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So far we have covered • Marketing planning o Purpose of marketing planning o The marketing planning process o SOSTAC / APIC • Environmental analysis o Having analysis skills • Market sensing & learning organisations o PESTEL – Macro o Micro environment o Problems with analysing the external environment • Blue Ocean vs. Red Ocean 1 © 2014 So far we have covered • Analysing the internal environment o Resource based view (RBV) • VRIN (Valuable, Rare, Inimitable, Non-substitutable) • Capabilities & competencies • Organisational culture • Value chain analysis 2 © 2014 So far we have covered • Information to recommend & inform strategic decision making o Research methods – primary/ secondary / qualitative / quantitative o Environmental scanning o External analysis techniques incl. scenario planning o Internal analysis techniques incl. marketing assets – brand strength, McKinsey 7 s frameworks etc… 3 © 2014 So far we have covered • Developing a strategic marketing plan aligned to meeting organisational objectives o Vision / mission statements o Hierarchy of objectives o Strategic choices – generic strategies o STP o SWOT & TOWS o Marketing mix tactics to deliver the strategy 4 © 2014 Unit 3 Implementation and Control 5 © 2014 CIM Strategic Marketing – 2014-2015 5. MANAGE RESOURCES TO DELIVER THE STRATEGIC MARKETING PLAN (CORE TEXT CHAPTER 15) 6 © 2014 5.1 learning outcome • Develop a realistic plan for the implementation of a marketing strategy 7 © 2014 Strategic marketing implementation and control • Managing resources to deliver the strategic marketing plan: o Develop a realistic plan for the implementation of a marketing strategy o Determine the key variables and resources required to implement a successful marketing strategy o Identify and assess the risks, implications and issues involved in implementing a marketing strategy 8 © 2014 Detailed plan structure and content Phase one – Goal setting 1. Mission 2. Corporate objectives Phase two – Situation review 3. Marketing audit 4. Market overview 5. SWOT analysis Phase three – Strategy formulation 6. Assumptions 7. Marketing objectives and strategies 8. Estimate expected results and identify alternative plans and mixes Phase four – Resource allocation and monitoring 9. Budget 10. First-year detailed implementation programme McDonald and Wilson, 2011 The output of this process is the strategic marketing plan… 9 © 2014 Implementation process • Good implementation process spells out the activities to • • • • be implemented Which activities to be implemented – mostly driven by the tactical mix elements of the plan How the implementation will be done The time and location of the implementation Who will be responsible for the implementation 10 © 2014 Implementing the plan – questions to be asked? • Is the structure of the organisation capable of • • • • implementing the strategy? Are resources deployed effectively, and if not, can the necessary changes be made? Are managers suitably empowered to implement changes? Do organisational policies support the strategies? Will staff members be affected by the strategy in such a way that they might try to sabotage its implementation? 11 © 2014 The implementation process Activities to be implemented What? Responsibility for implementation Who? Implementation process How? How implementation Will be done When? © 2014 Time and location of implementation 12 Use of established frameworks and templates • A range of formats and process for producing plans: • PR Smith’s SOSTAC® model and APIC process • Templates are generally chosen that best fits the organisational context 13 © 2014 Marketing organisation, team management • Advise for marketers developing an implementation plan: o “Since some of these characteristics (of evaluating organisation design) conflict with others, organisational design requires looking at priorities and balancing conflicting consequences” Cravens and Percy (2013) o The overall organisational structure and dominant corporate culture are important factors when designing the marketing organisation and the implementation plan for the marketing strategy 14 © 2014 Strategy and organisational structure • Is the structure capable of implementing the ideas? • Are resources deployed effectively within the organisation? • Are managers suitably empowered? 15 © 2014 Marketing Infrastructure Systems and processes Planning QA Marketing infrastructure Budgets There are a number of different types of organisational structures used and choosing the right one is important....... Transportation Staff Organisations require systems and processes for all of their operations (gathering marketing intelligence, developing the product mix, communicating value propositions etc..) Administration MKIS Systems and processes Refers to all the resources and structures that are needed in order for marketing to take place (staff, MIS, QA, budgets etc..) Communication 16 © 2014 Definitions “the pattern of relationships among positions in the organisation and among members of the organisation. Structure makes possible the application of the process of management and creates a framework of order and command through which the activities of the organisation can be planned, organised, directed and controlled.” (Mullins, 1999) © 2014 (Mintzberg, 1983) defines an organisation as “the sum total