SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 43
Download to read offline
][Welcome to
Marketing Strategy
Understanding Market Oportunities
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
4-2
The Seven Domains of Attractive
Opportunities
Macro
Level
Micro
Level
Market Domains Industry Domains
Mission, Ability to
Aspirations, Execute
Propensity on CSFs
for Risk
Connectedness up
and down Value
Chain
Team
Domains
Market Attractiveness
Target Segment Benefits
and Attractiveness
Industry Attractiveness
Sustainable
Advantage
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Market Industry
A group of individuals or
organizations (i.e., buyers)
having the willingness and
ability to buy goods or
services to satisfy a
particular class of wants or
needs
A group of organizations
(i.e., sellers) offering
goods or services that are
similar and close
substitutes for one
another
The distinction between market and industry is
important because:
•Assessments of market and industry attractiveness
differ, and use different analytical tools
•Companies need to account for sellers from other
industries serving their target market 2-3
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Situation Analysis
• One of the most widely used approaches to the collection and
analysis of marketing information is the situation analysis.
• The purpose of the situation analysis is to describe current and future
issues and key trends as they affect three key environments: the
internal environment, the customer environment, and the external
environment.
• There are many issues to be considered in a situation analysis. When
viewed together, the data collected during the situation analysis gives
the organization a big picture of the issues and trends that affect its
ability to deliver value to stakeholders.
• These efforts drive the development of the organization’s
competitive advantages and strategic focus
1-4
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Issues to Be Considered in a Situation
Analysis
1-5
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Conducting a Situation Analysis
• Analysis Alone Is Not a Solution
• Data Is Not the Same as Information
• The Benefits of Analysis Must Outweigh the Costs
• Conducting a Situation Analysis Is a Challenging Exercise
1-6
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-7
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Internal Environment
• The first aspect of a situation analysis involves the critical evaluation
of the firm’s internal environment with respect to its objectives,
strategy, performance, allocation of resources, structural
characteristics, and political climate.
• Or in short:
- Review of Current Objectives, Strategy, and Performance
- Availability of Resources
- Organizational Culture and Structure
1-8
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-9
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Customer Environment
• Who Are Our Current and Potential Customers?
• What Do Customers Do with Our Products?
• Where Do Customers Purchase Our Products?
• When Do Customers Purchase Our Products?
• Why (and How) Do Customers Select Our Products?
• Why Do Potential Customers Not Purchase Our Products?
1-10
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-11
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The External Environment
• Competition
• Economic Growth and Stability
• Political Trends
• Legal and Regulatory Issues
• Technological Advancements
• Sociocultural Trends
1-12
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-13
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Competition
1. Brand competitors, which market products with similar features
and benefits to the same customers at similar prices.
2. Product competitors, which compete in the same product class,
but with products that are different in features, benefits, and
price.
3. Generic competitors, which market very different products that
solve the same problem or satisfy the same basic customer need.
4. Total budget competitors, which compete for the limited financial
resources of the same customers.
1-14
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Competitive Analysis
1. Identification. Identify all current and potential brand, product,
generic, and total budget competitors.
2. Characteristics. Focus on key competitors by assessing the size,
growth, profitability, objectives, strategies, and target markets of
each one.
3. Assessment. Assess each key competitor’s strengths and
weaknesses, including the major capabilities and vulnerabilities that
each possesses within its functional areas (marketing, research and
development, production, human resources, etc.)
4. Capabilities. Focus the analysis on each key competitor’s marketing
capabilities in terms of its products, distribution, promotion, and
pricing.
5. Response. Estimate each key competitor’s most likely strategies and
responses under different environmental situations, as well as its
reactions to the firm’s own marketing efforts.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Collecting Marketing Data and
Information
• Secondary Information Sources
- Internal Data Sources
- Government Sources
- Book and Periodical Sources
- Commercial Sources
• Primary Data Collection
- Direct observation
- Focus groups
- Surveys
- Experiments
1-16
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
SWOT Analysis
• Many consider SWOT analysis to be one of the most effective tools in
the analysis of marketing data and information.
• SWOT analysis is a simple, straightforward framework that provides
direction and serves as a catalyst for the development of viable
marketing plans.
• It fulfills this role by structuring the assessment of the fit between
what a firm can and cannot do (strengths and weaknesses), and the
environmental conditions working for and against the firm
(opportunities and threats).
• When performed correctly, a SWOT analysis not only organizes data
and information, it can be especially useful in uncovering competitive
advantages that can be leveraged in the firm’s marketing strategy.
1-17
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-18
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-19
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-20
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
SWOT-Driven Strategic Planning
• Strengths and Weaknesses
• Opportunities and Threats
• The SWOT Matrix
1-21
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-22
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-23
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Competitive Advantage
• Developing and Leveraging Competitive Advantages
- Operational Excellence
- Product Leadership.
- Customer Intimacy
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Establishing a Strategic Focus
Using the results of the SWOT analysis as a guide, a firm might
consider four general directions for its strategic efforts:
1. Aggressive (many internal strengths/many external opportunities).
Firms in this enviable position can develop marketing strategies to
aggressively take on multiple opportunities. Expansion and
growth, with new products and new markets, are the keys to an
aggressive approach.
2. Diversification (many internal strengths/many external threats).
Firms in this position have a great deal to offer, but external
factors weaken their ability to pursue aggressive strategies. To help
offset these threats, firms can use marketing strategy to diversify
their portfolio of products, markets, or even business units.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Establishing a Strategic Focus (cont’d)
