Corporate Management and Entrepreneurship
MSE course CM_Entre (lecture 1-13)
MSE course CM_Entre (lecture 1-13)
Kartei Details
Karten | 168 |
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Sprache | English |
Kategorie | BWL |
Stufe | Universität |
Erstellt / Aktualisiert | 01.05.2021 / 14.06.2021 |
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What is the goal of Marketing?
- To achieve competitive advantages
- Relevant characteristics of products/services for competitive advantages:
- ... must be relevant (expacially for puchase decision)
- ... must be perceived
- ... must be defensible
- ... must be efficient
- Task:
- Target-oriented sourcing, structuring and evaluation of all information required for the subsequent derivation of marketing decisions
- Definition of "TARGET" position vs. "ACTUAL" positionof own product/services
- Analyses Perspecives:
- A: (Potential) Customers
- B: Competition
- Own Resources/Capabilities
- Objective: To define own positioning
- Results of the customer, competition and resource analysis form the basis
- Allows mulidimensional comparisons of perceptions/preferences of the customers or customer segments
- Obtaining and interpreting all information related to the purchasing behavior of current and potential buyers
- Differentiation according to
- Individual purchasing behavior = Individual actors
- Orgaizational buying behavior (B2B)
- "Buying Center" as a perspective of the analysis of organizational buying behavior
- Industrial goods
- Individual organizational buyers (organizations) at the center of the analyses
- In addition to general market cultivation, particular importance of sales staff / units
- Procedure:
- Goal: Systematic processing of the customers
- Systematic recording and central data management in sales ("white book")
- Personal buying Behavior (B2C)
- Look at diagram
- Orgaizational buying behavior (B2B)
- Aggregated buying behavior (market segements) = groups of customers
- Aggregated demand analysis
- Similarity of the purchasing behavior of different demanders
- Market segments (Customer segments)
Alignment with demand-side characteristics influencing / related to:- Purchasing behavior
- Usage behavior
- Organizational prcurement behavior
- Aggregated demand analysis
- Individual purchasing behavior = Individual actors
What is B: Competitive Analysis in the Analysis Perspectives of the Marketing concept about?
- Delimitaion of the competition
- Prerequisite: Identification of the relevant market
- Functional delimitation
To what extent do customers generally perceive other services from competitors as relevant substitution options? - Time delimitation
Are there substitution opportunities between customer purchase decisions, made at different times? (e.g. customers waiting for the next iPhone, before they decide to buy a new mobile phone) - Spatial delimitaiton
To what extent do customers perceive competitors from other regions / country markets as relevant substitution opportunities?
Transport: effort, time, cost -> Concrete for a construction site
For these delimitaions different tools can be used:
- Insustry analysis with Porter's five forces: Identification of drivers/influences that apply to all competitors in an industry
- Segment analysis (strategic group analysis)
- Analysis of specific market segments
- Identificaiot of clusters of competitors that are in similar or generalizable strategic situations
- Accordingly, similar competitive behavior is to be expected
- Competitor analysis
- Form of competitive analysis that goes the furthest
- Particular Challenge: How to identify and obtain the relevant information?
What is C: Resource/Capability Analysis in the Analysis Perspectives of the Marketing concept about?
Objective: As realistic and unbiased as possible analysis of the market-related strengths and weaknesses of the own company
- Relativ examination:
- Assessment of own capabilities in comparison to competitors identified as relevant in the competitive analysis
- Benchmarking as a suitable analysis tool
- Systematic comparison between comanies (units) on the basis of standardized comparative variables and benchmarks
- Purpose
- Controlling and aligning the use of marketing instruments (Step 3) with regard to defined marketing objectives
- Longer-term validity = long-term alignment of market activities with binding framework for action
- Types:
- A: Classic: Competitive strategies (Porter)
Manly: Quality leadership (differentiation) vs. cost leadership - B: Time leadership
- C: Relationship Management
- Brand Management
- Customer loyalty management
- A: Classic: Competitive strategies (Porter)
What is the Time leadership in the marketing strategies of the marketing concpept about?
- Destination:
- Acting at the right time in the market
- Particularly significant for young, fast-growing markets
- Market entry delayed by one year can result in losses of upt to 50% of the potential product volume
- Right time for market enty / market exit
- Rather significant for stagnating markets and products/services at the end of the life cycle
- Delayed market exit leads to reduced profits and even losses
- Acting at the right time in the market
Pioneers vs. Followers
- Advantages of the pioneer strategy (First mover)
- Can relatively freely shape their market without regard to competitors or existing cusomter layalties
- Chance to establish entry barriers
- Learning curve and experience curve advantages
- Risks/disadvantages of the pioneer strategy
- Uncerainty of technical feasibility, estimation of market develoment, achievability of profitability
- Necessarily high development speed which implies the danger of long-lasting image damage gue to insuffienently matured products
- High costs
- Explaining and introducing completeley new products to customers
- --> Followers do not have these disadvanateges, but ca build on the groundwork of the pioneers
What is the relationship management of te marketing strategies in the marketing concept about?