of the ways in which it divides its labour into distinct tasks and then achieves coordination among them.” “Organisations are as different and varied as nations and societies of the world. They have differing cultures sets of values, norms and beliefs reflected in different structures and systems. And the cultures are affected by events of the past and the climate of the present, by the technology of the type of work, by their aims and the type of people who work in them.” (Charles Handy, 1993) 17 Functional structure Cons Pros • • • • • Maximise efficiency High levels of specialisation Division of labour and little overlap Accountability and highly ordered Opportunities to progress for individuals Top Manager • • • • • Difficult to achieve horizontal integration Silo mentality Inefficiencies and conflicts Communication up and down could be slow Unresponsive to changing external environment Divisional Manager Department Operations • • • • Department Marketing Department R&D Department Sales Arranged around the roles undertaken by individuals and teams - these may be subdivided Ideally suited to organisations with a single product or service or portfolio of similar things Minimal overlap & duplication of roles Communication lines follow the chain of command up & down the levels of authority 18 © 2014 Product/Market/Brand structure 19 © 2014 Matrix structure 20 © 2014 Flexible and adaptive organisation Burns & Stalker (1961) o Mechanistic & organic forms of organisation • Stable, efficient and suitable for slow-changing operating environments • (mechanistic or “machine-like” organisations; also called “bureaucracies” Flexible, adaptive and suitable for fast-changing or dynamic operating environments (organic or “organism-like” organisations) 21 © 2014 Flexible and adaptive organisation • • • • • • • • Functional flexibility (multidisciplinary, Multi-skilling) Numerical flexibility - (Handy, 1989), The Shamrock Organisation Informal organisation – loosely structured & spontaneous Flat structures – the flattening of hierarchies Horizontal structures – functional versatility “Jobless” structures – employability a range of skills Boundary less structures – horizontal barriers are removed or softened by de-layering Ad hocracy (not bureaucratic) – temporary, adaptive, creative 22 © 2014 Critical path analysis • Project management tools and techniques to deliver the • • • • strategy CPA is one of these known as network analysis Divides the various components into smaller tasks hold them in a logical sequence and estimate how long each will take Gantt charts Resource Histograms 23 © 2014 GANTT Chart • The start and finish dates with milestone elements of a project 24 © 2014 Project critical path analysis flow diagram 1. A list of all activities required to complete the project 2. The time (duration_ that each activity will take to complete 3. The dependencies between the activities 4. Logical end points such as milestones or deliverables © 2014 http://www.businessballs.com/project.htm#critical-path-analysis 25 Agile project management • Is one of the revolutionary methods introduced for the practice of project management. • Emphasis is on the fact that entire team (scrum) should be a tightly integrated unit. This includes the product owner – who sets goals and priorities, Scrum master – who works with the team to prioritise the individual task and acts as trouble maker • Frequent communication is one of the key factors that make this integration possible. Agile project teams follow open communication techniques and tools including self-managing. • Deliveries are short-term. Usually a delivery cycle ranges from one week to four weeks. These are commonly known as sprints. 26 © 2014 Action priority matrix • Is a simple technique that helps you choose which activities to prioritise (and which ones you should drop) • By choosing activities intelligently, you can make the very most of your time and opportunities. • By choosing badly, you can quickly bog yourself down in low-yield, time-consuming projects that close down opportunities and stop you moving forwards. 27 © 2014 Action priority matrix 28 © 2014 Action priority matrix High High Effort High impact/Low effort (quick wins) High impact/High effort (major projects) Low Impact Low Low impact/Low effort (fill in tasks) Low impact/High effort (time bandits) 29 © 2014 Resource histogram 30 © 2014 Legislative, regulatory and code of conduct • Implementation plans need to take into account a range of • • • • internal and external factors which marketers may have little or no influence Multinationals need to consider local and regional legislation/regulation affecting promotional and packaging techniques Bribery and corruption Standards of behaviour and actions set by the organisation The promotion of high standards and professional skill 31 © 2014 Project management…….. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEQWSjWSx4Q 32 © 2014 5.2 Learning outcomes • Determine key variables and resources required for the successful implementation of a marketing strategy o Critical success factors o Culture attitudinal shifts o Communication – internal marketing o Resource/capability allocation o Budgeting 33 © 2014 Critical success factors • Essential factors that are essential for success in a particular market or • • • • industry Could be product attributes, marketing resources and core competencies?