3. Turnaround (many internal weaknesses/many external
opportunities). Firms often pursue turnaround strategies because
they find themselves in the situation—often temporary—of having
too many internal problems to consider strategies that will take
advantage of external opportunities. In these cases, firms typically
have to put their own house back in order before looking beyond
their current products or markets.
4. Defensive (many internal weaknesses/many external threats). Firms
take a defensive posture when they become overwhelmed by
internal and external problems simultaneously.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Developing Marketing Goals
• Attainability
• Consistency
• Comprehensiveness
• Intangibility
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Developing Marketing Objectives
• Attainability
• Continuity
• Time Frame
• Assignment of Responsibility
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Macroenvironmental Trends Analysis
• Unfavorable macro trends that negatively influence market demand can have a
devastating effect on the performance of firms serving that market. Similarly,
favorable trends exert positive forces that make it easier for firms to perform
well. Thus, the influence of macroenvironmental trends can be pervasive and
powerful.
• Implications of macro trends:
•Demographic trends can result in rapidly growing markets or on the flip side, can
make markets less attractive than they once were.
•Sociocultural trends can result in changes of consumer tastes and behavior.
•Economic trends influence the level of demand in most markets, but they are
particularly important in capital goods markets, real estate, and other markets
where sensitivity to interest rates and the level of household or corporate
income can be extreme.
•Regulation and deregulation in the political/legal environment can change the
attractiveness of a market.
•Technological trends often create attractive new markets or change existing
markets.
•Trends in the natural environment can affect market attractiveness. 2-31
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
4-32
Macro Trend Analysis:
Demographic environment
Sociocultural environment
Economic environment
Regulatory environment
Technological environment
Natural environment
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
How Macro Trends Can Affect Businesses
• Demographic trend examples/businesses affected:
•Graying of the population/nursing homes, hospitals
•Increase in ethnic population/food, clothing industries
• Sociocultural trend examples/businesses affected
•Evolution of the family structure (less traditional structure)/food,
women’s apparel (business attire)
•Exercise for both genders is in/exercise clothing, sports
beverages
• Economic trend examples/businesses affected
•Increase or decrease of interest rates/capital goods, real estate
•Free trade agreements/goods and services
2-33
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
How Macro Trends Can Affect Businesses
• Regulatory trend examples/businesses affected
•Government regulation/food, drug
•Government deregulation/airlines, trucking, railroads,
telecommunications, and banking
• Technological trend examples/businesses affected
•Development of fiber-optic cables/telecommunications,
computers
•Production of more disease-resistant livestock and
plants/farming and ranching, food
• Physical trend examples/businesses affected
•Global warming/ ski resorts, winter tourism 2-34
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Macro Trends and the Industry
• Macro trends may be favorable or unfavorable to the
industry
• How attractive is a market or an industry, now and in
the future?
• Specific trends worth strategic attention, so we can:
- Take advantage: Do trends suggest customer
needs that are poorly served?
- Mitigate its effects
2-35
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Industry Attractiveness
It makes sense to play in a game with more winners!
• Average firm profitability varies from industry to industry.
• In some industries (e.g., pharmaceuticals) most firms are
highly profitable. In others (e.g., restaurants) the failure
rate is high and average returns on equity are low.
• It’s easier to raise capital and acquire other resources in
attractive industries .
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
4-37
Porter’s Five Forces: A Tool for Assessing
Industry Attractiveness
Rivalry among
existing industry
firms
Threat of substitute
products
Bargaining
power
of buyers
Bargaining
power
of suppliers
Source: Adapted from Michael E. Porter, “Industry Structure and Competitive Strategy: Keys to Profitability,” Financial Analysts Journal, July-August
1980, p. 33.
Threat of new
entrants
4-13
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Example
Five Forces Analysis of the Attractiveness of Worldwide Cell Phone Service
Industry In Early 2004
• Rivalry is high leading to high customer churn: unfavorable
• Products are differentiated through new features and services, customer
switching costs are low.
• Threat of new entrants is low: moderately favorable
• While rapid pace of technological change may bring new entrants based on
new technologies (i.e.packet switching, satellites) new service providers
must purchase a bandwidth licence by spending billions.
• Supplier power is high: moderately unfavorable
• Governments have raised the price of additional bandwidth through
auctions.
• Buyer power is low: very favorable
• Even large customers have little power to set terms and conditions in this
oligopolistic industry.
• Threat of substitutes is high: moderately unfavorable
• PDAs or new multimedia devices could replace cell phones.
• Overall conclusion: only 2 out of 5 forces are favorable. Thus the cellular
phone industry is not particularly attractive at this time. 2-38
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Info sources for information about
macro trends
• Trade associations
• Trade magazines
• General business and popular press
• The Internet
2-39
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Macro Level Analysis Micro Level Analysis
The macro level of analysis The micro level of analysis
looks at aggregate markets looks at customers
individually
– it takes the overall
perspective on markets:
their size; growth rates in
terms of customer
numbers and in value
terms; etc.
– whether trade
customers, or end
consumers or business
users – to understand the
attractiveness of the
particular market
segments.
2-40
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Markets at the Micro
Level
Industries at the Micro
Level
•Involves looking individually at
customers to understand the
attractiveness of the target
segment
•Involves looking at the
company and whether it has a
sustainable competitive
advantage
Key questions:
- Is there a clearly identified
source of customer pain?
- Does the provide offering
provide customer benefits
that other solutions do not?
- Is the target segment likely to
grow? Is it a springboard to
other segments?
Key question:
- What is the basis of
competitive advantage?
• Proprietary technology,
brand, etc
• Superior organizational
processes, capabilities or
resources
• Economically viable
business model
2-41
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
4-42
The Team Domains
• Opportunities are only as good as the people
who will pursue them
Key questions:
• What are the Missions, Aspirations and Risk
Propensity of the team?
• Does the team have the Ability to Execute on
the Industry’s Success Factors
• Is the team well Connected up and down the
Value Chain
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
 Thank You 
1-43

