Pioneer Advantage
• Because it takes time to roll out a new product, work out the
technical problems, fill dealer pipelines, and gain consumer
acceptance, sales growth tends to be slow at this stage.
• Profits are negative or low in the introduction stage.
• Promotional expenditures are at their highest ration to sales
because of the need to:
– Inform potential consumers
– Induce product trial
– Secure distribution in retail outlets
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- 91. Marketing Strategies: Introduction Stage and
Pioneer Advantage
• Companies that plan to introduce a new product must decide when
to enter the market.
• To be first can be rewarding, but risky and expensive.
• To come in later makes sense if the firm can bring superior
technology, quality, or brand strength.
• Speeding up innovation time is essential in an age of shortening
product life cycles.
• Most studies indicate that the market pioneer gains the most
advantage.
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- 92. What are the sources of the pioneer’s advantage?
i. Early users will recall the pioneer’s brand name if the product satisfies
them.
ii. The pioneer’s brand also establishes the attributes the product class
should possess.
iii. The pioneer’s brand normally aims at the middle of the market and so
captures more users.
iv. Customer inertia also plays a role; and there are producer advantages:
economies of scale, technological leadership, patents, ownership of scarce
assets, and other barriers to entry.
v. Pioneers can have more effective marketing spending and enjoy higher
rates of consumer repeat purchases.
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- 93. Pioneering Strategy in Asia
• Pioneering appears to be advantageous in Asia.
• Studies in China suggest that early entrants had superior
sales growth and higher asset turnover but faced greater
operational risks and achieved lower returns on their
investments than later entrants.
• These findings imply that pioneers in emerging Asian markets
should exploit first-mover advantages (market expansion and
asset efficiency) while mitigating its disadvantages (risk and
cost effects.
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- 94. Pioneer Brands in China – Automotive Industry
General Motors (GM) and
Volkswagen (VW) were one of
the earliest entrants in the
China.
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- 95. Producer Advantages
a. Economies of scale
b. Technological leadership
c. Patents
d. Ownership of scarce assets
e. Other barriers to entry
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- 96. Limitations of Pioneer Advantages
• The pioneer’s advantage is not inevitable.
• Steven Schnaars studied industries where imitators surpassed
the innovators. He found several weaknesses among the
failing pioneers:
1. New products were too crude
2. Were improperly positioned
3. Appeared before there was a strong demand
4. Product-development costs were high
5. Lack of resources to compete
6. Managerial incompetence or unhealthy complacency
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- 97. Limitations of Pioneer Advantages
• Golder and Tellis raise further doubts about the pioneer
advantage. They distinguish between:
1. An Inventor: first to develop patents in a new-product category.
2. A product pioneer: first to develop a working model.
3. A market pioneer: first to sell in the new-product category.
• They conclude that although pioneers may still have an
advantage, a larger number of market pioneers fail than has
been reported and a larger number of early market leaders
(though not pioneers) succeed.
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- 98. Factors Affecting Market Leadership
• Golder and Tellis’s five factors underpinning long-term market
leadership:
1. Vision of a mass market
2. Persistence
3. Relentless innovation
4. Financial commitment
5. Asset leverage
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- 99. Long-Range Product Market Expansion
• The pioneer should visualize
the various product markets
it could initially enter,
knowing that it cannot enter
all of them at once.
• Suppose market-segmentation
analysis
reveals the product market
segments shown in Figure
11.7.
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- 100. Long-Range Product Market Expansion
• The pioneer should analyze
the profit potential of each
product market singly and in
combination and decide on a
market expansion path.
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- 101. Long-Range Product Market Expansion
• Thus, the pioneer in Figure 11.7
plans first to enter product market
P1M1, then move the product into
a second market (P1M2), then
surprise the competition by
developing a second product for
the second market (P2M2), then
take the second product back into
the first market (P2M1), and then
launch a third product for the first
market (P3M1).
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- 102. Long-Range Product Market Expansion
• If this game plan works, the
pioneer firm will own a good part
of the first two segments and
serve them with two or three
products.
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- 104. Marketing Strategies: Growth Stage
• The growth stage is marked by a rapid climb in sales.
• Early adopters like the product, and additional consumers
start buying it.
• New competitors enter, attracted by the opportunities. They
introduce new product features and expand distribution.
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- 105. Marketing Fast Food in China—A Growth Market
With a growing middle-class
Chinese economy, different
types of fast-food chains such
as Krispy Kreme are seizing this
opportunity by establishing a
presence there.
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- 106. Marketing Strategies: Growth Stage
• Prices remain where they are or fall slightly.
• Companies maintain their promotional expenditures at the
same or at a slightly increased level to meet competition and
to continue to educate the market.
• Sales rise much faster than promotional expenditures.
• Profits increase.
• Manufacturing costs fall faster than price declines owing to
the producer learning effect.