/capabilities The establishment of standards/CSF’s: What elements of the VP are essential in meeting customer needs? The assets and abilities or the organisation need to be successful in a chosen market or sector these can be determined by looking at the winners and losers in the sector Understand the weaknesses that may put an organisation at a competitive advantage 34 © 2014 Critical Success factors - (the marketing mix) Activity CSF New product development Trial rate Repurchase rate Sales programme Contribution by region, salesperson Controllable margin as percentage of sales Number of new accounts Travel costs Advertising programmes Awareness levels Attitude ratings Cost levels Pricing programmes Price relative to industry average Price elasticity of demand Distribution programmes Number of distributors carrying the product 35 © 2014 Cultural attitudinal shifts • Instilling a culture that supports the implementation of the strategy – resulting in a flexible and responsive organisation. • Therefore internal marketing needs to be included in strategic marketing plans 36 © 2014 Internal marketing • Is the use of a marketing approach in the internal environment of the organisation, whose employees are seen as customers who have to “buy in to” management ideas. • It also embodies a variety of approaches and techniques to acquire and motivate customer-conscious employees 37 © 2014 Internal marketing - Aims • Aligning internal & external programmes • Employee motivation and satisfaction • Customer orientation and satisfaction • Inter-functional co-ordination 38 © 2014 Internal marketing Strategy Plan Targeted at key groups in the company, alliance partner companies, and other influencers Internal marketing programme External marketing programme Targeted at key customers, segments and niches, and other external influencers 39 © 2014 Internal communications http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PujlvJhEEE0 40 © 2014 Resource/capability allocation and attainment • Final phase of developing the marketing strategy clearly state what resources the plan needs to be successfully implemented • Financial resources : budget • Human resources – expertise in social media? • Organisational systems such as CRM software 41 © 2014 The balanced scorecard Kaplan and Norton (1992, 1993) http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newLDR_85.htm “..gives managers a fast but comprehensive view of the business” 42 © 2014 Encourages implementation of a common strategy, which is communicated and coordinated across all major areas of the organisation The budgeting process Define organisational objectives (vision mission etc… Analyse the external environment (using forecasts, sensitivity analysis, e.g. PESTEL Analyse the internal environment (resources, capabilities, e.g. SWOT) Develop sales forecasts and budgets Devise marketing plan Develop production forecasts and budgets Revise Develop operational forecasts and budgets Devise marketing budget Develop budgets for capital expenditure Produce cash low forecasts and accounts (master budget) Seek approval for proposed budgets 43 © 2014 The purpose of budgeting Objectives of budgetary planning – PRIME • Planning – most important feature as managers can see potential threats or opportunities • Responsibility - objectives are set and managers of budget centres are made responsible • Integration and coordination – Activities need to be coordinated to ensure maximum integration of effort • Motivation – Commitment of employees can be encouraged through communication and feedback • Evaluation and control – Evaluating the performance of the budget holder 44 © 2014 Approaches to budget setting A statement of desired performance expressed in financial terms and never unlimited • Top down budgets – set on high and passed down the organisation • Bottom-up budgets – set further down the organisation and passed up for approval 45 © 2014 The financial approach… • Tends to be a top down model • Total marketing spend is often determined at the outset and then broken down into discrete activities • It is important that the marketing manager is able to express their intended outcomes in terms that indicate a direct contribution: Increase to sales, positive cash inflows, return on investment, growth in customer value 46 © 2014 Approaches to setting marketing budgets KPIs: • Total market share • Levels of customer satisfaction • # of direct response to advertisements • Volume of sales • Competitor performance • Distributor support Marketing Objectives Key performance indicators (KPI) Develop detailed action plan Create budget bottom up Close monitoring or actual performance against KPI’s Adjust actions accordingly 47 © 2014 Factors critical for success of change programmes Structure Systems Soft aspects Style Shared • The 7-S model McKinsey & Co. • A number of factors that will contribute to the successful implementation of plans and change programmes values Strategy Skills Staff Hard factors 48 © 2014 5.3 Learning outcomes • Identify and assess the risks, implications and issues from the implementation of a marketing strategy 49 © 2014 Risk assessment • Political – within an organisation or outside of it e.g. the • • • • • defection of a key supplier Social – Media or pressure groups can pose risks to strategy Physical – issues such as