- New Perspecitve
- Long-term loyalty by building strong brands and increasing customer satisfaction
- Logic
- Keeping existing customers is cheaper than gaining new ones
- Goals:
- Higher transaction numbers = repeated/more transactions, cross-selling
- Higher transaction amounts = higher willingness to pay / higher average "basket values"
What is the Brand Management in Relationship Management in the Marketing Strategies of the Marketing Concept about?
- Brands
- Externally recognizable features (e.g. name, symbol design) that allow a product / service to be identified or differentiated from the competition
- Perceptions and expectations (and associated esteem and emotinos) asscociatedwith the brand based o nprior interactions and communications
- Effects
- For prociders: "communication platform" that enables relationship building
- For consumers: information, trust and emotionalizatino function
Marketing Mix ("The 4 P's"):
- Product Policy (Product)
- All measures aimed at the design of the product / service
- Design of components
- Product life cycles
- Phase 1: Product innovations (launch phase)
- Phase 2: Product differentiation (growth phase)
- Phase 3: Product variation (maturity phase)
- Phase 4: Product elimination (decline phase)
- Components:
- Product core
- Packing/packaging
- Marking
- Service
- Pricing Policy (Price)
- All deicions with regard to the fee to be paid by the customer for a product / service
- Importance increases as possibilities for product differentiation become increasingly limited
- Pricing:
- Absolute amount of fee
- Upper limit
- Lower limit
- Trade-offs: Marketing goals and strategies
- Price Differentiation: In general the same products are offered at different prices
- Regional price differentiation: Different countries or regions
- Time-based price differentiation: time/seasonal conditions
- Product line-dependent price differentiation: Differentiation of products leads to different product lines with different prices
- Pricing systems:
- One-dimensional prices = total price
- Multidimensional prices = price is composed of different components
- Price bundling = package price
- Non-linear prices = additional to prices for individual service units, additional quantity-independen price elements
- Discounts:
- Volume discounts
- Time discounts
- Functional discounts
- Distribution Policy (Place)
- Acquisition activities
- Contact initiation, sales and customer retention
- Decision on sales channels and sales organs = sales channel system - Distribution channels: Direct vs. indirect
- Direct: direct customer contact, traditionally B2B
- low number of customers and high spatial concentration
- Goal: Closer customer relationships / differentiation via service quality
- Idirect: independent sales intermediaries B2C
- Direct: direct customer contact, traditionally B2B
- Acquisition activities
- Communication policy (Promotion)
- Potential Instuments:
- Sales promotion
- Product placement
- Sponsoring
- Advertising
- Potential Instuments:
- Checking the extent to which targeted marketing goals are or have actually been achieved with the help of the specific marketing measures
- Bases on both sales-related (revenue, contribution margins) and relationship-related metrics (customer satisfaction, perception, reach, attitudes)
- Information / Communication:
- Derivation of actin implications
- Coordinated, problem-related bundling of information = collecting, processing and analyzing relevant data
What is would be a conclusion of Marketing?
- Alignment of all corporate activities with market requirements
- Far more than advertising / sales promotion!
- Circular/iterative process of planning and controlling marketing activities
- Learning perspective in marketing is important >>> Learning about need, preferences and behavior of stakeholders and (potential) customers
- Recent Developments:
- Increases focus on relationships
- Build and maintain differentiated target groups and communities
- Online channels and media bring completely new opportunities and challenges
What do companies do?
- Provide valuable goods (products, services)
- Necessary activities: Procurement (Beschaffung), production, sales/logistics+reaserch & development, strategy, marketing, organization, HR, employees, innovation...
- Most important point: Competition -> You have to do alle the points above better than your competitors
- Receive compensation (mostly money = prices)
- B2B vs. B2C
How could you describe if you are trying to optimize your inputs respectively your outputs?
- Decisions, actions, transactions -> Balance of inputs vs. outcomes
- Maximize outcomes = Effectiveness (value, intended effects, revenues)
- Minimize inputs at fixed/certain outcomes = Efficiency (costs, time, risks)
Overlap between both approaches:
- Optimizing inputs and outcomes at once = Utility (Nützlichkeit; comlex, decision science)
- Certain aspects can be perceived as both (inputs & outcomes): e.g. time, price
- Many aspects influence each other: risks, time, costs, quality, innovation
- What is acting strategically?