More Related Content

What's hot

4.4. market differentiating
4.4. market differentiating4.4. market differentiating
4.4. market differentiatingtellstptrisakti
 
Marketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate Strategy
Marketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate StrategyMarketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate Strategy
Marketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate Strategytellstptrisakti
 
1.2 science and scientific research
1.2 science and scientific research1.2 science and scientific research
1.2 science and scientific researchtellstptrisakti
 
8.1. ethics and sr in ms
8.1. ethics and sr in ms8.1. ethics and sr in ms
8.1. ethics and sr in mstellstptrisakti
 
5.2. mlc introduction stage
5.2. mlc introduction stage5.2. mlc introduction stage
5.2. mlc introduction stagetellstptrisakti
 
9 strategic choice ppt
9 strategic choice ppt9 strategic choice ppt
9 strategic choice pptbwire sedrick
 
Business level strategies
Business level strategiesBusiness level strategies
Business level strategiesAnil Dhankhar
 
Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]
Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]
Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]Nawal Badu
 
strategy formulation
strategy formulationstrategy formulation
strategy formulationMentari Pagi
 
Strategy types and swot
Strategy types and swotStrategy types and swot
Strategy types and swotHxn Frd
 
Dimensions of grand strategies
Dimensions of grand strategiesDimensions of grand strategies
Dimensions of grand strategiesAnand Dabasara
 
Phea ch.07
Phea ch.07Phea ch.07
Phea ch.07DavinMon
 
Types of strategies
Types of strategiesTypes of strategies
Types of strategiesPamela Uribe
 
Strategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy Choice
Strategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy ChoiceStrategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy Choice
Strategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy ChoiceTayyab Hameed
 

What's hot (20)

5.4. mlc maturity stage
5.4. mlc maturity stage5.4. mlc maturity stage
5.4. mlc maturity stage
 
4.4. market differentiating
4.4. market differentiating4.4. market differentiating
4.4. market differentiating
 
Marketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate Strategy
Marketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate StrategyMarketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate Strategy
Marketing Strategy-topik 2-Corporate Strategy
 
1.2 science and scientific research
1.2 science and scientific research1.2 science and scientific research
1.2 science and scientific research
 
8.1. ethics and sr in ms
8.1. ethics and sr in ms8.1. ethics and sr in ms
8.1. ethics and sr in ms
 
5.2. mlc introduction stage
5.2. mlc introduction stage5.2. mlc introduction stage
5.2. mlc introduction stage
 
4.5. market positioning
4.5. market positioning4.5. market positioning
4.5. market positioning
 
9 strategic choice ppt
9 strategic choice ppt9 strategic choice ppt
9 strategic choice ppt
 
Business Portfolio Analysis
Business Portfolio AnalysisBusiness Portfolio Analysis
Business Portfolio Analysis
 
Business level strategies
Business level strategiesBusiness level strategies
Business level strategies
 
Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]
Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]
Grand strategy [ strategic alternatives]
 
strategy formulation
strategy formulationstrategy formulation
strategy formulation
 
Grand Strategy
Grand StrategyGrand Strategy
Grand Strategy
 
Strategy types and swot
Strategy types and swotStrategy types and swot
Strategy types and swot
 
Dimensions of grand strategies
Dimensions of grand strategiesDimensions of grand strategies
Dimensions of grand strategies
 
Phea ch.07
Phea ch.07Phea ch.07
Phea ch.07
 
Types of strategies
Types of strategiesTypes of strategies
Types of strategies
 
07.strategic alternatives
07.strategic alternatives07.strategic alternatives
07.strategic alternatives
 
Types of strategies
Types of strategiesTypes of strategies
Types of strategies
 
Strategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy Choice
Strategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy ChoiceStrategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy Choice
Strategy formulation : functional strategy & Strategy Choice
 

Viewers also liked

ch2 - marketing environment
ch2 - marketing environmentch2 - marketing environment
ch2 - marketing environmentkajol ko
 
Marketing environment(macro)
Marketing environment(macro)Marketing environment(macro)
Marketing environment(macro)Natansh Dubey
 
Macro environment of marketing
Macro environment of marketingMacro environment of marketing
Macro environment of marketingiram008
 
