Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Rice, Autos and Online Retailers

Winning Marketplace Strategies

The biggest threat to success comes from failing to understand and incorporate all aspects of a winning marketplace strategy.

Success arises from differentiation in one or – better – more of three domains:
  • Customer strategy (identifying and meeting unmet needs, branding – not just advertising – or finding new ways to go to market); 
  • Factor strategy (raw materials, supplier relationships, logistics, manufacturing, technology); or
  • Organization strategy (new business models, different systems and processes, new culture).
Many marketers focus exclusively on the first. But because differentiation is critical, marketing, perhaps surprisingly to some, has a significant, if not dominant role to play in understanding buyer behavior through the second and third, and then driving necessary changes through the organization.

To many Americans, rice is a simple foodstuff, something we eat in place of potatoes or bread, and as a side dish in Asian restaurants. And, like many, I grew up on Uncle Ben’s, Rice Krispies and Rice-a-Roni. Yet a master sushi chef in Japan might insist on Uonuma Koshihikari, which costs an order of magnitude more than the rice you’ll find in supermarkets (you can buy a 5kg / 11lb bag online for $130).

In 2009, both GM and Chrysler (for the second time) declared bankruptcy. Yet in 1990 – 20 years before – three MIT academics, James Womack, Daniel Jones and Daniel Roos published The Machine That Changed the World, a book detailing the Toyota Production System (TPS) that simultaneously cut costs and increased quality. Worse, intelligence on this radical new production and organization system was available to Detroit in the 1960s – the ideas that led to the TPS came from Ford, which opened its doors to extensive benchmarking by Toyota executives in the 1950s.

And new internet-aided business models can inhibit if not completely destroy your business. Perhaps the best known examples are the bankruptcies of Circuit City and Borders 2011 and, just this month, the announced closing of the remaining Blockbuster stores, driven by online retailers modeled on amazon.com, founded in 1994, almost 20 years ago…

Rice retailers, restaurants and food processors have multiple factor strategies to choose from, influenced by and influencing their customer strategies. And imagine if, when Chrysler first declared bankruptcy in 1979, US auto marketers had focused on understanding the role of Toyota’s factor and organization strategy on consumer behavior. Finally, only a radical shift in strategy to embrace an Internet business model confounded expert opinion that Best Buy would soon follow Circuit City.

Next: Surprise


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