- What is strategy / are strategies?
- Acting strategically
- acting accordingly to a long term "plan"
- goals oriented
- acting according to a pre-defined plan with a defined goal in mind
- Strategic acting is acting delibarately according to a plan
- All this in dependency of the competitors
- Strategy
- A plan of actions designed to achieve a long-term or averall aim
What are strategies and what are they good for?
Definition of Alfred Chandler (1962):
Strategy is the determination of the basic long-term goals of an enterprise and the adoption of courses of action and the allocation of resources necessary for carrying out these goals.
What are the purposes for strategies?
- Complement to deficits in planning = some components are uncerain/ambiguous
- Combination of stability and adaptability in a complex and dynamic world
- Complexity reduction = selection what is relevant and what is not
- Communication internal & external = mission/vision statement -> identity
- Selection of relevant factors and activity options:
- In what areas to be active (coporate strategy)?
- How to act in these area (business area strategies)?
- Control: Permanent questioning to what extent the current strategy is still adequate (strategic controlling)
What is meant by strategies are subjective and context-related?
- Perception of a specific situation
- What goals should be pursued (values, self-concept, identity)?
- What resources/capabilities are available or can be developed?
- Ideas/beliefs: What actions lead to what effects?
What means "Strategies are relational"?
Depend on perceptions and behaviors of thers: customers, stakeholders, shareholders, competitors, environment
What are the two adaptive levels of strategies?
- Strategic level: Strategic controlling
- Operational level: Implementation
In other words the indended vs. the realized strategy
Name the two core qustions in corporate strategy:
- In what business areas should the company be active?
= Heterogeneity of the activity portfolio- Focus
= Focus on specialized resources/competencies, market power - Diversification
= diversification of risks, internal finance
- Focus
- How should these areas (strategic business units) be managed?
- Management holding
= financial and strategic engagement in strategic business units - Finance holding
= controlling of financial inputs and outcomes of strategic business units
- Management holding
Name the five strategies for Portfolio alignment for a company:
- Vertical Integration
= Integration of upstream of downstream activities
= to overcome high supplier or buyer power
Indications:- High concentration of suppliers or buyers
- High specificity of products/services
- High (suppliers) / low (byer) prices
- Horizontal Integration
= Integration of activities at the same stage of the value chain
Objectives:- Higher concentration in market segment = higher price setting power
- Larger size
>>> higher profitability
- Development of strategic resources and competencies
= focus on core competencies
objectives- Development of unique and complementary capabilities in multiple business areas
- Generation and protection of competitive advanteges
- Risk diversification
= similar to diversification in stock portfolios
Objectives- counterbalancing different risk profiles of different business areas
- Internal cross-financing between different business areas -> see: growth-share matrix
- Solely profitability considerations
= Expected earnings (medium-term)
What is the Growth-Share Matrix (BSG Matrix) about and where is it used (portfolio alignment strategy?)?
- Question Marks
- High market growth, low market share, (high) investments necessary
= Large negative cash flow - Strategy: exploratory positioning, aggressive market penetration
- High market growth, low market share, (high) investments necessary
- Rising Stars
- High market growth, high market share, high investments necessary
= modest positive or negative cash flow - Strategy: price skimming (increase profitability)
- High market growth, high market share, high investments necessary
- Cash Cows
- Low market growth (mature market), high market share, no/low investments necessary
= Large positive cash flow - Strategy: milking
- Low market growth (mature market), high market share, no/low investments necessary
- Poor Dogs
- Low market growth (mature/declining market) low market share, no investments necessary
= modest positive or negative cash flow - Strategy: divestment / timing exit
- Low market growth (mature/declining market) low market share, no investments necessary
How can you analyze the macro environment for your business area strategy?
- PEST Analysis
= Analysis of the- Political
- Economic
- Socio-demographic
- Technological
Environemnt
- Search for Mega-Trends
= e.g. digital transformation, urbanization, aging society, water scarcity, increasing sustainabilty orientation -> Mega-Trend-Map
What is the Porter's Five Forces Analysis about?
Used to analyze the structure of business Areas / industries where you want to seddle in. -> Attention: It is ALWAYS about the analysis of the industry/sector, not about a specific brand: e.g. Electromobility in general and not Tesla itself.
In the beginning of this analysis it was just about the rivalry among existing competitors before the other 4 points got added (Threat of new entrants, Bargaining power of byers, Bargaining power of suppliers and threat of substitute products or services)
Name Porter's Five Forces:
- Rivalry Among exisitng competitors
- Threat of new entrants
- Threat of substitute products or services
- Bargaining power of Buyers
- Bargaining power of suppliers
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