distribution resources or plant and equipment affected by disaster such as fire Technical – Systems failures Labour – loss of key staff Legal – Actions by customers or other connected stakeholders to seek redress through the courts 50 © 2014 Action evaluation • • • • • How likely is it that the risk will show itself? Can we control it in any way? What will happen if this risk occurs? How can we control it in the least damaging way? Strategies: o Avoidance – eliminate or not be involved o Reduction – optimise, limit , mitigate o Sharing – transfer or outsource to third party o Retention – accept, plan on dealing with any incidence and budget accordingly 51 © 2014 Contingency planning • A series of milestones and activities to bring the strategy • • • • plan back on track Key personnel who need to be involved with clear details of roles and responsibilities Details of the plan will be tested Coverage of any additional training staff Details of how the plan will be updated as the risk it is designed to mitigate changes 52 © 2014 Stakeholder analysis • One of the biggest risks to execute a strategy is politics inside and • • • • • • outside the organisation. Powerful stakeholders can derail strategies Therefore important to categorise stakeholders e.g. the seven markets model also consider classifications: Economic stakeholders Social/political stakeholders Technological stakeholders Community stakeholders 53 © 2014 Stakeholder influence - Mendelow matrix • • • • • Positional power Resource power System power Expert power Personal power Used to plot the potential influence of stakeholder groups and possible threats to execute a strategy Mendelow’s power-interest matrix Level of interest Low High Low A Minimal effort B Keep informed C Keep satisfied D Key players Power/ influence High The Mendelow matrix (1991) 54 © 2014 Risk impact probability charts 55 © 2014 Directly changeable aspects of implementation Aspect Explanation and examples Organisation structure The hierarchy of the organisation can be redrawn with new posts created or old ones removed. The informal structure will remain intact, insofar as the individual staff remain employed under the new structure Management systems Information systems, feedback systems and control mechanisms (e.g. rewards and sanctions offered to staff) will need to be changed carefully, and with consultation Policies and procedures Procedures are often the easiest aspects to change and therefore are often the first aspects which the less competent manager will address Action plans and short-term budgets Action plans outline the tactics to be used to achieve the strategy. Tactics are easy to change. Short-term budgets can also be altered with relatively little difficulty Management information systems The methods by which management is fed information affect the type of information that is supplied. Changes in the information system will inevitably impact on future strategic decision making. Blythe and Megicks, 2010 56 © 2014 Change management models • Balogun et al, 1998 – “change Kaleidoscope” 57 © 2014 The planned change model - (Lewin, 1951) Breakdown the existing restraining and driving forces Unfreeze Existing behaviour Announce change Transition Movement Attitude/behaviour change Introduces imbalances which allows restraining forces Refreezing the driving/restraining forces Refreeze new behaviour New order This model was designed for stable environmental conditions. Re-freezing may be seen as counter-productive in fast-changing/turbulent business environments http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newPPM_94.htm 58 © 2014 Kotter 8 step model 1. Establish a sense of urgency 5. Empower broad-based action 2. Form a guiding coalition 6. Create short-term wins 3. Create a compelling vision for 7. Consolidate gains and 4. change Communicate the change vision 8. produce more change Anchor new approaches in the culture 59 © 2014 Managing change in teams Internal marketing ....can be used to facilitate the change process and overcome • resistance to change; & implementation of plans Attitude management and communications management (Grönroos, 1990) Company Internal marketing External marketing Internal market staff 3 types of marketing, Kotler 1999 © 2014 External market customers Internal marketing Adapted from Kotler, 1999 60 Lewin (1951) Force Field Analysis Current State Driving forces (for change) A requirement of new legislation. Professional Commitment to controlling the organisation. Requirement to report to external agencies A concern for quality Ideal Position Restraining forces (resistance) Cynicism about change ‘another fad’ Existing systems are sufficient Trade Union concern over effects on job working conditions Complexity of producing such reviews Cost of carrying out such reviews 61 © 2014 Factors for successful implementation for change • • • • • • • • Leadership Culture Structure Resources Control Skills Strategy Systems The 7-S model developed by McKinsey & Co, helps to illustrate the elements that can contribute to implementing change..... (Drummond and Ensor, (2001) 62 © 2014 Activity • Please review the CMI “Developing the skills for managing change” and present key findings/comments • Please review the case study about Corus “Overcoming barriers to change” and present key findings/comments 63 © 2014 CIM Strategic Marketing – 2014-2015 