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- 107. Strategies to Sustain Rapid Market Growth
During this stage, the firm uses several strategies to sustain
rapid market growth:
1. It improves product quality and adds new product features and
improved styling.
2. It adds new models and flanker products.
3. It enters new market segments.
4. It increases its distribution coverage and enters new distribution
channels.
5. It shifts from product-awareness advertising to product-preference
advertising.
6. It lowers prices to attract the next layer of price-sensitive buyers.
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- 108. Marketing Strategies: Growth Stage
• A firm in the growth stage faces a trade-off between high
market share and high current profits.
• By spending money on product improvement, promotion, and
distribution, it can capture a dominant position.
• It forgoes maximum current profit hoping to make even
greater profits in the next stage.
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- 109. Marketing Strategies – Maturity Stage
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- 110. Marketing Strategies: Maturity Stage
• At some point, the rate of sales growth will slow, and the
product will enter a stage of relative maturity.
• This stage normally lasts longer than the previous stages and
poses big challenges to marketing management.
• Most products are in the maturity stage of the life cycle.
• Most marketing managers cope with the problem of
marketing the mature product.
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- 111. Marketing Strategies: Maturity Stage
The maturity stage divides into three phases:
1. Growth, where the sales growth rate starts to decline
2. Stable, where sales flatten on a per capita basis because of
market saturation
3. Decaying maturity, where the absolute level of sales starts to
decline, and customers begin switching to other products
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- 112. Marketing Strategies: Maturity Stage
• The sales slowdown creates overcapacity in the industry that leads
to intensified competition
• The industry eventually consists of well-entrenched competitors
whose basic drive is to gain or maintain market share
• Dominating the industry are a few giant firms that serve the whole
market and make their profits mainly through high volume
• Surrounding these dominant firms is a multitude of market nichers
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- 113. Marketing in the Maturity Stage
Korean TV Shopping
• With the popularity of online
shopping in wired Korea, one
would think that traditional
TV shopping is on the
decline.
• Instead, South Koreans are
going big on television home
shopping.
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- 114. Marketing Strategies: Maturity Stage
• The question is whether to struggle to become one of the big
three and achieve profits through high volume and low cost,
or to pursue a niching strategy and achieve profits through
low volume and a high margin.
• Sometimes, the market will divide into low- and high-end
segments, and the firms in the middle see their market share
steadily erode.
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- 115. Electrolux’s Targeting Strategy in a Mature Market
Rather than accept the
stratification between low and
high, Electrolux segmented the
market according to the lifestyle
and purchasing patterns of
about 20 different types of
consumers—“20 product
positions.”
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- 116. Marketing Strategies: Maturity Stage
• Some companies abandon weaker products to concentrate on more
profitable and new products.
• Yet many mature markets and old products may still have potential.
• Industries widely thought to be mature—autos, motorcycles, television,
watches, cameras—were proved otherwise by the Japanese, who found
ways to offer new value to customers.
• Seemingly moribund brands like Ovaltine have achieved sales revivals
through the exercise of marketing imagination.
• The popularity of Tiger Balm in the reemerging traditional Chinese medicine
market is an example.
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- 117. Tiger Balm
• The popularity of Tiger Balm in
the re-emerging traditional
Chinese medicine market
• In the early 1990s, Tiger Balm
was revived by new
management at Haw Par
Corporation.
• Haw Par aggressively advertised
Tiger Balm in Asia by leveraging
on its heritage.
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- 118. Tiger Balm
• It also introduced Tiger Medical
Plaster, Tiger Muscle Rub, and
Tiger Liniment to expand its
product line.
• A new variant, Tiger Balm Soft,
was launched to target active
young consumers.
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- 119. Market Modification
• The company might try to expand the market for its mature
brand by working with the two factors that make up sales
volume:
• Volume = number of brand users * usage rate per user.
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- 120. Market Modification
• It can try to expand the number of brands users by converting nonusers.
• It can also try to expand the number of brand users by entering new
market segments.
• A third way to expand the number of brand users is winning competitors’
customers.
• Volume can also be increased by convincing current users to increase
their brand usage:
– Use the product on more occasions
– Use more of the product on each occasion
– Use the product in new ways
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- 121. Table 11.1: Alternate Ways to Increase Sales Volume
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- 122. Product Modification
• Managers also try to stimulate sales by modifying the
product’s characteristics through quality improvement,
feature improvement, or style improvement.
• Quality improvement aims at increasing the product’s
functional performance.
• Feature improvement aims at adding new features that
expand the product’s performance, versatility, safety, or
convenience.
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- 123. Advantages and Limitation of Product Modification
• This strategy has several advantages:
i. New features build the company’s image as an innovator.
ii. Wins the loyalty of market segments that value these features.
iii. Provide an opportunity for free publicity.
iv. Generate sales force and distributor enthusiasm.
• The chief disadvantage is that feature improvements might
not pay off in the long run.
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- 124. Marketing Program Modification
• Product managers might also try to stimulate sales by
modifying other marketing program elements—price,
distribution, and communications in particular.