Can we sell below total cost
Can we sell below total costCan we sell below total cost
Can we sell below total costpascastpt
 
3.2. measuring market opportunities
3.2. measuring market opportunities3.2. measuring market opportunities
3.2. measuring market opportunitiestellstptrisakti
 
OBHT electronic comm
OBHT electronic commOBHT electronic comm
OBHT electronic commpascastpt
 
4.1. market segmentation
4.1. market segmentation4.1. market segmentation
4.1. market segmentationtellstptrisakti
 
Destination Management Organization Activites
Destination Management Organization ActivitesDestination Management Organization Activites
Destination Management Organization Activitestellstptrisakti
 
6.3 the environmental impacts of tourism
6.3 the environmental impacts of tourism6.3 the environmental impacts of tourism
6.3 the environmental impacts of tourismtellstptrisakti
 
7.1. competition tourism destination new
7.1. competition tourism destination new7.1. competition tourism destination new
7.1. competition tourism destination newtellstptrisakti
 
Discountred cash flow
Discountred cash flowDiscountred cash flow
Discountred cash flowpascastpt
 
Cash conservation and working
Cash conservation and working Cash conservation and working
Cash conservation and working tellstptrisakti
 

Viewers also liked (20)

ch2 - marketing environment
ch2 - marketing environmentch2 - marketing environment
ch2 - marketing environment
 
Marketing environment(macro)
Marketing environment(macro)Marketing environment(macro)
Marketing environment(macro)
 
Macro environment of marketing
Macro environment of marketingMacro environment of marketing
Macro environment of marketing
 
8.2 chapter 21
8.2 chapter 218.2 chapter 21
8.2 chapter 21
 
2.2 definisi
2.2 definisi2.2 definisi
2.2 definisi
 
1.1 definisi
1.1 definisi1.1 definisi
1.1 definisi
 
Can we sell below total cost
Can we sell below total costCan we sell below total cost
Can we sell below total cost
 
3.2. measuring market opportunities
3.2. measuring market opportunities3.2. measuring market opportunities
3.2. measuring market opportunities
 
OBHT electronic comm
OBHT electronic commOBHT electronic comm
OBHT electronic comm
 
4.3. market branding
4.3. market branding4.3. market branding
4.3. market branding
 
4.1. market segmentation
4.1. market segmentation4.1. market segmentation
4.1. market segmentation
 
Destination Management Organization Activites
Destination Management Organization ActivitesDestination Management Organization Activites
Destination Management Organization Activites
 
6.3 the environmental impacts of tourism
6.3 the environmental impacts of tourism6.3 the environmental impacts of tourism
6.3 the environmental impacts of tourism
 
7.1. competition tourism destination new
7.1. competition tourism destination new7.1. competition tourism destination new
7.1. competition tourism destination new
 
Characteristc of a DMO
Characteristc of a DMOCharacteristc of a DMO
Characteristc of a DMO
 
Discountred cash flow
Discountred cash flowDiscountred cash flow
Discountred cash flow
 
8.1 chapter 20
8.1 chapter 208.1 chapter 20
8.1 chapter 20
 
FM-T5-Inflows Outflows
FM-T5-Inflows OutflowsFM-T5-Inflows Outflows
FM-T5-Inflows Outflows
 
Cash conservation and working
Cash conservation and working Cash conservation and working
Cash conservation and working
 
Financing
FinancingFinancing
Financing
 

Similar to 3.1. understanding market opportunities test

The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019
The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019
The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019Carol Phillips
 
Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)
Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)
Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)shrund
 
Final ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docx
Final ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docxFinal ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docx
Final ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docxAKHIL969626
 
Are you sure you have a strategy.pptx
Are you sure you have a strategy.pptxAre you sure you have a strategy.pptx
Are you sure you have a strategy.pptxMahtabHashmi2
 
Strategy formulation and SOWT analysis
Strategy formulation and SOWT analysisStrategy formulation and SOWT analysis
Strategy formulation and SOWT analysisSamya Alghazo
 
Product Management Issues Faced
Product Management Issues FacedProduct Management Issues Faced
Product Management Issues FacedDevansh Aggarwal
 
Chapter Two Production and operation management
Chapter Two Production and operation managementChapter Two Production and operation management
Chapter Two Production and operation managementbahreabdella
 
4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry Analysis
4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry Analysis4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry Analysis
4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry AnalysisAmber Ford
 
The strategy tools used in industry analysis
The strategy tools used in industry analysisThe strategy tools used in industry analysis
The strategy tools used in industry analysisThiago Magalhães
 
competitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptx
competitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptxcompetitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptx
competitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptxMohsanAnwar
 
Your strategy needs a strategy
Your strategy needs a strategyYour strategy needs a strategy
Your strategy needs a strategyGMR Group
 

Similar to 3.1. understanding market opportunities test (20)

The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019
The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019
The Brand Audit Toolkit: Organizing Data for Insights Spring 2019
 
Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)
Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)
Strategic marketing-plan-copyright-houghton-mifflin-company1839(1)
 
chap002.ppt
chap002.pptchap002.ppt
chap002.ppt
 
Final ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docx
Final ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docxFinal ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docx
Final ProjectTo understand strategies in the framework of miss.docx
 