6. MONITOR, MEASURE & ADAPT THE MARKETING PLAN FOR CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT (CORE TEXT CHAPTER 15) 64 © 2014 6.1 Learning outcomes • Recommend appropriate control mechanisms to measure and monitor the progress of the implemented marketing strategy 65 © 2014 Marketing performance measurement • • • • The use of marketing metrics is vital for any healthy business & the prime reasons: To evaluate success (or failure) of marketing plans To rectify and implement corrective actions To assist future decision making and planning To provide a convincing and strong rationale for a marketing plan for the board 66 © 2014 Finance measure/control ratios • Measure value added in four ways (McDonald & and Wilson, 2011: o Value-chain analysis – looking at cost sand outputs in comparison wit competitors o Shareholder value added (SVA) o Customer value – looking at customer satisfaction and loyalty measures o Accounting value – the results and ratios from the annual accounts and quarterly updates 67 © 2014 Accounting • • • • Accounting measures of marketing performance reflect the financial impact that its activities have: Profit and loss – the impact of incomes earned and costs incurred Balance sheets – the impact on assets and liabilities Cash flows – the impact on money moving into and out of the organisation Budgetary controls – the impact on the monitoring and management of income and expenditure 68 © 2014 Accounting measures • The interpretation of financial data o Published accounts - Financial health o Management accounting o Prudence concept - assets and income are not overstated and liabilities and expenses are not understated. • Understand the impact of marketing decisions on the finances of • • the business Be able to work effectively with the finance professionals in the business Be competent in the day-to-day financial techniques http://www.businessballs.com/finance.htm © 2014 69 Operational measures • Provide and indication of the impact the tactics in the marketing mix are having and if they are achieving the desired level of competitive advantage • A wide range of metrics to consider • Choice of metrics influenced by the objectives set in the strategic marketing plan… 70 © 2014 Operational measures Category Examples Category Examples Competitive and customer metrics Market share, consumer purchase intentions, customer loyalty, willingness to recommend Profitability metrics Break-even sales level, contribution margins Product and portfolio metrics Market penetration, sales Customer profitability volumes for new products metrics vs existing products, repeat purchases Customer lifetime value, acquisition and retention costs Sales and channel metrics Percentage of outlets stocking the product, inventory turnover Pricing metrics Proportion of customers considering product good value, competitors’ response to price changes Promotion metrics Coupon redemption rates, baseline vs incremental sales Advertising media and web Opportunities to view, metrics cost-per-thousand impressions, share of voice, cost per click 71 © 2014 KPIs • Key performance indicators help an organisation to define and measure progress toward organisational goals • Are quantifiable measurements agreed beforehand that reflect critical success of an organisation • E.g. KPI for a business might be the % of its income coming from returning customers • A customer service department might have a KPI that says a % of customer calls must be answered within a minute 72 © 2014 Marketing Dashboard • A good dashboard consists of three layers o Strategic level - Monitors and measures performance against business outcomes and marketing objectives o Operational level - Tracks performance of core marketing strategies and processes o Tactical level - Analyzes performance at project or activity level as they relate to the first two 73 © 2014 Marketing dashboard 74 © 2014 Examples of basic marketing measures • Market share – is the % of a market accounted for by a specified product or organisation. • Profitability – for marketing the difference between gross and net profit and making comparisons between products, brands, segments and customers • Loyalty – customer retention is important and need to be able to monitor 75 © 2014 Marketing metrics • Competitor & customer • • • • metrics Profitability metrics Product and portfolio metrics Customer profitability metrics Sales and channel metrics • Pricing metrics • Advertising, media and web • • • • • metrics Financial metrics Brand equity metrics Innovation metrics Internal market metrics Internal process metrics 76 © 2014 Customer metrics Monitoring customers 1. Key customer identity 2. Customer history 3. Relationship of customer to product 4. Relationship of customer to potential market 5. Customer attitudes and behaviour 6. The financial performance of the customer 7. The profitability of selling to the customer 77 © 2014 Advertising effectiveness • • • • • Must Must Must Must Must be be be be be seen read believed remembered acted upon (David Starch 1920s) 78 © 2014 Advertising metrics - Reach, frequency, impact • Reach – measure of percentage of people in target market exposed to the ad campaign during a given period of time • Frequency – how many times the average person in the target market is exposed to the message • Impact – qualitative value of a message through a given