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DEVELOPING MARKETING STRATEGIES AND PLANS | CHAPTER 2 35<br />

Pratt & Whitney employs crossfunctional<br />

employee teams to<br />

build its products, such as this<br />

4000 series aircraft engine.<br />

partnered with specific suppliers and distributors to create a superior value delivery network, also<br />

called a supply chain.<br />

Sony In May 2009, Sony announced it would cut its number of suppliers in half over the<br />

next two years (to 1,200), increasing the volume of parts and materials from each and thus reducing<br />

unit costs and overall procurement spending. Some stock analysts received the news positively<br />

as evidence of the company’s commitment to restructuring. Others were less optimistic, such as<br />

Mizuho Investors Securities analyst Nobuo Kurahashi: “I’m not sure how effective this is because<br />

it’s just operational streamlining and wouldn’t simply push up earnings or bear fruit immediately.” 7<br />

Sony<br />

Core Competencies<br />

Traditionally, companies owned and controlled most of the resources that entered their businesses—<br />

labor power, materials, machines, information, and energy—but many today outsource less-critical<br />

resources if they can obtain better quality or lower cost.<br />

The key, then, is to own and nurture the resources and competencies that make up the essence of<br />

the business. Many textile, chemical, and computer/electronic product firms do not manufacture<br />

their own products because offshore manufacturers are more competent in this task. Instead, they<br />

focus on product design and development and marketing, their core competencies. A core competency<br />

has three characteristics: (1) It is a source of competitive advantage and makes a significant<br />

contribution to perceived customer benefits. (2) It has applications in a wide variety of markets.<br />

(3) It is difficult for competitors to imitate. 8<br />

Competitive advantage also accrues to companies that possess distinctive capabilities or excellence<br />

in broader business processes. Wharton’s George Day sees market-driven organizations as<br />

excelling in three distinctive capabilities: market sensing, customer linking, and channel bonding. 9<br />

In terms of market sensing, he believes tremendous opportunities and threats often begin as “weak<br />

signals” from the “periphery” of a business. 10 He offers a systematic process for developing peripheral<br />

vision, and practical tools and strategies for building “vigilant organizations” attuned to<br />

changes in the environment, by asking three questions each related to learning from the past,<br />

evaluating the present, and envisioning the future.<br />

Competitive advantage ultimately derives from how well the company has fitted its core competencies<br />

and distinctive capabilities into tightly interlocking “activity systems.” Competitors find it hard to<br />

imitate Southwest Airlines, Walmart, and IKEA because they are unable to copy their activity systems.

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