Are you sure you have a strategy.pptx
Are you sure you have a strategy.pptxAre you sure you have a strategy.pptx
Are you sure you have a strategy.pptx
 
Strategy formulation and SOWT analysis
Strategy formulation and SOWT analysisStrategy formulation and SOWT analysis
Strategy formulation and SOWT analysis
 
Product Management Issues Faced
Product Management Issues FacedProduct Management Issues Faced
Product Management Issues Faced
 
Ch01_Roth3e_Enhanced_PPT.pdf
Ch01_Roth3e_Enhanced_PPT.pdfCh01_Roth3e_Enhanced_PPT.pdf
Ch01_Roth3e_Enhanced_PPT.pdf
 
Chapter Two Production and operation management
Chapter Two Production and operation managementChapter Two Production and operation management
Chapter Two Production and operation management
 
4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry Analysis
4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry Analysis4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry Analysis
4-1 CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning And Industry Analysis
 
strm04.ppt
strm04.pptstrm04.ppt
strm04.ppt
 
The strategy tools used in industry analysis
The strategy tools used in industry analysisThe strategy tools used in industry analysis
The strategy tools used in industry analysis
 
Mktg6 ie ch02_ppt
Mktg6 ie ch02_pptMktg6 ie ch02_ppt
Mktg6 ie ch02_ppt
 
Unit 2_Exploiting the Opportunity.ppt
Unit 2_Exploiting the Opportunity.pptUnit 2_Exploiting the Opportunity.ppt
Unit 2_Exploiting the Opportunity.ppt
 
6.2.pptx
6.2.pptx6.2.pptx
6.2.pptx
 
competitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptx
competitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptxcompetitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptx
competitor analysis strategic management.docx.pptx
 
Your strategy needs a strategy
Your strategy needs a strategyYour strategy needs a strategy
Your strategy needs a strategy
 
Competitors Analysis
Competitors AnalysisCompetitors Analysis
Competitors Analysis
 
strategic management
strategic managementstrategic management
strategic management
 
IFE, RBV, Porter's
IFE, RBV, Porter'sIFE, RBV, Porter's
IFE, RBV, Porter's
 

More from tellstptrisakti

6.1. marketing implementation
6.1. marketing implementation6.1. marketing implementation
6.1. marketing implementationtellstptrisakti
 
3.3. forecasting market opportunities
3.3. forecasting market opportunities3.3. forecasting market opportunities
3.3. forecasting market opportunitiestellstptrisakti
 
Topic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannewTopic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannewtellstptrisakti
 
Topic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannewTopic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannewtellstptrisakti
 
Topic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods new
Topic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods newTopic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods new
Topic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods newtellstptrisakti
 
Topic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates new
Topic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates newTopic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates new
Topic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates newtellstptrisakti
 
Topic6.1 managing career_career_management
Topic6.1 managing career_career_managementTopic6.1 managing career_career_management
Topic6.1 managing career_career_managementtellstptrisakti
 
Topic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_management
Topic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_managementTopic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_management
Topic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_managementtellstptrisakti
 
Supply and demand analysis
Supply and demand analysis Supply and demand analysis
Supply and demand analysis tellstptrisakti
 
Topic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-rev
Topic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-revTopic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-rev
Topic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-revtellstptrisakti
 
Topic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-rev
Topic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-revTopic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-rev
Topic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-revtellstptrisakti
 

More from tellstptrisakti (17)

6.1. marketing implementation
6.1. marketing implementation6.1. marketing implementation
6.1. marketing implementation
 
5.3. mlc growth stage
5.3. mlc growth stage5.3. mlc growth stage
5.3. mlc growth stage
 
3.3. forecasting market opportunities
3.3. forecasting market opportunities3.3. forecasting market opportunities
3.3. forecasting market opportunities
 
Cost based pricing
Cost based pricingCost based pricing
Cost based pricing
 
Topic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannewTopic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c2 compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
 
Topic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannewTopic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
Topic7.1c compensation how_to_createa_market-competitive_payplannew
 
Topic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods new
Topic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods newTopic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods new
Topic7.1b compensation job_evaluation_methods new
 
Topic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates new
Topic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates newTopic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates new
Topic7.1a compensation basic_factors_in_determining_pay_rates new
 
Topic6.1 managing career_career_management
Topic6.1 managing career_career_managementTopic6.1 managing career_career_management
Topic6.1 managing career_career_management
 
Topic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_management
Topic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_managementTopic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_management
Topic6.2 managing career_employee_life-cycle_career_management
 
Evaluating Net Cashflow
Evaluating Net CashflowEvaluating Net Cashflow
Evaluating Net Cashflow
 
Financial analysis
Financial analysis Financial analysis
Financial analysis
 
Supply and demand analysis
Supply and demand analysis Supply and demand analysis
Supply and demand analysis
 
Net income is not cash
Net income is not cashNet income is not cash
Net income is not cash
 
Inventories
InventoriesInventories
Inventories
 
Topic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-rev
Topic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-revTopic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-rev
Topic8.3c managing globalhr_staffing-rev
 
Topic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-rev
Topic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-revTopic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-rev
Topic8.3b managing globalhr_adapting-rev
 