medium 79 © 2014 Media metrics Planning Concept Explanation Reach % of target audience exposed to message at least once during relevant time period. Frequency No of times a member of target audience is exposed to a media vehicle (not the advertisement) during relevant time period Opportunity to See (OTS) Even if a person has been exposed to a vehicle, doesn’t mean they have seen an ad. OTS measures they have had the opportunity to see it Duplication Targets exposed to 2 or more adverts carrying the same message Gross Rating Points (GRP) Measure of the total no of OTS generated in a set period of time. Simply reach x frequency = GRP Effective frequency No of times an individual needs to be exposed to an ad before comms is effective 80 © 2014 3 parts to brand equity Feldwick, 1996 • Brand value - based on a financial and accounting base • Brand strength - measuring the strength of a consumer’s attachment to a brand • Brand description - represented by the specific attitudes customers have towards a brand 81 © 2014 General brand equity metrics and measures Consumer metric Measure by Familiarity Familiarity relative to other brands in the set being considered Penetration Number of customers or number of active customers as a percentage of the intended market What they think about the brand Brand preference as a percentage of preference of other brands within the set being considered or those with intention to buy or those with brand knowledge What they feel Customer satisfaction compared to the average for other brands Loyalty Either behavioural (repeat buying, retention) or intermediate (commitment, engagement) Availability Distribution, for example, weighted percentage of retail outlets carrying the brand Ambler, 2003 © 2014 82 Brand values • http://www.interbrand.com/en/best-global- brands/2013/Best-Global-Brands-2013.aspx 83 © 2014 Innovation and learning measures • Comparative analysis o Making comparisons over time or against standards is essential to encourage a culture of continuous improvement • Benchmarking o An external target of performance against which a firm measures its activities • Process benchmarking • Competitor benchmarking 84 © 2014 Innovation metrics Strategy • • • • Culture • Appetite for learning • Freedom to fail Outcomes • Number of initiatives in process • Number of innovations launched • % revenue due to launches in the last 3 years Awareness of goals Commitment to goals Active innovation support Perceived resource adequacy Ibid 85 © 2014 Internal market metrics • Metrics available to assess employee-based equity o Awareness of corporate goals o Perceived calibre of employer o Relative employee satisfaction o Commitment to corporate goals o Employee retention o Perceived resource adequacy o Appetite for learning o Freedom to fail o Customer-brand empathy 86 © 2014 Customer lifetime value (CLV) Measures the worth of a customer to the firm either as an individual or as part of a segment. (Kumar, 2008) Customer life time value is an important concept because it indicates long term health of the customer relationship along with an upper limit on spending to acquire new customers (Farris et al, 2006) 87 © 2014 Triple bottom line • Measuring and reporting financial, social and environmental performance – offering a solution to balance various stakeholder demands, and is increasingly being adopted by organisations. 88 © 2014 Activity • Measurement of marketing effectiveness for one of your organisations, please • Discuss the types of measures currently in use e.g. • • • – Financial – Productivity – Relationship marketing / CRM – HR – Innovation and performance Do you think they are appropriate? Are there any decisions made as a result? How could measurement be improved? 89 © 2014 6.2 Learning outcomes • Understand the importance of continuous improvement in relation to marketing strategy and planning 90 © 2014 Strategic drift • External changes over time and an organisation's strategy will • • • change in an incremental way to keep pace Often driven by routine and processes built up over time However if there is disruptive change in the external environment, the organisation's strategy does not keep pace with the changes leading to strategic drift This can affect the organisation financially and sustainability if the organisation does not change fast enough – this demonstrates the importance of continuous improvement 91 © 2014 Total Quality Management (TQM) • • • Is an orientation to quality in which quality values and aspirations are applied to the management of all resources and relationships with the firm (incl. The value chain) to seek continuous improvement and excellence: Quality in all processes Requires buy in Anything less results in higher levels of waste, rejected items failures and customer dissatisfaction http://www.businessballs.com/dtiresources/total_quality_ management_TQM.pdf © 2014 92 Total quality management (TQM) • • • • • • • Get it right first time - zero defects Quality chains – relationship between customers-suppliers Quality culture and total involvement - everyone Quality through people – “empowerment” Quality management Process alignment Continuous improvement – always looking for ways to improve processes http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=OSA1q107IYg 93 © 2014 Cost management – general principles Any activity intended to ensure