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Business Planning • Business plans – guide entire organization or its business units – Bplans.com provides several examples 2-1 Marketing Plans • Describe the marketing environment • Outline marketing strategies • Identify plans for implementation and evaluation 2-2 Strategic Planning • Strategic planning is the managerial decision process that matches the organization’s resources and capabilities to its market opportunities for long-term growth • Firms may become multi-product companies with self-contained divisions – Strategic Business Units (SBUs) – Example: The Walt Disney Company or Hyundai 2-3 Planning at Different Levels 2-4 Lower Levels of Planning • Functional – Conducted by mid-level managers – Includes Marketing as well as Finance, Operations, HRM, etc. • Operational – Conducted by first-line managers – Includes day-today execution of tactical plans 2-5 Strategic Planning Steps Define the organization’s mission Evaluate internal/external environments Set objectives Establish the business portfolio 2-6 Define the Organization’s Mission • A mission may begin with these questions: – What business are we in? – What customers should we serve? – How should we develop the firm’s capabilities and focus its efforts? 2-7 Sample Mission Statements • MADD: To stop drunk driving, support the victims of this violent crime, and prevent underage drinking. • Under Armour: To find new technology and enhance the performance of every athlete and outdoorsman. Lighter. Faster. Stronger. Better. 2-8 Evaluate the Internal/External Environment Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats 2-9 Set Organizational and SBU Objectives • SBU objectives must support the overall objectives of the firm 2-10 Establish the Business Portfolio • For firms with different SBUs, planning also includes allocating resources among the businesses • Each SBU is a separate profit center within the larger corporation • Each SBU is responsible for its own costs, revenues, and profits 2-11 Crest Crest toothpaste products are part of P&G’s portfolio that ranges from personal care products to coffee 2-12 Portfolio Management • The range of products owned by a large firm is called a business portfolio • Portfolio analysis allows a firm to assess the potential of its products and businesses – BCG Growth-Market Share Matrix 2-13 Boston Consulting Group 2-14 BCG Matrix 2-15 BCG Matrix • Method focuses on the potential of a firm’s existing successful products to generate cash that the firm can then use to invest in new products • New products are chosen for their potential to become future cash generators • Two dimensions: – Market growth rate – Relative market share 2-16 BCG Matrix: Stars • SBUs with dominant market share in high-growth markets – requires funding to keep up with production and promotion demands – strategies seek to maximize market share in the face of increasing competition 2-17 BCG Matrix: Cash Cows • SBUs with dominant market share in a low-growth potential market – product is well established and market share can be maintained with minimal funding – firms milk cows of profits to fund growth of other products in portfolio – too many cows can become a liability due to the lack of growth potential 2-18 BCG Matrix: Question Marks • SBUs with low market shares in fastgrowth markets – sometimes called problem children – the firm has failed to compete effectively • The dilemma? Investing more money into the SBU may: – improve market share in a high potential market OR – result in negative cash flow and failure 2-19 BCG Matrix: Dogs • SBUs with small market share in a slowgrowth market – specialized products in limited markets unlikely to grow – firms may sell dogs to smaller firms or eliminate product from market – dogs may be an important product that showcases the firm’s distinctive competency 2-20 Developing Growth Strategies • Product-Market Growth Matrix illustrates different growth strategies – Two dimensions • opportunities for growth in existing or new markets • allocating resources into existing products or new products – Four strategies result 2-21 Figure 2.4: Product-Market Growth Matrix 2-22 Steps in the Marketing Planning Process 1. Perform a situation analysis 2. Set marketing objectives 3. Develop marketing strategies – Select a target market – Develop marketing mix strategies 4. Implement marketing strategies 5. Monitor and control strategies 2-23 Under Armour Woman Under Armour targets athletes of both sexes who seek moisture control when they play or work out 2-24 Jet Blue Part of Jet Blue’s product strategy is to provide inflight diversions to bored passengers 2-25 Operational Planning • Day-to-day execution of the marketing plan • Performed by first-line supervisors • Timed over 1-2 months 2-26 The Internal Business Environment • Corporate Resources and Competencies • Corporate Culture – Risk-Taking Cultures – Profit-Centered versus PeopleCentered Cultures 2-27 The Economic Environment • The Business Cycle – All economies go through cycles of prosperity, recession, and recovery – The cycle directly affects marketers because of its effect on consumer behavior • The Power of Expectations – Consumer confidence represents consumer beliefs about what the future holds – Like business cycles, it affects whether consumers buy or cut back on spending 2-28 Consumer Confidence Index 2-29 The Competitive Environment • Analyzing the Competition – Strengths and weaknesses analysis – Competitive intelligence (CI) • Competition in the Microenvironment • Competition in the Macroenvironment 2-30 Competition: The Microenvironment • In the microenvironment, competition means the alternatives from which the target may choose • Level 1: competition for discretionary income (for income left after a consumer pays for necessities) • Level 2: product competition in which different products attempt to satisfy the same needs or wants • Level 3: brand competition in which competitors offering similar products compete for consumer choice 2-31 Competition: The Macroenvironment • Overall structure of industry – monopoly - when one seller controls market – oligopoly - relatively small number of sellers, each with a substantial share of market – monopolistic competition - many sellers compete for buyers; each offers a slightly different product and has a small share of market – perfect competition - many small sellers each offering the same product 2-32 Competition: The Macroenvironment Share of Market per Firm: High Number of Firms in Market: Low Monopoly Oligopoly Monopolistic Competition Perfect Competition Low High 2-33 The Legal Environment • Regulatory Agencies – Food and Drug Administration – Federal Trade Commission – Federal Communications Commission – Interstate Commerce Commission – Consumer Product Safety Commission – Environmental Protection Agency 2-34 The Sociocultural Environment • Characteristics of society • Characteristics of people in that society • Cultural values and beliefs 2-35