Recently uploaded

A Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdf
A Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdfA Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdf
A Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdfDisha Global Tours
 
best weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdf
best weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdfbest weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdf
best weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdftour guide
 
Hoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsx
Hoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsxHoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsx
Hoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsxChung Yen Chang
 
Moving to Italy - A Relocation Rollercoaster
Moving to Italy - A Relocation RollercoasterMoving to Italy - A Relocation Rollercoaster
Moving to Italy - A Relocation RollercoasterStefSmulders1
 
Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779
Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779
Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779Delhi Call girls
 
Dubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big Juicy
Dubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big JuicyDubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big Juicy
Dubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big Juicyhf8803863
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
DARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda Bux
DARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda BuxDARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda Bux
DARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda BuxBeEducate
 
Top 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptx
Top 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptxTop 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptx
Top 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptxdishha99
 
Akshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptx
Akshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptxAkshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptx
Akshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptxAkshay Mehndiratta
 
Exploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel Guide
Exploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel GuideExploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel Guide
Exploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel GuideTime for Sicily
 
Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236Sherazi Tours
 
BERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptx
BERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptxBERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptx
BERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptxseribangash
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking MenDelhi Call girls
 
VIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,Ms
VIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,MsVIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,Ms
VIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,Msankitnayak356677
 
Italia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue mura
Italia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue muraItalia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue mura
Italia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue murasandamichaela *
 
Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236Sherazi Tours
 

Recently uploaded (20)

A Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdf
A Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdfA Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdf
A Comprehensive Guide to The Types of Dubai Residence Visas.pdf
 
Rohini Sector 18 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No Advance
Rohini Sector 18 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No AdvanceRohini Sector 18 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No Advance
Rohini Sector 18 Call Girls Delhi 9999965857 @Sabina Saikh No Advance
 
best weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdf
best weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdfbest weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdf
best weekend places near delhi where you should visit.pdf
 
Hoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsx
Hoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsxHoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsx
Hoi An Ancient Town, Vietnam (越南 會安古鎮).ppsx
 
Moving to Italy - A Relocation Rollercoaster
Moving to Italy - A Relocation RollercoasterMoving to Italy - A Relocation Rollercoaster
Moving to Italy - A Relocation Rollercoaster
 
Call Girls In Munirka 📱 9999965857 🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICE
Call Girls In Munirka 📱  9999965857  🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICECall Girls In Munirka 📱  9999965857  🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICE
Call Girls In Munirka 📱 9999965857 🤩 Delhi 🫦 HOT AND SEXY VVIP 🍎 SERVICE
 
Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779
Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779
Night 7k Call Girls Noida Sector 93 Escorts Call Me: 8448380779
 
Dubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big Juicy
Dubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big JuicyDubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big Juicy
Dubai Call Girls O528786472 Call Girls Dubai Big Juicy
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Bhikaji Cama Palace Women Seeking Men
 
DARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda Bux
DARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda BuxDARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda Bux
DARK TRAVEL AGENCY presented by Khuda Bux
 
Call Girls 🫤 Connaught Place ➡️ 9999965857 ➡️ Delhi 🫦 Russian Escorts FULL ...
Call Girls 🫤 Connaught Place ➡️ 9999965857  ➡️ Delhi 🫦  Russian Escorts FULL ...Call Girls 🫤 Connaught Place ➡️ 9999965857  ➡️ Delhi 🫦  Russian Escorts FULL ...
Call Girls 🫤 Connaught Place ➡️ 9999965857 ➡️ Delhi 🫦 Russian Escorts FULL ...
 
Top 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptx
Top 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptxTop 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptx
Top 10 Traditional Indian Handicrafts.pptx
 
Akshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptx
Akshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptxAkshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptx
Akshay Mehndiratta Summer Special Light Meal Ideas From Across India.pptx
 
Exploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel Guide
Exploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel GuideExploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel Guide
Exploring Sicily Your Comprehensive Ebook Travel Guide
 
Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Visa Consultant in Lahore || 📞03094429236
 
BERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptx
BERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptxBERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptx
BERMUDA Triangle the mystery of life.pptx
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Chhattarpur Women Seeking Men
 
VIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,Ms
VIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,MsVIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,Ms
VIP Call Girls in Noida 9711199012 Escorts in Greater Noida,Ms
 
Italia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue mura
Italia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue muraItalia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue mura
Italia Lucca 1 Un tesoro nascosto tra le sue mura
 
Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236
Study Consultants in Lahore || 📞03094429236
 

