Strategic marketing planning
Cours : Strategic marketing planning. Recherche parmi 300 000+ dissertationsPar dissertation • 18 Mars 2013 • Cours • 793 Mots (4 Pages) • 760 Vues
strategic marketing planning.
Some potential applications of SGA have been proposed in a number of
previous papers (e.g. Hatten and Hatten, 1987; Easton, 1988; Carroll et al., 1992;
Aaker, 1995; McGee et al., 1995). However, it should be noted that in the
majority of these papers the potential applications of SGA have only been
suggested from a theoretical point of view, without proposing a specific
methodology that allows us to put them into practice. Also, the most common
perspective of analysis employed has been strategic management instead of
strategic marketing. Finally, none of these papers have centred attention on the
various applications that SGA might have.
In the light of this, it seems appropriate to develop a paper in which the main
applications that can derive from SGA as a management tool for strategic
marketing are put in a synthesised and structured form, and with consideration
being given to the specific manner in which such applications could be
implemented.
SGA as a tool for strategic marketing
In this section, we introduce the concept of strategic group and present a short
review of the literature on the topic. We then propose six potential applications
of SGA as a strategic marketing tool.
The concept of strategic groups. The concept of strategic groups was coined
by Hunt (1972) to refer to highly symmetric firms operating within the same
industry with respect to some of their aspects such as cost structure, formal
organisation, degree of product differentiation and diversification, etc. The
strategic groups approach supposes that the strategic diversity of an industry
can be simplified by classifying the firms into different competitive groups
(Newman, 1978; Porter, 1979). Furthermore, it can be foreseen that these
groupings will remain stable due to the presence of mobility barriers, which
limit the movement of firms through strategic space (Caves and Porter, 1977),
or due to imperfections in the market for resources, which either make difficult
or delay the acquisition of the specific assets that are necessary for the
implementation of each strategy (Dierickx and Cool, 1989).
The concept of mobility barriers between groups is an extension of the entry
barriers to the industry. In particular, the theory of mobility barriers holds that
barriers impede not only the access of the newcomers from other industries, but
also the movement of firms between groups in the same industry. Additionally,
it is important to note that the mobility barriers may often be asymmetric
(Hatten and Hatten, 1987). This asymmetry is reflected in two ways. First,
entry into some groups would be more difficult than into others (it would
Strategic groups
analysis
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