expenditure is monitored and achieves value can be considered a cost management activity • Set standards and targets o Standard costs are used as a basis for comparison with actual costs • Measure and evaluate actual performance • Take corrective action 94 © 2014 Cost behaviour and budgeting considerations An understanding of how different costs behave is important. Cost behaviour is the way in which cost changes as the activity level changes. The basic principle of cost behaviour is that as the levels of activity rises, costs will usually rise 95 © 2014 Cost-benefit analysis Is a techniques used to determine the feasibility of an activity, project, decision, or plan by quantifying its cost and benefits The cost-benefit analysis adds up the value of the benefits of a course of action, an activity or a project, and subtracts the cost associated with it 96 © 2014 Cost-benefit analysis - Pay back The amount of time taken to break even on a project or investment, or the time taken for the benefits received to equal costs It assumes equally divided cash flow To calculate payback you need to know o The cost of the project o The forecast profit 97 © 2014 Breakeven analysis Is a tool used to calculate the breakeven point. The breakeven point is the sales volume at which the variable and fixed costs of producing the product or service will be recovered – so there is neither a profit or loss 98 © 2014 Breakeven analysis Total revenue Breakeven point where revenue = total costs Total cost £cost Variable cost Fixed cost 0 B.E.P. = Fixed Costs Contribution Volume of output Contribution is the difference between revenue and variable cost 99 © 2014 Productivity measures It looks at the effectiveness of the allocation and usage of the organisation and usage of the organisations resources Productivity is the ratio of Outputs or Outputs units Inputs Input units 100 © 2014 Quality concepts Critical success factors: • Product & service quality for marketing-orientated businesses, because: o They determine customer satisfaction - the ultimate source of competitive survival and advantage o The ability of the company to differentiate its products and services rests upon the quality of its total offering 101 © 2014 Quality concepts – a view from some of the “gurus” • Juran (1988) – quality should not just be about meeting • • specification (but on internal & external customers) – “user based approach” and that 85% of quality problems were the result of “ineffective systems” Ishikawa (1991) – “Quality Circles” – the process of people solving quality problems Taguchi (1986) – Quality cost model – costs of quality 102 © 2014 Kaizen theory • A process of making continual incremental improvements to business processes • Originating in Japan as a response to Deming’s work on Plan, Do, Check, Act • The reasoning of Kaizen is that it is always possible to enhance the operations of the company and the employees should be encouraged to find ways to solve even minor operational problems and deliver improvements 103 © 2014 Six sigma process improvement DMAIC model (Bruce, 2005) • Define an opportunity or • • • • need for improvement Measure current performance Analyse the opportunity for improvement http://hueftlestudios.com/SixSigma/DMAIC_Model.gif Improve performance Control performance http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yyk8G0zrfpU 104 © 2014 6.3 Learning outcomes • Create an effective continuous improvement plan 105 © 2014 Action learning • User reflect on their own knowledge of a subject and use questioning to generate insights into a particular topic. • Action learning sets, teams of eight or ten individuals to tackle difficult problems though questioning. • The insights are then used to create action plans • Professor Reg Revans… 106 © 2014 Data collection plans • Important part of continuous improvement is deciding what data to collect and how to collect it. • Much of the information is collected via research methods and gathered through market intelligence channels. 107 © 2014 The PDCA (Deming) cycle) - An improvement methodology Adapt, implement & monitor ACT PLAN CHECK DO What and who Analyse findings & assign cause Direct contact & secondary data Source: Drummond & Ensor 108 © 2014 Deming 14 points for improving quality 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Create a constancy of purpose Adopt a new quality-conscious philosophy Cease dependence on inspection Stop awarding business on price Continuous improvement in the system of production and service Institute learning on the job Institute leadership 8. Drive out fear 9. Break down barriers between departments 10. Eliminate slogans and exhortations 11. Eliminate quotas or work standards 12. Give employees pride in their job 13. Institute education and a selfimprovement programme 14. Put everyone to work to accomplish it 109 © 2014 Assessment – March 2015 • Task 1 – 40 marks produce a 3 year marketing plan to increase the organisation’s level of market orientation. (see assessment for more requirements but need to use recognized planning framework) o Maximum page count 8 • Task 2 – 60 marks examination (based on the marketing plan) 110 © 2014 Home work / activity • Please complete an outline of task 1 of the December assessment and submit for review. Please indicate the models and approaches you might take……. 111 © 2014 Q & A session 112 © 2014