• They should assess the likely success of any changes in terms
of effects on new and existing customers.
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- 125. Marketing Strategies – Decline Stage
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- 126. Marketing Strategies: Decline Stage
• Sales decline for a number of reasons, including technological
advances, shifts in consumer tastes, and increased domestic
and foreign competition.
• All lead to overcapacity, increased price-cutting, and profit
erosion.
• As sales and profits decline, some firms withdraw from the
market. Those remaining may reduce the number of products
they offer.
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- 127. Marketing Strategies: Decline Stage
• Unless strong reasons for retention exist, carrying a weak
product is very costly to the firm—and not just by the amount
of uncovered overhead and profit: there are many hidden
costs.
• Weak products often consume a disproportionate amount of
management’s time.
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- 128. Marketing Strategies: Decline Stage
• The first task is to establish a system for identifying weak
products.
• Many companies appoint a product-review committee with
representatives from marketing, R&D, manufacturing, and
finance.
• The product-review committee makes a recommendation for
each product—leave it alone, modify its marketing strategy,
or drop it.
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- 129. Harvesting Strategies
• If the company were choosing between harvesting and
divesting, its strategies would be quite different.
• Harvesting calls for gradually reducing a product or business’s
costs while trying to maintain sales.
• It would try to cut these costs without letting customers,
competitors, and employees know what is happening.
• Harvesting can substantially increase the company’s current
cash flow.
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- 130. Companies that successfully restage or rejuvenate a
mature product often do so by adding value to the
original product:
• Yamaha closely examined the market and found that the
majority of pianos purchased sit around idle and neglected,
without being tuned regularly.
• It seemed that many people owned pianos, but few were
playing them.
• People did not want to invest the time
that it takes to master the instrument.
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- 131. Companies that successfully restage or rejuvenate a
mature product often do so by adding value to the
original product:
• Yamaha then decided to develop a sophisticated combination
of digital and optical technology that can play performance
pieces just like the way professional pianists do.
• The advent of the digital piano has revived the piano industry
and increased the market for piano maintenance as well.
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- 132. Divesting Decisions
• When a company decides to drop a product, it faces further
decisions.
• If the product has strong distribution and residual goodwill,
the company can probably sell it to another firm.
• If the company cannot find any buyers, it must decide
whether to liquidate the brand quickly or slowly.
• It must also decide on how much inventory and service to
maintain for past customers.
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- 133. Evidence for the Product Life-cycle Concept
• The PLC concept helps marketers interpret product and
market dynamics, conduct planning and control, and do
forecasting.
• New consumer durables show a distinct take-off, after which
sales increase by roughly 45% a year, but they also show a
distinct slowdown, when sales decline by roughly 15% a year.
• Slowdown occurs at 34% penetration on average, well before
most households own a new product.
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- 134. Evidence for the Product Life-cycle Concept
• The growth stage lasts a little over eight years and does not
seem to shorten over time.
• Informational cascades exist, meaning people are more likely
to adopt over time if others already have, instead of by
making careful product evaluations.
• One implication is that product categories with large sales
increases at take-off tend to have larger sales declines at
slowdown.
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- 135. Table 11.2: Summary of Product Life-Cycle
Characteristics, Objectives, and Strategies (A)
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- 136. Table 11.2: Summary of Product Life-Cycle
Characteristics, Objectives, and Strategies (B)
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- 137. Critique of the Product Life-Cycle Concept
• PLC theory has its share of critics, who claim life-cycle
patterns are too variable in shape and duration to be
generalized, and that marketers can seldom tell what stage
their product is in.
• A product may appear mature when it has actually reached a
plateau prior to another upsurge.
• Critics also charge that, rather than an inevitable course, the
PLC pattern is the self-fulfilling result of marketing strategies,
and that skilful marketing can in fact lead to continued
growth.
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- 138. Market Evolution
• Because the PLC focuses on what is happening to a particular
product or brand rather than on what is happening to the
overall market, it yields a product-oriented rather than a
market-oriented picture.
• Firms need to visualize a market’s evolutionary path as it is
affected by new needs, competitors, technology, channels,
and other developments and change product and brand
positioning to keep pace.
• Like products, markets evolve through four stages:
emergence, growth, maturity, and decline.
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- 139. Marketing in an Economic Downturn
• Given economic cycles there will always be tough times, like
2008–2010 were in many parts of the world.
• Despite reduced funding for marketing programs and intense
pressure to justify them as cost effective, some marketers
survived—or even thrived—in the recession.
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- 140. Five Guidelines To Improve The Odds For Success
During An Economic Downturn
1. Explore the Upside of Increasing Investment
2. Get Closer to Customers
3. Review Budget Allocations
4. Put Forth the Most Compelling Value Proposition
5. Fine-Tune Brand and Product Offerings
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- 141. Schema for Chapter Eleven © Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd 2013. 141 All rights reserved