Marketing and the warfare metaphor

21
Marketing Strategic options and tactics Dr Andrew Hirst Room 9339 1

description

This is a brief overview of the warfare metaphor as applied to marketing. It is dedicated to the brave men and women of our armed forces.

Transcript of Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Page 1: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Marketing Strategic

options and tactics

Dr Andrew Hirst Room 9339 1

Page 2: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Session Guide

• Basic marketing strategy

• Introduction to War analogies

• Brief outline of Marketing Warfare

– Attack vs Defence

Focus on Guerrilla (not Gorilla)

Page 3: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Marketing Strategy

• Underlying principle

– STP

• Segmentation

• Targeting

• Positioning

– 4P's / 7P's

» Product

» Place

» Promotion

» Price

» People

» Physical Attributes

» Process

Page 4: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

War Analogies

• Popularised in the '80s

– Popular coffee table reading

• The Art of War by Sun Tzu

• The Book of Five Rings by Miyamoto Musashi

• The Prince by Niccolò Machiavelli

• On War by Carl Von Clausewitz

Versions applied to business

– Rise and Trout's (1986) - Marketing Warfare

– Levinson's Guerrilla Marketing

– Other analogies include the Cola wars, price wars etc

– e.g Sainsbury vs Tesco 2013

Page 5: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Growth strategies often lead to

confrontation

At t a c ke r

Defender

Frontal Attack

Bypass Attack

Flanking Attack

Guerrilla Attack

Encirclement Attack

Page 6: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Attacking Strategies• Frontal Attack (All out attack on opponents territory)

– Costly, requires superior resources and firepower

– Success - El Alamein 1942 - Monty defeat the Desert Fox Rommel.

Out numbered them with tanks and guns

– Failure - Balaclava 1854 and Trench Warfare 1916, French at

Agincourt

Business cases:

2013 BT vs SKY

Change in TV viewing technology

Historic classic cases

1970/80's IBM vs Apple Personal computing

1970's Freddy Laker vs British Airways Atlantic Charter flights

Page 7: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Attacking Strategies

• Flanking (attack weak points)

– Focus on the weaknesses of the competitor

• regional or underserved segment

– Capture market share to gain a foothold

– Use creativity

– eg. Japanese motor industry vs US 1980's Honda Cub

• Encirclement (attack on all fronts)

– Middle ages castle sieges

– Cut off supply

• e.g Supply of customers Tesco v Sainsbury 1990's

• e.g. Samsung vs Sony 2013

Page 8: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Attacking strategies (cont)

• Bypass

– Military Strategy Maginot line

– Technology leapfrog

– e.g iphone vs Blackberry or Nokia

• Guerrilla

– French Resistance

– Unconventional Tactics often disruptive behaviour to develop a

buzz

– Eg. Flashmobs, Popup shops, PR stunts, viral campaigns

Page 9: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Guerrilla marketing

The enemy advances, we retreat

The enemy camps we harass

The enemy tires we attach

The enemy retreats, we pursueMao Tse-Tang

Page 10: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Principles of Guerrilla marketing

• Find a market small enough to defend

– e.g. 1980's Apple graphics design industry

• Never act like a brand leader

– e.g. 2000's Google "never be evil like Microsoft"

• Be prepared to run away

– being nimble and adaptable to change

Page 11: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Conventional goals with

unconventional tactics

• Low cost

• Time

• Energy - Richard Branson

• Information - e.g. Google

• Artic Monkey's - MySpace

Page 12: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Examples

• Imagination

• Yob Golf

• Pop-up shops

• Pop-up bars

Page 13: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Modern Guerrilla tactics?

• With your neighbours consider potential

electronic tactics.

– Twitter

– Blogs

– Facebook

– Email

– Websites

Page 14: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Defending an Attack

Attacker DefenderCounter/ Pre-emptive

Mobile

Flanking

Contraction

Page 15: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Defensive strategies

• Fortification

– Leningrad in WW2

– Customer Loyalty

– Brand awareness and differentiation

• e.g. microsoft 1990's virtually unopposed for 15 years until

web techs

Flanking Defence

Strengthen offer

Predicting competitor actions e.g Own Label contracts

Page 16: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Defensive strategies

• Sun Tzu "The supreme art of war is to subdue the

enemy without fighting"

• Pre-emptive defence

– Deter competitors from attacking

– Create entry barriers

• Discounting to make the market segment cheaper

Counter offensive

– overstretched competitors

e.g Marlboro on the US - slashed prices to offset growth in

cheaper brands

Page 17: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Defensive Strategies

• Mobile

– Incremental product development

– Rapid prototyping

• Beta versions e.g. Google and Mozilla

• Contraction

– Withdraw from untenable ground

– E.g M&S in the US, Sainsbury US, Tesco Japan and

US

Page 18: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Summary

• Warfare analogies help us understand tactics

available to marketeers

– The choice of option depends on resources and

capability

– large firms can use a range of tactics

– Start-ups and young organisation need to think clearly

about the choice, often guerrilla tactics are effective

– Guerrilla tactics require time, energy and creativity

Page 19: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Reading

• Rise and Trout's (1986) - Marketing Warfare

• Levinson's (2008) - A start up guide to Guerrilla

Marketing for 1st time marketers

• Website - Levinson's Guerrilla Marketing

• Hunt S and A Menon (1995) Metaphors and Competitive

Advantage: Evaluating the Use of Metaphors in Theories

of Competitive Strategy. Journal of Business Research

33, 81-90

• Rindfleish A.(1996) Marketing as warfare: reassessing a

dominant metaphor. Business Horizons Sept- October 3-

10.

• Kotler and Singh (1981). Marketing Warfare in the

1980's. Journal of Business strategy. Winter 30-41

Page 20: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Agincourt

Page 21: Marketing and the warfare metaphor

Charge of the light brigade

...All in the valley of Death

Rode the six hundred.

'Forward the Light Brigade!

Charge for the guns!' he said:

Into the valley of Death

Rode the six hundred...