27 October 2011
Thoughts on balancing current customers and the company product or service portfolio with new areas of growth: can these be reconciled - and what does it require to balance them in terms of structure and culture?
Everything we do in marketing is to:
• Attract more customers.• Retain existing customers with the right profile. • Grow the revenue of existing customers. • Grow the profit margin/ customer.• Grow the asset value of the business. This is a function of the number, value and
profit margin of customers and the strength of the brand/ cost structure of the business.
All the marketing metrics we put in place are diagnostic tools we use to understand why we are growing - or not growing - relative to the above
objectives - and thereby align our operations with our strategy.
It is true that:
• Outside of size, the only ways to achieve superior performance are:– By having a niche focus;– By creating exceptional products and services;– By being different enough so that consumers will pay for it;– By changing the competitive paradigm.
• Whilst the first three makes a company competitive, the last one makes a company leapfrog competitors: • The top 20 companies in the Fortune 2010 list of fastest growing companies
received $3,40 in incremental market capitalisation for every $1 of revenue growth. • For the companies that created new categories, this was $5,60!
Let us look at the traditional Ansoff matrix to balance growth: companies balance attracting new customers with launching new products and services.
Market
extension
Market
penetration
Product
development
Diversification
Markets
Prod
ucts
Increasing technological new-ness
Increasing market new-ness
Aim to saturate the market
(or all segments)
Extend existing products to new markets
and/ or segments
Sell new products to existing markets
(or segments)
Sell new products to new markets
(or segments)
Let us introduce category creation as a major new area of growth. This requires radical thinking, not easy to reconcile with traditional thinking and operations.
Market
extension
Market
penetration
Product
development
Diversification
Markets
Prod
ucts
Increasing technological new-ness
Increasing market new-ness
Category creation
Incremental innovation
Sell new products to new markets and create new markets altogether
Most companies try and manage existing customer and product/
service revenue with new revenue from new customers and products: the operational
requirements for these are very different. It is unlikely they will
both co-exist with ease.
Levels of profitability by type of innovation: if you compare where the exponential benefit to profitability is largest, it is within niche markets, products with regular incremental innovation and revolutionary new products or services.
Degree of competitiveness
Low – commoditised Highly differentiated
Profitability
Commoditised – most airlines
Differentiated offers, i.e. better service
Niche markets
New categories
Revolutionary new productsHigh
margin spaces
Moderate to fair margin spaces
Low margin spaces, only competitive advantage
volume
Profitability growth should be exponential. If we compare Ansoff with what we learn about incremental profitability, we can hypothesize:
Market
extension
Market
penetration
Product
development
Diversification
Markets
Prod
ucts
Increasing technological new-ness
Increasing market new-ness
Category creation
Incremental innovation
Exponential increases in profit margin: more customers at the same rate of
profitability and resource utilization will increase revenue and the magnitude of
profit, whilst incremental and radical innovation will lead to an exponential
growth in profit margin.
One growth area focus on resource optimisation (processes & control), the other on brand value proposition optimisation (vision, innovation & collaboration).
Market
extension
Market
penetration
Product
development
Diversification
Markets
Prod
ucts
Increasing technological new-ness
Increasing market new-ness
Category creation
Incremental innovation
Brand value proposition renewal
Resource optimisation
Better capacity utilisation: more customers at the same or a slightly higher cost-base.
The same or more customers with incremental or radically different new products and services, at higher margins and most likely with increases in the cost structure of the company. In the instances of radical products, these will be new business units.
The different areas have different organisational requirements. It is important to acknowledge that and structure accordingly. This will also have cultural implications.
Market
extension
Market
penetration
Product
development
Diversification
Markets
Prod
ucts
Increasing technological new-ness
Increasing market new-ness
Category creation
Incremental innovation
Greater collaboration & technocratic focus, less
autocracy, a commitment to ongoing improvement
Clear management structures, processes & controls; internal focus,
even degree of autocracy
Visionary leadership, networks of influencers and
collaborators, collaborative management approach,
working with small independents
A lean operational “machine” produces
standardised products and services
using standardised structures, processes
and trained staff. Deviation leads to inefficiencies and a
breakdown in quality. Cost control imperative.
Radical innovation requires new people & approaches. Traditional
structures can kill such innovation. Often these needs to be in different
companies.
Incremental innovation
requires adherence to the
core customer and business
How do we balance current growth with potential growth?
• Separate incremental innovation: making existing products better, with radical innovation: creating new categories.
• The first one uses new technology to “update” features and benefits of products and services for consumers (i.e. a new Gillette razor blade).
• The latter uses existing or new technology to design new categories. • These two areas are hardly ever able to sit side-by-side, the latter requires
different ways of thinking and doing. That is why companies like P&G uses small companies to do this, or Apple uses applications designers that do not work for them. Verganti says that companies that are very successful at this use influencers and collaborators extensively. Consumer research using traditional approaches are not that useful here.
• Incremental innovation is easier: it is updating existing products and services to make the delivery better for consumers. Here the secret is to be first, not second or last. Traditional consumer research is more useful here.
• Generally, experiential and experimental research is great for radical innovation.