3.1. understanding market opportunities test

  • 2. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 4-2 The Seven Domains of Attractive Opportunities Macro Level Micro Level Market Domains Industry Domains Mission, Ability to Aspirations, Execute Propensity on CSFs for Risk Connectedness up and down Value Chain Team Domains Market Attractiveness Target Segment Benefits and Attractiveness Industry Attractiveness Sustainable Advantage
  • 3. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Market Industry A group of individuals or organizations (i.e., buyers) having the willingness and ability to buy goods or services to satisfy a particular class of wants or needs A group of organizations (i.e., sellers) offering goods or services that are similar and close substitutes for one another The distinction between market and industry is important because: •Assessments of market and industry attractiveness differ, and use different analytical tools •Companies need to account for sellers from other industries serving their target market 2-3
  • 4. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Situation Analysis • One of the most widely used approaches to the collection and analysis of marketing information is the situation analysis. • The purpose of the situation analysis is to describe current and future issues and key trends as they affect three key environments: the internal environment, the customer environment, and the external environment. • There are many issues to be considered in a situation analysis. When viewed together, the data collected during the situation analysis gives the organization a big picture of the issues and trends that affect its ability to deliver value to stakeholders. • These efforts drive the development of the organization’s competitive advantages and strategic focus 1-4
  • 5. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Issues to Be Considered in a Situation Analysis 1-5
  • 6. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Conducting a Situation Analysis • Analysis Alone Is Not a Solution • Data Is Not the Same as Information • The Benefits of Analysis Must Outweigh the Costs • Conducting a Situation Analysis Is a Challenging Exercise 1-6
  • 7. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-7
  • 8. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Internal Environment • The first aspect of a situation analysis involves the critical evaluation of the firm’s internal environment with respect to its objectives, strategy, performance, allocation of resources, structural characteristics, and political climate. • Or in short: - Review of Current Objectives, Strategy, and Performance - Availability of Resources - Organizational Culture and Structure 1-8
  • 9. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-9
  • 10. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Customer Environment • Who Are Our Current and Potential Customers? • What Do Customers Do with Our Products? • Where Do Customers Purchase Our Products? • When Do Customers Purchase Our Products? • Why (and How) Do Customers Select Our Products? • Why Do Potential Customers Not Purchase Our Products? 1-10
  • 11. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-11
  • 12. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The External Environment • Competition • Economic Growth and Stability • Political Trends • Legal and Regulatory Issues • Technological Advancements • Sociocultural Trends 1-12
  • 13. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-13
  • 14. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Competition 1. Brand competitors, which market products with similar features and benefits to the same customers at similar prices. 2. Product competitors, which compete in the same product class, but with products that are different in features, benefits, and price. 3. Generic competitors, which market very different products that solve the same problem or satisfy the same basic customer need. 4. Total budget competitors, which compete for the limited financial resources of the same customers. 1-14
  • 15. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Competitive Analysis 1. Identification. Identify all current and potential brand, product, generic, and total budget competitors. 2. Characteristics. Focus on key competitors by assessing the size, growth, profitability, objectives, strategies, and target markets of each one. 3. Assessment. Assess each key competitor’s strengths and weaknesses, including the major capabilities and vulnerabilities that each possesses within its functional areas (marketing, research and development, production, human resources, etc.) 4. Capabilities. Focus the analysis on each key competitor’s marketing capabilities in terms of its products, distribution, promotion, and pricing. 5. Response. Estimate each key competitor’s most likely strategies and responses under different environmental situations, as well as its reactions to the firm’s own marketing efforts.
  • 16. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Collecting Marketing Data and Information • Secondary Information Sources - Internal Data Sources - Government Sources - Book and Periodical Sources - Commercial Sources • Primary Data Collection - Direct observation - Focus groups - Surveys - Experiments 1-16
  • 17. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. SWOT Analysis • Many consider SWOT analysis to be one of the most effective tools in the analysis of marketing data and information. • SWOT analysis is a simple, straightforward framework that provides direction and serves as a catalyst for the development of viable marketing plans. • It fulfills this role by structuring the assessment of the fit between what a firm can and cannot do (strengths and weaknesses), and the environmental conditions working for and against the firm (opportunities and threats). • When performed correctly, a SWOT analysis not only organizes data and information, it can be especially useful in uncovering competitive advantages that can be leveraged in the firm’s marketing strategy. 1-17
  • 18. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-18
  • 19. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-19
  • 20. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-20
  • 21. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. SWOT-Driven Strategic Planning • Strengths and Weaknesses • Opportunities and Threats • The SWOT Matrix 1-21
  • 22. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-22
  • 23. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-23
  • 24. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Competitive Advantage • Developing and Leveraging Competitive Advantages - Operational Excellence - Product Leadership. - Customer Intimacy
  • 25. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 26. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Establishing a Strategic Focus Using the results of the SWOT analysis as a guide, a firm might consider four general directions for its strategic efforts: 1. Aggressive (many internal strengths/many external opportunities). Firms in this enviable position can develop marketing strategies to aggressively take on multiple opportunities. Expansion and growth, with new products and new markets, are the keys to an aggressive approach. 2. Diversification (many internal strengths/many external threats). Firms in this position have a great deal to offer, but external factors weaken their ability to pursue aggressive strategies. To help offset these threats, firms can use marketing strategy to diversify their portfolio of products, markets, or even business units.
  • 27. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Establishing a Strategic Focus (cont’d) 3. Turnaround (many internal weaknesses/many external opportunities). Firms often pursue turnaround strategies because they find themselves in the situation—often temporary—of having too many internal problems to consider strategies that will take advantage of external opportunities. In these cases, firms typically have to put their own house back in order before looking beyond their current products or markets. 4. Defensive (many internal weaknesses/many external threats). Firms take a defensive posture when they become overwhelmed by internal and external problems simultaneously.
  • 28. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 29. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Developing Marketing Goals • Attainability • Consistency • Comprehensiveness • Intangibility
  • 30. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Developing Marketing Objectives • Attainability • Continuity • Time Frame • Assignment of Responsibility
  • 31. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Macroenvironmental Trends Analysis • Unfavorable macro trends that negatively influence market demand can have a devastating effect on the performance of firms serving that market. Similarly, favorable trends exert positive forces that make it easier for firms to perform well. Thus, the influence of macroenvironmental trends can be pervasive and powerful. • Implications of macro trends: •Demographic trends can result in rapidly growing markets or on the flip side, can make markets less attractive than they once were. •Sociocultural trends can result in changes of consumer tastes and behavior. •Economic trends influence the level of demand in most markets, but they are particularly important in capital goods markets, real estate, and other markets where sensitivity to interest rates and the level of household or corporate income can be extreme. •Regulation and deregulation in the political/legal environment can change the attractiveness of a market. •Technological trends often create attractive new markets or change existing markets. •Trends in the natural environment can affect market attractiveness. 2-31
  • 32. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 4-32 Macro Trend Analysis: Demographic environment Sociocultural environment Economic environment Regulatory environment Technological environment Natural environment
  • 33. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. How Macro Trends Can Affect Businesses • Demographic trend examples/businesses affected: •Graying of the population/nursing homes, hospitals •Increase in ethnic population/food, clothing industries • Sociocultural trend examples/businesses affected •Evolution of the family structure (less traditional structure)/food, women’s apparel (business attire) •Exercise for both genders is in/exercise clothing, sports beverages • Economic trend examples/businesses affected •Increase or decrease of interest rates/capital goods, real estate •Free trade agreements/goods and services 2-33
  • 34. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. How Macro Trends Can Affect Businesses • Regulatory trend examples/businesses affected •Government regulation/food, drug •Government deregulation/airlines, trucking, railroads, telecommunications, and banking • Technological trend examples/businesses affected •Development of fiber-optic cables/telecommunications, computers •Production of more disease-resistant livestock and plants/farming and ranching, food • Physical trend examples/businesses affected •Global warming/ ski resorts, winter tourism 2-34
  • 35. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Macro Trends and the Industry • Macro trends may be favorable or unfavorable to the industry • How attractive is a market or an industry, now and in the future? • Specific trends worth strategic attention, so we can: - Take advantage: Do trends suggest customer needs that are poorly served? - Mitigate its effects 2-35
  • 36. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Industry Attractiveness It makes sense to play in a game with more winners! • Average firm profitability varies from industry to industry. • In some industries (e.g., pharmaceuticals) most firms are highly profitable. In others (e.g., restaurants) the failure rate is high and average returns on equity are low. • It’s easier to raise capital and acquire other resources in attractive industries .
  • 37. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 4-37 Porter’s Five Forces: A Tool for Assessing Industry Attractiveness Rivalry among existing industry firms Threat of substitute products Bargaining power of buyers Bargaining power of suppliers Source: Adapted from Michael E. Porter, “Industry Structure and Competitive Strategy: Keys to Profitability,” Financial Analysts Journal, July-August 1980, p. 33. Threat of new entrants 4-13
  • 38. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Example Five Forces Analysis of the Attractiveness of Worldwide Cell Phone Service Industry In Early 2004 • Rivalry is high leading to high customer churn: unfavorable • Products are differentiated through new features and services, customer switching costs are low. • Threat of new entrants is low: moderately favorable • While rapid pace of technological change may bring new entrants based on new technologies (i.e.packet switching, satellites) new service providers must purchase a bandwidth licence by spending billions. • Supplier power is high: moderately unfavorable • Governments have raised the price of additional bandwidth through auctions. • Buyer power is low: very favorable • Even large customers have little power to set terms and conditions in this oligopolistic industry. • Threat of substitutes is high: moderately unfavorable • PDAs or new multimedia devices could replace cell phones. • Overall conclusion: only 2 out of 5 forces are favorable. Thus the cellular phone industry is not particularly attractive at this time. 2-38
  • 39. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Info sources for information about macro trends • Trade associations • Trade magazines • General business and popular press • The Internet 2-39
  • 40. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Macro Level Analysis Micro Level Analysis The macro level of analysis The micro level of analysis looks at aggregate markets looks at customers individually – it takes the overall perspective on markets: their size; growth rates in terms of customer numbers and in value terms; etc. – whether trade customers, or end consumers or business users – to understand the attractiveness of the particular market segments. 2-40
  • 41. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Markets at the Micro Level Industries at the Micro Level •Involves looking individually at customers to understand the attractiveness of the target segment •Involves looking at the company and whether it has a sustainable competitive advantage Key questions: - Is there a clearly identified source of customer pain? - Does the provide offering provide customer benefits that other solutions do not? - Is the target segment likely to grow? Is it a springboard to other segments? Key question: - What is the basis of competitive advantage? • Proprietary technology, brand, etc • Superior organizational processes, capabilities or resources • Economically viable business model 2-41
  • 42. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 4-42 The Team Domains • Opportunities are only as good as the people who will pursue them Key questions: • What are the Missions, Aspirations and Risk Propensity of the team? • Does the team have the Ability to Execute on the Industry’s Success Factors • Is the team well Connected up and down the Value Chain
  • 43. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Thank You  1-43